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Top 10 Braves Pitching Performances Of The Last 25 Years

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Top 10 Braves Pitching Performances Of The Last 25 Years
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The Atlanta Braves have built their modern success on a foundation of elite pitching. From John Smoltz’s late-career brilliance to Max Fried’s World Series dominance and Spencer Strider’s record-setting strikeouts, the franchise has always had an ace ready to deliver when it mattered most.

Here are the ten greatest Braves pitching performances of the 21st century — dominance defined by precision, power, and postseason poise.

1. Max Fried — 2021 World Series Game 6 vs. Astros

Max Fried — 2021 World Series Game 6 vs. Astros
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Fried’s six shutout innings in Houston sealed Atlanta’s first championship since 1995. He out-dueled Luis Garcia with pinpoint command and erased the ghosts of October heartbreak.

6.0 IP • 4 H • 0 R • 6 K • 0 BB

It was the exclamation point on a postseason in which Fried showed he’s every bit a modern ace. This outing cemented his place in Braves lore as the pitcher who brought a title home.

2. John Smoltz — 2005 NLDS Game 2 vs. Astros

John Smoltz — 2005 NLDS Game 2 vs. Astros
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At 38, Smoltz turned back the clock with seven scoreless innings in a must-win Division Series game.

7.0 IP • 7 H • 0 R • 8 K • 1 BB

It was his final October start for Atlanta — vintage Smoltz, power and precision in perfect sync. For a generation that grew up watching the ‘90s aces, this was a reminder that Smoltz’s postseason fire never dimmed.

3. Spencer Strider — 16 Ks vs. Rockies (2022)

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In his rookie year, Strider unleashed a historic performance at Truist Park: eight innings, two hits, 16 strikeouts — a franchise rookie record.

8.0 IP • 2 H • 0 R • 16 K • 0 BB

That outing announced a new era of Braves power pitching. It also hinted at what was to come — a future face of the rotation who could dominate a lineup with just two pitches.

4. Tim Hudson — Complete-Game Gem vs. Padres (2004)

Tim Hudson — Complete-Game Gem vs. Padres
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Hudson’s first season in Atlanta included a masterpiece that confirmed why the Braves traded for him.

9.0 IP • 4 H • 0 R • 10 K • 1 BB

It was classic Hudson: heavy sinker, relentless pace, quiet dominance. His ability to command tempo and ground-ball contact made him the perfect successor to the dynasty-era rotation.

5. Craig Kimbrel — Rookie of the Year Season (2011)

Craig Kimbrel — Rookie of the Year Season
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Kimbrel’s 2011 season was one long highlight reel. He struck out 127 in 77 innings and saved 46 games to clinch NL Rookie of the Year.

46 SV • 1.04 WHIP • 127 K in 77 IP

His playoff-berth-clinching save against the Marlins remains one of the loudest moments Turner Field ever heard. It was the beginning of a dominant stretch that made Kimbrel one of baseball’s all-time great closers.

6. Mike Foltynewicz — 2-Hit Shutout vs. Nationals (2018)

Mike Foltynewicz — 2-Hit Shutout vs. Nationals
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Folty’s 11-strikeout masterpiece against Washington was his peak in a breakout All-Star season.

9.0 IP • 2 H • 0 R • 11 K • 1 BB

It symbolized the resurgence of Braves pitching during their first new-era division title run. For one night, everything — velocity, command, emotion — clicked in perfect harmony.

7. Jair Jurrjens — 8 Scoreless vs. Phillies (2009)

Jair Jurrjens — 8 Scoreless vs. Phillies
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Facing the defending champions, Jurrjens delivered eight shutout innings with pinpoint control.

8.0 IP • 3 H • 0 R • 6 K • 2 BB

It was the highlight of his 14-win All-Star campaign and proof he could hang with the NL elite. Though injuries shortened his career, nights like this showed how talented he truly was.

8. Max Fried — Complete-Game Shutout vs. Mets (2023)

Max Fried — Complete-Game Shutout vs. Mets
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Two years after his World Series heroics, Fried dominated New York with an efficient 109-pitch shutout.

9.0 IP • 3 H • 0 R • 8 K • 0 BB

It reaffirmed his ace status after an injury-marred start to the season. Performances like this proved that even in the post-Smoltz era, Atlanta’s tradition of true No. 1 starters continues.

9. Spencer Strider — 13 Ks vs. Marlins (2023)

Spencer Strider — 13 Ks vs. Marlins
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Strider followed up his rookie year with another gem — seven scoreless and 13 strikeouts versus Miami.

7.0 IP • 2 H • 0 R • 13 K • 1 BB

His consistency proved Atlanta’s future was still powered by dominant pitching. If Fried is the present, Strider is the embodiment of the Braves’ pitching future.

10. Julio Teheran — 6 Scoreless vs. Nationals (2016)

Julio Teheran — 6 Scoreless vs. Nationals
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In a duel with Max Scherzer, Teheran shut out Washington for six innings with precision and command.

6.0 IP • 0 R • 7 K • 1 BB

It was one of the bright spots of his two-time All-Star tenure in Atlanta. For a rotation in transition, Teheran’s reliability helped bridge the gap to the team’s next wave of stars.

The Arms That Defined Braves Country

From Smoltz’s vintage postseason dominance to Strider’s radar-gun-melting brilliance, Braves pitchers have kept the franchise’s tradition alive in the 21st century.

Fried, Strider, and company carry on a legacy of excellence — proof that in Atlanta, the ace torch is never dropped, only passed forward.

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