The Braves are heading toward the trade deadline with one obvious problem still hanging over the roster: shortstop hasn’t given them enough. Pitching is part of the conversation, sure, but Atlanta’s infield situation has become impossible to ignore.
Ha-Seong Kim was brought in after his huge September last season, but the bat hasn’t followed him to Atlanta. That has sparked some blunt criticism, including this line from The Athletic’s Jesus Cano: “He's basically getting paid $4 million a hit. At some point, I don't know how long that leash can go,”
Atlanta has already cycled through Mauricio Dubón, Jorge Mateo, Jim Jarvis, and Kim at the position this season. And once Ronald Acuña Jr. returns, Dubón could end up as the main shortstop option. That opens the door to a Kim trade before the deadline, and MLB.com’s Mark Bowman laid out a path where Atlanta could move him without expecting him to headline a return.
“Kim wouldn’t be the centerpiece of any deal. But it doesn’t feel like he has a fit in Atlanta with both Mauricio Dubón and Jorge Mateo looking like better options at the shortstop position. Pairing Kim with a top pitching prospect and agreeing to pay the remaining portion of his $20 million salary to a middle infield-needy team could net a decent return,” Bowman wrote.
If the Braves decide they want to keep Dubón in the outfield instead, they may have to go get a shortstop. ESPN’s Kiley McDaniel and Jeff Passan pointed to Houston Astros shortstop Jeremy Peña as a possible target.
“Peña has always been a plus defender at shortstop with a strong power/speed combo, but his feel for hitting and pitch selection comes and goes. He made the most of Daikin Park's Crawford Boxes by leaning into power and pull/lift, and his 2025 baseball card stats ran hot with better-than-you'd-expect outcomes on balls in play fueling a 5.7 WAR season. Expect more years in line with his other WAR figures (2.7 to 3.3) for the next few seasons,” Passan and McDaniel wrote.
Peña would bring a lot to Atlanta right away. He has one more year left on his contract, he’d upgrade the offense at a spot that has been a season-long issue, and his defense would fit the bill too. On top of that, he comes with postseason experience, including World Series success.
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