Toussaint victorious in debut

Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Touki Toussaint sits in the dugout after completing six innings of the first game in a baseball doubleheader against the Miami Marlins, Monday, Aug. 13, 2018, in Atlanta. It was Toussaint's MLB debut. (AP Photo/John Amis)
Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Touki Toussaint sits in the dugout after completing six innings of the first game in a baseball doubleheader against the Miami Marlins, Monday, Aug. 13, 2018, in Atlanta. It was Toussaint's MLB debut. (AP Photo/John Amis)

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BRAVES 9, MARLINS 1

ATLANTA -- Touki Toussaint wants to lead other Haitians to the big leagues. He set quite a compelling example in his debut with the Atlanta Braves.

The 22-year-old Haitian-American broke into the majors with six dazzling innings, leading the first-place Braves to a 9-1 rout of the Miami Marlins in the first game of a doubleheader Monday. Ronald Acuna homered and drove in three runs to make things easier for his fellow rookie.

Looking cool as can be on a sweltering summer day in Atlanta, Toussaint took full advantage of his temporary promotion to serve as the team's 26th player. He surrendered two hits and limited the damage from his only serious jam to a single run.

The right-hander hopes word of his success gets back to Haiti, an impoverished Caribbean nation that has no passion for baseball and has never sent a native-born player to the majors.

"To be able to play on this stage, to be able to represent my country, it's definitely humbling," Toussaint said. "Hopefully kids see that, go ahead and take a shot at it."

Toussaint (1-0) was born in Florida but moved to Haiti just a few months later , living there for about eight years. He returned to Florida after his parents split up and gave baseball a try, though it didn't go well at first.

"I was terrible," Toussaint recalled. "I had 24 at-bats and struck out like 22 times."

He walked away from the game for about a year, focusing on soccer, but eventually returned to America's pastime. He took up pitching at a relatively late age, getting serious during his sophomore year of high school. He quickly blossomed into a top prospect who was picked in the first round by Arizona in 2014.

"You learn something new every single day, so it doesn't get boring," Toussaint said. "That's something I gravitated towards. I love it."

Toussaint was dealt to the Braves in 2015, one of several trades made by Atlanta to bolster its farm system during a massive rebuilding effort.

That effort is paying off big time for the Braves, who were a single percentage point ahead of idle Philadelphia at the beginning of the day and edged a little further in front leading into Game 2. Toussaint became the third pitching prospect to win his big league debut for Atlanta this season, following Mike Soroka and Kolby Allard.

Toussaint's mother, Kahaso Kiti, cheered from the stands and waited for him afterward outside the clubhouse at SunTrust Park.

"I can't even tell you how I feel," she said. "He's my son. I'll always be proud of him. That's my baby."

Acuna has quickly established himself as a budding star at age 20. He hit his third leadoff home run of the season and the 16th overall with his opposite-field drive into the Braves' bullpen in the bottom half of the first off Pablo Lopez (2-3).

Acuna added a two-run double in the sixth, highlighting a five-run outburst that turned the game into a blowout.

But it was Toussaint's performance that really resonated, especially given all the hardships so many Haitians have experienced. Even those who have moved to the Dominican Republic side of Hispaniola, the Caribbean country where baseball is wildly popular and has produced more than 700 big leaguers, face brutal discrimination that keeps most from pursuing their dreams.

Toussaint wants to make a difference beyond the field.

"He's adamant about that," his mother said. "He's got enough people who know him and know of him down there."

After breezing through the first, Toussaint ran into trouble. Derek Dietrich walked, J.T. Riddle singled and Issac Galloway tied the game with a run-scoring double that left runners at second and third with no outs.

But Toussaint retired Magneuris Sierra on a liner to left -- not deep enough to allow Riddle to tag up and score. Yadiel Rivera struck out, and Lopez took a 3-2 fastball for a called third strike that ended the threat.

"He kept us off balance," Marlins Manager Don Mattingly said. "He doesn't really get the ball to the left side of the plate. He's a guy you've got to see and limit the plate. Just cover one side with him, really. First time seeing him gave us a little trouble."

SUNDAY'S LATE GAME

CUBS 4, NATIONALS 3 Pinch-hitter David Bote smashed a grand slam against Ryan Madson with two outs in the ninth inning to lift the host Chicago Cubs over the Washington Nationals. Bote's long drive to center field came after Washington's Max Scherzer and Chicago's Cole Hamels delivered dominant starts. Madson (2-5) came in with a 3-0 lead to start the ninth and quickly ran into trouble. He gave up an infield single to Jason Heyward with one out and hit Albert Almora with a pitch. Madson then retired Kyle Schwarber on a foul pop before hitting Contreras to load the bases, but Bote drove a 2-2 pitch well beyond the center-field wall. Teammates mobbed him as he crossed the plate and fans chanted "Bote! Bote!" It was quite a turn after the Cubs got shut down for most of the night. But they managed to take two of three in the first meeting between these teams since Chicago won the NL division series last year. Bote's drive made a winner of Justin Wilson (4-3), who got the final two outs in the ninth. The Nationals managed three hits, but looked as though they were on their way with Scherzer tossing three-hit ball over seven scoreless innings. The three-time Cy Young Award winner struck out 11 and walked one. Hamels was about as good, giving up 1 run and 1 hit in 7 innings. He struck out nine and walked one in his third start since Chicago acquired him from Texas.

Sports on 08/14/2018

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