Atlanta bashes past Houston to claim World Series title
Franchise, led by Canadian GM Alex Anthopoulos, wins 1st championship since 1995
Most of the season, it just seemed this wasn't their year.
They dropped their first four games, and soon injuries piled up. They lost their most dynamic player before the All-Star break. They were stuck below .500 in August.
Yet out of nowhere, suddenly, this Atlanta team transformed itself and took off.
Jorge Soler, Freddie Freeman and their teammates breezed to their first World Series championship since 1995, hammering the Houston Astros 7-0 on Tuesday night in Game 6. Max Fried threw six dominant innings in a signature pitching performance to close it out.
"We hit every pothole, every bump you could possibly hit this year," Freeman said. "Injuries, every single kind of thing that could happen, that could go wrong went wrong, and we overcame every single one of those things."
WATCH | Canadians play key roles in Atlanta's World Series victory:
How proud The Hammer himself would've been.
Even so, Atlanta's troubles never fully went away.
Canadian general manager Alex Anthopoulos, the architect of the team's midseason turnaround, missed this crowning achievement after testing positive for COVID-19. Born in Montreal, he was back at his home in Georgia for the clincher.
Soler, a July acquisition who tested positive for the coronavirus in the playoffs, backed Fried early with a monster three-run shot for his third homer against the Astros.
By then, it was a total team effort. Ailing star Ronald Acuna Jr., the dynamo of Atlanta's future, bounded from the dugout to join the celebration for Freeman, the longtime face of the franchise.
When Yuli Gurriel grounded out to end it, Freeman caught the throw at first base, put the ball in his pocket, and the party was on for manager Brian Snitker's club.
A full hour after the game, hundreds of fans packed behind the team's third base dugout kept doing the chop and chant, causing loud echoes to bounce around the ballpark.
About 700 miles away at suburban Truist Park, thousands of fans poured into the team's home to holler.
A mere afterthought in the summer heat among the land of the Giants, White Sox and Dodgers, but magnificent in the Fall Classic.
"This is the toughest team I've ever been a part of," said shortstop Dansby Swanson, who also homered.
Soler, who was later named World Series MVP, tapped his heart twice before beginning his home run trot after connecting off rookie Luis Garcia in the third inning, sending the ball flying completely out of Minute Maid Park. Dansby Swanson also homered and by the final out, nothing could stop them.
Not a broken leg sustained by starter Charlie Morton in the World Series opener. Not a big blown lead in Game 5.
Steadied by 66-year-old manager Brian Snitker, an organization man for four decades, underdog Atlanta won the franchise's fourth title.
"They never gave up on themselves," he said on a postgame victory platform. "We lost a lot of pieces over the course of the summer and it was just the next man up."
Consider it a tribute to the franchise's greatest player, Mr. Hank Aaron. The Hall of Fame slugger died Jan. 22 at 86, still rooting for his old team, and his legacy was stamped all over this Series.
"Nobody ever wanted to let Hank down," Snitker said. "That's just the way it was, we didn't want to let him down. He charged us with a responsibility to make these guys better and we weren't going to let him down."
And note Atlanta outhomered the top-scoring team in the majors by 11-2.
For 72-year-old Houston manager Dusty Baker, a disappointment. But for many fans still rooting against the Astros in the wake of their 2017 sign-stealing scandal, some satisfaction.
"Yeah, it's tough, but you know something? You've got to keep on trucking, and that gives you even more incentive next year," Baker said.
"It's tough to take now, but this too shall pass. I mean, it really hurts, but it's over," he added.
Major credit for Atlanta, too, goes to Canadian general manager Alex Anthopoulos. Undaunted by Acuna's knee injury, he pulled off a flurry of July trades that brought the Fab Four to the outfield — NL Championship Series MVP Eddie Rosario, Adam Duvall, Joc Pederson and Soler.
"Thanks to God for the opportunity to be on this team," Soler said through a translator.
Anthopoulos, of Montreal, held the same title with the Blue Jays from 2010-2015. He took over in Atlanta in 2017, but wasn't in Houston for the victory after reportedly testing positive for COVID-19 and instead choosing to stay home in Georgia.
But even in the Analytics Era, guided by a GM fully versed in new-age ways, the path this Atlanta team took wouldn't add up in any computer. Especially with how things looked in midseason.
"At that time, we were searching," third baseman Austin Riley said before Game 6. "I think there's no question about that."
Minus Acuna, Atlanta wasn't over .500 for a single day until the first week in August. It finished 88-73 for the 12th-best record in the majors and fewest victories among playoff teams; their win total was the lowest for a World Series champion since St. Louis' 83 in 2006.
Plus, the agonizing history of sports in Atlanta, a city where no team had won a title in the four major pro sports besides 1995.
The baseball team couldn't convert a three games-to-one advantage over the Dodgers in the NL Championship Series last year. The Hawks fell short in the NBA semifinals last season. And then there was the big one, the Falcons blowing a 28-3 lead to the Patriots in the Super Bowl.
But not this time.
"Boy, we're in November right now and we've been doing this since February. We've had so many ups and downs this year. For us to be world champions, that is awesome to hear," Freeman said.
Patchwork champions
Favoured in spring training to win their fourth straight NL East title, Atlanta lost Acuna to a torn knee ligament in July. Earlier, 2020 Triple Crown contender Marcell Ozuna was injured and later placed on leave while Major League Baseball investigated him under its domestic violence policy. Projected ace Mike Soroka of Calgary never got back from Achilles injury.
Going into the playoffs, their bullpen was a crazy patchwork.
They had a guy who made his big league debut in October, a lefty who was pitching in 2019 for the Texas AirHogs in a now-defunct independent league and a righty who was stacking boxes at an appliance warehouse a decade ago. Toss in a rookie who was off the roster a week ago as he watched Game 1 at a hotel in suburban Atlanta.
For sure, plenty of fans around the country were rooting hard against Jose Altuve and the Houston crew. Many continue to heckle them as the "Cheatin' Astros" for an illegal sign-stealing scheme on the way to their 2017 title, and those feelings might last forever.
Certainly a lot of people were cheering for Baker. A World Series winner as a player and a highly respected figure on and off the field, he wasn't able to check the final box on his resume as a championship skipper.
First title since 1995
The franchise's crowns have been spread out over more than a century.
The 1995 Atlanta champs featured five future Hall of Famers — rookie Chipper Jones, aces Tom Glavine, Greg Maddux and John Smoltz, and manager Bobby Cox. Those rings were the lone pieces of hardware that resulted from 14 straight division titles.
The 1957 team, located in Milwaukee, was led by Aaron in his only NL MVP season. His 44 was painted in large numbers on the outfield grass at Truist Park, and Baker and Snitker often mentioned how much he'd meant to them.
There was the 1914 Boston edition, too. In last place on the Fourth of July, they surged to win the pennant, then upset a heavily favoured team — the Philadelphia A's — to earn their nickname.
Sound familiar?
Atlanta's previous title came at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, their first home after moving from Milwaukee to the Deep South in 1966. Then there was Turner Field before the team uprooted from downtown and decided to sprawl into the suburbs.
Truist Park was packed and the outside plazas were jammed over the weekend, and pulsating crowds filled Minute Maid Park.
Quite a change from last October. Only a limited capacity was permitted for that World Series as the Dodgers beat Tampa Bay at a neutral-site stadium in Arlington, Texas — that followed a total shutout for fans during a regular season shortened because of the coronavirus.
Now, all of baseball waits to see whether spring training is on deck in a little over three months. A squabble between owners and players threatens soon to shut down the sport.
In the meantime, the sport can savour a year in which things, slowly, started to get back to normal.