Ian Anderson took the mound Saturday trying to redeem himself for his last start, when he showed spotty command and went only three innings, suffering his first loss in the majors.
Anderson showed more than redemption. He delivered the best performance by a Braves starter this season. The 22-year-old allowed one hit across seven scoreless innings. He struck out nine and walked three _ but issued zero bases on balls after the second inning. The Braves defeated the Nationals, 2-1, in Washington.
"He had that confident look back tonight," manager Brian Snitker said. "Once he got through that second inning, that was a pretty gutsy pitch right there to end that inning when he got himself in trouble, then he got into a rhythm. He was clicking. He probably could've pitched all night."
Anderson opened the second with consecutive walks, which prompted a mound visit from pitching coach Rick Kranitz. He responded with two flyouts and a strikeout.
Kranitz's advice was to simplify things, Anderson said. Don't try to do too much and slow the game down. The only National to reach base after that point was Asdrubal Cabrera, whose bunt single was their only hit against Anderson.
"It was a great learning experience, definitely," Anderson said. "Every time I go out there, it's going to be a learning experience no matter what the results are. So that's how I looked at that second inning. I was able to reset a little bit after that inning, getting out of there. I was able to figure it out and that goes a long way for me and going forward."
The Braves' starter retired 12 straight after Cabrera reached. He set down 18 of 19 Nationals after his back-to-back walks. Anderson became the second pitcher in 120 years to allow one hit or fewer in two starts of at least six innings across his first four appearances, according to the team.
Anderson's change-up and curveball were the best they've been at the major league level. The change-up generated nine called strikes or whiffs on 30 pitches. The curveball coaxed nine called strikes or whiffs with 18 curveballs.
The incoming reinforcements and Anderson's emergence create hope the Braves' rotation might be serviceable by October. Ace Max Fried is expected to return late next week. Veteran lefty Cole Hamels is supposed to debut mid-week. Anderson has impressed in three of four starts, proving to be more reliable early than many of the young pitchers the Braves have tested in recent years.
Maybe with that trio, and whoever else provides consistency in the coming weeks, the Braves can patch together a staff that'll give their vicious offense a chance in the postseason.
"We get Cole going, get Max back, Ian is going good," Snitker said. "Hopefully all those guys will step up and do what we think they can."