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The game between the San Francisco Giants and Atlanta Braves at Truist Park has been rained out today.
The San Francisco Giants and Atlanta Braves will not play as scheduled tonight after hazardous weather conditions forced a postponement. Here’s what led to the decision, and when the makeup game will be played.
The postponement creates scheduling challenges and raises questions about how the makeup game will affect each team’s pitching plans and upcoming series.
A flood watch and wind advisory blanketed the Atlanta area through the evening hours, making Thursday night baseball at Truist Park an impossibility. Precipitation probability sat at 90%, with rainfall totals of one to two inches expected. Thunderstorms were forecast to arrive before 11 p.m. ET covering the entirety of what would have been a 7:15 p.m. first pitch. Wind gusts of up to 30 mph added another layer of hazard to an already unplayable forecast.
Multiple rounds of heavy rainfall pushed widespread accumulations to two to four inches across the Atlanta metro area, with localized amounts running even higher and flash flooding risk elevated across portions of the region. That combination of standing water, lightning, dangerous gusts, and deteriorating field conditions left organizers no viable path to getting the game in Thursday night.
The makeup game is scheduled for Monday, Aug. 31, at 6:05 p.m. ET at Truist Park. Tickets purchased for Thursday’s postponed contest are expected to be honored or exchanged for the rescheduled date, consistent with standard weather-postponement policy for this series.
Shifting a mid-June game to the final day of August is not a neutral transaction. Both rosters will look meaningfully different by late summer — injury histories, depth chart changes, and the impact of September roster expansion are all in play. The Braves, who held the NL East lead at approximately 46-27 in recent standings, already had at least one other makeup game on the calendar: a Chicago White Sox contest slated for Aug. 20. Stacking additional scheduling demands into that late-summer window complicates bullpen management and starting rotation alignment for both clubs heading into the stretch run.
The Giants arrived at Truist Park riding momentum. They swept a Wednesday doubleheader that featured a Luis Arraez home run and consistent pitching, then packed their bags without playing the series finale — the rubber game of a three-game set that had already absorbed one weather disruption. The June 16 opener was suspended by rain with San Francisco ahead, 3-2, in the bottom of the second inning, before resuming the following day as part of a split-schedule doubleheader.
Both clubs get an unexpected breather Thursday. Whether that rest helps or costs them depends entirely on where each team stands when Aug. 31 arrives.
Jonathan Vankin JONATHAN VANKIN is an award-winning journalist who covers MLB, NBA, NFL, NHL, boxing, golf, and Olympic sports for Heavy.com. He twice won New England Newspaper and Press Association awards for sports feature writing. He was a sports editor and writer at The Daily Yomiuri in Tokyo, Japan, covering the Olympics, pro baseball, boxing, sumo and other sports. More about Jonathan Vankin
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