Mauricio Dubón has given the Braves exactly the kind of dependable production that can get lost in the noise of a long season.
His .273/.328/.424 line puts him near the top of Atlanta’s offense in several key categories. Among Braves hitters with at least 100 plate appearances, his batting average is second-best on the club.
His .752 OPS, .330 wOBA, and 107 wRC+ all rank sixth in that same group. It’s not an All-Star résumé, but it is the profile of a player who keeps showing up and doing damage in useful ways.
The bigger story is how he’s handled pressure. Dubón has been productive in almost every meaningful game state the Braves can throw at him.
In low leverage situations, he has a .747 OPS and a 110 sOPS+. In medium leverage, that becomes a .764 OPS and a 109 sOPS+.
In high leverage, he’s still at .742 with a 102 sOPS+.
The clutch numbers are even louder. With two outs and runners in scoring position, he’s hit .975 with a 191 sOPS+.
Overall with runners in scoring position, he’s at .975 and a 159 sOPS+. Late and close, he has a .757 OPS and a 112 sOPS+.
When Atlanta has been trailing, he’s posted a .893 OPS and a 155 sOPS+. And with two strikes, he’s sitting on a .675 OPS and a 164 sOPS+.
In other words, the moment has not been too big for him. He has been at least league average in every one of those spots, and in some of them he has been far better.
The two-out, runners-in-scoring-position work stands out most, where he has outperformed the league by 91 points. He’s also been 64 points better than league average in two-strike counts.
Dubón’s value doesn’t stop at the plate. He has already piled up eight Outs Above Average, tied for sixth-most in the majors.
That puts him in the 97th percentile while he’s logged time at shortstop, third base, left field, center field, and right field. A second utility Gold Glove is very much in play.
That versatility matters even more because Atlanta’s shortstop picture is still unsettled. Ha-Seong Kim, Jorge Mateo, and Dubón are all set to reach free agency after the season.
Rookie Jim Jarvis has shown some encouraging flashes since arriving in the majors, but he still looks more like a future utility piece than the long-term answer at shortstop.
In Other News...
Braves Deadline Focus Just Shifted To A Move Fans Have Wanted
Atlantas position atop the NL East has held up even through a rough June, and a recent series win over the Pirates offered a reminder that the Braves are still very much in the mix. But the bigger picture around the club has shifted toward what comes next, with Alex Anthopoulos already signaling that Atlanta expects to be active at the trade deadline and that pitching help will be a priority.
The emphasis on starting pitching makes sense for a team trying to steady itself for the stretch run, and the market could push the Braves toward a familiar veteran type if they decide to make a move. Sonny Gray has surfaced as one name to watch, giving fans a reason to keep an eye on how aggressively Atlanta pursues rotation upgrades over the next few weeks. [Read more 🡒]
ESPN Just Revealed Two Braves Deadline Fits Fans Will Obsess Over
The Braves deadline conversation is already taking shape around two very different needs, and ESPNs Jeff Passan put a spotlight on both. Atlanta is looking for starting pitching help, and Passan flagged Freddy Peralta as a possible fit while also pointing to the shortstop market, where CJ Abrams stands out as the kind of player who could reshape a lineup if he ever became available.
Abrams is the more intriguing name for Braves fans because the upside is obvious, but the path to a deal is anything but. Passan noted the Nationals are highly unlikely to move him and would drive a massive price if they even entertained it, which leaves Atlanta in the familiar spot of weighing big-name possibilities against the reality of what actually gets done in July. [Read more 🡒]
