The Braves’ June skid has turned the trade deadline into a lot more than a talking point.
Atlanta dropped five of six against the Padres and Giants before Tuesday’s 5-3 loss to the Cardinals, and the damage keeps piling up. A lead that once looked comfortable in the NL East is down to 2.5 games, and the Braves no longer have the best record in baseball. They’ve now lost seven of their last eight and 13 of their last 17, with Tuesday’s frustration showing up in the box score: 11 runners left on base and just 1-for-12 with runners in scoring position.
The injuries haven’t helped. Right-handed reliever Robert Suarez landed on the 15-day injured list last week with right elbow inflammation, and the list of missing regulars is still long.
Ronald Acuña Jr. is out with a hamstring issue, Spencer Strider is sidelined with an elbow injury, Sean Murphy remains out with a finger injury, and several pitchers are also unavailable. On top of that, Drake Baldwin, Austin Riley and Ha-Seong Kim are all stuck in extended slumps.
That leaves general manager and president of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos staring at a roster that needs answers before the Aug. 3 deadline.
The clearest need is in the rotation.
With Strider on the injured list, Atlanta is trying to piece together innings behind Chris Sale, Bryce Elder, Grant Holmes and Martin Perez. The final spot has been a moving target. JR Ritchie has filled it recently, but after a few shaky outings, the Braves have gone back to Reynaldo López, who began the year in the rotation before moving to the bullpen in late April.
Perez has been one of the better surprises on the staff. His 3.00 ERA and 136 ERA+ are both second only to his 2022 season as career-best marks.
Elder, though, has gone the other direction. He looked like an ace over the first two months, but he has been hit hard lately, allowing 19 runs over his last three starts.
Atlanta’s rotation depth is even thinner than it looks. Spencer Schwellenbach, AJ Smith-Shawver and Joey Wentz are all on the injured list, while Hurston Waldrep also started the season there before returning. He’s currently piggybacking with López as the club continues to evaluate both pitchers.
If the Braves go shopping for a starter, Tarik Skubal is the biggest name linked to them. The two-time defending American League Cy Young Award winner is back from elbow surgery and has still put up a 3.15 ERA and 0.91 WHIP in 11 starts for the Tigers. Detroit is out of contention, so Skubal could be available, though he’d almost certainly cost a massive package as what would amount to a two-month rental.
Atlanta has the money and the prospect capital to make a real run at him. And if the Braves decide to push chips in for Skubal - or another top starter - the thinking is that the prospect loss can be replaced over time. No one in the system is truly off-limits.
There are other names to watch, too. Sonny Gray is another possibility if Boston sells, and the Boston Globe reported that he is open to waiving his no-trade clause. Gray, the 2023 AL Cy Young Award runner-up, has a 2.69 ERA over 83.2 innings.
Kevin Gausman is also in the mix if Toronto decides to become a seller. He has a 4.36 ERA in 17 starts, while Detroit’s Casey Mize has posted a 2.63 ERA in 12 starts. Gausman and Mize are both free agents after the season, which would make them appealing rental targets.
Atlanta can’t realistically expect a deep postseason push without at least looking outside the organization for help on the mound.
The lineup is another issue.
The Braves gave Ha-Seong Kim a one-year, $20 million deal over the winter, but by late June he’s in the worst stretch of his career. Through 26 games, he’s 5-for-62 with 22 strikeouts, seven walks and a .239 OPS. He missed the first 41 games after slipping on ice in Korea and injuring his hand, and for a time he also lost his everyday shortstop job to Jorge Mateo, who entered Tuesday hitting .262 with a 102 OPS+ while making $1 million in 2026.
That’s not the return Atlanta envisioned when it brought Kim in after he hit .253 with 12 RBIs and 14 runs scored in 24 games for the club following a waiver claim from Tampa Bay in September.
Austin Riley’s season has been rough as well. He’s hitting .207/.286/.333 with eight home runs in 83 games, which has put him among the coldest bats in the league right now.
With Kim, Riley and Baldwin all scuffling, the Braves produced a 65 wRC+ in June, the worst mark in Major League Baseball.
If the front office decides it needs an outside jolt, Washington shortstop and Georgia native CJ Abrams has come up as a possible target. A deal for him would likely take a major return, assuming the Nationals choose to sell.
The bullpen could also use another arm after Suarez’s injury. Raisel Iglesias is still anchoring the back end, and Atlanta can patch things together with Iglesias, Dylan Lee, Tyler Kinley, Didier Fuentes, Ian Hamilton, James Karinchak and Dylan Dodd. But an addition would make sense, even if it’s a cheaper one.
Aroldis Chapman is one name that stands out. The 38-year-old lefty is still touching 100 mph and has a 2.19 ERA with 16 saves for the Red Sox. Boston sits last in the AL East, so a sell-off appears likely, with Chapman, Jarren Duran and Willson Contreras among the players mentioned as possible trade chips.
The Braves opened a 13-game stretch Tuesday that runs into the All-Star break. It includes home series against the Cardinals and Mets at Truist Park, plus road trips to Pittsburgh for a series with the Pirates and back to St. Louis for another matchup with the Cardinals.
In Other News...
Braves Just Got An Update That Changes Spencer Schwellenbachs Stakes
Spencer Schwellenbachs rehab from elbow surgery has moved into a more encouraging phase, with the Braves prospect continuing to progress and a trip to Florida potentially coming within the next couple of weeks to ramp things up. For Atlanta, it matters because Schwellenbach is part of a broader cluster of young arms trying to work back from elbow issues, and the organization is watching every step closely as it sorts out who might still have a chance to help before the season runs out.
The timing now gives Schwellenbach a real late-season target if everything keeps moving in the right direction, with a possible return to pitching in late August or early September. He is still behind Hurston Waldrep and AJ Smith-Shawver in the comeback pipeline, which is why the next phase is so important for him and the Braves. The only thing left to learn is whether his recovery keeps trending cleanly enough to let that window stay open. [Read more 🡒]
Braves May Have Reached Their Breaking Point With Ha-Seong Kim
Ha-Seong Kims first season in Atlanta has already taken a turn the Braves could not have envisioned when they claimed him off waivers on Sept. 1 and then brought him back on a one-year, $20 million deal after he declined his $16 million option for 2026. The move made sense on paper. Kim had been limited with Tampa Bay while recovering from offseason shoulder surgery, then showed enough after arriving in Atlanta to convince the club he could be part of the infield picture going forward.
The problem is the return visit has not gone smoothly, and the offensive impact has been far lighter than the Braves needed. Kim has spent time out with injury and, since coming back, has not given the lineup much to work with, leaving Atlanta to keep sorting out its shortstop mix with other options already in the conversation. What looked like a sensible late-season addition has become one more tricky decision for a team trying to settle its roster heading into next year. [Read more 🡒]
Braves May Have Another Young Arm Worth Believing In
Braxton Fuentes has become one of those young arms the Braves can point to as a quiet bullpen success story. The 21-year-old began the year with starter development still in mind, but his path quickly shifted into relief work, and he has settled in with a 2.59 ERA, 36 strikeouts and at least 25 appearances while helping steady Atlantas middle innings.
For a club still thinking long term, the more interesting part is what comes next. Fuentes already has the kind of fastball-slider combination that can play right away, and the Braves still want to see whether he can grow into a third pitch and eventually move back toward starting. That possibility makes his progress worth tracking, especially after the rough first look he got in the majors last year. [Read more 🡒]
