ATLANTA -- The Braves won Game 1 of the National League Championship Series with a bottom-of-the-ninth clutch hit Saturday. As the club danced around the field in celebration, the frenzied crowd at Truist Park chanted "MVP! MVP!" at the hero.
If all you knew about Game 1 were those two facts, who would you guess had stroked the winning hit? Freddie Freeman, right? You know, the National League MVP in 2020 and the face of the Atlanta franchise.
But the correct answer is Austin Riley, whose emergence this season might just mean that Atlanta has a new MVP in town.
Riley's RBI single up the left-field line off Los Angeles Dodgers relief ace Blake Treinen lifted the Braves to 3-2 walk-off win in the series opener. Earlier, Riley tied the game at 2 by blasting a home run over the left-field bullpen in the fourth inning off Tony Gonsolin, making his hero turn a nightlong journey.
"You dream of that as a little kid," Riley said.
With the twin heroics, Riley continued a breakout season and joined an exclusive list of players in Braves history to have a game-tying hit and a game-winning hit in the same playoff contest, along with Tony Gonzalez (1969), Hank Aaron (1969), Michael Tucker (1998) and Brian Jordan (1999).
"[Riley's improvement] is really noticeable," Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. "You just see the confidence."
As for Freeman -- who put the Braves into the NLCS with a go-ahead, eighth-inning homer against the Milwaukee Brewers on Tuesday in the division series clincher -- Saturday's outing was arguably the worst game of his postseason career. For the first time, he struck out four times in a playoff game, his fourth whiff coming just minutes before Riley's heroics.
But Riley's emergence this season, which has continued during the playoffs, has signified something crucial for a club trying to finally get past the National League's behemoth in the Dodgers: This still-maturing club is a lot more than Freddie Freeman these days.
"I don't know that we won many games that Freddie's [struggled]," Braves manager Brian Snitker said. "And it's a good thing. I mean, that just shows you how these guys are growing and they're maturing and the moment isn't too big for them."
Riley, 24, entered this season with a .232 career batting average and 26 homers in 131 games over two big league campaigns. This season, those numbers exploded, as he hit .303 with 33 homers, 107 RBIs and 6.1 WAR, per baseball-reference.com. Those numbers are why the fans might not have been deluded in the MVP chants they directed Riley's way.
After Riley's winning hit, even as teammate Ozzie Albies raced home with the tiebreaking run, the Braves had poured out of the dugout in pursuit of Riley to celebrate. Red fireworks began shooting out of the stadium's upper reaches, part of the celebratory light show. The mascot ran around the field with a gigantic Braves flag. It's the kind of jubilation you expect from a winning hit by the home team in a playoff game.
"He's the big boss," Albies said, while describing his aim in successfully stealing second base to put himself in scoring position for Riley. "Yeah, once I got on, I [said] I'm going [to steal] so I can be in scoring position for Riley. I'm pretty sure; he's been hot. He's going to do the job. No doubt."
However, if not for Riley, the mood in Cobb County could have been very different, because it was a game the Braves very much needed to win.
Atlanta started young ace Max Fried, who entered the game as baseball's hottest pitcher. The Braves had home-field advantage over the 106-win Dodgers thanks to the latter's status as a wild-card team. And the Dodgers, who needed five grueling games to knock off the 107-win San Francisco Giants in the NLDS, went with a bullpen game in reaction to a heavily worked pitching staff.
For most of Saturday's game, the gambit worked. Fried wasn't as sharp as he has been in recent weeks, but he held the Dodgers to a pair of runs over six innings. Yet the Braves managed just a pair of runs over the parade of Dodgers relievers -- eight of them by the end of the night.
If Atlanta had not pulled out the victory and entered Game 2 down in the series -- with home-field advantage flipped to Los Angeles and the Dodgers sending future Hall of Famer Max Scherzer to the mound Sunday -- some mild panic might have set in at Truist Park.
"It doesn't get easier, that's for darn sure," Snitker said. "I think any, all these wins here in this thing are going to be big. They're all going to be hard to come by."
Instead of panic, there was bedlam -- and for that, you have Riley, the Braves' newest MVP candidate, to thank.
"You see what he's doing, the at-bats in the [division series], here," Snitker said. "I think that kid's definitely taken the next step forward."