ATLANTA — For the first time since 1999, the Atlanta Braves are going back to the World Series.

Eddie Rosario continued a torrid postseason with a three-run homer just inside the foul pole in the fourth inning, breaking a 1-1 deadlock and propelling Atlanta to a 4-2 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday. One season after the Braves lost to the Dodgers in a seven-game NLCS, Atlanta knocked off the defending champions in six.

The Dodgers got the tying runs on base with no one out in the seventh, but lefty reliever Tyler Matzek came on and struck out three straight to electrify a thundering Truist Park gathering. The last of the three was former MVP Mookie Betts.

Rosario, who was named NLCS MVP, went 2-for-3 with a walk and finished the NLCS with a .560 average, 1.040 slugging percentage, three homers and nine RBIs in six games.

The loss ends the title defense of the Dodgers, who won the World Series after last year’s pandemic-shortened season. It was an abrupt end for Los Angeles, which won 106 games during the regular season and beat the 107-win San Francisco Giants in the NL Division Series.

Instead, it’s the 88-win Braves who take the NL pennant during a season in which they did not climb over the .500 mark until Aug. 6. According to Elias, that’s the latest first-day-over-.500 date ever for a team that reached the World Series. The previous record was Aug. 3 held by another version of the franchise — the 1914 Boston Braves, known to history as the “Miracle Braves.”

While the 2021 Braves looked like a longshot to end their pennant drought when the postseason began, nothing about the way Atlanta dismantled the Milwaukee Brewers during the NLDS and the Dodgers during the NLCS seemed miraculous.

The pennant is the latest step for a franchise that began a long rebuild during the middle part of the past decade and reemerged as a contender in 2018. This season marked the Braves’ fourth straight season in the playoffs. Saturday’s win snapped a string of 12 straight postseason runs for the franchise without a World Series appearance, tied with the Athletics for the longest streak of that kind.

Braves starter Ian Anderson held the Dodgers to one run over four innings, before giving way to a pinch-hitter during Atlanta’s fourth-inning rally. A.J. Minter came on after Anderson and set down all six batters he faced, striking out four in a dominating performance.

With the win, Braves franchise stalwart Freddie Freeman earns his first trip to the Fall Classic. Drafted by the Braves in the second round of the 2007 draft, Freeman was the one player the Braves kept when they methodically dismantled their last contending club, signing him to an eight-year extension in 2014.

Freeman starred for a number of losing teams during the early years of that contract, but now with the pact due to expire after this season, he’s also experienced the team’s complete turnaround.

The win was also the cherry on the top of the long career of manager Brian Snitker, a Braves lifer who has been with the organization since 1977. Snitker, who turned 66 during the series, played for the franchise in the minors then worked as a roving instructor after being hired to remain with the organization by Hall of Famer Hank Aaron. He managed in the minors for years before coaching in the majors. Now he’s at the pinnacle of his profession with the only organization he’s known.

For the Dodgers, the loss kicks off what could be an offseason of change, with several of their star players headed for free agency. The list includes Max Scherzer, Albert Pujols, Corey Seager, Kenley Jansen, Chris Taylor and longtime ace Clayton Kershaw.

With the Dodgers’ repeat bid ending, baseball will go without a back-to-back champion once again. No one has repeated as champions since the Yankees’ three-year streak from 1998 to 2000. It’s baseball’s longest-ever stretch without a repeat champ.

Source: www.espn.com