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The Leading Logic In Sports Handicapping

Friday 5/16/2008Line$ LineOU LineGame InfoScore
OAKLAND at ATLANTA7:35 PM ETPreview | FoxSheet | Recap | Boxscore
915:  OAKLAND  EVELAND )
 
916:  ATLANTA  JURRJENS )
+1.5  -160

-1.5  +140
+135

-145

8.5un
 
 2
Final
3
 

By Phil Foley
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

ATLANTA (Ticker) -- There's no place like home for Mark
Kotsay, Chipper Jones and the Atlanta Braves.

Kotsay beat his old club with an RBI double and Jones singled
twice and scored the game-winning run to lead the Braves to a
come-from-behind 3-2 win over the struggling Oakland Athletics
on Friday.

Brian McCann had three hits and drove in a run for Atlanta,
which improved to a major league-best 15-4 at Turner Field.

The Braves, who have dropped 16 of 22 on the road, have been a
different team at home.

"We're not bad here," said Jones, who leads the majors with a
.423 batting average. "We stink on the road, plain and simple.
I don't know that the deal is. We don't get any hits, can't
score any runs and can't make pitches."

Part of the reason for their success has been the play of Jones.
The 36-year-old slugger has hits in 17 of Atlanta's 19 home
contests and is batting .459 (34-for-74) at Turner Field.

Jones continued his torrid hitting at home, collecting a single
in the sixth and leading off the decisive eighth with a single
before advancing to second base on a two-out single by McCann.

Kotsay, who was traded from the A's to Atlanta in the offseason,
followed by smashing the 0-1 offering from former Brave Alan
Embree (1-2) into the right-center field gap, plating Jones to
give Atlanta the victory.

"Obviously it feels good, but I don't have any regrets or bad
feelings about that team," Kotsay said of his old club. "What
transpired wasn't anything to do with hard feelings or anything.
It just feels good to get a one-run win."

The 32-year-old Kotsay had just one hit in eight at-bats with a
walk and two strikeouts against Embree before delivering the
game-winning blow.

"I faced Embree a lot of times," Kotsay said. "He won more
battles than I have. He threw it by me the first pitch. He
came back hard I got my opportunity tonight. It feels good."

Manny Acosta (2-1) scattered one hit in two frames to record the
victory.

Oakland jumped out to a 2-0 lead, but wasted a golden
opportunity to break the game open in the second.

Catcher Kurt Suzuki snapped an 0-for-23 slump with a leadoff
single and advanced to third on Ryan Sweeney's double.

However, Suzuki was nabbed at the plate after Sweeney mistakenly
advanced to third base on the play as the catcher made a wide
turn for home.

After Donnie Murphy drew a walk, Dana Eveland followed with a
safety squeeze down the third base line. Atlanta starter Jair
Jurrjens pounced on the ball and uncorked a wild throw over the
head of McCann, allowing Sweeney to score and Murphy to advance
to third.

After Murphy scored on a groundout, Bobby Crosby singled to
right field. However, Eveland tried to test the arm of Jeff
Francoeur and was gunned down at the plate when McCann applied a
nice sprawling tag on the Oakland pitcher to record the final
out of the frame.

"It was my first time at the plate and my first time on base,"
Eveland said. "I tried to score on a single and got thrown out
by the best arm in the league."

"That was huge," Francoeur said. "(Being down) 2-0 is a big
difference from 3-0. It was a soft hit ball. I had to get to
it fast to make that play. It was a nice team win tonight."

Jurrjens, who allowed two unearned and scattered eight hits
while pitching for the first time in his major league career on
three days' rest, was thankful that Francoeur bailed him out.

"That's how crazy baseball is," said Jurrjens, who allowed two
unearned runs in five frames. "I'm really thankful that I got
out (of the inning) with two runs. I don't know how to explain
it."

The lost opportunities were too much for the A's, who have been
in a bit of an offensive slump over their past four games.

Oakland, which has dropped its last four contests and has lost
six of its first seven on their nine-game road trip, has plated
four runs over its last four games.

"I really didn't think about it," Eveland said of his club's
offensive woes. "These guys are capable of putting 10 or 12
runs on the board."

The A's stranded 10 runners on base and finished a dismal
1-for-9 with runners in scoring position.

Meanwhile, Atlanta took advantage of its opportunities, drawing
the contest even in the sixth on two-out, run-scoring single by
Francoeur and a double by McCann.

Eveland allowed two runs and six hits in 5 2/3 frames for the
Athletics (23-20), who have dropped 10 of their last 16 games
after starting the season 17-10.