The Braves’ rotation has become a real problem, and Martín Pérez is now at the center of it.
Atlanta still holds first place in the NL East, but the margin has been shrinking for a month, and the pitching issues are impossible to ignore. The offense went cold for a stretch, sure, but the starting staff has been just as shaky. Beyond Chris Sale, the Braves have had little certainty from one outing to the next.
“How the Atlanta Braves should line up their current rotation options has been a source of debate due to injuries and struggles from what were productive pieces. With this in mind, it is fair to realize that any way that the current group shakes out is going to have a fair share of question marks outside of Chris Sale,” ATL All Day’s Nick Halden wrote.
Pérez, a veteran left-hander and World Series champion, gave Atlanta a useful run after being added back into the rotation. He was 4-3 after rejoining the starting five following his DFA earlier this season, and his first stretch offered some stability.
Since returning to the rotation on May 19, Pérez had made eight starts and gone 4-3 with a 4.17 ERA. He allowed three or fewer runs in six of those outings, according to CBS Sports.
That version of Pérez hasn’t shown up as often lately. On Sunday afternoon against the New York Mets, he was tagged for five runs in just two innings before leaving after a line drive hit his arm. After that outing, Braves reporter Scott Coleman suggested the team may be nearing the end of the road with him.
“I know the options are slim at the moment, but the Martin Perez run is just about over and I hope they don’t wait too long to get off this train,” Coleman said. “I’m not kidding, I think there’s a decent chance he gets DFA’d in the next week or two if they want the roster spot.”
For Atlanta, Pérez’s value has been tied to reliability. He has at least taken the ball every fifth day, which matters when a staff is stretched thin. But when his command slips, the results can get ugly fast, and that is exactly the kind of risk the Braves can’t afford right now.
In Other News...
Braves Quietly Got Back A Bullpen Arm They May Desperately Need
For most of the season, Atlantas bullpen has looked like one of the clubs quiet advantages, but the last stretch has brought a little more unease. Raisel Iglesias has blown a save, Dylan Lee has had shaky outings and Didier Fuentes is nearing the break, which has made the relief picture feel less settled than it did a few weeks ago.
Into that mix comes Danny Young, the left-hander the Braves have quietly gotten back after his injury layoff. His early work this season has been encouraging enough to give Atlanta another option for mid-to-high-leverage spots against left-handed hitters, and perhaps a way to ease the load on some of the other arms that have been asked to carry more lately. The bigger question is how quickly the Braves lean into that role, and whether Young can turn a useful return into something more than just a temporary fix. [Read more 🡒]
Walt Weiss Decisions Just Cost The Braves A Game They Had Won
The Braves had enough offense to put themselves in position to win, but the game slipped into the kind of extra-inning mess that usually leaves a manager under the microscope. Atlanta scored six runs and still could not finish off the Mets, with the lineups missed chances and a thin bench leaving the club in a difficult spot once the game stretched beyond regulation.
Walt Weiss choices only made the margin for error smaller. The Braves were already navigating a less-than-ideal setup in extras, and the way the bullpen and lineup were handled became a major part of why a game that looked won turned into a loss, even before the final inning had fully played out. [Read more 🡒]
Braves Cant Afford Another Quiet Deadline From Alex Anthopoulos
With the trade deadline approaching, the Braves look like a club that cannot simply sit back and hope the rotation and outfield sort themselves out. ESPNs latest best-fit rundown had Atlanta attached to 17 of the top 25 deadline candidates, which is a pretty clear sign that the market sees a team with real needs and a front office that should be active. Starting pitching remains the obvious priority, and the list of names floating around ranges from Tarik Skubal and Joe Ryan to Sonny Gray, Reid Detmers, Casey Mize, Jose Soriano and Freddy Peralta.
The outfield search is a little murkier, with Taylor Ward looking like the most realistic target if Atlanta wants to add a bat without emptying the system. Shortstop is another area worth watching, but the price tag on the top names would be steep enough to make any deal complicated fast. For Alex Anthopoulos, the pressure is less about making a splash than avoiding another deadline that leaves the roster looking almost exactly the same when the dust settles. [Read more 🡒]
