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Willson Contreras gets the better of his younger brother in the Chicago Cubs’ 6-3 win over the Atlanta Braves

Willson Contreras had three hits and stole a base in his first game against younger brother William, helping the Chicago Cubs beat the Atlanta Braves 6-3 on Saturday.

The Cubs won a day after ending their 10-game skid and also stopping the Braves’ 14-game winning streak.

The Contreras brothers both started at catcher, marking the first time they shared a field. They hugged before the 30-year-old Willson, a two-time All-Star, singled in the first inning. Contreras then stole second base against his brother and scored on Jonathan Villar’s two-run single.

“That’s 1-0,” Willson Contreras said.

“I didn’t want to get beat by my younger brother. I’m pretty sure he was thinking the same thing. We’re professionals. We love our teams,” he said.

The brothers were the first to start at catcher in the same game since Yadier Molina for the St. Louis Cardinals and José Molina for the Tampa Bay Rays on June 10, 2014, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

“From my first at-bat, when I gave him a hug, I was proud,” Willson Contreras said. “Even before the game I was trying to keep myself together.”

Willson Contreras later doubled and drove in a run. His 24-year-old brother had two hits for the Braves.

“During his last at-bat, he came up and he was looking at me and he said, ‘What are you looking at?’ I looked right back and said, ‘What are you looking at?’ That was probably the only kind of jokey moment of the day,” William Contreras said.

The Braves’ Contreras singled in the second inning but was forced out at second on an unusual double play. Adam Duvall hit a flyball to shallow right that fell among three fielders — Contreras was forced out at second and Duvall, who had headed back to the dugout before getting pushed toward the base by first base coach Eric Young Sr., was called out.

“I would imagine Adam thought there were three outs,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said.

Justin Steele (2-5) got his first win since his season debut April 9 against the Milwaukee Brewers. He allowed two runs and five hits in five innings.

Kyle Wright (7-4) gave up five runs and a career-high 11 hits in six innings.

“I didn’t feel like I gave up that many hits,” Wright said. “I thought I executed pretty good, got some soft contact but put the ball in play and some things happen sometimes. Give them credit.”

Rafael Ortega homered and Alfonso Rivas and Andrelton Simmons each had two hits for the Cubs.

Duvall, Ronald Acuña Jr. and Michael Harris II had a pair of hits for the Braves, who hadn’t lost a season series against the Cubs since 2017.

The Cubs extended their lead to 3-0 on Acuña’s throwing error on Willson Contreras’ single to right field in the second. They made it 4-0 on Jason Heyward’s double that bounced away from Duvall in left in the third.

Duvall homered in the fifth. The Braves lead the NL in homers but have just one in two games against Chicago.

Austin Riley’s bases-loaded sacrifice fly pulled the Braves within 4-2 in the fifth. Heyward made a sliding catch on Marcell Ozuna’s flyball to right for the third out.

  • Cubs outfielder Clint Frazier accepted an assignment at Triple-A Iowa after he was designated for assignment June 10.
  • The Cubs placed infielder Frank Schwindel (low back strain) on the 10-day injured list. He exited in the second inning Friday after running to first on a groundout. Rivas was recalled from Iowa to replace Schwindel.
  • Infielder David Bote (left shoulder surgery) resumed his rehab assignment with Iowa that was paused because of dizziness.

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Source: Berkshire mont

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