
On June 18, Braves president of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos said Atlanta is “not selling.” They’ve gone 7-11 and lost two of their three best starting pitchers to long-term injuries since then. They’re 11 games under .500 and have dropped behind the Marlins in the NL East standings. The front office may not have wanted to sell, but the team has left them no choice.
The more interesting question is whether they feel it’s necessary to make a major shakeup. They could move a couple rentals and run it back with mostly the same roster in 2026. That’d be a signal they view this season as an injury-wrecked aberration. That wouldn’t address some of the issues — a lack of rotation depth, zero production from the bottom half of the lineup — that have tanked their ’25 season. The Braves have committed to the same core with a boatload of long-term extensions. Do they feel they need a significant change to that group?
Record: 40-51 (5.1% playoff odds, per FanGraphs)
Other series entries: Rockies, Giants, Phillies, Pirates, Astros, Marlins, Athletics, Orioles, White Sox, Nationals, Cubs, Rays, Dodgers
Sell Mode
Impending Free Agents: Marcell Ozuna, Raisel Iglesias, Rafael Montero
The Braves only have three rentals, none of whom would be a massive trade chip. Montero is a league average middle reliever who could be cashed in for a lottery ticket prospect. Ozuna and Iglesias are bigger names and more interesting trade targets, but they’ve each had inconsistent seasons and are quite expensive.
Iglesias, 35, is playing on a $16MM salary. The veteran righty lost his hold on the closer role last month. He has performed better since moving into more low-leverage situations, rattling off 12 1/3 frames of four-run ball since the beginning of June. Iglesias has not allowed a home run in that stretch, a big turnaround after he gave up seven longballs through the season’s first two months. He still has a strong strikeout and walk profile, but he’s carrying a career-worst 4.81 earned run average over 33 2/3 innings on the year. The Braves would probably need to pay down part of the contract to move him for a semi-notable prospect.

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