With the trade deadline closing in, the Braves have a bigger problem than simply identifying what they need. They also have to figure out who is actually willing to deal.
The standings, especially in the AL, are muddy enough that the seller list is still hard to pin down. That uncertainty leaves Atlanta searching for a partner, and Houston might be the most intriguing one on the board.
The Astros are in a strange spot. Early in the season, they looked like a team headed toward selling.
Then they finished the second half strong, and general manager Dana Brown may need a playoff push to keep his job. That kind of tension can create an opening, and one possible move could line up the Braves’ need for a right-handed bat with Houston’s own goals.
The name to watch is Isaac Paredes.
Paredes is not a flawless fit for Atlanta, but the market for right-handed bats is thin enough that he stands out anyway. He brings power, he takes walks, and he can move around the diamond or serve as a DH.
For a Braves team that mainly needs to handle left-handed pitching better, that kind of profile has real appeal. The added bonus is the $13.35 club option for 2027, which gives the deal some longer-term upside if it works.
From Houston’s side, the logic is pretty straightforward. If the Astros decide to sell, moving Paredes could bring back prospect talent while also clearing salary. If they choose to buy, sending him to Atlanta for an MLB-ready pitching prospect would fill a need on the mound and open up money and a roster spot to chase a left-handed bat.
There is one catch: the ideal version of this move would have Paredes in left field for Atlanta, but there’s no indication he can do that. He has played all over the infield, which could matter if Austin Riley keeps struggling or if injuries hit again, but he has not been tested in the outfield. Even so, a right-handed DH option with power and on-base ability would still be useful if Brown’s asking price is reasonable.
Paredes might not be the cleanest answer for the Braves, and getting Houston to cooperate could be difficult. But this is exactly the kind of inventive thinking Alex Anthopoulos may need at this deadline.
The market doesn’t offer many obvious fixes, and Atlanta has real roster problems to solve. That means the front office may have to dig deeper and target less obvious names to get the job done.
In Other News...
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Ken Rosenthals read is that if the Tigers keep hanging around the race, they are more likely to hold onto Skubal and chase a postseason push of their own. Detroit has climbed back into striking distance in both the Wild Card and division races, and that kind of momentum can make a front office think twice about moving a front-line arm, which leaves Atlanta waiting to see whether the market shifts again before deadline day. [Read more 🡒]
Braves Are Wasting Their Best Weapon In Close Games
The Braves bullpen has been one of the quiet strengths of this season, a unit that has generally done its job and then some while keeping Atlanta in striking distance. The numbers back up the eye test, too, with the relief corps ranking near the top of the league in just about every major category, which is why the recent late-game decisions have stood out so much.
Carlos Carrasco handling key middle and late innings in one-run and two-run games, along with Danny Young taking the eighth in a tie game, has raised the question of whether the Braves are leaning on the right arms at the right time. Walt Weiss has said the club is essentially chasing those games with the bullpen because the offense gives them a chance to win late if they can keep things close, but the balance between preserving matchups and deploying the most trusted relievers is starting to look like a real test of how Atlanta wants to manage its best weapon. [Read more 🡒]
