Braves Make Urgent Pitching Reset As Pressure Suddenly Rises

The Braves shake up their roster with strategic call-ups and assignments as they prepare for a crucial series finale against the Mets.

The Braves’ roster churn kept spinning Monday, and the biggest name in the shuffle was right-hander Owen Murphy, who got the call to the majors for the first time before Atlanta’s series finale against the Mets.

Murphy arrives with plenty of prospect shine attached. Atlanta took him in the first round, 20th overall, in the 2022 MLB Draft, and MLB Pipeline had him pegged as the Braves’ No. 6 prospect this season with a 2028 expected time of arrival. He’s put together a 3.88 ERA in 11 starts for Triple-A Gwinnett this year, covering 60 1/3 innings, and also posted a 6.10 ERA over 20 2/3 innings in five starts with Double-A Columbus.

To clear a spot, the Braves designated right-hander Carlos Carrasco for assignment. Carrasco, who turns 40 in March, made eight relief appearances for Atlanta and logged a 5.94 ERA across 16 2/3 innings. His 2024 season with the club was even rougher, with a 9.88 ERA in three starts over 13 2/3 innings.

Atlanta also brought up another 2022 first-rounder in JR Ritchie, recalling the right-hander from the minors while placing lefty Martín Pérez on the 15-day injured list with a left forearm contusion. Pérez suffered the injury in Sunday’s loss to the Mets and had to exit the game. Ritchie, ranked by MLB Pipeline as Atlanta’s No. 2 prospect when he debuted earlier this season, has worked 43 2/3 innings over nine appearances, seven of them starts, and owns a 4.53 ERA with one save.

Pérez had been a steady part of the Braves’ pitching mix, making 14 starts and four relief appearances while throwing 81 1/3 innings with a 3.54 ERA.

The moves didn’t stop there. Soon after, Atlanta placed outfielder Eli White on the paternity list and selected outfielder José Azócar to the roster. To make that happen, the Braves designated catcher Jair Camargo for assignment.

White is in his fourth season with Atlanta and has hit .227/.277/.400 in 119 plate appearances over 53 games. Azócar, a former Met, is in his second season with the Braves and has gone 5-for-15 with a .333 average, one walk and one stolen base in nine MLB games. Camargo, one of the many catchers Atlanta has used this season, appeared in just one game for the Braves, going 1-for-2 with a double and a run scored in a 7-5 loss to San Francisco on June 17.

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