Braves May Need To Pass On The Dream Deadline Arm

As the Braves weigh their options ahead of the trade deadline, a closer look suggests Joe Ryan might be the better long-term investment over Tarik Skubal.

As the MLB trade deadline looms, the Atlanta Braves find themselves in a familiar position-on the hunt for starting pitching. The urgency of this need will soon be clearer, as Hurston Waldrep attempts to rejoin the rotation and internal candidates vie for their shot.

However, it seems almost inevitable that the Braves will be shopping for at least one arm to bolster their staff. Among the names buzzing in the Braves' fan base is Tarik Skubal, but perhaps the focus should shift elsewhere.

There's no denying Skubal's prowess on the mound. He's one of the elite pitchers in the game today.

Acquiring him would undoubtedly enhance Atlanta's roster. Yet, Skubal is a rental, and that status should ideally temper the trade demands, though it may not.

Considering various factors, the Braves might be better served bypassing the frenzy surrounding Skubal and instead setting their sights on Joe Ryan from the Twins.

Both Skubal and Ryan share similarities-power arms that rack up strikeouts and are likely headed for free agency after the season. Skubal's free agency is almost a certainty, while Ryan holds a mutual option for 2027 with Minnesota, which he might decline unless injury strikes. Both pitchers are currently with teams whose playoff prospects are dimming.

However, it's the differences that are key. While neither pitcher comes cheap, Skubal's back-to-back Cy Young wins make him a pricier acquisition.

Braves GM Alex Anthopoulos has shown he's not averse to rentals, but he's historically cautious about surrendering a treasure trove of prospects for a player likely to depart post-season. Skubal's recent elbow surgery and shaky return add another layer of risk to his acquisition.

Ryan, on the other hand, presents a slightly less risky option. The Twins won't part with him easily, but his price tag is likely more reasonable for a pitcher who could match or surpass Skubal’s performance this season.

Moreover, Ryan doesn't have Scott Boras as his agent, unlike Skubal. This makes extension talks with Ryan a more viable possibility-something that aligns well with Anthopoulos's strategies.

As the deadline approaches, the Braves will be keeping a keen eye on both pitchers and their market situations. With neither player expected to move before late July, Atlanta has time to assess their position as they gear up for the season's final push. Whether it's Skubal or Ryan, Braves fans should be excited about the potential addition, though the long-term benefits might tilt in favor of Ryan.

In Other News...

Braves Fans Wont Love Walt Weiss Take On The NL East Race

June has not been kind to the Braves, and the cushion in the NL East has thinned to three games after a stretch of losses that included Sundays 3-2 setback to the Giants. Atlanta has not been able to pair enough clean defense with timely offense, and the recent skid has opened the door just enough for the Phillies to inch closer in the standings.

Walt Weiss did not sound overly worried about the race, brushing off the shrinking margin as something that still feels early in the season. Even with Chris Sale giving Atlanta a strong outing, the Braves have not consistently backed up their pitching, and the lack of run production has become a more pressing concern as the month has worn on. [Read more 🡒]

Braves Entering A Stretch That Feels Far More Serious Than Expected

The Braves have reached a point where the broader standings debate feels a lot less important than the nightly evidence on the field. A road trip that yielded just seven runs in five games underscored how sharply the offense has slipped, and the June production has been so thin that Atlanta has spent more time trying to stop the bleeding than thinking about where it sits in the division. Walt Weiss has taken the same view, stressing that the priority is the clubs own performance, not the margin in the standings.

Atlantas issues also stretch beyond the lineup, with pitching questions lingering as the calendar moves toward the second half. The absence of Ronald Acua Jr. leaves an obvious hole in the middle of the order, but the larger question is whether the Braves can stabilize enough to avoid letting this stretch turn into something bigger. For now, the trade market remains in the background, not yet a real solution or even a serious conversation, which only adds to the sense that the next few weeks could tell us a lot about how far this team can lean on internal fixes. [Read more 🡒]

Braves Lefty Just Answered A Big Question About His Fast Rise

Briggs McKenzie has gone from draft-day curiosity to one of the Braves most interesting pitching developments almost overnight. The 2025 fourth-round pick has already climbed through Rookie ball, Low-A and High-A in just two months, a fast track that usually comes with at least one rough landing. For McKenzie, the first taste of High-A was bumpy enough to raise the obvious question about whether the jump had arrived too soon.

His third start at the level offered a much better answer. McKenzie settled in with eight strikeouts in 4.2 innings and finished by retiring six of his final 10 batters via punchouts, a sharp rebound that dropped his season ERA to 2.08 over 26 innings. The stuff still points to more growth ahead, too, with a curveball that misses plenty of bats, a fastball sitting in the 90-95 mph range and a low-80s changeup giving Atlanta plenty to work with as his rise keeps testing the limits of how quickly he can move. [Read more 🡒]