The Braves are in a spot where standing still probably isn’t good enough.
Atlanta leads the NL East by 3.0 games, but the Phillies and Marlins are close enough to keep the pressure on. After a rough stretch, the division picture could tighten in a hurry, which is why the trade deadline feels important for the Braves. They have two obvious areas to attack: shortstop and the rotation.
On the pitching side, Bleacher Report’s Kerry Miller floated a deal he labeled “realistic” that would send Sonny Gray from the Boston Red Sox to Atlanta in exchange for right-hander Owen Murphy and cash considerations.
“Realistic Trade: Atlanta Braves acquire RHP Sonny Gray from Boston Red Sox for RHP Owen Murphy and cash considerations,” Miller proposed.
For the Braves, that kind of framework has some appeal. They have the money to help make a deal work, and Murphy is a useful prospect without being one of the organization’s crown jewels. The 22-year-old right-hander is among Atlanta’s better pitching prospects, but he is not in the same tier as Cam Caminiti, RJ Ritchie, or Didier Fuentes.
That matters. If the Braves can land a starter of Gray’s caliber without touching that top group, it changes the calculus.
Gray would bring a lot more than just stability. The 36-year-old right-hander has posted a 2.61 ERA this season, gone 10-1, and piled up 2.2 bWAR in 16 starts. He has struck out 82 batters and logged a 1.104 WHIP across 89.2 innings.
It’s not the Tarik Skubal speculation that has followed Atlanta around this summer, but it would still be a major addition. Pairing Gray with Chris Sale would give the Braves a rotation front that looks built for October.
And even if Spencer Strider and the other injured starters aren’t back yet, or aren’t fully right, Atlanta could lean on Sale and Gray at the top and feel good about it.
That’s the appeal of Miller’s idea: a deal that brings in a proven arm, uses cash to help grease the wheels, and keeps the Braves from sacrificing one of their top three young pitchers. For Atlanta, that would be a strong deadline win.
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Phillies Fans Just Lost A Reunion They Were Waiting For
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Phillies Star Pulled Into Disturbing Sportsbook Lawsuit Allegations
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The filing also pulls Bryce Harper into the conversation through a personalized video message that was part of the alleged VIP package, a detail that has drawn criticism from gambling experts even though no laws or MLB rules are said to have been broken. Harper has previously spoken out against gambling because of his Mormon faith, which only adds another layer to a case that already names FanDuel, DraftKings and the NFL in broader claims about addiction and responsibility. [Read more 🡒]
