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Home»Baseball»Braves vs. Royals series recap: An ideal start to the season
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Braves vs. Royals series recap: An ideal start to the season

News RoomBy News RoomMarch 30, 2026No Comments9 Mins Read
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Braves vs. Royals series recap: An ideal start to the season

The season is finally underway and it’s always fun to talk about a winning series to get things going, right? It certainly beats the stuffing out of the way last season started, right? Anyways, it was truly exciting to be in the building for Opening Night on Friday and it was even more encouraging to see this team pick up a strong series win right out of the gate against a Royals team that does have some real aspirations of making the Postseason heading into this season.

So how did everything go down? It’s time to dive into the first series recap of the season, so join me on this quick journey!

Friday, March 27

Braves 6, Royals 0

This was about as good of a start to the season as you could ask for as the Braves delivered a complete team victory to get their season off to a winning start. Chris Sale pitched six scoreless innings in this one and even if he wasn’t at his dominant best in this one, it also helped considerably to have some lights-out defense being played behind him. Dylan Lee, Robert Suarez and Tyler Kinley each entered following Sale’s exit and they each clamped down on the Royals in order to make this a shutout win for Atlanta.

Ozzie Albies became the first Braves player to hit a home run during the regular season for the third season in a row and this time, his solo shot that he pulled just barely fair around the left-field foul pole got the Braves out ahead early in the first inning. Ozzie’s dinger was the first of three on the night for the Braves, as Drake Baldwin added a solo shot of his own in the third inning and then Michael Harris II doubled the lead with a two-run shot that made it 4-0 Braves.

Mauricio Dubón then made sure that his debut with the Braves was a successful one as he delivered a two-RBI double in the eighth inning to make it 6-0 and officially put the Braves into cruising territory. As I mentioned earlier, Atlanta was truly firing on all cylinders in this one — the bats were potent, the pitching was reliable, the defense was on point and the base running was effective and aggressive. A truly ideal game of baseball was played by this ball club on Friday night.

Saturday, March 28

Braves 6, Royals 2

This was less ideal but it was certainly more dramatic. The Braves were unable to crack the code that Michael Wacha was offering them in this one, as Wacha ended up going for six scoreless innings while striking out seven Atlanta batters. The good news was that Reynaldo López was going pitch-for-pitch with him and it also turned out that the mechanical issues that plagued López during his final start of spring training appeared to have been fixed and he looked more like his normal self in this outing. López also pitched six strong innings as this one turned into a pitchers’ duel.

Unfortunately, López ended up getting the short end of the stick when it came to the duel, as he ended up giving up a homer to Salvador Perez in the seventh inning in order to break the deadlock. That was the last batter that López faced and things didn’t get a lot better for the Braves in the next inning as Joel Payamps ended up conceding a run to make it 2-0 Royals at that late point in the contest. The game went into the bottom of the ninth inning with that same 2-0 score and that’s when we got our first sign of high leverage magic from the Braves this season.

Before Royals closer Carlos Estévez threw his first pitch, FOX ran two graphics: One that stated that Estévez led all of MLB in saves last season and another that stated that the Royals were 73-0 in 2025 in games where they led after eight innings. I had a strange feeling that the commentator’s curse (Well, the Chyron graphics’ curse) was on and sure enough, Estévez walked Baldwin to lead off the ninth. Matt Olson put runners on the corners with his single and then Mike Yastrzemski marked his Braves debut with an one-out RBI single that cut the deficit to just one. Michael Harris II made it a tie game after he smacked one off of Estévez’s foot. The save was officially blown and now it was time for some magic.

Dominic Smith was also making his Braves debut in this game and with plenty of inspiration guiding him, he took advantage of a full count pitch that crossed the plate right in his sweet spot. Smith sent the ball flying into the Chop House for a walk-off grand slam that sent Truist Park into a complete and total delirium.

Sunday, March 29

Royals 4, Braves 1

With the series in hand, Grant Holmes got the ball to start this one hoping to make it three great starts in a row for the already injury-beleaguered Braves rotation. While Holmes wasn’t horrible, this was definitely the weakest start of the three Opening Series starts for the Braves, as the Royals tacked on one run in the third, fourth, and fifth innings in order to have a somewhat comfortable cushion heading into the later portion of the game.

It didn’t help matters that the Braves had some really bad luck in this one as far as xBA is concerned. Atlanta had the five hardest-hit balls of this contest and four of the five longest-hit balls in this game as well. They also finished with an xBA of .314 to KC’s .196 in this game as well. Usually that results in a win but instead, those long, hard-hit fly balls from the Braves ended up finding gloves instead of the seats while the Royals were able to dink-and-dunk their way into a comfortable lead.

Seth Lugo ended up tossing 6.1 shutout innings in this one and then the Kansas City bullpen came in and did an effective job. An eighth-inning Drake Baldwin home run off of John Schreiber made sure that the Braves didn’t end up getting shut out on a day when they were hitting the ball really well but that was all of the substantial offense that Atlanta ended up getting in this one. Lucas Erceg got a double play ball to wipe out a one-out single from Yaz that could’ve been the start of another magical ninth inning for the Braves. Instead, the dream of 162-0 died in the third game of the season for Atlanta.

It also has to be noted that Didier Fuentes made his 2026 debut during this game. While he did end up conceding a run, he pitched the final four innings of this one and he looked a whole lot more confident in this outing than he did in his initial big league stint, so there’s that.

While you always want to be greedy and pick up a sweep, the Braves still had a lovely start to the season with this series win. The first game in particular was very encouraging, as that game feels like the proof of concept of sorts when it comes to the style of play that Walt Weiss would like to see. I’d imagine that if the Braves are going to be heading back to the Postseason, they’ll have their fair share of wins that look like what happened on Friday night.

They’ll also have their fair share of losses that look like what happened on Sunday afternoon. Sure, it stunk to see Atlanta drop that one when the underlying stats suggest that they were the better team but I’d definitely prefer to go down like that instead of looking completely and totally feeble at the plate like this team did for long stretches of the 2025 season. While you don’t want to see the Braves drop too many games like that where they had everything going for them except the runs being put on the board, it’s the type of loss that makes you think that this is going to be a very, very tough team to put away on most nights.

Lastly, this might be a nit-pick of sorts but there’s still plenty of improvement to be made in the ABS department when it comes to this team picking and choosing the right time for challenges. We saw on Saturday night that the team actually ran out of challenges in the first inning. I’d imagine that both Drake Baldwin and Ronald Acuña Jr. got a bit of a talking-to when it comes to figuring out the right and proper time to pat the helmet and maybe this’ll be something that will be more of a work-in-progress for the Braves than other teams. For now, there’s plenty of space to improve.

That’s my only real quibble for what was a very good Opening Series for the Braves. They won in comfortable fashion, they won in dramatic fashion and they lost in one of the very few ways that you can find comfort in losing. They’ll have a solid chance to keep things going in the right direction too, as they’ll be staying at home for the next three games while the Athletics will be coming into town all the way from Toronto licking their wounds after starting their season off getting swept by the defending American League champions.

If things are going to keep going in the right direction, the bottom of the rotation is going to have to come up big with Bryce Elder and (maybe) Jose Suarez getting the ball before Chris Sale returns to the mound on Wednesday. Things may be fine if the offense continues to swing the bat like they have to start the season but it’s clear that the pitching will need to continue holding up its end of the bargain if the Braves want to really get rolling to kick off the season. Let’s see what happens, y’all.

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