Braves Make Another Familiar Roster Move As Depth Questions Linger

The Braves strategically maneuver their roster by re-signing veteran pitcher Carlos Carrasco on a minor league deal, while moving catcher Jair Camargo to Triple-A, maintaining roster flexibility and depth.

The Braves are back in familiar territory with Carlos Carrasco, who has re-signed on a new minor league deal after another brief run through Atlanta’s roster. At the same time, catcher Jair Camargo has been outrighted to Triple-A Gwinnett, according to the transactions log.

Carrasco, 39, was designated for assignment earlier this week, then cleared outright waivers, elected free agency and returned on a fresh minors contract. It’s the same loop Atlanta has kept using all season. He has already been added to the roster six times this year, and the pattern has been nearly identical each time: a short stay in the majors, a DFA, then a reset.

From the Braves’ side, the appeal is pretty clear. Carrasco effectively functions as a 41st man on a 40-man roster, giving the club a veteran arm it can call up to cover innings before moving him off the roster for a fresher pitcher. For Carrasco, the arrangement is less stable than he’d probably like, but it has at least kept him in the big leagues on and off, with the pay and service time that come with it.

His work in Atlanta has mostly been usable, though Sunday’s outing against the Mets changed the look of his numbers. He finished June with a 3.68 ERA in 14 2/3 innings this season, then was tagged for five earned runs in two innings against New York.

That pushed his season ERA to 5.94. Even so, it would not be a surprise to see Atlanta bring him back again soon.

Camargo’s path is different. The 27-year-old was brought up a few weeks ago when Atlanta needed a third catcher for a doubleheader.

Drake Baldwin started the first game and then served as the designated hitter in the second, while Sandy León handled catching duties. Camargo then entered that game for León and doubled before being sent back down.

He was designated for assignment earlier this week when the Braves called up José Azócar to cover Eli White’s stint on the paternity list. Azócar was designated for assignment today after White returned.

Camargo also cleared waivers, but this is his first career outright, and because he has less than three years of big league service time, he does not have the right to elect free agency.

Atlanta’s catching group at the big-league level now consists of Baldwin and Joey Bart. Camargo can slot in with León and Maverick Handley as non-roster depth at Triple-A. In the majors, he has a .125/.222/.250 line across just nine plate appearances, and while the bat has not shown much in the minors either, he is regarded as a solid defender.

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