<p>ATLANTA -- What little margin for error the Braves had facing Clayton Kershaw in Game 1 evaporated in the early innings thanks to a few near-misses in the field, raising questions about whether manager Fredi Gonzalez would shuffle his defense for Friday night's Game 2. By leaving Evan Gattis in left field and defending the decisions behind several other pivotal plays the day after Atlanta's 6-1 loss, Gonzalez dispelled those questions and delivered a vote of confidence to his fielders.</p><p>"I wasn't disappointed at all on the defense," Gonzalez said. "I think when your guys go out there and lay it on the line, those things are going to happen, but I thought all the things were the right things, other than the execution."</p><p>Gattis' ill-fated dive for a liner in the second inning that turned into an RBI double for Dodgers catcher A.J. Ellis will be remembered as the flashiest misstep in the field, but the sequence leading to the first Los Angeles run earlier in the frame drew its share of second-guessing as well. Jason Heyward opted not to challenge Yasiel Puig as he went first-to-third on Juan Uribe's single into shallow center, but he did fire home as Puig scored on Skip Schumaker's sacrifice fly, leaving his throw up the line and allowing Uribe to move into scoring position.</p><p>Gattis said after the game that if Uribe had been on first at the time of Ellis' at-bat, he would not have taken such an aggressive line on the well-hit liner to his right.</p><p><a href="http://atlanta.braves.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20131004&content_id=62481216¬ebook_id=62481814&vkey=notebook_atl&c_id=atl">Keep reading...</a></p>