ATLANTA _When Mike Foltynewicz is on his game, the hard-throwing Atlanta Braves redhead can be a truly dominant pitcher.
He was absolutely on his game Friday night against the Washington Nationals, throwing a two-hit shutout in a 4-0 Braves win at SunTrust Park. He faced just 28 batters, two over the minimum, in recording his first career complete game.
Dansby Swanson had a three-run homer for the Braves in their second win to start the four-game series.
Foltynewicz retired 20 consecutive batters after Bryce Harper's one-out single in the first inning, and Swanson's homer off Stephen Strasburg in the seventh inning broke open the game.
The Nationals didn't get another hit until Trea Turner's two-out single in the ninth inning, before Foltynewicz struck out Harper to end the game on his 107th pitch.
In what has to be considered one of the two best performances of Foltynewicz's career, he limited the Nationals to just two hits and one walk with 11 strikeouts, mixing 97-99 mph fastballs with curveballs and sliders to overpower plenty of hitters and leave others looking perplexed.
Strasburg also had a shutout going until the seventh inning, when the Braves scratched out a run on consecutive singles by Nick Markakis and Kurt Suzuki and an error by first baseman Matt Adams on a swinging-bunt of a grounder by Johan Camargo that let in a run.
One out later, Swanson crushed a low curveball, pulling it to the back wall of the left-field bullpen for his fourth homer and a 4-0 lead.
Strasburg, who was charged with seven hits, four runs (three earned) and no walks with 10 strikeouts, left the game with two outs in the seventh inning after experiencing discomfort in the fingers of his glove hand.
For Foltynewicz, it was the best game he pitched since taking a no-hitter to the ninth inning at Oakland June 30, 2017, before giving up a leadoff homer to Matt Olson that ended his night after 119 pitches. Foltynewicz had four walks and eight strikeouts in that game.
On Friday, he didn't walk a batter until Juan Soto to start the eighth inning. Soto was the first to reach base for the Nationals since Harper's one-out single in the first inning.
Brian Goodwin followed by grounding into a force at second and hustling to beat the relay to first and avoid the double play. But Foltynewicz promptly picked off Goodwin at first base and struck out Pedro Severino to end the inning, making it 25 outs in 24 batters faced.