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The Chicago Cubs (27-16) and Atlanta Braves (30-13) close a first-place series at Truist Park with Atlanta carrying the cleaner current shape. Chicago still owns the NL Central lead, but the trip has gone cold fast: four straight losses, three total runs in those four games and only 13 hits during that drought. Atlanta has already taken the first two games 5-2 and 4-1, became the first team in MLB to reach 30 wins, and has done it with a varied offense that has stretched well beyond one superstar lane. Drake Baldwin homered Wednesday, Michael Harris II started the decisive eighth-inning push, Mike Yastrzemski doubled home the lead run, and Mauricio Dubón turned the game into a multi-run margin with a two-run shot. Below is my preview, prediction, and pick for today’s baseball game between the Atlanta Braves and the Chicago Cubs.
Here’s how I’ll play it. I’ll be pumping out these predictions for individual games all season, with plenty of coverage here on DraftKings Network. Follow my handle @dansby_edits for more betting plays.
Chris Sale gives Atlanta the sturdier spine. He enters 6-2 with a 2.20 ERA, 0.88 WHIP and 56 strikeouts in 49 innings, and the expected-contact sheet backs the run prevention: .209 batting average allowed, .348 slugging allowed, .280 xwOBA, 87.2 mph average exit velocity, 32.2% hard-hit rate, 29.3% strikeout rate and 6.3% walk rate. Ben Brown deserves respect on the other side: 1-1, 1.82 ERA, 0.91 WHIP, 27 strikeouts in 29.2 innings, plus a sharp .215 wOBA, .257 xwOBA, .206 xBA, .278 xSLG and 3.8% barrel rate allowed. The workload profile changes the full-game math. Brown just moved back into a starting role with four hitless innings against Texas, so Atlanta should get multiple cracks at Chicago’s middle relief rather than living entirely inside Brown’s best 12-out pocket.
Atlanta’s bats give the run line real margin equity. The Braves are carrying the better right-handed pitching attack, and the individual contact quality is loud in multiple spots. Matt Olson has 14 HR, a .343 ISO, .295/.374/.639 slash, .429 wOBA and 177 wRC+, with a 93.4 mph average exit velocity, 51.2% hard-hit rate, .403 xwOBA and 19.0% barrel rate. Baldwin has 11 HR, a .225 ISO, .295/.378/.520 slash, .395 wOBA and 153 wRC+, with a 91.8 mph average exit velocity, 50.4% hard-hit rate, .394 xwOBA and 14.7% barrel rate. Harris might be the most dangerous margin piece because his underlying sheet is even louder than the slash: .311/.338/.504, .368 wOBA and 135 wRC+, with a 95.2 mph average exit velocity, 58.9% hard-hit rate, .420 xwOBA and 17.0% barrel rate. Ozzie Albies adds an 8-HR, .366 wOBA, 134 wRC+ switch-hitting bridge, while Austin Riley’s 91.2 mph exit velocity and 46.0% hard-hit rate keep another right-handed damage lane alive behind the lefty thump.
The Cubs’ counterargument has substance, which is why Cubs team total under 2.5 carries more fragility than the recent scores suggest. Chicago has hit .266/.362/.424 with a .785 OPS, 15 HR, 59 walks and 107 strikeouts against left-handed pitching, and the lineup still has Sale scare points. Seiya Suzuki brings a .397 wOBA, .375 xwOBA, 43.2% hard-hit rate and 9.5% barrel rate; Ian Happ has a .366 wOBA, .362 xwOBA and 18.3% barrel rate; Michael Busch has been the current-form engine with 10 hits, one homer, 10 RBI, 11 walks and a 1.037 OPS over the last 10 team games. The issue is concentration. Busch has carried too much of the recent offense, Suzuki is the cleanest power answer, and the broader group arrives in its worst scoring stretch of the season against a lefty whose slider/four-seam pairing is still missing bats and avoiding hard contact.
The full-game angle matters more than the first five here. Atlanta’s bullpen has a season-long No. 1 power ranking with a 3.04 ERA, and the current late-inning shape is strong: Raisel Iglesias has yet to allow a run in 12 2/3 innings, while the recent usage sheet has Iglesias at 27 pitches, Dylan Lee at 40 and Robert Suarez at 51 over the last seven days. Chicago’s bullpen sits 20th in season-long power ranking with a 3.89 ERA, and the matchup page shows more vulnerability behind Brown: Phil Maton at an 8.44 ERA and 5.16 FIP, Javier Assad at a 6.00 ERA, Jacob Webb at a 3.63 ERA and 4.54 FIP, and a broader bridge that has already cracked in this series. Braves moneyline at -181 forces a premium price. Braves team total over 4.5 at +115 is live, but Brown’s .257 xwOBA and 3.8% barrel rate make five Atlanta runs a slightly heavier ask. Braves -1.5 at +119 uses more paths: Sale suppressing Chicago, Atlanta’s top-half power creating a lead, Brown exiting before the late innings, and the Braves’ bullpen protecting a multi-run game.
Best bet: Braves -1.5 +119. Playable to +105. Sale gives Atlanta the run-prevention floor, Olson-Baldwin-Harris supply enough current-form impact to separate, and Brown’s quality comes with a workload setup that should expose Chicago’s middle relief before the game is over. The Cubs’ lefty split keeps the sweat real, but their current offense has narrowed into too few reliable scoring lanes.
Projected score: Braves 5, Cubs 2.
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