Milwaukee Brewers closer Josh Hader is typically unhittable against left-handed batters. That's what made Atlanta Braves star Freddie Freeman's game-winning home run off Hader on Tuesday even more special.

With Game 4 of the NLDS tied at 4-4 in the eighth inning, Freeman blasted an opposite field home run off Hader with two outs to give the Braves a 5-4 lead:

Atlanta then shut the door on the Brewers, advancing to the NLCS for the second straight season.

After the game, the Braves first baseman admitted it was the coolest moment of his career to date, per Bradford Doolittle of ESPN:

“I've had a lot of cool moments in my career, but so far I think that's going to top them right there,” Freeman said. “But hopefully that's not the last cool one.”

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Dolittle notes that Hader hadn't allowed a postseason home run before this and hadn't allowed a run at all since the end of July. The hard-throwing lefty had allowed just seven homers to lefties in his career heading into this game, though Freeman had tagged him for a dinger back in 2019.

For Freeman to do it again in that moment, though, was a true shocker. The Braves star revealed his mindset at the plate against one of the most dominant relievers in baseball in such a key moment:

“Against him, in my whole career, I just look location, because he throws all those heaters up,” Freeman said. “Was I looking for a [first-pitch] slider up? No. I was just kind of looking up. … I kind of looked up and away in location, and he threw it there and I was able to get it.”

Freeman and the Braves now have to wait and see their NLCS opponent. The mighty San Francisco Giants and defending World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers will be playing a winner-take-all Game 5 on Thursday.