Raisel Iglesias Just Reached A Braves Mark That Changes The All-Star Talk

As Raisel Iglesias continues to climb the Atlanta Braves' record books, his dominance as a closer solidifies his bid for an All-Star selection.

SAN FRANCISCO - Raisel Iglesias had a little keepsake waiting for him in the visitors clubhouse at Oracle Park on Saturday morning: the baseball from the final out of Friday night’s win over the San Francisco Giants, sealed in clear plastic with an MLB authentication sticker. It marked his 113th save as an Atlanta Brave, a number that pushed him into fourth on the franchise’s all-time saves list.

For Iglesias, milestones like that have piled up in a career that has taken a very different route than the one he once imagined. When he signed with the Cincinnati Reds in 2014, he arrived as a much-hyped starter from Cuba.

Closing games was not part of the plan. It became the path that defined him, and it’s turned him into one of the most accomplished Latin American closers ever.

Now he’s chasing another first: an All-Star selection. Dave Roberts will set the National League roster for July 14, and Iglesias’ name has put itself squarely in the conversation.

The case is strong. The 36-year-old has converted all 16 of his save chances, and his 1.37 ERA over 26 1/3 innings ranks seventh among qualified relievers. That’s a sharp turnaround from his 2025, when he carried a 5.28 ERA through the end of June.

Iglesias’ career numbers keep climbing, too. He now has 269 saves, which is 10th-most by a pitcher from Latin America.

He’s 20 away from moving past Jose Valverde and Armando Benitez into eighth. And his run of 34 straight saves, dating to July 28, 2025, is the longest active streak in the majors.

Braves manager Walt Weiss summed up the package this way: “I talk about him being a total package as a closer,” Braves manager Walt Weiss said. “He’s durable, he controls the running game, he’s a strike-thrower, he’s got swing-and-miss stuff.”

That blend matters even more when you remember how the game was changing as Iglesias was breaking in. Velocity was becoming the currency of late-inning pitching, and around the same time he signed with the Reds, Aroldis Chapman was electrifying fans with a triple-digit fastball while finishing games for Cincinnati. Iglesias came back to the same role two years later, but his value came from a different place: a mid-90s fastball and the ability to command everything else in his arsenal.

“I’m defined more by my control,” Iglesias said in Spanish. “It’s by having confidence in all my pitches and throwing every one of them; that’s the foundation of my repertoire. I’m not known as a high-velocity pitcher, so you just have to keep preparing.”

Since arriving in Atlanta at the 2022 trade deadline, he’s been exactly what the Braves hoped for at the back end of games. In more than 240 appearances, he has posted a sub-2.40 ERA, second only to the suspended Emmanuel Clase among relievers with at least 150 innings in that stretch. Clase remains on unpaid leave after an alleged scheme to rig bets on pitches thrown in MLB games.

The Braves, though, see Iglesias as more than a shutdown arm. He’s become a steady presence for young pitchers, the kind of veteran who talks through routines, preparation and the mental grind that comes with the job.

That has mattered as Atlanta deals with its starting pitching issues, and it could matter again if Didier Fuentes is asked to help fill that void.

“I’m very grateful to him for everything he’s taught me,” Fuentes said in Spanish. “He’s a great person, and every day he contributes his bit so that I can keep applying it to my work and moving forward. I hope one day I can have as impressive a career as him.”

Iglesias said Fuentes has the tools to build something of his own.

“Players like Dee Dee represent the good things that have happened to me,” Iglesias said. “They are the ones to whom I need to pass on those positive experiences so they can learn and stay on the right track for the years they have left to play here.”

In Other News...

Braves May Have Another Young Arm Worth Believing In

Braxton Fuentes has spent most of this season helping steady an Atlanta bullpen that has become a real asset, and the 21-year-old right-hander has done enough in relief to keep himself in the conversation for bigger things. After beginning the year with the idea he might be stretched back out as a starter, his role quickly settled into shorter bursts, and the results have been strong: a 2.59 ERA, 36 strikeouts in 31 1/3 innings, and at least 25 appearances.

The larger question is what comes next for a pitcher whose stuff already plays in late innings but whose long-term value could be even greater if he can survive in a rotation. Fuentes has the kind of fastball-slider combination that can miss bats now, and Atlanta still wants to see a third pitch emerge as part of a move back toward starting. That makes his progress worth tracking closely, especially after last years rough first look in the majors left plenty to prove. [Read more 🡒]

Braves Deadline Plans Keep Getting Messier For One Frustrating Reason

The Braves deadline picture has been getting murkier not because of one glaring hole, but because several parts of the roster keep shifting under Alex Anthopoulos feet. Atlanta still has to sort through issues at third base, in the rotation and around the outfield mix, and the problem is that each answer seems to create another question before the front office can even settle on the next move.

Austin Riley, Grant Holmes, Reynaldo Lopez and Mike Yastrzemski have all become part of that restless equation, with their recent struggles feeding into a roster plan that keeps changing shape. Add in the lingering effect of Jurickson Profars suspension, and the Braves are left trying to decide not just what they need at the deadline, but what their needs will look like by the time they actually make a deal. [Read more 🡒]

Braves Suddenly Have A Real Shot At A Deadline Ace

The Braves push toward the trade deadline has taken on a different tone lately, because the conversation is no longer just about finding pitching help, but about whether they can actually chase one of the biggest arms on the market. Atlantas recent run of uneven starting pitching has put the front office in a familiar spot, weighing short-term urgency against long-term cost while trying to stay in the NL East race.

MLB.coms Mark Feinsand has added to the speculation by pointing to Atlanta as a logical fit for a front-line starter if the market breaks that way. The Braves have the kind of financial room and prospect depth that can at least keep them in the conversation, which is why the idea is getting real traction this early in deadline season. Whether that interest turns into something concrete will depend on how aggressive Atlanta wants to get, and how far it is willing to go to fix the rotation. [Read more 🡒]