Griffey gets No. 599 as Bruce's walk-off shot in 10th wins game
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| Regular Season Series |
| Series tied 3-3 (as of Sat 5/31) |
| Fri 5/2 |
@ATL 2, CIN 0 |
Recap |
| Sat 5/3 |
@ATL 9, CIN 1 |
Recap |
| Sun 5/4 |
@ATL 14, CIN 7 |
Recap |
| Fri 5/30 |
@CIN 3, ATL 2 |
Recap |
| >Sat 5/31 |
@CIN 8, ATL 7 |
Box Score |
| Sun 6/1 |
@CIN 6, ATL 2 |
Recap |
| · Complete Schedule: Reds | Braves |
| Scoring Summary |
| ATL | CIN |
 | 1st | K Griffey Jr homered to right, J Bruce scored. | 0 | 2 |
 | 1st | B Phillips homered to left. | 0 | 3 |
 | 2nd | G Norton homered to right, J Francoeur scored. | 2 | 3 |
 | 2nd | K Griffey Jr hit sacrifice fly to center, J Hairston scored, J Bruce to third. | 2 | 4 |
 | 2nd | E Encarnacion singled to shallow left center, J Bruce scored, A Dunn to third, E Encarnacion to second advancing on throw. | 2 | 5 |
 | 3rd | M Teixeira homered to center, K Johnson and C Jones scored. | 5 | 5 |
 | 4th | K Johnson singled to right, J Jurrjens scored. | 6 | 5 |
 | 5th | J Hairston reached on infield single to shortstop, E Encarnacion scored, D Ross to third, A Phillips to second. | 6 | 6 |
 | 7th | J Francoeur homered to right. | 7 | 6 |
 | 9th | D Ross grounded out to pitcher, R Freel scored, J Votto to second. | 7 | 7 |
 | 10th | J Bruce homered to right. | 7 | 8 |
| · View complete Play-By-Play |
| Game Information |
| Stadium | Great American Ball Park, Cincinnati, OH |
| Attendance | 38,585 (91.2% full) - % is based on regular season capacity |
| Game Time | 3:43 |
| Weather | 84 degrees, partly cloudy |
| Wind | 21 mph |
| Umpires | Home Plate - Adrian Johnson, First Base - Tim Tschida, Second Base - Jim Joyce, Third Base - Jeff Nelson |
CINCINNATI (AP) -- Jay Bruce insists that his first career homer won't overshadow Ken Griffey Jr.'s 599th.
Oh, really?
Griffey moved within one homer of a seldom-reached mark on Saturday, but the rookie who's just getting started was the center of attention in the cluster of disbelieving
Cincinnati Reds at home plate.
Bruce's Big Start
Rookie Jay Bruce was 3-for-5 on Saturday with three runs and capped his day with a walk-off homer in the 10th inning. Bruce has a solid start to his MLB career, and although he's only played five big league games so far, he's off to a better career start than teammate Ken Griffey Jr.
Griffey Jr. vs. Bruce,
First 5 MLB Games
|
Griffey Jr. |
Bruce |
| BA |
.105 |
.579 |
| H-AB |
2-19 |
11-19 |
| HR |
0 |
1 |
| RBI |
0 |
4 |
| Slug pct. |
.158 |
.895 |
Bruce extended his amazing weeklong debut with his first homer Saturday, a solo shot in the 10th inning that gave the Cincinnati Reds an 8-7 victory over the stunned and frustrated
Atlanta Braves.
The first time the 21-year-old rookie went deep, it ended a game that started with Griffey's 599th homer.
"You can't steal the show from him," Bruce said.
That's exactly what he did.
Bruce's homer off
Manny Acosta (3-2) dealt another crushing road defeat to the Braves, who couldn't hold a one-run lead in the ninth and couldn't stop Bruce an inning later.
"It's come to the point where we've got to start winning these close games," catcher
Brian McCann said. "They're killing us."
Fast Facts
• Jay Bruce is now 11-for-19 (.579) in his short career. This was also his third three-hit game in his fifth career MLB game.
• Bruce is the second player in the last 50 years to have a trio of three-hit games in his first five games. Kirby Puckett is the only other player to accomplish the feat. He was 12-for-24 (.500) in his first five games in 1984.
• Atlanta's Mark Teixeira hit a three-run homer off Josh Fogg and is now 6-for-9 (.667) with two home runs and eight RBI in his career against Fogg.
-- ESPN Research
Griffey was on deck when Bruce connected. He rounded the bases while 38,585 fans chanted "BRUUUUCE!" in unison, flipped his helmet into the air halfway to home, then got pummeled by teammates when he hopped on the plate.
"That's the first walk-off home run in my life, at any level," Bruce said. "It's crazy."
The Reds' top prospect is 11-for-19 in his first five games in the majors, providing one big hit after another. He has a pair of three-hit games and a four-hit game.
"What a remarkable story Jay Bruce is," manager Dusty Baker said. "I've never seen a better story. If he's living a dream, I'd like to be in that dream."
The Braves dropped their heads and trudged away in disbelief. They can't seem to do anything right on the road.
Francisco Cordero (2-0) pitched the 10th, sending the Braves to an excruciatingly familiar finish. Atlanta has lost its last 20 one-run games on the road since August, matching the second-longest such streak in major league history.
According to the Elias Sports Bureau, Kansas City lost 21 straight one-run games on the road from 2000-01. Pittsburgh dropped 20 in a row from 1985-86.
The Braves have one of the NL's best home records at 22-7, offset by the worst road mark at 7-20. The near-miss misery goes much deeper. Atlanta is 0-5 in extra innings this season and 2-16 in one-run games overall.
"That's the way it's been going for us, all these close games," manager Bobby Cox said. "It's cyclical. It will turn around. It always does."
The Braves built a 7-6 lead on homers by
Greg Norton,
Mark Teixeira and
Jeff Francoeur, only to let it slip away on a disputed play in the ninth.
Rafael Soriano gave up a walk and a single, then failed to look
Ryan Freel all the way back to third base on
David Ross' soft comeback grounder.
Soriano threw to first, and Freel dashed for home and slid in headfirst, beating the relay. Cox threw his cap and was ejected while arguing the call at the plate, a sign of Atlanta's mounting frustration.
"Obviously, I thought he was out," McCann said. "He wasn't; I saw the replay. I thought I tagged him on the biceps, but on the replay, it was further down."
Griffey got the Reds rolling with a two-run drive in the first off
Jair Jurrjens, leaving him one away from becoming the sixth player to reach 600 career homers. He also had a sacrifice fly and a double.
With his next homer, Griffey will join
Barry Bonds, Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth, Willie Mays and
Sammy Sosa at 600. He'll have one more chance in his hometown -- the series concludes on Sunday -- before an eight-game road trip.
"Even his outs are hard," Baker said of Griffey, who wasn't available after the game. "It won't be long."
Chipper Jones, who went 0-for-5 and had a game-ending error in Cincinnati's 3-2, 11-inning win on Friday night, had a pair of singles and matched an Atlanta record. Jones' 81 hits through the end of May equaled Ralph Garr's mark from 1974.
Game notes Jurrjens was the 383rd pitcher to give up a homer by Griffey. ... Jones batted .417 in May with four homers. ... Soriano's first pitch in the ninth sailed untouched to the backstop screen. He wound up with his first blown save in two chances. ... Reds starter
Josh Fogg gave up six runs in 3 1/3 innings, likely costing him a spot in the rotation again.