Tag: Atlanta Braves

What the Atlanta Braves Should Do for the 2014 MLB Trade Deadline

The 2014 MLB trade deadline is closing in, and teams are scrambling to put together rosters that will keep them atop the standings and into the postseason.

The Atlanta Braves currently sit one game back from the Washington Nationals. What do the Braves have to do to take the lead in the NL East and have success in the postseason?

Check out Braves insider Kevin McAlpin break down the latest news as the trade deadline approaches.

 

All stats accurate as of July 21.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Dan Uggla Released by Braves: Latest Details and Reaction

After an especially painful season in the batter’s box for Dan Uggla, the Atlanta Braves have released the struggling second baseman.

The team’s official Twitter account confirmed the news:

The Braves were willing to make the move even though they will have to pay Uggla a hefty sum of money, per Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal:

In fact, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution‘s David O’Brien notes that the Braves’ decision to eat the contract is unprecedented in team history:

The release comes just days after the Braves rather mysteriously suspended Uggla for one game just before the All-Star break.

Manager Fredi Gonzalez was loath to explain the team’s reasoning for the suspension.

“I’m not going to say anything other than that it’s an internal matter,” he said, via The Associated Press (h/t ESPN.com). “That’s the way I like to handle stuff, and the Atlanta Braves like to handle stuff. And that’s it. You can ask me 400 different ways and my way is that we’re going to handle it internally.”

Jayson Stark of ESPN noted how toxic things had become with the second baseman:

Uggla was a powerful force in his first season in Atlanta in 2011, collecting 36 home runs and 82 RBI despite hitting just .233 on the season. 

Never one to hit for average, Uggla’s value in the middle of the infield plummeted with his power numbers. He was batting just .162 in 2014 with two home runs and 10 RBI in 48 games before his release.

ESPN’s Mark Simon noted that Uggla had little in the way of sweet spots in the strike zone over the past two years:

Uggla could benefit from a change of scenery, and an enterprising franchise might be able to pick him up on the cheap with the Braves paying out the majority of his salary until the end of next season. Few could look at him as an everyday player, but he may still hold value as a pinch hitter due to his ability to hit the long ball and draw walks.

The Braves will now count on Tommy La Stella to hold down the fort at second base. The 25-year-old is hitting .292 with zero home runs and 17 RBI in 43 games this year. La Stella is a capable player, but the Braves may look to find the power they expected from Uggla before the July 31 trade deadline as they make a run at the NL East crown.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Perfect Trade Scenarios for Atlanta Braves at the Deadline

The Atlanta Braves (47-38) are currently riding a season-best seven-game winning streak as we hit July.

Despite their hot streak, the Braves hold just a half-game lead in the division as the Washington Nationals have also improved their play.

You can bet general manager Frank Wren will be looking to improve the roster as the July 31 trade deadline nears in order to give the Braves a leg up over the Nationals.

Just how active Wren will be at the deadline is still unclear. Until we find out, let’s take a look at a few perfect trade scenarios for the 2014 trade deadline.

 

Trade Dan Uggla

Like most Braves fans, I’m shocked that Dan Uggla is still on the roster. Uggla has lost his starting job to Tommy La Stella, and it’s clear that he no longer fits in the short-term or long-term plan in Atlanta.

Trading Uggla before the deadline would be trimming the fat for the Braves.

This would allow the Braves to carry an extra arm in the bullpen, which could prove valuable in keeping the bullpen fresh for the season’s entirety.

Or the Braves could add an infielder (such as Philip Gosselin) who has more speed, more versatility and plays better defense to their bench.

At this point, the Braves are just trying to get rid of Uggla and wouldn’t get anything in return. Minimal salary relief from the other team would be the best-case scenario.

Trading Uggla would be the first step toward a successful trade deadline.

 

Add Bullpen Piece

The Braves bullpen has tightened as of late, which has played into the current win streak.

However, the Braves could use one more arm from the left side to shore up the bullpen and give manager Fredi Gonzalez plenty of options to end games.

David O’Brien of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution recently weighed in on the Braves’ search for bullpen help: 

The Braves were looking for Jonny Venters to return in June to provide a boost from the left side. However, Venters looks iffy at best to return this season.

His absence combined with Luis Avilan’s down season has left the Braves a little vulnerable from the left side.

Adding a relief pitcher isn’t flashy, but it’s the necessary move for this deadline. This is where Wren should start when looking to add at the deadline.

 

Find Top Starter

Trading Uggla would be trimming the fat, while adding bullpen help is the unflashy but necessary move. If Wren could grab a top-end starter at the deadline, that would be the cherry on top.

It seems unlikely that the Braves will go this route in order to keep their young prospects in the organization. However, if teams soften their asking price, Wren could get more involved.

There’s no doubt the Braves could use one more pitcher to complement Julio Teheran at the top of the rotation.

David Price, Jeff Samardzija or Cliff Lee are a few players that would give the Braves a dynamic one-two punch in the postseason.

As I mentioned, this won’t happen if the Braves have to trade multiple top prospects. But grabbing an elite pitcher could give the Braves their best chance at a World Series title that has eluded them since 1995.  

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


2nd-Half Predictions for Every Braves Starter

The second half of the season officially begins for the Atlanta Braves on Sunday. In the slides ahead I’ll look back at the numbers put up by each player in the Braves lineup during the first half, then I’ll offer up a prediction for what each player might do in the second half.

Predictions are a tricky business, but that’s what makes them so fun. Begin the slideshow to see my predictions for the second-half Braves, and let me know your thoughts in the comments.

 

All stats are accurate up to and including June 25, and are taken from FanGraphs.com and Baseball-Reference.com.

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Predicting the Braves’ Top Targets on the 2014 International Prospect Market

The MLB international signing period begins on July 2, and the Braves could make a splash by signing some high-dollar talent. This, despite being constrained by MLB regarding how much they can spend.

Much like last month’s draft, MLB has limited the amount of money that teams can spend on players. While the details are a bit different, the amount of bonus-pool money allocated to teams uses the same system of reverse order of the previous season’s regular-season winning percentages that the draft uses.

That leaves the Braves with a total of $1,897,900 to spend on international free agents, per Ben Badler of Baseball America, while a team like the Marlins, who finished with the worst record in the NL East and the second-worst record in all of baseball, has $4,622,400 to spend.

The Braves have traditionally done very well in regards to signing and developing international prospects. On their current big league squad, Julio Teheran (Colombia) and Luis Avilan (Venezuela) were international signings. Four of their top-10 prospects are from the international ranks as well: catcher Christian Bethancourt (Panama), second baseman Jose Peraza (Venezuela), RHP Mauricio Cabrera (Dominican Republic), and outfielder Victor Reyes (Venezuela).

Even with limited bonus-pool money the last few years, the Braves have done a good job of signing players who could have an impact. In 2011, they signed LHP Luis Merejo for just $65,000, and the very next year Baseball America listed Merejo as one of their Ten Breakout International Prospects To Watch.

The last time the Braves signed an international player for more than a million dollars was in 2010, when they gave then-shortstop Edward Salcedo a $1.6 million bonusthe highest bonus for an international player in club history.

While Salcedo has slowly worked his way to Triple-A Gwinnett in the Braves minor league system, he is not considered a top prospect. His defense forced a move to third base, and it may eventually force another move to the outfield. At the plate, he’s a free-swinger who doesn’t make a lot of contact, and he has never put up the eye-popping numbers that the Braves were hoping for.

It has been rumored by Badler that this year the Braves will once again give a seven-figure bonus to an international player: Venezuelan third baseman Juan Yepez. Atlanta is thought to have the inside track on Yepez since his trainer’s brother is the Braves assistant director of Latin American operations.

The scouting reports on Yepez are mixed, which can often be the case with young international talent. There are concerns that his skills at the plate haven’t translated into performance in games. There are also questions about whether he has the range to stick at third base.

Those uncertainties about Yepez sound a lot like the imperfect prospect that the Braves ended up getting in Edward Salcedo. Keep in mind, though, that international prospects are always more of an unknown commodity to both organizations and scouts.

With the Braves having such a close affiliation with the trainer of Juan Yepez, perhaps they know something that other teams do not.

Beyond Yepez, the Braves international signings will most likely include players from lesser known baseball countries. While most teams stick to the Dominican Republic and Venezuela to find their talent, the Braves also mine lesser-known baseball countries like Panama, Colombia and even Nicaragua.

Atlanta also scouts the Caribbean Islands for talent, and it signed three players last year from Curacao. The Braves best-known international successAndruw Jonescame from that small Caribbean island.

 

The Long Shot

The Braves last-minute spring-training signing of Ervin Santana apparently put the screws on an already tight payroll. In an interview with Mike Ferrin and former GM Jim Duquette on XM Radio’s MLB Network Channel 89 (h/t Alan Carpenter of TomahawkTake.com), Braves GM Frank Wren admitted that the Atlanta front office had to ask ownership to increase payroll in order to complete the signing.

This cash-strapped position of the big league ballclub could have the Braves pursuing a different strategy than signing a high-dollar international free agent. Instead of going big into the international market this year, they may instead seek to accomplish another item on their overall organizational wish list: trading Dan Uggla.

Teams are able to trade international signing slots, and over the past few years we’ve seen a few of these slots get included in trades. (Click here for an explanation of how these trades work from Baseball America.)  

This could be a perfect opportunity for the Braves to rid themselves of the burdensome contract of Dan Uggla. The no-hitting second baseman is signed through next season, leaving approximately $20 million remaining on his deal.

Atlanta could attempt to trade a high-dollar international slot (or two) to a team that wants extra slot money to sign a prospect. In return, that team could take Dan Uggla and most of his contract off the Braves’ hands, sending a minor prospect back in return.

With Major League Baseball limiting the money available for teams to use to sign international players, that money now carries additional value. Essentially, the Braves would be trading “potential players” in exchange for salary relief.

The team acquiring Dan Uggla’s contract (and also Dan Uggla) would be taking on salary that they would have spent on international talent in previous years but which is now constrained by MLB rules.

That scenario is a long shot, but with Uggla sitting on the bench taking up 10 percent of the Braves’ payroll this season as well as next season, extraordinary steps may need to be taken in order to get him off the team’s books.

While the Braves may not want to sacrifice a large chunk of their limited international bonus-pool moneyor the future prospects who could be signed with that moneyif there is an opportunity to unburden their payroll from the Dan Uggla mistake, then they should take it.

But again, that’s a long shot, and it’s pure speculation on my part. Atlanta will most likely sign a dozen or so good international players this year, several of whom we’ll probably be listing on top-prospect lists in a few years.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


3 Relievers the Braves Should Target to Help Fix the Bullpen

The Atlanta Braves have already signaled they would like to add a reliever or two to their bullpen. General manager Frank Wren was clear about that when he spoke with SiriusXM radio host Jim Bowden earlier this week:

As the Braves seek to acquire another reliable setup man, fresh in the mind of the Atlanta front office is the predicament the team found itself in at the end of last season when Jordan Walden went down in mid-September. While he returned for the playoffs, he was rusty and ineffective, essentially leaving the Braves without their top setup man.

Walden was likely third on the setup-man depth chart to open the 2013 season. Atlanta lost Jonny Venters and Eric O’Flaherty earlier in the year to Tommy John surgery.

This year the Atlanta front office seems to be signaling that it will not let an injury to a reliever dictate how its postseason unfolds. Acquiring another setup man for Craig Kimbrel—to supplement Jordan Walden and rookie Shae Simmons—will be a key goal for the team in the upcoming trading season.

The Braves may also want to acquire another quality reliever to address a more immediate concern:

Walden has already missed 32 games this season because of a hamstring injury. So clearly his absence from the relief staff is a factor in the Braves’ ability to close out the final innings of a game.

Atlanta added two relievers last season via trade: Luis Ayala from the Baltimore Orioles and Scott Downs from Anaheim. But neither of those two relievers could really be considered a setup man or someone who could be counted on almost every night to pitch shutdown innings.

As the Braves look to bolster this year’s pen they should also do so with an eye toward next year and beyond. While the spring training signing of Ervin Santana signaled the team is fully committed to winning this season, the endless procession of multiyear contracts the team has handed out signals that the Braves expect to contend for many years to come.

In order to acquire a reliever who could be considered an impact reliever, the Braves may have to part with some good prospects. In doing so they need to ensure whatever reliever they acquire can be useful beyond this season.

Here are three impact relievers the Braves should consider.

 

Wade Davis, Kansas City Royals

While Davis is underpaid for a decent starter, he is overpaid for a good reliever. That could prompt the Royals to try and move him for a more cost-effective option and/or prospects.

The tale of his career is that of two different pitchers: the lackluster starter with the 4.57 ERA and the dominant reliever with a 1.99 ERA.

The Braves could use the services of Davis in the pen this season, then give him a chance to return to starting next spring. In Atlanta he would be facing mainly National League lineups for which his 3.43 ERA vs. the NL is better than his career ERA against all major league teams of 4.12.

 

Alex Torres, San Diego Padres

The Padres seem to always be in rebuilding mode, and Torres might be one of those guys they want to (re)build around. They acquired him this offseason from the Tampa Bay Rays along with a prospect in exchange for a bunch of prospects.

Should San Diego be willing to trade Torres, he would satisfy two stated needs of the Atlanta pen: (1) a setup man capable of pitching important innings late in a game and (2) a left-handed reliever capable of getting out tough lefties.

The Braves would need to part with a pretty good prospect in order to acquire Torres, but Atlanta would get a reliever in return who would be under team control through the 2019 season. Torres may also be able to convert to a starting role next spring.

 

Jonathan Broxton, Cincinnati Reds

While Broxton offers the Reds protection against an injury to Aroldis Chapman, Cincinnati may see an opportunity to fill other needs by moving him.

Yes, Broxton is having a terrific year and even closed out games when Chapman was injured early in the season, but the Reds are closer to the bottom of their division than the top. Moving a guy like Broxton could clear salary and bring back a good prospect.

The Braves could feel confident in trading a good prospect for Broxton knowing that he is signed through next season with a mutual option for 2016. He would not be just a one-year rental.

 

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Certainly Atlanta does not want to repeat the mistakes of the 1997 Seattle Mariners who parted with several future All-Stars in order to add a few relievers. The Braves aren’t that desperate yet, but they should up the ante from their mediocre acquisitions of last season.

In order to get better relievers in a trade, Atlanta has to be more willing to give up better prospects in return. The team has already given up a first-round pick this year in exchange for Ervin Santana. The last major piece of the puzzle for this team is another setup man, and filling that void will come with a cost.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Justin Upton Injury: Updates on Braves OF’s Hamstring and Return

The Atlanta Braves announced on Tuesday night that outfielder Justin Upton strained his left hamstring. He’s listed as day to day:

The two-time All-Star was removed after the first inning, making way for Jordan Schafer, per Kevin McAlpin of 680 The Fan in Atlanta:

Upton made the most of his short time on the field, singling in the top of the first and scoring the Braves’ third run of the game on a single by Tommy La Stella. That base hit upped his season average to .295, which is the highest among Atlanta’s regular starters. His 14 home runs and 36 RBI are also tops for the team.

The Braves have struggled offensively this season, so taking Upton’s bat out of the lineup will leave a major hole. Since he’s only day to day, his absence shouldn’t affect the team too much in the long run.

Atlanta came into the game tied with the Washington Nationals for the lead in the National League East, so that could change for as long as Upton is out.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


5 Under-the-Radar Players the Atlanta Braves Could Grab in the Trade Window

After a disappointing week, the Atlanta Braves (33-29) find themselves in a tie atop the National League East division with the surging Washington Nationals.

The offense still hasn’t consistently clicked, but the major reason for the Braves’ recent struggles has been the performance of the bullpen.

A year after leading the majors with a 2.46 bullpen ERA, the Braves bullpen has slipped to a 3.35 ERA, which puts them sixth in the National League.

This has cost the Braves in multiple games this season as Mark Bowman of MLB.com points out:

The bullpen should get a boost from the recent arrival of Shae Simmons as well as Jordan Walden when he returns from injury. However, general manager Frank Wren will almost undoubtedly be looking for bullpen help at the July 31 trade deadline.

With that said, here’s a look at five players the Braves could trade for with the emphasis on bullpen help.

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Stock Up, Stock Down for Atlanta Braves’ Top 10 Prospects for Week 8

It was another good week for Atlanta Braves prospects. The two hitters at Triple-A, Tommy La Stella and Christian Bethancourt, are really starting to swing the bat.

Meanwhile on the mound, the organization’s top prospect seems to have righted the ship, and several other pitchers on this list are doing better than the basic stats seem to indicate. We’ll use advanced stats to find the truth behind the numbers.

No. 5 prospect Mauricio Cabrera is still on the disabled list, so everyone below him moves up a spot and the next prospect in line from the Beyond The Box Score consensus Braves prospect list will stick around for a little while longer.

 

Season stats through the games of May 25th are taken from FanGraphs. Weekly stats run from May 19th through May 25th and are taken from Minor League Central.

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Atlanta Braves 2014 Mock Draft: Projecting Top 5 First-Round Targets

The Atlanta Braves will look to bolster their farm system and find future help at the MLB level in a few weeks when the 2014 MLB draft gets underway.

The Braves could go a number of different directions with the No. 32 overall pick in the compensation round acquired from the Brian McCann deal.

Last year, the Braves selected Jason Hursh (No. 31 overall), a right-hander out of Oklahoma State University. Hursh got an invite to this year’s spring training and is currently pitching for Double-A Mississippi, where he sports a 3-3 record and 3.45 ERA.

Will the Braves go the college route or select a high school standout? Will the Braves target a positional player or another pitcher?

In the last five years, the Braves have selected four pitchers (Hursh, Lucas Sims, Sean Gilmartin, Mike Minor) to just one positional player (Matt Lipka). Of those five picks, three were out of college and one was from Georgia— a place the Braves have picked apart.

With that in mind, here’s a look at potential targets for the Braves to take in the first round of the June 5 2014 MLB draft.

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