The Braves have checked in on Sonny Gray, and they’re hardly alone.
According to Ken Rosenthal and Will Sammon of The Athletic, Atlanta is one of several teams that has reached out to the Red Sox about the right-hander’s availability. At this stage, though, nothing is close to happening, and Boston still hasn’t fully committed to either buying or selling before the Aug. 3 trade deadline.
That hesitation makes sense. The Red Sox have suddenly heated up, winning five straight and 10 of their last 12 to climb within three games in the crowded American League Wild Card race. A club that looked like a likely seller for much of the first half is now trying to decide whether this run changes the math.
Gray’s situation is exactly why teams are circling. He’s an impending free agent, and clubs in need of rotation help are naturally doing their homework.
The Braves are expected to come up often in this conversation, and for good reason: Gray has a full no-trade clause, he lives in Nashville, and he has previously valued staying close to home when making decisions like this. Atlanta is about a four and a half hour drive from Nashville, which makes it one of the more convenient options for his family.
The fit on the field is obvious too. Atlanta has been battered by pitching injuries and has watched several stopgaps start to crack.
Bryce Elder came into today’s game with an 8.70 ERA over his last six starts. Martín Pérez just went on the injured list.
Reynaldo López is still stretching back out after a bullpen stint. Hurston Waldrep has allowed 10 runs in his first 10 2/3 innings since returning from a spring elbow procedure.
Spencer Schwellenbach has not pitched this year after surgery to remove loose bodies from his elbow during spring training. And Spencer Strider has been out nearly a month with elbow inflammation and will miss at least one more month while on the 60-day IL.
That’s why Atlanta’s interest feels inevitable. Braves president of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos also tends to favor shorter-term commitments when he adds veteran talent, which lines up with Gray’s rental status. Most of the longer deals Atlanta has handed out under Anthopoulos have been extensions for players still in their early-to-mid 20s.
Gray is in the final season of the three-year, $75MM contract he originally signed with the Cardinals. He adjusted the deal a bit when he approved a trade from St.
Louis to Boston over the winter. He’s earning a $31MM salary this season, though St.
Louis is covering $20MM of that as part of the trade. That leaves Boston responsible for $11MM in salary and a $10MM buyout on a mutual option that won’t be exercised by both sides.
More than a decade has passed since a mutual option was picked up by both teams, and there’s still about $3.31MM left to be paid on the salary plus that $10MM buyout.
It’s a hefty price for a rental, but Gray has pitched like someone worth paying for. Across 16 starts, he has thrown 89 2/3 innings, averaging 5 2/3 innings per outing. He owns a 2.61 ERA with a 22.8% strikeout rate, a 6.4% walk rate and a 47.6% ground-ball rate, his best mark since 2020.
Atlanta’s payroll picture suggests it could make the move if it wants to. The club’s cash payroll is a little over $259MM, and its luxury-tax number sits around $252MM.
That puts the Braves above the $244MM threshold, but still well short of the second penalty tier at $264MM. Adding Gray alongside Chris Sale would give Atlanta a rotation built around two of the most successful pitchers of this era, and both would profile as playoff starters if healthy.
Still, the Braves are just one team in a much larger group likely asking Boston about Gray. Clubs like the Cubs, Blue Jays, Phillies, Padres and Rangers have probably also checked in. The Red Sox appear to be taking their time, hoping this recent surge pushes them toward a buyer’s stance instead of the seller’s role many expected earlier in the year.
If Boston does decide to move Gray, there’s not much reason to keep him. The mutual option is not getting picked up, and he can’t receive a qualifying offer because he already got one from the Twins after the 2023 season.
That leaves the Red Sox with a simple choice: trade him for future value or keep pushing for a playoff spot. Right now they’re stuck in the middle, but the next two to three weeks should clear things up.
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