ATLANTA - Martín Pérez has been one of the Braves’ better finds this offseason, but Tuesday night brought a reminder that even a steady arm can’t cover for a team that’s running out of margin.
Atlanta fell 5-3 to the Cardinals at Truist Park, and the loss fit the club’s recent slide far too neatly. The Braves have now dropped seven of their last eight, and their lead in the NL East is down to 2 1/2 games over the Phillies.
Pérez, who signed a Minor League contract with Atlanta in January and didn’t crack the Opening Day roster, came into the night with a 3.00 ERA across 12 starts and 17 appearances. His home numbers had been especially sharp, but that changed in a hurry. He was tagged for four earned runs on four hits, with three walks and one strikeout, and the outing pushed him to 6-5.
The damage all came in the fourth inning.
Pérez had retired nine of the first 12 hitters he faced before Nelson Velázquez turned on a solo shot that Statcast projected at 444 feet to straightaway center. Five batters later, with two outs and two runners aboard, Nathan Church delivered the swing that broke the game open, launching a three-run homer to right field on an 81.9 mph changeup that stayed low and inside to the left-handed hitter.
“It was one pitch,” Pérez said. “The sequence [I threw to Church] was bad.
Too many cutters outside, and [I didn’t] show anything [inside]. When I [threw] my changeup, it was in a good spot, but he was ready for that pitch.
I think that was the only bad pitch. The first homer, I was OK with that.
But we have to be better with the sequencing to lefties.”
It was the third time this season Pérez has given up four earned runs in a start, though he still hasn’t allowed more than four in any outing. On Tuesday, his velocity was down across the board compared with his season averages: the fastball sat at 87.5 mph, down 1.9 mph; the cutter at 83.6 mph, down 1.9; the changeup at 80.1 mph, down 2.1; and the curveball at 75.4 mph, down 1.7.
Even so, Pérez wasn’t pointing the finger at stuff alone. Atlanta’s bats have been cold behind him, and that trend continued against St.
Louis. Over Pérez’s last five starts dating back to June 5, the Braves have scored just 17 runs.
On Tuesday, they went 1-for-12 with runners in scoring position.
“We need to hit a little bit more,” Pérez said. “It’s not a secret.
I think we [have to] do better [things] as a team. I think if we put some runners on base, we’re [going to] be fine.
There’s [going to] be a game where we’re [going to] bring them in. It’s better [for this] to happen now than later.”
A veteran who made his MLB debut in 2012, Pérez has become a stabilizing voice in the clubhouse during a rough stretch for Atlanta. He said his focus is on keeping the room steady, even as the club has watched a big division lead shrink over the past month-plus.
“I’m just trying to keep the clubhouse with good energy,” Pérez said. “And the dugout, too.
That’s all I can do. I’m not a hitting coach.”
The night also carried a heavier meaning for Pérez on a personal level. Born in Guanare, Venezuela, he had his home country on his mind after deadly earthquakes hit areas surrounding La Guaira and Caracas on June 24, just hours after he started in San Diego. The quakes registered magnitudes of 7.2 and 7.5.
“It’s bad, man,” Pérez said. “You see in your country [that] a lot of people [were] affected.
It’s hard for me to not be out there trying to help people. I know me and my family have been doing a lot of donation stuff, but it’s still hard to get into the media - Instagram and Twitter - and see what’s [happening] there.
It’s hard. It’s sad.”
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