The Braves head to St. Louis with a chance to keep a little momentum going before the All-Star break, and Chris Sale is the one on the mound trying to make sure the trip doesn’t go sideways.
Atlanta steadied itself in Pittsburgh earlier this week, taking a series for the first time since June 19-21. That matters because the Braves had been wobbling for a while: after opening the season 18-2-1 in series play, they’ve gone just 2-6-1 since then, with one of those losses coming against these same Cardinals in Atlanta.
Now they get the rematch in St. Louis.
The Cardinals, meanwhile, haven’t exactly been riding a wave of good feelings themselves. They grabbed a series from the Cubs after leaving Atlanta, but then dropped four of five to the Brewers.
That stretch knocked their playoff odds from about 40 percent to about 30 percent. They had been holding the NL’s final playoff spot by a game over the Marlins; now they’re three games back in a tighter picture at the top, where the three NL Wild Card teams are separated by just half a game.
The Braves sit three games ahead of that group, while St. Louis has slipped into a second tier of teams hanging around but not quite in the center of the race.
On paper, the Cardinals’ overall production hasn’t been especially strong. They rank 14th in position player fWAR and 21st in pitching fWAR. Even so, they’ve managed to outplay the numbers a bit, with two more wins than their run differential suggests and three more than BaseRuns would point to.
Sale gives Atlanta its one steady rotation arm in this matchup, but he’s coming off one of his roughest outings in a Braves uniform. Against the Mets, he went five innings, allowed two homers, and posted a 3/2 K/BB ratio in a blowout win.
The result didn’t matter much that night, but the underlying work wasn’t clean. His FIP was his second-worst of the season, and his xFIP- for the start checked in at 123 - only the second time this year he’s been above 100, the only time he’s gone above 105, and his fourth-worst mark in any start as a Brave.
Sale usually bounces back after a bad one, and that’s the expectation here.
He has barely seen the Cardinals as a Brave, and in fact has faced them only twice in his career, once in 2015 and once in 2023. Both times, he dominated.
St. Louis will counter with 29-year-old Kyle Leahy, a pitcher Atlanta did not see in the earlier series.
Leahy worked long relief for the Cardinals in 2024 and 2025 before moving into the rotation after a solid run this season. He’s put up 1.4 fWAR in 88 innings in 2025, though a lot of that has come with a low HR/FB rate.
His numbers this year are a little unusual: a 93 ERA-, 99 FIP-, and 101 xFIP- all line up reasonably well, but his xERA is ugly.
Leahy is a true junkballer with a legit six-pitch mix, and he gets elite extension that helps his mid-90s fastball play up. His pitch shapes don’t look great on paper, but he offsets that with harder secondaries than hitters usually see.
He has good command of his four-seamer, sinker, and curve, while the rest of the mix is more about trying to fool hitters than overpower them. If Atlanta’s left-handed bats can lay off the changeup when it’s down and avoid making themselves look bad on it, they may find chances to do damage against the fastball and curve.
Leahy’s outings tend to follow a similar pattern, with the real swing factor being whether fly balls leave the yard. His HR/FB rate was 24 percent in April, then dropped to around seven percent in May, three percent in June, and zero so far in July.
That has helped him put together a strong run over about seven starts from a FIP standpoint, even if a couple of those outings have been less impressive by xFIP. If the Braves can push that HR/FB rate upward, they’ll like their chances.
If not, they may be stuck in another frustrating BABIP kind of day until they can finally force Leahy out of the game.
In Other News...
Braves Suffer Another Outfield Shakeup In The Middle Of Draft Night
The Braves outfield picture shifted again Saturday night, with the club making a fresh round of roster moves while the MLB Draft was unfolding. Atlanta recalled Brewer Hicklen from Triple-A Gwinnett to help fill the opening, and the team also brought back right-hander Owen Murphy as part of a broader shuffle that touched both the bullpen and the depth chart.
James Karinchak was optioned to Gwinnett, Jose Azocar was outrighted to Triple-A and AJ Smith-Shawver had his rehab assignment moved to Gwinnett as well. The timing only added to the sense of urgency around the roster, since the announcements landed in the middle of draft-night buzz and left the Braves managing yet another adjustment as they try to stabilize the group around the edges. [Read more 🡒]
Braves Fans May Be Surprised By These Alex Anthopoulos Draft Busts
Alex Anthopoulos has built plenty of goodwill in Atlanta by turning trades into core pieces, but the Braves recent draft record still has a few rough spots worth remembering. A review of his first-round picks turns up names like Braden Shewmake, Jared Shuster and Ryan Cusick, players who arrived with real expectations and never quite matched them once the spotlight got brighter.
Shewmake was moved to the White Sox before the 2024 season in the Aaron Bummer deal, while Shusters path took a sharp turn after a difficult major league debut and an offseason trade. Cusick, meanwhile, is now trying to regroup in the Phillies Triple-A system, a reminder that even in a front office known for aggressive roster building, not every early swing has connected the way the Braves hoped. [Read more 🡒]
Braves Just Made Another High Upside Pitching Bet
The Braves kept leaning into upside on the pitching side in the 2026 MLB Draft, using the 84th overall pick on right-hander Jensen Hirschkorn. A California prep arm committed to LSU, Hirschkorn arrives with the kind of profile Atlanta has long shown a willingness to bet on: a projectable pitcher with real stuff, enough command to make evaluators take notice, and the patience required to let the arm mature.
Hirschkorn is viewed as a talent who could grow into much more than his draft slot suggests, but the path there will not be immediate. With a fastball, a slider and the kind of feel for the strike zone that stands out for a high school pitcher, he gives the Braves another developmental arm to add to the pipeline, even if the payoff is still some time away. [Read more 🡒]
