Bad seventh inning hurts Braves in loss to Padres

The Atlanta Braves' Freddie Freeman is tagged out by San Diego Padres catcher Raffy Lopez as he tries to score on a Kurt Suzuki grounder in the third inning of Friday night's game in Atlanta.
The Atlanta Braves' Freddie Freeman is tagged out by San Diego Padres catcher Raffy Lopez as he tries to score on a Kurt Suzuki grounder in the third inning of Friday night's game in Atlanta.

ATLANTA - Hunter Renfroe hit a go-ahead, two-run single in San Diego's five-run seventh inning, and Freddy Galvis had a three-run homer and went 5-for-5 as the Padres beat the Atlanta Braves 9-3 Friday night.

Freddie Freeman's 15th home run this season gave Atlanta a 3-2 lead in the fifth. Jose Pirela hit a two-run homer for San Diego in the first.

Atlanta reliever Sam Freeman (1-3) gave up three runs in the seventh.

Before Renfroe's single, the Padres were on the verge of wasting a bases-loaded, no-out opportunity for the second time in the game. Pirela grounded into a double play in which pinch-runner Cory Spangenberg was forced out at the plate. Renfroe then hit Freeman's 1-2 pitch up the middle, driving in Travis Jankowski and Eric Hosmer.

Galvis added a three-run homer just beyond the reach of leaping center fielder Ender Inciarte, off Peter Moylan. Galvis had a run-scoring single, giving him four RBIs, in the ninth. The five hits were a career high.

Freeman's homer gave him hits in 25 of his past 26 games. He led the National League with his .342 batting average entering the game.

Pirela's homer, his first of the season, drove in Travis Jankowski, who doubled down the left-field line on Brandon McCarthy's first pitch. McCarthy allowed two runs on eight hits in 5 2/3 innings.

Clayton Richard (6-6) allowed three runs, two earned, on six hits in six innings. Luis Castillo closed the game with two scoreless innings.

Home plate umpire Joe West ejected Padres manager Andy Green in the fourth after Green argued West's changed call on an apparent strikeout by Atlanta's Ozzie Albies. West initially clinched his right fist as if to call Albies out. He then changed his mind, apparently thinking Albies tipped the ball - which was not caught by catcher Raffy Lopez before it hit the dirt.

Green argued and was headed back to the dugout when he was tossed by West. Green then turned back toward the plate and threw his cap in the general direction of West before engaging the umpire in a more spirited argument. First-base umpire Doug Eddings eventually stepped between Green and West and helped to point the manager back toward the dugout.

It was the second straight game Green had problems with an umpire's call. He was upset after a video review confirmed Tyler Flowers was hit by a pitch in the Braves' 4-2 win Thursday night.

It was the Braves' turn to complain in the ninth when a video review failed to overturn a safe call on Renfroe's slide at second base. Umpires ruled shortstop Dansby Swanson failed to touch second base before throwing to first on Castillo's grounder.

Attendance was 41,497, Atlanta's fourth sellout of the season.

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