Padres and Yu Darvish, with extra day of rest, meet Braves
San Diego’s Yu Darvish will put his shutout streak on the line Sunday night — on an extra day of rest — when the visiting Padres face the Atlanta Braves in the second game of their four-game series. Darvish’s start was pushed back when Saturday’s game was postponed because of heavy rain in the Atlanta area. The postponement means the teams will meet on Monday at 12:20 p.m. and 6:20 p.m. ET for a day-night doubleheader to conclude the series. This is San Diego’s only trip to Atlanta. Darvish (3-1, 2.43
ERA), a veteran right-hander, has made three consecutive scoreless appearances and has worked 18 innings without allowing a run. His mound opponent will be Braves right-hander Bryce Elder (1-1, 4.79). The Padres won the opener 3-1 on Friday to end their three-game losing streak. San Diego has won 10 of the last 14 meetings in Atlanta. Darvish has not allowed a run since the fourth inning of his start against the Los Angeles Dodgers on April 14. Since then, he’s thrown five scoreless innings against Cincinnati, five against the Chicago Cubs, and seven against the Dodgers, which matched his longest outing of the season. “I’ve always said he’s the toughest righty I’ve ever faced,” San Diego second baseman Xander
Bogaerts said. “The guy has like seven, eight pitches. … To me, he’s the toughest, with all the pitches he has and different speeds.” In beating the Dodgers on Sunday for his third straight win, Darvish allowed only two hits, one walk and matched his season high with seven strikeouts. “The plan was to kind of see how they reacted to the pitches. The fastball was coming out of the hand right, it was working nicely,” Darvish said after that game. “Obviously they are a very good team, but to be able to take the series against them, for sure it is going to give us some confidence moving forward.” Darvish has made seven
career starts against the Braves, going 1-4 with a 5.30 ERA. He hasn’t faced them since 2022, when he went 1-0 with a 4.38 ERA in two starts. Elder will make his fifth start since being recalled from Triple-A Gwinnett to fill the spot created by the season-ending injury to ace Spencer Strider. Three of Elder’s previous outings have been solid, and he had a nice bounce-back last Sunday when he allowed two runs in 5 1/3 innings against the New York Mets. Elder had been ripped for seven runs in 3 1/3 innings by the Dodgers on May 4. “We want to give the guys a chance to get it done at the plate and leave the bullpen in a situation where we can get it done,” Elder said. “As starters, that’s kind of what we’re trying to do week in, week out.”