ATLANTA – The hearing of Matt Harvey for the teams competing is going very well lately.

Harvey, the 29-year-old right-handed, has managed 6 innings and 2/3 and has allowed a six-hit point in the Reds' 5-3 win against the Atlanta Braves on Tuesday night in front of a crowd of 28,356 at SunTrust Park. He walked one and took out two.

A note down for the Reds: The left-handed Amir Garrett took a line on the left leg and had to leave the game in the eighth inning. X-rays were negative. He has a contusion of the lower leg.

Harvey has won two consecutive starts for the first time since last May.

"It was one of those starts where physically I did not feel well," he said. "I was able to run and throw throws and get out guys early, when they hit a few balls, it was just against someone."

Harvey has only launched 84 shots.

"I was on a cruise," Harvey said. "I looked up and I did not have a lot of shots, it was nice to do, I was pretty used to fighting with 100 shots in six innings and I was I am shot. we."

Harvey seems to be recovering after a difficult time. He had six innings and had two hits out of five on his last outing.

The Reds will likely be willing to trade Harvey if they receive decent offers for him. Harvey is a free agent after the season. Harvey has a 3-3 record and a 4.31 ERA in nine starts for the Reds since the May 8th match that led him to New York Mets.

"It's normal for me, Matt Harvey," said Gennett Scooter. "He's 95, and he can climb up to 96, 97. 98. His belongings are there, I think the more he goes there, the more he feels comfortable."

Once again, Harvey did not have his best tips on Tuesday.

"A beginning like today where you face good alignment, and you do not have your best stuff, and you go there, it's a step in the right direction," a- he said. "You're not always going to have your best stuff, I'm used to that over the years, the difficulties of not feeling good, not being in perfect health have appeared in the numbers, I think health is coming back. Not feeling good and having seven innings is a sign that things are going in the right direction. "

The Red Devils had a run of seven game wins broken Monday. They were eager to start a new one.

"We played very well in baseball," said Reds manager Jim Riggleman, "I'm so proud of our guys, how they fight and how they want. The series of seven consecutive wins, they wanted so much this game last night. That escaped us and they came back and had it tonight. They give you good efforts every night. "

The Reds took a 1-0 lead in the fourth. Gennett scored one with and flew second. He moved to the third on the flight of Eugenio Suarez to the right. Jesse Winker got Gennett home with a single infield.

Harvey was sailing to this point. But he hit Ozzie Albies with a pitch to start the bottom of the fourth. Freddie Freeman followed with a single, sending Albies to third place. Nick Markakis fought back at Harvey. He got out of his glove, but he recovered in time to get Albies, who had gone astray too far third. Tyler Flowers got Freeman home with a double to tie him.

The Reds take the lead in the fifth. Jose Peraza led with a triple. A little later, Scott Schebler doubled to get Peraza.

The Reds added a run to sixth. Gennett led with a double. Two out later, Adam Duvall chose to register Gennett and bring the score to 3-1.

The Reds continued to add, as they say. Gennett led the eighth with a walk. He moved to the second Suarez grounding and scored on Winker's single.

The Braves reduced the gap to one to eighth. Ender Inciarte took the lead and fired a shot from Garrett for a single inside. Michael Lorenzen took over and gave Albies a double. Inciarte scored on the grounding of Freeman. Markakis brought in Albies with another attack.

Nearer Raisel Iglesias came and got the final.

The Reds added a run to the ninth. Tucker Barnhart and Joey Votto walked. Gennett spanned four lengths from 0 to 2 before doubling a single in the left to bring it to 5-3.

"When you fall behind, it's important," Gennett said.

Garrett was painful.

"When it happened, it really hurt," he said. "I'm not going to lie, but I think it'll be okay in a day or two."