By John A. Tures, Professor of Political Science, LaGrange College
Everyone knows that the Atlanta Braves’ success comes from the farm system, along with a series of top-notch free-agent signings to supplement all of that home-grown talent. But what’s less known, but just as important, are the little deals, the ones that plug any injury holes or slumps that could bedevil any major league franchise. It may be the key to the Braves’ season and postseason success.
Smart Atlanta GMs worked deals to bring in big names like Greg Maddux, Fred McGriff, Andres Galarraga, Garry Sheffield as well as Josh Donaldson. One-sided trades brought John Smoltz, Dansby Swanson, Ender Inciarte, Max Fried, and now Matt Olson and Sean Murphy to the Braves. In fact, it would probably take several documents to list all of the big names that the team brought in to help win another division title.
Lesser known are the tales of the short-term signings, the one-year deals for players ignored or overlooked by others, which filled glaring gaps that kept the well-oiled Braves baseball machine lubricated.
With the signing of outfielder Adam Duvall on a one-year deal, the Braves may have found a solution for the Spring Training struggles of Jarred Kelenic, a new trade acquisition. Given Duvall’s history with the Golden Glove and bat in the Braves’ postseason glory, it looks like yet another case of smart money.
And who can forget the 2021 season where the Braves picked up the NLDS MVP, NLCS MVP, and World Series MVP to offset Ronald Acuna’s season-ending injury, with deals that should make Alex Anthopoulos a first-round Hall-of-Fame GM when he retires?
Pitcher Chris Sale was the biggest offseason trade from the Braves other than Kelenic. But he’s hardly the only one, according to CBS. Aaron Bummer and Reynoldo Lopez provide much needed depth for the Braves pitching, one in the bullpen and possibly one in the starting rotation.
Luis Guillorme, the ex-New York…
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