Atlanta Braves

Hudson picked for sixth Opening Day start

Tim Hudson will start April 1 against Philadelphia at Turner Field.
Tim Hudson will start April 1 against Philadelphia at Turner Field.
By David O Brien
March 21, 2013

After going with Kris Medlen to start the Wild Card game in October, the Braves will turn to their eldest pitcher, Tim Hudson, to start Opening Day.

Manager Fredi Gonzalez announced Thursday that Hudson would start April 1 against Philadelphia at Turner Field, his sixth Opening Day start and first since 2008.

“It’s an honor and a privilege to start Opening Day with any club, especially this one,” said Hudson, 37, who’ll be followed in the rotation by left-hander Paul Maholm, Medlen, lefty Mike Minor and Julio Teheran.

“Why not give it to the veteran guy?” Gonzalez said. “The Opening Day start is a special thing. Some people will downplay it, but it’s a special thing.”

Of moving Maholm up to the second spot and Medlen third, Gonzalez said, “It splits the left-handers, and if everything goes right, you get your three guys facing the Phillies and a couple of series later they get a chance to face Washington.”

Hudson is 1-0 with a 2.79 ERA in five Opening Day starts, including two (2006 and 2008) for the Braves. In the 2008 opener at Washington, he allowed two runs and three hits in seven innings of a 3-2 loss. The Nationals did all the damage in the first inning and didn’t have a base runner in Hudson’s remaining six innings.

Medlen went 9-0 with a 0.97 ERA in 12 starts after moving from the bullpen at the end of July, and the Braves have won a major league-record 23 consecutive regular-season games he’s started. That doesn’t include the Wild Card game, when he was charged with three hits and five runs (two earned) in a loss.

“Huddy was pitching good baseball last year,” Gonzalez said. “We were thinking about going with Huddy or Medlen for that one-game playoff, but I think everyone in the world agreed with us to give Medlen the opportunity there. He was the hottest pitcher in baseball.”

Both pitchers have struggled this spring, but Hudson was sharp in his next-to-last spring start Thursday night, allowing six hits and no walks with five strikeouts in six scoreless innings against Washington. He previously had a 5.40 ERA, and Medlen has a 6.27 ERA in five starts.

Gonzalez said the rotation was essentially mapped out at the beginning of spring training.

“For this club, there’s a lot of expectations coming into this year,” Hudson said, “and it’s nice to be able to get it started off with me on the mound and hopefully get us in the right column with a W.”

Maholm will pitch the second game April 3 against the Phillies, after an off day built in the schedule in case of a rainout. Medlen will start the series finale against the Phillies, and Minor gets the April 5 home opener against the Cubs.

Gonzalez said either Hudson or Teheran would pitch the April 6 against the Cubs, based on whether Hudson needs an extra day of rest. If he starts April 6, Teheran would debut April 7 in the series finale against Chicago.

Either way, Hudson would start one of the first two games of the April 12-14 series at Washington. He’s 14-5 with a 2.65 ERA in 26 starts against the Nationals.

Hudson is three career wins from 200 and has a 105-65 record and 3.52 ERA in eight seasons with the Braves, including 16-7 with a 3.62 ERA in 2012. He had his third consecutive season with at least 16 wins, despite missing most of spring training and the season’s first month recovering from lumbar-fusion back surgery.

Tommy Hanson was the Braves’ Opening Day starter in 2012, after three consecutive years of Derek Lowe starts.

“I didn’t realize it’s been that long since I started one,” said Hudson, who had major elbow surgery since his last Opening Day start. “It does feel good to be able to be considered a guy that’s capable of pitching Opening Day. I’ve just got to hold up my end of the bargain and go out there and pitch like one.”

Hudson has a 186-102 record since the beginning of 2000, trailing only C.C. Sabathia (191-102) and Roy Halladay (190-93) in wins during that period. He also leads the majors in fewest home runs allowed per nine innings (0.71) since 2000 and ranks fourth in ERA at 3.43.

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David O Brien

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