ATLANTA - Brian Snitker wants the Atlanta Braves to pay closer attention when they’re running the bases.
A fifth straight postseason awaits the defending World Series champions, and the Atlanta manager knows the team can’t afford to make mistakes on the basepaths.
“As a baserunner, you have to zero in on the guy in front of you and nobody else because he might fall, he might not see things the way everybody else does,” Snitker said. “Your main focus is the guy in front of you when you’re running the bases, and we weren’t real aware in some situations today.”
Joey Meneses hit a go-ahead, two-run homer off Jesse Chavez in the seventh inning, and the Washington Nationals stopped the Braves’ five-game winning streak with a 3-2 victory on Wednesday as Atlanta cost itself with poor baserunning.
Ronald Acuna Jr. drove in an early run and scored another for Atlanta, which clinched a postseason appearance a night earlier.
Atlanta trailed by a run in the eighth when Michael Harris II hit a one-out single to right with Austin Riley on second and William Contreras on first. Third base coach Ron Washington held up Riley, who had rounded third, but Contreras was nearly at third and was thrown out returning to second by catcher Tres Barrera, who had received the throw from right fielder Lane Thomas.
“Wash was giving me a go the whole time and then at the last second put up the stop sign, and I think at that point Contreras was already there,” Riley said. “It’s tough. It happens.”
Snitker said the Braves held a meeting about baserunning on Tuesday to go over the intricacies of staying alert.
“It’s just when your playing close games, those are the things you can control,” Snitker said. “There’s so many things in this game you can’t control, but we can control our baserunning. It’s the awareness more than anything. We talk about it a lot. We show them different videos and different angles.
“Most of them are visual learners. We do that quite a bit.”
Atlanta remained one game behind the NL East-leading New York Mets, who lost 6-0 at Milwaukee. The Braves had won 10 straight home games, outscoring opponents 47-16.
Atlanta is 52-26 at Truist Park, with only one remaining three-game series against the Mets from Sept. 30-Oct. 2. The Braves are a big league-best 71-29 since May 31.
Meneses put the Nationals up 3-2 with his 10th homer, a 420-foot drive to left for the 30-year-old rookie. He leads last-place Washington with 57 hits, 10 homers and 25 RBIs since his major league debut on Aug. 2.
“I can’t say enough about what Joey has done for us since he’s been here,” Nationals manager Dave Martinez said. “He’s been hitting balls, doubles, homers, getting on base, but today was all about the team. We came out with a victory.”
Andres Machado (2-0) pitched a scoreless sixth, Carl Edwards Jr. escaped a jam with a runners on first and third in the eighth when Eddie Rosario lined out and Kyle Finnegan pitched a perfect ninth for his 11th save in 15 chances.
Chavez (4-2) gave up one run and one in two-thirds of an inning.
Atlanta took advantage of Paolo Espino’s erratic throws to first base to make it 1-0 in the first. Acuna led off with a single, advanced to second on a throwing error by Espino on a pickoff attempt and scored when Contreras reached on an infield single and Espino threw wildly to first again.
Atlanta had won 11 of 12 against the Nationals and began the day 26-8 in the series since the start of last year.
Bryce Elder gave up one run with two walks and six strikeouts in 5 2/3 innings for the Braves.
“He went into the sixth and gave us a chance to win the game,” Snitker said. “I thought he did a really good, solid job. He pitched around some different things, but it was solid, very solid.”
Elder stranded a runner in scoring position in the third. He hit Josh Palacios with a pitch in the fifth, and Palacios advanced to third on Barrera’s single before Thomas’ sacrifice fly trimmed the lead to 2-1.
Espino gave up four hits and two runs - one earned - in four-plus innings. He has a 4.94 ERA in 17 starts.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Nationals DH Nelson Cruz missed his seventh straight game with eye inflammation.
NICE MOVES
Washington center fielder Victor Robles ran forward to his left to make a diving catch of Acuna’s fly, stood up and threw accurately to first to double up Vaughn Grissom and get a double play in the fifth. ... The Nationals ended the bottom of the seventh with a double play when Dansby Swanson struck out and Grissom was caught stealing. .... Thomas got his eighth assist. ... Harris ran hard to his right to make a shoestring catch in left-center in the bottom of the eighth.
UP NEXT
Nationals: After an off day Thursday, RHP Josiah Gray (7-9, 5.14 ERA) will face a yet-to-be determined pitcher for the Marlins as Washington opens a three-game series at Miami.
Braves: LHP Max Fried (13-6, 2.52) will face Ranger Suarez (9-5, 3.53) as Atlanta opens a four-game series at Philadelphia. Fried has no decision with a 3.50 ERA in three starts against the Phillies this year.