Matt Olson and the Atlanta Braves are on some kind of roll.
And they're showing no signs of slowing down.
Olson led off the ninth inning with a home run off Seattle closer Andres Munoz on Tuesday night, breaking a tie and giving the MLB-leading Braves a 3-2 come-from-behind road victory.
The Braves, who haven't lost a series all season, will look to extend that streak when they wrap up the three-game interleague set Wednesday afternoon.
Olson, a three-time All-Star who hit his 300th career homer Monday, hammered a 2-1 slider from Munoz 412 feet to left-center field.
"He's some kind of locked in," Braves manager Walt Weiss said.
It was the National League-leading 13th homer of the season for Olson, whose 28 extra-base hits are seven more than anyone else in the major leagues.
Olson is bringing back memories of 2023, when he had career highs in all three Triple Crown categories with a .283 batting average, 54 homers and 139 RBIs to earn an NL Silver Slugger Award.
"I talked about comparing it to '23 and it was an unbelievable year he had but I think, dare I say it, he might even be better this year," Weiss said. "Just because he's shooting balls all over the yard. Doubles in the opposite-field gap, homers (to the opposite field). He's just hitting the ball really hard and it's line to line. He's in a special place right now."
Even scarier, with the exception of outfielder Ronald Acuna Jr., who went on the 10-day injured list over the weekend with a strained right hamstring, the Braves are getting healthier.
Closer Raisel Iglesias earned his sixth save of the season Tuesday after being activated off the injured list because of right shoulder inflammation. That allowed Robert Suarez, who led the NL with 40 saves with San Diego last year, to return to his setup role, in which he earned the victory Tuesday to improve to 3-0.
In addition, Michael Harris II got the start in left field against the Seattle Mariners. Normally the center fielder, Harris has been limited since tweaking his left quadriceps April 23. If all goes well this week, Weiss said Harris could be back in center this weekend when the Braves play at the defending World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers.
"We've got to see how this goes, but this whole thing has been a progression from being off to being available as a pinch hitter to (being used as a designated hitter) and now playing the field," Weiss said. "It's little by little, but I think center field is in the close future."
The Mariners got Cal Raleigh back Tuesday after he missed three straight games with discomfort in his right side. Raleigh served as the designated hitter and went 0-for-4 with three strikeouts. He wasn't alone, as the Mariners managed just three hits -- two singles by Josh Naylor and a two-run homer by J.P. Crawford -- and fanned 16 times.
Munoz suffered his third loss of the season and has already allowed three homers - one more than he gave up in all of 2025.
"He'll bounce back. This is sometimes the way that the game goes," Mariners manager Dan Wilson said of his closer. "We've got a long season ahead of us still and just got to keep grinding it out. ... We'll make our adjustments and we'll be fine."
The Braves announced they plan to juggle their rotation for the series finale and start left-hander Martin Perez (2-1, 2.22 ERA) against Mariners right-hander Bryan Woo (1-2, 4.61).
Perez pitched five scoreless innings last Tuesday in a 5-2 victory against visiting Detroit, allowing just two hits. He is 8-6 with a 3.31 ERA in 31 career appearances (26 starts) against Seattle.
Woo has allowed six homers over his past two starts, both no-decisions, after not allowing any in his first five outings. He gave up six runs on seven hits Friday against Kansas City in a game the Mariners eventually lost 7-6. Woo will be facing the Braves for the first time.
--Field Level Media
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