Bryce Elder had a rough one on the mound at Charlotte Sports Park against the Rays, as he ended up conceding more runs than innings pitched in what turned out to be a battle of the bats between the Atlanta Braves and Tampa Bay in spring training action.
It was clear from the jump that this was probably going to be a shaky outing for Elder in today’s contest. Despite being given a four-run lead to play with, that ended up not mattering much as Elder was all over the place (and not in a good way, this time). He dealt with two men on base before recording an out (with the second runner reaching via hit-by-pitch) and then a wild pitch moved both of those runners into scoring position. Elder eventually got out of the inning by only giving up a single run thanks to a couple of ground balls that he induced but he also sandwiched in a walk in between the fielder’s choice RBI for Ben Williamson and the double play that ended the inning.
It was clear that Elder was going to have to step things up after his rough first inning but the results didn’t go his way in that regard. Jonny DeLuca led off the second inning with a double and made it home on another fielder’s choice RBI that cleared the bases. The bases were soon busy again, as Elder ended up surrendering a walk, a single and then an RBI single that made it a 5-3 game at that point. Elder then ended up getting pulled for the remainder of the inning in favor of Darius Vines, who promptly gave up a three-run shot to Ben Williamson to put five runs on Elder’s line and give the Rays the lead in this one. Vines followed that up by giving up a double and a walk immediately afterwards, so this was clearly just a rough day for Atlanta’s pitchers — and it was only going to get rougher.
Elder ended his day on a high note by re-entering the contest during the third inning and only surrendering another walk while getting through his only scoreless inning of the day. With that being said, a line of 3.1 IP, 6 H, 3 BB, 2 K and 5 R certainly isn’t encouraging. Now granted, the wind was blowing out towards the fences in this one so it wasn’t like Elder was the only one struggling with that but also, Elder was the only pitcher who walked more than one batter in this one. It was definitely a frustrating day on the mound for Elder in this one and that was only compounded due to something happening soon afterwards that was completely out of his control.
Joey Wentz entered the game in the bottom of the fifth inning looking to continue to bolster his case for a spot in the starting rotation. However, he suffered a setback in this frame that might leave him out for a little bit of time. Wentz started off this frame by giving up a leadoff double and he was an out away from getting out of things unscathed. Unfortunately, he not only ended up giving up a run while trying to field a bunt but he also hurt himself while trying to cover first base in the process.
Wentz stayed on the ground for a while in plenty of pain but he eventually stood up under his own power. He did take a cart ride to the clubhouse but according to reports from Braves beat writer Mark Bowman of MLB.com, there’s reason to believe that this was simply a precautionary measure since Wentz was seen walking around the clubhouse after his outing. Either way, a starting pitcher going down (no matter how far up or down that pitcher is on the depth chart) is the absolute last thing that the Braves want to see at this point and here’s hoping that there is, in fact, nothing serious when it comes to Wentz’s injury. His injury (alongside two late runs given up by Tyler LaPorte) was the capper on a rough day for Braves pitching.
Fortunately for the Braves, this didn’t stop them from continuing to rake at the plate. As I mentioned earlier, the Braves scored four runs in the first inning as seven of Atlanta’s starting nine took plate appearances in the first inning alone. Luke Williams and Dominic Smith both picked up singles to start things off, Jorge Mateo plated the first run of the game on a sacrifice fly and then Ben Gamel added another homer to his spring tally to make it 3-0 Braves. Kyle Farmer liked what Ben Gamel did so much that he crushed a homer of his own immediately afterwards, giving the Braves their third separate instance of back-to-back home runs so far this spring. Boom!
Luke Williams added a homer of his own in the second inning but things quieted down in the middle portion of this game considerably following two loud innings to start this game for the Braves. Once the seventh inning rolled around, Dominic Smith collected his second hit of the game in order to plate José Azocar on an RBI single and then Jair Camargo smacked a two-run dinger of his own to make it four big flies on the day for the Braves. They may have dropped the game but it was still nice to see the Braves continue to send the ball flying all over the diamond in yet another game.
So to sum things up, today was a mixed bag in terms of what was on display during the game. It was definitely nice to see the Braves continue to mash at the plate but it that was a double-edged sword as the conditions did contribute to Atlanta’s pitching staff struggling to contain the Rays’ bats as well. It was a rough day in particular for two pitchers who are the most-likely hurlers in this contest to be contributing to big league games once the regular season starts later this month. Elder had issues with location and command and Wentz suffered an apparent injury. You always have your peaks-and-valleys in spring training and today was certainly a valley in many ways.


















