The top two division winners (first two seeds) are determined by regular season winning percentages. The final two teams are the winners of the National League Wild Card Series, played between the league's third through sixth-seeded teams.
The Atlanta Braves (104–58) clinched their sixth straight postseason appearance on September 10, the third longest active streak in MLB behind the Dodgers and Astros,[1] clinched the National League East on September 13,[2] a first-round bye on September 18,[3] the best record in the NL on September 27,[4][5][6] and the best overall record on September 28, giving them home-field advantage throughout the entire playoffs.[7][8] They played against the Philadelphia Phillies (90–72), who clinched their second straight postseason appearance on September 26,[9][10] and swept the Miami Marlins in the Wild Card Series. This was the third postseason meeting between the two teams, following the 1993 National League Championship Series and last year's National League Division Series, both of which the Phillies won. The Braves won the regular season series against the Phillies, 8–5, with seven of those meetings coming in September.[11]
This was the third postseason meeting between Atlanta and Philadelphia. They previously met in the 1993 NLCS and 2022 NLDS, both of which were won by Philadelphia.
The Phillies broke a scoreless tie in their half of the fourth inning as Bryson Stott's single scored Bryce Harper. In the bottom of the inning, Jeff Hoffman struck out Michael Harris II to escape the bases-loaded jam with two outs. In the sixth inning, Harper homered off Spencer Strider on the first pitch of the at-bat to extend the lead to two. In the eighth inning, the Phillies loaded the bases and Trea Turner scored on catcher's interference during J. T. Realmuto's at-bat to give the Phillies a 3–0 lead. Atlanta managed one more threat in the bottom of the eighth inning with runners on first and third and one out, but Turner started a sparkling inning-ending double play off the bat of Ozzie Albies to end the threat. Former Braves closer Craig Kimbrel finished things out for the Phillies and gave them the first game of the best-of-five.
Game 2 featured starters Zack Wheeler for the Phillies and Max Fried for the Braves. The Phillies broke through in their half of the first inning when Alec Bohm singled to center to plate Trea Turner. Two innings later, the Phillies lengthened the lead to 3–0, when J. T. Realmuto hit a two-run homer to right-center field to score Bryce Harper. The Phillies added a fourth run in the top of the fifth inning when Nick Castellanos scored on a Bryson Stott sacrifice fly. The Braves finally scored their first run of the series in the bottom of the sixth when Ronald Acuña Jr. scored on a fielding error by Turner after a single by Ozzie Albies. After six innings of play, the Phillies led 4–1. In the bottom of the seventh inning, the Braves got closer after Travis d'Arnaud hit a two-run homer scoring Matt Olson. Heading to the home half of the eighth and trailing 4–3, Austin Riley hit a two-run homer, on a full count, that scored Acuña, giving the Braves their first lead of the game at 5–4. In the top of the ninth, after A. J. Minter walked Harper, closer Raisel Iglesias entered the game. After Realmuto flied out to center for the first out, Castellanos drove the ball to right-center field, and Michael Harris II made a leaping catch near the wall for the second out. The throw came into the infield and Riley was able to grab the loose ball and fire to first to double-up Harper, ending the game. This was the first 8-5-3 double play in postseason history.[25] With the victory, the Braves evened the series as the series shifted to Philadelphia.
The starters for Game 3 consisted of Bryce Elder for the Braves and Aaron Nola for the Phillies. The Braves got the scoring started in the third inning when Ozzie Albies singled home Ronald Acuña Jr.. The bottom of the inning had the Braves defense facing a red-hot Phillies offense as Nick Castellanos tied the game with a solo home run and Bryce Harper hit a three-run shot to give the Phillies a 4–1 lead. After a pitching change, J. T. Realmuto drove home two on a double to left giving the Phillies a 6–1 lead after three innings. In the bottom of the fifth inning, Harper hit his second home run of the game off Brad Hand to extend the Phillies lead to 7–1. In the sixth, the Braves got closer after Orlando Arcia singled home Marcell Ozuna, to make the score 7–2. In the bottom half, Trea Turner's solo home run made it 8–2. The bottom of the eighth has the Phillies playing long ball again as Castellanos hits his second home run of the game and Brandon Marsh hits his first home run giving the Phillies a 10–2 lead. With the six home runs, the Phillies set a franchise postseason record and tied a Major League postseason record with most home runs in a single game.[26]
Game 4 consisted of Spencer Strider for the Braves and Ranger Suárez for the Phillies. The Braves started the scoring in the fourth inning when Austin Riley hit a solo home run. In the bottom of that inning, Nick Castellanos hit a home run off Spencer Strider to tie the game 1–1. In the bottom of the fifth inning, Trea Turner broke the tie with a solo home run to give the Phillies a 2–1 lead. In the bottom of the sixth inning, Castellanos hit his second home run of the game (and his fourth in two days) to extend the Phillies lead to 3–1. The Braves loaded the bases with two outs in the seventh, but Ronald Acuña Jr. hit a deep fly ball that was caught by Johan Rojas to end the inning. Matt Strahm relieved Gregory Soto in the top of the ninth inheriting runners on first and third and nobody out, Strahm induced a pop out from Kevin Pillar and a shallow fly out from Eddie Rosario on consecutive pitches. Now with two outs, Strahm ended the series by striking out pinch-hitter Vaughn Grissom to eliminate the Braves and send the Phillies to the NLCS for the second consecutive year.
The Diamondbacks pounced on Clayton Kershaw early in the top of the first inning, as the first five batters for Arizona scored, highlighted by a three-run home run by Gabriel Moreno. The onslaught continued, as Evan Longoria's double scored Alek Thomas to extend the lead to 6–0 and chase Kershaw out of the game, having recorded just one out; marking the shortest start of his career.[27] In the next inning, three more runs were scored by Corbin Carroll on a solo home run, an RBI double by Lourdes Gurriel Jr., and Longoria on a sacrifice fly. In the seventh, Alek Thomas homered off Michael Grove to extend the Diamondbacks lead to 10–0. In the eighth inning, Tommy Pham homered inside the right-field foul pole off Alex Vesia to make the score 11–0. In the bottom half, Will Smith hit a two-run triple to score Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman, ending the shutout, but not the rout. The Diamondbacks took Game 1, 11–2, in the best-of-five series.
This was Merrill Kelly's first win against Los Angeles in 17 starts.[28]
The starters for Game 2 featured Zac Gallen for the Diamondbacks and Bobby Miller for the Dodgers. The Diamondbacks jumped on the Dodgers again in the first inning as they scored three times. Corbin Carroll scored on a sacrifice fly by Christian Walker, Ketel Marte scored on a ground out, and Tommy Pham scored on a single by Lourdes Gurriel Jr.. The Dodgers got on the scoreboard when J. D. Martinez hit a solo home run. The Diamondbacks extended their lead to 4–1 in the sixth when Gurriel Jr. hit a solo shot. The Dodgers got that run back in their half of the inning when Enrique Hernández drove home Max Muncy on an infield single. This was the closest that the Dodgers could get as they dropped the second game by a score of 4–2, giving the Diamondbacks a 2–0 lead in the series heading to Phoenix.
The starters for Game 3 featured Lance Lynn for the Dodgers and Brandon Pfaadt for the Diamondbacks. The game was held scoreless for the first two innings, which was the first time that Arizona was not leading in the whole series. The Diamondbacks pounced on Lynn in the bottom of the third, as Arizona unleashed four home runs from Geraldo Perdomo, Ketel Marte, Christian Walker, and Gabriel Moreno, becoming the first team in postseason history to hit four homers in a single inning.[29] The Dodgers got their first run of the game when Chris Taylor singled home Max Muncy in the top of the seventh inning. Later, the Dodgers made the score 4–2 when Enrique Hernandez singled home Will Smith. Paul Sewald closed out the upset victory, and series sweep of the 100-win Dodgers, in the ninth to help the Diamondbacks advance to the NLCS for the first time since 2007.[30] This was the third straight season that the Dodgers lost a postseason series to a team with 15 or more losses than them in the regular season after the 2022 NLDS and the 2021 NLCS.[31]
MLB.com ranked the Diamondbacks’ sweep of the Dodgers as the sixth biggest upset in postseason history.[32]
Formerly the Boston Red Stockings, Boston Red Caps, Boston Beaneaters, Boston Doves, Boston Rustlers, Boston Bees, Boston Braves and the Milwaukee Braves