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Wild-card intrigue again focuses on Cardinals, Braves in one-game showdown

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St. Louis Cardinals manager Mike Matheny tips his cap to the fans after the final regular season game, a 1-0 win against the Cincinnati Reds at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri, on Wednesday, October 3, 2012. (Photo by Chris Lee/St. Louis Post-Dispatch/MCT)

ATLANTA (MCT) — Two teams that haven’t seen each other since May 30 confront each other anew on Friday. Cloaked in late afternoon shadows, the Cardinals and Atlanta Braves will use one game to relearn one another.

Major League Baseball calls it the inaugural wild-card playoff. The participants see it in more blunt terms.

“It’s Game 7,” Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez said. “As simple as it may seem, it’s Game 7. You can imagine we’ve played six. We’ve won three and they’ve won three. It’s Game 7.”

Lose and go home. Win and receive the Washington Nationals for a best-of-five division series. The Cardinals represent the first beneficiaries of an expanded format that has allowed them to carry their World Series defense onto a postseason stage. They will send Kyle Lohse, who lost only three of this season’s 33 starts, against the Braves’ talisman, Kris Medlen.

The Cardinals (88-74) enter as defending World Series champions partly because of the Braves’ beneficence last September. The Braves, who defined National League success in the 1990s, haven’t won a postseason series since 2001.

Since May the Cardinals have firmed their bullpen while enduring a come-and-go offense. The Braves (94-68) surged behind Medlen, with whom they have won in 23 consecutive starts dating to 2010.

“We know the necessity to make (Friday) like a Game 7 but there is also still a balance of ‘Let’s play the game,’” offered Cardinals manager Mike Matheny. “Let’s play another game. It’s worked for us down the stretch here in September just to continue to play the game and not try to reinvent the wheel.”

The Braves won five of this season’s six games between the two teams, including a three-game sweep at Busch Stadium that punctured the Cardinals’ 20-11 start. The Braves then won a May three-game series at Turner Field as Matheny sorted through an ill-fitting bullpen.

“I saw a very good team. I think we saw an offense that came into St. Louis early in the season and put together the kind of series that we had been putting on everybody else,” Matheny said. “Then we came here and they played well again. But when you get to the postseason there are no slouches.

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