Freeman, Braves have been beasts with runners in scoring position

Small sample size, yes. But the Braves still could feel good about this statistic and how it might bode for their season: Five games in, they were hitting more than 100 points better with runners in scoring position than any other major league team.

After going 8-for-13 in those situations during Tuesday’s 13-6 rout of the Nationals, the Braves had a stunning .480 average (24-for-50) with four homers and league-leading marks of 35 RBIs, a .541 OBP and .760 slugging percentage with runners in scoring position.

They got a fifth homer with runners in scoring position in the first inning Wednesday when Preston Tucker hit a three-run shot off Nationals ace Max Scherzer.

The next-best batting averages in the majors with runners in scoring position entering Wednesday’s games belonged to the Padres (.353) and Rockies (.346), and the next-highest RBI totals in those situations belonged to the Nationals (27) and Diamondbacks (27).

No surprise who’s been the biggest gun for the Braves with runners in scoring position: Freddie Freeman was 6-for-7 with two home runs, two intentional walks and nine RBIs in those situations after going 2-for-2 on Tuesday with a three-run homer and an RBI single. Freeman led the majors in average (.857), OBP (.889) and slugging percentage (1.857) among players with at least five official at-bats with runners in scoring position before Wednesday.

A year ago, Freeman hit .357 with runners in scoring position, posting a .509 OBP that ranked third in the majors beyond Joey Votto (.565) and Mike Trout (.533) and a .667 slugging percentage that was seventh-best in the majors.

The Braves hit .272 with runners in scoring position in 2017, seventh-best in the majors.