Jim Jarvis May Be Forcing Braves To Rethink The Deadline

Jim Jarvis' recent improvements at the plate might just be the game-changer the Braves need as they approach the trade deadline with big decisions looming.

Jim Jarvis has gone from stopgap to storyline in a hurry, and the Braves may have to adjust their trade deadline thinking because of it.

When Atlanta brought Jarvis up from Triple-A Gwinnett, there was room to wonder what the move really meant. Was it a reward for what he had done in Gwinnett, even without much prospect buzz attached to his name?

Or was it simply Atlanta reaching for help because shortstop production had been so thin? Either way, Jarvis arrived with modest expectations and a bat that, at first, mostly produced weak contact and a few balls that found grass.

That has changed fast.

Before Atlanta’s July 5 game against the Pirates, Jarvis had an average exit velocity of just 82.2 MPH when his brief May stint was included. Over a full season, that would have ranked as the lowest in baseball by 0.9 MPH. He was hitting .211/.250/.211, which was still better than what Ha-Seong Kim and Jorge Mateo gave the Braves in June, but not the kind of line that changes a front office’s plans.

Then came the breakout in Pittsburgh. In the series finale, Jarvis launched his first career homer and also ripped a double off the right field wall.

The next day, he lined a 102.2 MPH single. Two days after that, he smoked a 102.4 MPH liner that stayed in the park.

After the game, the rookie said he had made some small adjustments to his posture.

The numbers since then have backed up the eye test. Over his last four games before the All-Star break, Jarvis posted an average exit velocity of 90.7 MPH, a jump of more than 8 MPH. That kind of stretch can be easy to overread, but Jarvis kept it going out of the gate afterward with a 103.8 MPH single, a 90.9 MPH double, and a 99.3 MPH barrel that was caught in center field.

There’s more behind the surge than just a hot week. Jarvis has raised his bat speed from 70.6 MPH to 71.5 MPH, and his ideal attack angle has climbed from 40.5% to 75.0%.

The result is more authority on the ball and better contact at better angles. In plain terms, he’s swinging it much better, and he no longer has to depend on bloopers falling in to reach base.

If that holds, Atlanta’s shortstop problem looks a lot less urgent. The Braves could still chase another bat, but Jarvis’ emergence may give them the freedom to put more of their prospect capital toward the rotation instead of splitting it across multiple needs or settling for lesser returns.

With the 2026 MLB trade deadline only two-and-a-half weeks away, Jarvis’ bat may end up shaping how the Braves decide to spend.

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