September 15, 1993
Atlanta Braves 7 (W: Smith, 4-8)
Cincinnati Reds 6 (L: Dibble, 1-4)
93-53
1st place
3.5 games ahead 
INCREDIBLE BRAVES COMEBACK PUSHES ATLANTA FURTHER AHEAD IN WEST
In a season of incredible games, the Atlanta Braves picked tonight for the most incredible of all, and they may have launched themselves well into position to win their third straight NL Western Division title. And for the third year in a row, the Braves victimized the Cincinnati Reds with a stunning comeback, this one witnessed nationally on ESPN.
Two years ago, the Braves signaled their entry into the contender category by rallying from three runs down - with two outs - in the 9th inning against Reds flamethrower Rob Dibble. About six weeks later in their final road trip of 1991, the Braves rallied from a 6-0 deficit with a game-winning home run off this same Dibble, staying close enough to the Dodgers to eventually surpass them. Last year the Braves trailed the Reds, 5-2, entering the bottom of the 8th before rallying to tie and then homering off the other flame throwing Nasty Boy, Norm Charlton, a win that broke Cincinnati's back and began their descent and Atlanta's rise to another pennant. And then there was what happened tonight, when the 1994 Braves made an appearance and helped lift this year's Braves to a 3 1/2 game lead over the rapidly fading Giants, who lost their 7th straight contest.
Perhaps feeling he had a game to give and wanted to give his starter's an extra day's rest, Atlanta Manager Bobby Cox sent Kent Mercker to the mound to oppose the NL's best pitcher, Jose Rijo. Mercker has basically become a starter over the last six weeks due to the arm troubles of Pete Smith. It was only his 11th career start, and Mercker and the Braves fell behind when Jacob Brumfield led off the 3rd inning with a solo home run to put the Reds ahead, 1-0. The Braves, though, tied it in the bottom of the inning when Otis Nixon tripled with two outs and then scored on Jeff Blauser's single. Then in the sixth, Mercker weakened.
Chris Sabo singled and when Hal Morris attempted to bunt Sabo to second, he got more than he planned when Rafael Belliard's throwing error scored Sabo and put Morris on first. He later scored after singles by Juan Samuel and Jeff Branson, ending Mercker's night with Atlanta trailing, 3-1. Fred McGriff golfed a solo shot off Rijo in the sixth, and the game entered the late stages with the Reds leading, 3-2. Trying to hold the Reds at bay, Cox sent out the wild flamethrower Mark Wohlers, who walked Sabo, gave up a single to Morris and retired Joe Oliver on a sacrifice bunt that put both runners in scoring position with one out. Two singles and a double later, the Reds were suddenly in front, 6-2, and the outlook was bleak for the Braves. When Atlanta reached the 9th down by four runs and near the bottom of the batting order, it looked worse still. But Damon Berryhill opened the 9th with a double off Johnny Ruffin, and since every run counted, Bill Pecota came on as a pinch-runner. The next two batters are expected to be stars in the Atlanta future, Chipper Jones, who made his debut last night, and Ryan Klesko, who was sent up to pinch-hit for Ramon Caraballo. Jones struck out but then Klesko took a gargantuan swing that blasted a two-run shot deep into the right field seats, a ball that got out of the yard so quickly there was almost no time to react. Jeff Reardon, whom Atlanta fans are still mad about over his failures in last year's World Series, came on and gave up a double to Otis Nixon. At this point, the Braves now had the tying run at the plate in the form of Jeff Blauser, and the shortstop singled but hit it hard enough that the fleet Nixon had to stop at third base. The Reds summoned Dibble to face the power hitters coming up next, and ESPN noted quickly that batter Ron Gant's career numbers against Dibble were abysmal, 2-for-16 with 7 strikeouts. Dibble threw one right across the middle of the plate and Gant, though behind the pitch, got hit bat out and hit the ball. It carried into left field and hit the top of the fence, going over for a game-winning three run shot that sent the Atlanta crowd of 48,000 fans into sheer ecstasy, celebrating the win, the excitement, and the fact the Braves are now 3 1/2 games ahead of the Giants.
The Braves have momentum.
The Giants are slumping.
And there are only 16 games left to see who finishes as the last team standing.