Braves Notes: Fuentes, Kim, Roster Decisions

Braves prospect Didier Fuentes was a healthy scratch from a scheduled start yesterday and could be an option to join the big league pitching staff in the near future. As Chad Bishop of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution breaks down, Fuentes’ scratch doesn’t necessarily guarantee a recall to the majors, but the Braves are light on options to summon as they embark on a sequence of 10 games in 10 days. Each of Hayden Harris, Dylan Dodd and Rolddy Muñoz was optioned late last week, meaning they can’t be recalled for 15 days (from the date of their option) unless they’re directly replacing an injured player on the roster. Skipping Fuentes’ start yesterday also helps to manage the promising 20-year-old’s workload after he only pitched 70 total innings (majors and minors combined) in 2025.

Fuentes has been terrific so far in Gwinnett this season. He’s taken the ball three times, tossed a total of 16 2/3 innings and held opponents to four runs (2.16 ERA) on eight hits and six walks with 20 strikeouts. He’s also plunked three batters and tossed a wild pitch, so his command hasn’t exactly been pristine, but the results and bat-missing capabilities are impressive.

Throughout spring training, there were calls from Atlanta fans to plug Fuentes into the rotation — understandably so. To this point in the season, however, there are five Braves pitchers who’ve started multiple games — Chris Sale, Reynaldo López, Grant Holmes, Martín Pérez, Bryce Elder — and none has an ERA higher than 3.42 (Holmes). Despite all the injuries, Atlanta starters remarkably lead the majors with a 2.65 ERA. Metrics like FIP (4.02) and SIERA (4.05) are far more bearish, but it’d be hard for Braves brass to tell any of the current starters he’s losing his place in the rotation. Atlanta already briefly jettisoned Pérez, but he quickly re-signed on a new deal and responded by tossing six shutout innings in Philadelphia on Friday.

None of that includes righty Spencer Strider, who’s working his way back from an oblique injury and could return early next month. The Braves will need to figure out a way to plug Strider back into the rotation whenever he’s cleared to return. Elder looked to be very much on the roster bubble in spring training, but he’s allowed only two earned runs through his first 23 1/3 innings. Pérez, as previously mentioned, just fired six shutout innings on the road against a top division rival. He now has a 2.21 ERA on the year. Perhaps another injury will make the decision easier, but if everyone’s healthy, it’s fair to say that “too many effective starters” isn’t a problem many foresaw Atlanta encountering a few weeks back (though it’s a “problem” they’ll surely welcome with open arms).

On the position-player side of the roster, the Braves will have some decisions looming regarding seldom-used veterans currently holding down bench spots. Catcher Sean Murphy is on a rehab assignment. Shortstop Ha-Seong Kim is headed for a simulated game Thursday, manager Walt Weiss told the Atlanta beat (via MLB.com’s Mark Bowman). He could begin a rehab assignment next week himself.

The return of Murphy, on paper, would seem to be bad news for veteran backstop Jonah Heim, who’s 5-for-23 in limited action as the No. 2 catcher behind reigning National League Rookie of the Year Drake Baldwin. As Bowman points out, however, infielder Kyle Farmer has only received seven plate appearances all season. The organization loves his presence in the clubhouse, but he’s even more seldom-used than Heim. Keeping Heim over Farmer could allow the Braves to more comfortably use both Baldwin and Murphy in the same lineup, splitting time at catcher and DH, with Heim on hand as an emergency option.

Of course, when Kim returns — likely in mid-May — both Heim and Farmer could be squeezed out. No one on the Braves’ bench can be optioned, so two of Farmer, Heim, Jorge Mateo and Eli White are likely to find themselves displaced, barring other injuries that allow the team to kick those decisions down the road a bit.

Mateo has hit quite well, albeit in a tiny sample of 20 plate appearances. His prior track record doesn’t create much optimism about him sustaining this pace, but he’s still an elite runner with 98th-percentile sprint speed (per Statcast) and some defensive versatility. White has been the team’s worst hitter … in a similarly tiny sample of 22 plate appearances. He’s a terrific outfield defender, however, and Statcast measures his sprint speed even better than Mateo, placing him at the very top of the MLB scale with 30.4 feet per second (100th percentile).

Braves Select Martín Pérez

April 17th: Perez was officially selected back to the roster today.

April 15th: The Braves seem set to bring Martín Pérez right back up to the majors. Manager Walt Weiss told reporters this evening that the veteran southpaw was among the options to start Friday’s series opener against Philadelphia (relayed by Chad Bishop of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution). Mark Bowman of MLB.com suggests it will indeed be Pérez, who is also listed as the team’s probable starter opposite Taijuan Walker on the MLB website.

Atlanta designated him for assignment on Sunday and ran him through outright waivers. Pérez elected free agency but returned on a minor league contract this morning. That might’ve come with an understanding that he’d be quickly called back up. The transactional sequence allowed the Braves to carry a nine-man bullpen for the intervening few games, though it obviously came with the possibility that another team would claim Pérez off waivers.

Pérez has made three appearances in an Atlanta uniform. He has gotten decent results, allowing just five runs across 14 1/3 innings. The 35-year-old southpaw has only struck out six of the 53 batters he faced with a well below-average 7.2% swinging strike percentage.

Bryce Elder is on the mound for tonight’s series finale against Miami. The Braves are off tomorrow. Pérez’s return allows them to give an extra day of rest to their other starters. It’ll be Chris Sale vs. Cristopher Sánchez in a phenomenal pitching duel on Saturday and Grant Holmes opposite rookie Andrew Painter to round out the weekend divisional set. Atlanta hasn’t listed probable starters for next week’s series against the Nationals but would have Reynaldo López and Elder on schedule for the first two games.

The Braves already have two openings on their 40-man roster. They’d only need to make an active roster move involving a pitcher as a corresponding transaction. Dylan Lee and Hayden Harris are their only pitchers with minor league options. They’ll presumably option Harris out after tonight’s game.

Braves Re-Sign Luke Williams To Minor League Deal

The Braves have re-signed Luke Williams to a minor league deal, according to his transactions tracker at MLB.com. He has been assigned to Triple-A Gwinnett and entered tonight’s game as a pinch runner.

It’s an unsurprising development. Williams is clearly liked by the club as a depth piece but he is out of options, leading to frequent transactions. Williams was added to the roster a few days ago while Michael Harris II went on the paternity list. When Harris came back a few days later, Williams was designated for assignment, cleared waivers and elected free agency. It’s a familiar cycle for him. He was claimed off waivers in the summer of 2023 and, since then, this is the third time he has become a free agency and then quickly re-signed.

Williams hasn’t hit in the majors, with a .212/.272/.280 line in 350 plate appearances. But he provides defensive versatility, with experience at every position on the diamond except catcher. He can also steals some bases, swiping 25 bags in 31 attempts in his big league career.

Atlanta doesn’t have a ton of optionable position player depth on the roster. The only guy on the 40-man who isn’t already in the majors or on the injured list is Nacho Alvarez Jr., who has a .182/.325/.212 line in Triple-A so far this year. If someone on the active roster suffers an injury, Williams will be a candidate to rejoin the big league club.

Photo courtesy of Brett Davis, Imagn Images

Braves Designate Osvaldo Bido, Select Ian Hamilton

The Braves have designated right-hander Osvaldo Bido for assignment, per a team announcement. Right-hander Ian Hamilton‘s contract has been selected from Triple-A Gwinnett in a corresponding move. Atlanta also optioned southpaw reliever Hayden Harris to Gwinnett. That’ll clear another active roster spot for veteran lefty Martín Pérez. Braves skipper Walt Weiss said last night that Pérez, who quickly re-signed on a minor league deal after being designated for assignment and clearing waivers, will start Friday.

Bido, 30, has become the poster boy for the perpetual DFA carousel that some players ride in today’s game. Since the end of the 2025 season, he’s been on six different 40-man rosters via a series of DFAs and waiver claims. He spent the 2025 season with the A’s and has since bounced to the Braves, Rays, Marlins, Yankees, Angels and back to the Braves. It’s feasible he could now find himself with a seventh organization in the span of about five calendar months.

On the one hand, the parade of DFAs might suggest that teams don’t feel Bido is a big league-caliber arm. On the other, he’s yet to make it through waivers. Twenty percent of the league has rostered Bido since the 2025 Winter Meetings commenced. Clubs clearly think there’s major league potential in the lanky right-hander, but he’s yet to put things together with any real consistency.

Bido pitched 10 innings with Atlanta and was tagged for seven runs on seven hits and five walks. Walking five of the 41 hitters he faced (12.2%) is already problematic, but Bido also plunked a pair of batters and rattled off four wild pitches. Suffice it to say, his command has not been there in 2026.

Command has never been an especially strong point for Bido, but he hasn’t struggled to this extent in the past. He entered the season having walked or hit 12% of the batters he’s faced in the majors. He’d averaged a wild pitch every 10 innings or so. He’s walked/hit 17.1% of his opponents this year and averaged a wild pitch every two and a half innings — certainly not ideal.

Bido has had an up-and-down run in the majors, logging poor numbers in 2023, strong output in 2024 and more struggles in 2025. The 2026 season clearly hasn’t been kind to him. Overall, metrics like SIERA (4.62) and FIP (4.70) view him a bit more favorably than his career 5.13 ERA, but Bido has typically pitched like a swingman or sixth starter. He averages 94.7 mph on his four-seamer and sinker alike. He’s only a bit worse than average in terms of strikeout rate (20.6%) and walk rate (9.7%), but he’s an extreme fly-ball pitcher whose best season was spent pitching home games in the cavernous Oakland Coliseum during the Athletics’ final season there.

Last year’s move to West Sacramento’s Sutter Health Park, which played like an absolute launching pad, did Bido no favors. He served up 13 big flies in only 44 1/3 home innings, compared to just six on the road (35 1/3 innings). He’s been tagged for one home run in his 10 innings with the Braves.

Bido would ideally land in a more pitcher-friendly home park than he had with either the A’s or Braves. Sutter Health Park was the fifth-most homer-friendly park for left-handed batters in 2025, per Statcast’s Park Factors. Atlanta’s Truist Park was just behind, sitting sixth in MLB. Time will tell whether that happens. The Braves have five days to trade Bido or place him on waivers. Outright waivers are a 48-hour process, so today’s DFA will be resolved in no more than a week’s time.

As for Hamilton, he’ll be suiting up for a seventh major league season. He’s pitched 150 1/3 innings for the White Sox, Twins and Yankees in his career, turning in a sharp 3.59 ERA overall. A terrific 2023 season (2.64 ERA, 58 innings) disproportionately affects that career-long mark; Hamilton had a 4.91 ERA in 14 2/3 innings prior to that season and has a 4.06 earned run average in 77 2/3 frames since.

Hamilton, 30, has fanned just over one quarter of his opponents in the majors but also sports an 11.1% walk rate that’s nearly three percentage points north of average. He’s shown above-average grounder tendencies (45.9%) and has done a nice job of avoiding homers and hard contact in general. His first year with the Braves organization has kicked off nicely, with 6 1/3 innings of two-run ball and a 9-to-1 K/BB ratio in Triple-A Gwinnett.

Like nearly everyone else in the Atlanta bullpen, Hamilton is out of minor league options. At present, southpaw Dylan Lee is the only optionable pitcher — bullpen or rotation — on the Braves’ major league roster. It’s an untenable setup in the modern game, where teams tend to cycle various relievers through the final couple bullpen spots to maintain a stock of fresh arms in support of starters who rarely work deep into games. That’s all the more true given that Lee, while technically optionable, almost certainly isn’t being sent down anytime soon. He’s been one of Atlanta’s most consistently effective relievers dating back to 2024, with an overall 2.65 ERA and a 1.13 mark through his first eight frames in 2026.

Luke Williams Elects Free Agency

Utilityman Luke Williams elected free agency after being designated for assignment by the Braves, relays Chad Bishop of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. He cleared waivers and has multiple career outright assignments, allowing him to return to the market.

There’s a decent chance that’s just a formality and a precursor to a new minor league contract with Atlanta. Williams has bounced on and off the Braves’ roster for the past three-plus seasons. He received a brief call over the weekend while Michael Harris II was on paternity leave. Williams is out of minor league options and was surely aware he’d be the cut once Harris returned to the team.

The call-up gave Williams a few days of major league pay. He appeared in two games, once as a defense substitute and one as a pinch-hitter. He drew a walk against Kolby Allard in his only plate appearance. Williams has taken 350 trips to the plate in the big leagues. He’s a .212/.272/.280 hitter, though he has stolen 25 bases.

Braves, Martín Pérez Agree To New Minor League Deal

The Braves and veteran lefty Martín Pérez are in agreement on another minor league contract, reports Jon Heyman of the New York Post. Atlanta designated the 35-year-old for assignment over the weekend, and he elected free agency after clearing waivers. The Octagon client is now quickly returning to the Braves organization on a non-guaranteed deal, although given the mountain of injuries on the Atlanta pitching staff, it’s likely that Pérez will be back in the major league fold before all that long.

It’s increasingly common in today’s game for mid-30s veterans — particularly pitchers — to be designated for assignment and quickly re-sign upon being released. The Braves themselves have done this frequently in the past with Jesse Chavez, and we’ve seen clubs like the Mariners (Casey Lawrence), Yankees (Ryan Weber, David Hale) and Marlins (Devin Smeltzer) regularly shuffle players on and off the 40-man roster via repeated cycles of DFA, outright, and new minor league pacts. Organizations are typically up front about their intentions in these scenarios, and the player is obviously amenable to the setup. We don’t yet know if that’s the route down which Pérez is headed with Atlanta, but this is a first step in that direction.

Pérez has made three appearances for manager Walt Weiss’ club this season — two starts, one relief outing — and held opponents to five runs in 14 1/3 innings. That comes out to a tidy 3.14 earned run average, but Pérez’s six strikeouts (11.3%) and 90 mph sinker make it tough to imagine him sustaining that level of run prevention.

The veteran Pérez has been a reliable back-end starter in the second act of his career, dating back to 2020, with a collective 3.99 ERA in his past 719 1/3 MLB frames. That number is skewed a bit by an outlier 2022 season (2.89 ERA in 196 innings); Pérez has generally been good for bulk innings and a mid-4.00s ERA. Metrics like FIP (4.39) and SIERA (4.65) feel that’s about where his run prevention should reside, based on his strikeouts, walks, ground balls, etc.

The Braves currently have an entire rotation’s worth of arms on the injured list. Spencer Strider (oblique strain), Spencer Schwellenbach (surgery to remove bone chips from elbow), Hurston Waldrep (same as Schwellenbach), AJ Smith-Shawver (Tommy John surgery last June) and Joey Wentz (torn ACL) are all on the shelf. Wentz won’t return this season. Smith-Shawver, Schwellenbach and Waldrep are likely out until early or mid-summer.

At the moment, Atlanta’s rotation includes Chris Sale, Reynaldo López, Grant Holmes and Bryce Elder. Lefty José Suarez and righty Osvaldo Bido are swing options in the bullpen. Prospects JR Ritchie and Didier Fuentes are intriguing options in the minor leagues, though the former has yet to make his MLB debut and is not yet on the 40-man roster.

Pérez adds an experienced depth option to the mix. There’s enough track record here that he could pitch his way into a more permanent rotation spot, but if he’s comfortable riding the DFA carousel that Atlanta has previously utilized with Chavez, that could also present a path to somewhat consistent innings (albeit a more circuitous one).

Martín Pérez Elects Free Agency

Veteran left-hander Martín Pérez elected free agency, relays Chad Bishop of The Atlanta Journal Constitution. He cleared outright waivers after being designated for assignment by the Braves on Sunday.

Pérez made three appearances in an Atlanta uniform. He got decent results, allowing just five runs across 14 1/3 innings. The 35-year-old southpaw only struck out six of the 53 batters he faced with a well below-average 7.2% swinging strike percentage. The Braves opted not to continue running him out as their fifth starter. They’re carrying a nine-man bullpen for the time being — a luxury partially afforded by a day off on Thursday — but will need a fifth starter or bullpen game early next week.

Spencer Strider is set to begin a rehab assignment on Thursday. He’ll make at least three minor league appearances. The Braves could recall Didier Fuentes or turn to José Suarez to lead a bullpen game in the Pérez spot.

It’s possible the Braves look to bring Pérez back on a minor league deal. They don’t have much in the way of upper minors rotation experience. If Pérez is unable to find a big league contract as a free agent, he could be best served returning to an organization with which he’s already familiar.

Sean Murphy To Begin Rehab Assignment

Braves catcher Sean Murphy is headed out on a minor league rehab assignment, the team announced this morning. He’ll report to Atlanta’s High-A affiliate tonight, kicking off a rehab window that can last up to 20 days.

Murphy, 31, looked last year to be on his way to a nice rebound effort from a down showing in 2024. He missed some time early due to an oblique strain and a fractured rib but posted a hearty .240./331/.514 slash (131 wRC+) with 16 home runs in his first 239 plate appearances last year.

Murphy’s production began to dwindle in late July, however, and it cratered over the next month-plus before he was diagnosed with a torn labrum in his hip, necessitating season-ending surgery. Over his final 98 plate appearances, the former All-Star batted only .096/.224/.145 — brutal numbers that certainly appear to depict a player who had been attempting to gut out an injury of note.

Prior to Murphy’s struggles last summer, the Braves had begun using both him and fellow catcher (and eventual Rookie of the Year winner) Drake Baldwin in the same lineup — one behind the plate and the other at designated hitter. With Marcell Ozuna‘s contract expiring at season’s end, that setup looked like it could carry over into the 2026 season. There was naturally some speculation about the possibility of trading Murphy and the remaining three years/$45MM on his contract as Baldwin emerged into stardom, but that possibility seemed like a long shot once Murphy required surgery. No team was going to take on the remaining contract — let alone do so and give up something of note.

With Murphy’s rehab lingering into the ’26 season, the door seemed open for Jurickson Profar to take regular at-bats as the DH in Atlanta. The Braves signed Mike Yastrzemski in the offseason, adding him to an outfield mix also including Profar, Michael Harris II and Ronald Acuña Jr. Instead, Profar’s second PED suspension of the past year prompted a 162-game ban and paved the way for minor league signee Dominic Smith to make the roster. Smith has been beyond a pleasant surprise; he’s been one the most productive hitters in the league, albeit in a limited role. Through 37 plate appearances, he’s homered three times while slashing .353/.378/.647.

Smith’s track record suggests he’s not going to sustain anything close to this pace, but he’s hit so well that Atlanta won’t be in any rush to move on from him. It feels likelier that Murphy’s return would spell trouble for veteran Jonah Heim, who signed a one-year deal during camp and has thus far gone 3-for-19 in 22 plate appearances. Heim had a breakout showing with the ’23 World Series champion Rangers but followed it up with a .217/.269/.334 performance in two subsequent seasons before being non-tendered by Texas.

At least for the time being, the Braves needn’t make any roster decisions just yet. Murphy is going to need a fairly lengthy buildup after missing all of spring training. He hasn’t seen game action since Sept. 6. It’s unlikely this will be just a quick two- or three-game rehab stint. But the start of the clock on his 20-day window does establish a pretty set deadline for the Braves to make a call on a veteran player who can’t be optioned (e.g. Heim) before too long, barring additional injuries that arise in the next couple weeks.

Poll: Which Team Has Been Most Impacted By Injuries This Year?

Every year, teams that are widely expected to succeed at the outset of the season stumble due to injury woes. Teams that look strong on paper can often perform much less impressively if even one or two key players are removed from the mix, and even the very best teams can look vulnerable with a long enough string of tough-luck injuries. 2026 has been no exception to this so far, with several teams facing substantially tougher roads in the months ahead thanks to an early injury or three putting them on the back foot. Which team has it worst when it comes to the injury bug? Here’s a few of the leading contenders, in alphabetical order:

Atlanta Braves

One look at Atlanta’s list of injured players makes it easy to see why they’re in this conversation. The Braves’ injured starting pitchers would be a respectable starting rotation when taken together: Spencer Schwellenbach, Spencer Strider, Hurston Waldrep, AJ Smith-Shawver, and Joey Wentz are all currently on the shelf. While Wentz is more of a back-end starter or swing man, the other four would all be in the conversation to start playoff games for the Braves alongside future Hall of Famer Chris Sale if they were healthy. In addition to the starting pitching woes, the Braves are without two key members of their lineup: catcher Sean Murphy and shortstop Ha-Seong Kim. Despite this deep group of talented players on the shelf, it can be argued the Braves haven’t been too impacted by those issues: they’re actually leading the NL East at the moment, and scorching hot starts from Drake Baldwin and Mauricio Dubon have helped fans to forget about the losses of Murphy and Kim.

Baltimore Orioles

The Orioles could be easy to overlook on a list like this given their considerable depth all over the diamond, but that depth has been tested a great deal already this year. Zach Eflin is out for the year as he faces UCL surgery, but unlike other teams on this list the rotation is the least of Baltimore’s woes. A lineup that is currently without Jordan Westburg (elbow sprain), Jackson Holliday (hamate surgery), Adley Rutschman (ankle inflammation), Tyler O’Neill (concussion), Ryan Mountcastle (foot fracture) and Heston Kjerstad (hamstring strain) has been rather resilient in the face of those many losses thanks to the team’s deep positional corps. The bullpen has not been so fortunate, as last summer’s loss of Felix Bautista has been compounded by injuries to Keegan Akin and Andrew Kittredge to completely upend the Orioles’ late-inning mix outside of Ryan Helsley.

Chicago Cubs

While some teams collapse under the weight of several injuries piling up, the Cubs have struggled to stomach just one major loss. Star right-hander Cade Horton looked like an up-and-coming ace with the club last year, but just two starts into what would’ve been his first season in the majors, the right-hander was sidelined for UCL surgery. That’ll leave the Cubs without their best pitcher for the entire year, all while Justin Steele is still rehabbing from his own UCL surgery last April. The loss of Horton isn’t the only injury the Cubs have faced this year, either. Seiya Suzuki missed the start of the season after getting hurt during the WBC, though he’s since returned to the lineup. Matthew Boyd is currently sidelined by an arm injury of his own, and the team’s top two bullpen additions from the offseason (Phil Maton and Hunter Harvey) have both recently gone on the injured list as well. Losing Horton might be the biggest individual blow any team has faced so far this year, though other teams surely have it worse than the Cubs when it comes to volume.

Houston Astros

The Astros have had a brutal run of injuries so far this year. Hunter Brown and Cristian Javier are both sidelined with shoulder strains. Tatsuya Imai (arm fatigue) joined them on the shelf and Cody Bolton (mid-back tightness) is also banged up. Things aren’t much better outside of the rotation. An outfield mix that was already looking thin before the season began lost its best starter in center fielder Jake Meyers to an oblique strain. The infield lost Jeremy Peña to a hamstring strain. The bullpen has also struggled badly without star closer Josh Hader, who has been sidelined by biceps tendinitis without much clarity on his timeline for a return to action. Other, smaller loses include outfielder Zach Dezenzo, lefty Bennett Sousa, and right-hander Nate Pearson. That’s on top of the continued absences of players like Hayden Wesneski and Ronel Blanco due to surgeries underwent last season.

Toronto Blue Jays

The reigning AL champs have struggled badly with injuries all over the roster this year. The most obvious are those in the rotation, where all of Cody Ponce, Bowden Francis, Jose Berrios, Shane Bieber, and Trey Yesavage are currently shelved with only Yesavage likely to return any time soon. That’s left the Jays to rely on Patrick Corbin and an injured Max Scherzer in the early going. While the lineup hasn’t been quite as damaged as the rotation, there’s still been significant losses. Alejandro Kirk is in the midst of six-week absence due to thumb surgery. Anthony Santander was sidelined before the year even began by shoulder surgery. George Springer (fractured toe) and Addison Barger (sprained ankle) are facing injuries of their own. While the bullpen has remained intact, the number of injuries in the rotation and lineup have left the Jays looking very different than they would when healthy.

Other Options

Those five teams aren’t the only ones facing injury woes, of course. The Mets have an argument given that Juan Soto is probably the most impactful talent on the injured list all throughout the league at the moment, though he’ll be back in a few weeks and they lack other significant injuries. The Yankees are currently without players like Gerrit Cole, Carlos Rodon, and Anthony Volpe, but those injuries were known during the offseason and the club was able to construct their roster around them. The Dodgers’ losses of Mookie Betts, Tommy Edman, and Blake Snell are certainly significant, but it’s hard to say they’re being impacted too much when they have the best record in baseball. The Brewers have a strong argument for this list in the event that Christian Yelich joins Quinn Priester and Jackson Chourio on the shelf, though that isn’t yet certain. The Reds have stayed healthy in the lineup and bullpen, but the losses of Hunter Greene and Nick Lodolo are obviously a big blow to their rotation.

Which team do MLBTR readers think has been most impacted by injuries this year? Have your say in the poll below:

Which team has been most impacted by injuries in 2026?

Vote to see results

Braves Designate Luke Williams For Assignment

The Braves announced today that outfielder Michael Harris II has been reinstated from the paternity list. In a corresponding move, infielder Luke Williams has been designated for assignment. Atlanta’s 40-man roster count drops from 39 to 38.

Williams was only selected to the big league roster this past weekend when Harris went on paternity leave. He appeared in two games with Atlanta and took one plate appearance, drawing a walk in that lone trip to the batter’s box.

This is now four straight seasons in which Williams, 29, has suited up for Atlanta. He’s a clear favorite of the organization, even if his production in the majors hasn’t amounted to much. The 2015 third-rounder (Phillies) has totaled 350 plate appearances in the big leagues but sports just a .212/.272/.280 batting line. He’s a versatile defender with a decent track record in the upper minors, however.

Williams has played all four infield positions, all three outfield spots and even taken 11 innings of mop-up relief in his big league career. His career line in Triple-A is weighed down a bit by an especially rocky showing there last season, but he’s still a lifetime .255/.333/.401 hitter at the top minor league level, including a .282/.344/.495 slash in 55 games in 2024.

This is the fourth DFA of Williams’ career (not counting the original 2023 waiver claim that sent him from L.A. to Atlanta, as he wasn’t formally designated for assignment prior to being placed on waivers). The Braves have successfully passed him through waivers unclaimed on three separate occasions since first claiming him from the Dodgers. He’ll be placed on waivers or traded within the next five days, and the outcome of his DFA will be known within the next seven days, at maximum. (Waivers are a 48-hour process.) Williams will have the right to reject an outright assignment if he clears waivers, but even if he does, recent history tells us there’s a good chance he’d re-sign with the organization and head back to Triple-A Gwinnett anyhow.

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