Poll: Who Will Win The NL East?
With the first game of the 2026 season already in the rearview mirror, the offseason is now complete for MLB’s 30 teams. Until the playoffs begin, teams will be focused on a smaller goal: winning their division. In the run-up to the start of the season, we have been conducting a series of polls to gauge who MLBTR readers believe is the favorite in each division. The Blue Jays came out on top in the AL East, and the Tigers did the same in our poll on the AL Central, and the Mariners were predicted to win the AL West. In the NL West, the Dodgers predictably came out on top, while the the Cubs won a plurality (42%) of the votes in the NL Central. Today, we’ll round out this series of polls with a look at the NL East. All teams are listed in order of their 2025 regular season record:
Philadelphia Phillies (96-66)
The Phillies won the NL East in dominant fashion last year, but repeating that feat figures to be a much taller order in 2026. That’s because Philadelphia’s biggest offseason moves were focused on the same core that they’ve used for the last several years. Kyle Schwarber and J.T. Realmuto re-signed. Cristopher Sanchez and Jesus Luzardo signed extensions. But none of that meaningfully pushes the ball forward relative to 2025. There were some external additions of note, like Adolis Garcia and Brad Keller, but the Phillies seem very comfortable banking on youngsters like Justin Crawford and Andrew Painter to pick up the slack left by departing All-Stars Ranger Suarez and Nick Castellanos. Will that be enough to keep them at the top of the NL East?
New York Mets (83-79)
The Mets completely overhauled their entire organization this offseason after missing the playoffs by a hair in 2025. Pete Alonso, Edwin Diaz, Brandon Nimmo, Starling Marte, and Jeff McNeil (among others) are gone. Marcus Semien, Jorge Polanco, Bo Bichette, Devin Williams and Luis Robert Jr. (among others) have arrived to replace them. The result is a completely overhauled lineup that offers the potential for a very impressive offense on paper but comes with real defensive questions as Bichette and Polanco are set to be tasked with learning new positions. With that said, the team’s biggest addition of the winter is surely Freddy Peralta, who will lead a rotation that also stands to get a full season from Nolan McLean this year. It was an unorthodox retool of the roster in Queens this offseason, but this year’s team built around Juan Soto and Francisco Lindor certainly has a chance to be a lot stronger than the one they leaned on last season.
Miami Marlins (79-83)
The Marlins surprised baseball fans in 2025 by nearly making it all the way back to .500, but that wasn’t enough to convince president of baseball operations Peter Bendix to call off the rebuild early. Edward Cabrera and Ryan Weathers were shipped out the door, while the team’s additions were fairly modest. Owen Caissie joined the team as part of the Cabrera trade return and could be a 30-homer bat in right field, mirroring 2025 All-Star Kyle Stowers in left once the latter is healthy, but a team relying on Christopher Morel at first base and Chris Paddack to be your big free agent additions to the lineup and rotation doesn’t offer much reason for optimism about the club’s division chances. Pete Fairbanks was a strong addition to the bullpen, but Miami will need a big rebound from Sandy Alcantara plus significant steps forward from youngsters like Connor Norby, Max Meyer, and Agustin Ramirez if they’re going to compete for the East.
Atlanta Braves (76-86)
No team in baseball had a more disappointing season last year than the Braves. Virtually everything went wrong in Atlanta last season, as the entire roster struggled with injuries and under-performance outside of a few bright spots like Drake Baldwin and Matt Olson. The good news for Atlanta is, they still have a very talented core on paper. Ronald Acuna Jr. is a superstar with an MVP award on his mantle. Chris Sale is a future Hall of Famer. Spencer Strider and Austin Riley are certainly capable of bouncing back. Additions like Robert Suarez and Mike Yastrzemski should be helpful, though Ha-Seong Kim is starting the season on the injured list after signing on to be their starting shortstop. The bones of a great team are certainly present, but it’s anyone’s guess whether Atlanta can perform up to that level this year.
Washington Nationals (66-96)
The Nationals enter 2026 with little reason for hope in the short-term. James Wood looks like a budding superstar, but MacKenzie Gore has been traded and CJ Abrams could follow suit later this year. Offseason additions like Zack Littell and Miles Mikolas in the rotation should help to eat innings but neither offers substantial upside. Fans in D.C. could hope for big years from players like Wood, Abrams, Cade Cavalli and Brady House, but even with those things going right, the best case scenario would be convincing newly-minted president of baseball operations Paul Toboni to try and make a more substantial effort to compete next year. It would take a minor miracle to get the Nationals into the postseason for 2026, much less as the champions of the NL East.
How do MLBTR readers think the NL East will play out this year? Will the Phillies hang on to win it again despite running it back? Will the Mets’ massive retool work out? Or will a team like the Marlins or Braves surprise and take the crown for themselves? Have your say in the poll below:
Who will win the NL East in 2026?
Offseason In Review: Atlanta Braves
The Braves’ offseason began with a managerial change. They brought back their shortstop, added a pair of high-leverage relievers, and upgraded their outfield. A series of Spring Training injuries has magnified their lack of activity on the rotation market, leaving questions about whether they did enough to avoid a repeat of their frustrating 2025 season.
Major League Signings
- RHP Robert Suarez: Three years, $45MM
- DH/LF Mike Yastrzemski: Two years, $23MM (including buyout of ’28 club option)
- SS Ha-Seong Kim: One year, $20MM
- RHP Raisel Iglesias: One year, $16MM
- RHP Tyler Kinley: One year, $4.25MM (including buyout of ’27 club option)
- RHP Joel Payamps: One year, $2.25MM
- C Jonah Heim: One year, $1.5MM
- 1B Dominic Smith: One year split contract, $1.25MM in MLB
- 2B Kyle Farmer: One year split contract, $1.25MM in MLB
- SS Jorge Mateo: One year, $1MM
- LHP Danny Young: One year split contract, $925K in MLB
- RHP Ian Hamilton: Non-guaranteed contract (subsequently outrighted off 40-man roster)
2026 commitments: $65.75MM
Total future commitments: $113MM
Trades and Claims
- Acquired SS Mauricio Dubón from Astros for SS Nick Allen
- Claimed RHP Osvaldo Bido off waivers from Athletics (later lost on waivers to Rays and reclaimed from Yankees)
- Claimed RHP Anthony Molina off waivers from Rockies (later outrighted)
- Claimed OF Michael Siani off waivers from Cardinals (later lost on waivers to Dodgers)
- Claimed RHP Carson Ragsdale, LHP Josh Walker off waivers from Orioles (later lost both players)
- Acquired LHP Ryan Rolison from Rockies for cash (later lost on waivers to White Sox)
- Claimed LHP Ken Waldichuk off waivers from Athletics (later traded to Rays)
- Traded 2B Brett Wisely and LHP Ken Waldichuk to Rays for cash
- Reacquired 2B Brett Wisely from Rays for cash (later designated for assignment)
- Claimed RHP George Soriano off waivers from Orioles (later lost on waivers to Nationals)
- Claimed LHP José Suarez off waivers from Orioles
Option Decisions
- Team exercised $18MM option on LHP Chris Sale (later extended)
- SS Ha-Seong Kim declined $16MM player option (later re-signed for $20MM)
- Team declined $8MM option on minor league IF David Fletcher
- Team exercised $7MM option on 2B Ozzie Albies
- Team declined $7MM option on RHP Pierce Johnson in favor of $250K buyout
- Team declined $5.5MM option on RHP Tyler Kinley in favor of $750K buyout (later re-signed for $4.25MM)
Extensions
- Signed LHP Chris Sale to one-year, $27MM deal covering 2027 season (deal includes $30MM club option for ’28)
Notable Minor League Signings
- José Azocar, Carlos Carrasco, Tristin English, Blayne Enlow, Ben Gamel, Jordan Groshans, Javy Guerra, Elieser Hernández, Brewer Hicklen, James Karinchak, DaShawn Keirsey Jr., Sandy León, Kyle Nelson (later released), Martín Pérez, Austin Pope, Sean Reid-Foley, Aaron Schunk, Tayler Scott, Rowdy Tellez, Connor Thomas, Chadwick Tromp, Darius Vines, Luke Williams
Notable Losses
- Marcell Ozuna, Charlie Morton (retired), Jake Fraley (lost on waivers), Vidal Bruján (lost on waivers), Alek Manoah (non-tender), Carson Ragsdale (non-tender), Austin Cox (outright), Carlos D. Rodríguez (outright), Chuckie Robinson (outright), Nathan Wiles (released)
Despite a strong finish, the Braves finished the 2025 campaign 10 games below .500. They missed the playoffs for the first time in seven years, falling to fourth place in the NL East. That disappointing year came with questions about a managerial change. Brian Snitker was in the final year of his contract and turning 70 in October. President of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos had been adamant the team would welcome Snitker back if he wanted to continue, but the skipper was less committal.
Snitker announced at season’s end that he would not return to the dugout. He’ll remain with the team as a special advisor, a fitting transition for an organizational lifer whose time managing in the farm system dates to the early 1980s. For the first time in nearly a decade, the Braves have a new leader in the MLB dugout.
As is often the case with Atlanta’s player personnel moves, they were tight-lipped about their managerial search process. It’s unclear how many external candidates were under serious consideration. The Braves opted for continuity, elevating bench coach Walt Weiss to the position in early November. Weiss has been on the staff since the 2018 season and has four seasons of managerial experience. He led the Rockies between 2013-16, with Colorado winning between 66 and 75 games in those years.
Although Weiss was an internal hire, the Braves changed most of the coaching staff. Former Orioles interim manager Tony Mansolino takes the bench coach role. They parted with longtime pitching coach Rick Kranitz, bringing in former Mets pitching coach Jeremy Hefner as his replacement. Hitting coach Tim Hyers returns for a second season.
Atlanta’s roster maneuvering began with a few notable option decisions. The team made easy calls to exercise their options on Chris Sale ($18MM) and Ozzie Albies ($7MM). Shortstop Ha-Seong Kim declined his $16MM player option, which had seemed increasingly likely as he generated a fair amount of buzz after Atlanta claimed him off waivers from the Rays. The Braves declined their $7MM option on setup man Pierce Johnson, who had struggled down the stretch. More surprisingly, they also bought out Tyler Kinley on what had seemed a reasonable $5.5MM option.
Anthopoulos said the team wanted to preserve as much financial flexibility as possible at the beginning of the offseason. They needed to do something at shortstop. Closer Raisel Iglesias was hitting free agency. Injuries had exposed a lack of rotation depth in 2025.
While acknowledging the need to acquire multiple relievers, Anthopoulos said in November that the priorities were shortstop and starting pitching (relayed by David O’Brien). “We’re going to focus on those spots. We’ll see where those lead us, what the acquisition costs are and all that, and then we’ll turn our attention to the bullpen,” he said from the GM Meetings.
That may well have been the plan, but it’s not how things played out. The free agent relief market moved much more quickly than the hitters or starting pitchers. Atlanta was as aggressive as any team in that arena. They started by re-signing Iglesias on a one-year, $16MM deal. The 36-year-old closer had overcome an early season home run spike to post a solid 3.21 ERA with an excellent strikeout and walk profile over 70 appearances.
The Braves would make a bigger bullpen splash three weeks later. They brought in two-time All-Star Robert Suarez on a three-year, $45MM contract in early December. Suarez has high-end velocity and has posted consecutive sub-3.00 ERA seasons. He led the National League with 40 saves, though the Braves confirmed that he’ll move into a setup role in deference to the incumbent Iglesias.
It’s a significant investment for a reliever’s age 35-37 seasons. Atlanta committed a combined $29MM to their 2026 payroll in their late-innings duo. They were clearly motivated to make a splash at the back of the bullpen. Jorge Castillo of ESPN reported that the Braves made a five-year offer to top free agent closer Edwin Díaz before they signed Suarez. Díaz opted for a three-year deal with the Dodgers instead (presumably at a much higher annual rate) and Atlanta moved quickly to the former Padres closer.
The Braves built out the bullpen with a handful of smaller free agent pickups. They brought Kinley back on a $4.25MM guarantee with a ’27 club option, confirming they made the right call to decline his slightly higher priced option for 2026.
Atlanta non-tendered and re-signed middle reliever Joel Payamps for $2.25MM. Danny Young and Ian Hamilton joined the organization on a split contract and non-guaranteed deal, respectively. Young will miss the majority of the season as he rehabs last May’s Tommy John surgery; Hamilton has already been outrighted off the 40-man roster.
The Braves should have one of the league’s stronger bullpens. Iglesias and Suarez are an elite one-two pairing. Dylan Lee and Aaron Bummer offer Weiss a pair of quality left-handers, while Kinley and Payamps slot nicely into the middle innings. Daysbel Hernández is behind as he rehabs last year’s shoulder injury but should get a middle relief spot once he’s healthy. Out-of-options waiver pickup Osvaldo Bido nabs the final bullpen job for the time being.
Atlanta’s relief corps took one notable injury hit over the winter. Former setup man Joe Jiménez is dealing with another seemingly significant left knee issue. He missed the entire 2025 season after undergoing surgery the prior offseason. Jiménez required a cleanup procedure to repair cartilage damage last November. He was placed on the 60-day injured list at the start of camp, and it’s unclear when (or if) the Braves anticipate him pitching this year.
Although the bullpen was fixed, the Braves had yet to fully address either the rotation or shortstop as the Winter Meetings concluded. The latter position was essentially a waiting game on whether Kim would re-sign. Atlanta never seemed interested in spending on Bo Bichette. Kim was the only other starting shortstop available in free agency. The trade market at the position was similarly barren.
The Braves gave themselves some cover as they awaited Kim’s decision. They lined up a trade with the Astros that sent last year’s starting shortstop Nick Allen to Houston for Mauricio Dubón. Allen is a superlative defender but probably has the lightest bat of any non-catcher in the league.
Dubón is a Gold Glove utility player who should be a capable defensive shortstop. He’s a below-average hitter but certainly provides more at the plate than Allen did last year. The Braves paid $4.7MM in the difference between the infielders’ respective arbitration salaries. Dubón will be a free agent next offseason.
Dubón raised the floor at shortstop while having the versatility to play a multi-positional role if the Braves brought Kim back. They were tied to free agent utility infielder Willi Castro as well, but they ended up landing their preferred target in the middle of December. Kim returned on a one-year, $20MM deal. He reportedly declined a four-year, $48MM offer from the Athletics to take the higher salary in a familiar setting. Kim picked up an extra $4MM over the player option value, while the Braves solidified shortstop.
That was the plan, at least. It’s on hold after Kim slipped on ice in his native South Korea and tore a tendon in his right middle finger. He flew back to Atlanta to undergo surgery that’ll sideline him for the first four to six weeks of the season. It magnified the importance of the Dubón pickup, as he’s penciled back in as the everyday shortstop to begin the year.
Immediately after the Kim injury, the Braves signed Jorge Mateo to a big league deal for marginally more than the league minimum. He’ll work as a backup shortstop who could be pushed off the roster once Kim is healthy. While shortstop is in flux, the rest of the infield is settled. Matt Olson and Albies will play every day on the right side. Austin Riley is back from last year’s core surgery to man third base.
Catcher Sean Murphy also underwent an operation at the end of the 2025 season — a labrum repair in his right hip, in his case. Murphy has apparently played through hip pain for years. He’s starting the season on the injured list. The Braves have one of the sport’s best young catchers in Rookie of the Year Drake Baldwin. Murphy’s absence opens some at-bats at designated hitter. Atlanta could ease his workload even if he’s back from the injured list before the end of May.
That freed up enough playing time that the Braves felt comfortable adding left fielder Mike Yastrzemski on a two-year, $23MM deal. A multi-year contract came as a surprise for a player who turns 36 in August. Yastrzemski has a long track record as a slightly above-average regular. He’s coming off a big finish to the 2025 season after being traded from the Giants to the Royals at the deadline.
Yastrzemski joins Michael Harris II and Ronald Acuña Jr. as the projected starting outfield. Righty-hitting Eli White can work as a short side platoon player to take some at-bats from Yastrzemski against lefty pitching. That was supposed to move Jurickson Profar to the primary DH role.
That plan was also scuttled, as Spring Training brought the news that Profar had again tested positive for a performance-enhancing substance. It’s his second straight year serving a PED ban. This one comes with a 162-game suspension, so he’ll miss the entire season and forfeit his $15MM salary. He’s under contract for a matching amount next year in the final season of what has become a massive headache of a free agent signing. It’s unclear if the Braves intend to keep him around or will eat the money and move on.
First baseman Dominic Smith, who signed a minor league contract over the winter, is set to open the season as the DH against right-handed pitching. Smith had a solid half-season for the Giants last year (.284/.333/.417 in 63 games) and hit pretty well this spring. The Braves re-signed him to a split contract at the end of camp, giving him a 40-man roster spot. He’ll be paid at a $1.25MM rate while he’s on the MLB team.
Atlanta did the same with veteran infielder Kyle Farmer, who’ll provide a right-handed bat off the bench. Farmer hasn’t hit much over the past two seasons and is coming off a very difficult season, batting .227/.280/.365 across 300 plate appearances for the Rockies. He’s also making $1.25MM for time in the majors on a split deal.
Smith and Farmer each have the service time to refuse minor league assignments, but their respective contracts presumably come with solid minor league salaries that could incentivize them to accept a future assignment to Triple-A Gwinnett. Farmer beat out-of-options infielder Brett Wisely for the last bench spot.
The Braves still needed a backup catcher for the first month and a half of the season. Jonah Heim, non-tendered by the Rangers in November, will fill that role. He signed a $1.5MM contract on the heels of a second straight rough season. Heim was an above-average regular and the starter on Texas’ 2023 World Series team. He has hit .217/.269/.334 with declining defensive grades over the past two years.
For all the activity on the position player and bullpen fronts, the Braves did curiously little in the rotation. Their biggest starting pitching move was a minor league deal for veteran lefty Martín Pérez. Anthopoulos said in February that the team was comfortable with their depth and felt they’d only benefit from adding a playoff-caliber starter. That’s a much different message from his comments in November.
It’s true that the intervening three months raised the team’s confidence in Grant Holmes, who finished last season with a UCL sprain but has successfully rehabbed without surgery to date. They’re surely encouraged by the development of prospects JR Ritchie and Didier Fuentes (the latter of whom will open the season in the big league bullpen after a dominant spring).
At the same time, it’s difficult to justify completely eschewing the rotation market given the injury histories of their returning starters. Zac Gallen, Justin Verlander, Chris Bassitt, Zack Littell and the still unsigned Lucas Giolito were among the starters who lingered in free agency into February. Gallen was the only one among that group who was attached to a qualifying offer. They all signed one-year deals (or are virtually certain to do so, in Giolito’s case). Did the Braves not consider any of them an upgrade over Joey Wentz, Bryce Elder or José Suarez?
It seems likelier that payroll was the obstacle, though they haven’t reallocated any of the $15MM they’re not paying to Profar. If that’s the case, it raises questions about whether they’d have been better served adding a starter than committing as much money as they did to the back of the bullpen — or whether Kim is a significant enough upgrade over Dubón that it made sense to pay him $20MM (even if the finger injury itself was obviously unforeseeable).
The already flimsy rotation depth has taken a number of hits this spring. Spencer Schwellenbach and Hurston Waldrep each underwent surgeries to remove loose bodies from their elbows. They’ll miss most or all of the first half. Spencer Strider has an oblique strain that’ll cost him at least a few weeks. That would have drawn Wentz into the rotation, but he tore his ACL in a collision covering first base and will miss the whole season. They already knew that AJ Smith-Shawver wouldn’t be a factor after last June’s Tommy John procedure.
Sale is back at the top of the rotation. He has his own significant injury history, but he’s currently healthy and a Cy Young caliber arm when he’s on the mound. It’s pivotal that Holmes’ elbow holds up, as he’s the #2 starter for the time being.
Reynaldo López is seemingly the third starter. He made one appearance last year before undergoing season-ending shoulder surgery. A fastball that usually sits in the 95-96 mph range averaged 91.3 mph this spring. The velocity might tick up a little bit as he gets into the season but probably isn’t climbing by four miles per hour. Even if he’s currently healthy, it’s unlikely he’s throwing 140+ innings.
Elder and Suarez are fringe roster types. The Braves placed the latter on waivers a couple months ago, losing him to the Orioles only to claim him back a few weeks later. They’re now each in the season-opening rotation. They’re going to need Ritchie and Fuentes to excel as rookies. The former will begin the year in Triple-A but should be up before long. Fuentes is going to start in relief with a plan to option him a few weeks into the season to build up as a starter in the minors. That’s a sensible course of action, but he’s a 20-year-old who pitched a total of 70 innings last year. He’s not logging a full rotation workload.
They’ll need to stay afloat for a couple months to benefit from midseason injury returns and potential deadline pickups. It’s certainly not out of the question, but there’s limited margin for error in a division that features the Phillies and Mets.
The Braves did make one notable move on the rotation front, albeit one that has no real impact on the 2026 picture. They hammered out an extension with Sale this spring, paying him a $27MM salary for the ’27 season while adding a $30MM club option for 2028. It’s a sensible move to extend a relationship that has worked extremely well for both sides. It also removes the already long shot possibility that the Braves might have traded Sale at the deadline if they weren’t performing up to expectations.
They’re certainly hoping they’ll play well enough to approach deadline season as buyers either way. Few teams match the high-end talent the Braves possess. A team with Acuña, Baldwin, Olson, and Riley plus an excellent bullpen can certainly be dangerous. This is among the most top-heavy rosters in MLB, though, putting a lot of pressure on the team’s pitching development to overcome the injuries.
How would you grade the Braves' offseason?
Braves Designate Brett Wisely For Assignment
The Braves designated infielder/outfielder Brett Wisely for assignment Wednesday upon setting their 40-man roster, as first indicated on the team’s transaction log at MLB.com. He’s out of minor league options and didn’t make Atlanta’s Opening Day roster.
Atlanta also placed catcher Sean Murphy and shortstop Ha-Seong Kim on the 10-day injured list, as expected. Pitchers AJ Smith-Shawver, Danny Young, Hurston Waldrep, Spencer Strider and Daysbel Hernández are all opening the year on the 15-day IL. Smith-Shawver and Young both had UCL surgery last year, while Waldrep had surgery to remove loose bodies from his elbow earlier this spring. All are potential 60-day IL candidates next time the Braves need to open a 40-man roster spot.
Wisely, 26, has appeared in each of the past three MLB seasons, including a four-game cameo with Atlanta last year, wherein he tallied nine plate appearances. He’s a left-handed hitter with a lifetime .214/.265/.319 batting line in 466 major league plate appearances and has played all four infield spots as well as left field and center field. He has roughly average contact skills and a history of drawing walks in the minors. Wisely is a versatile infield defender who can handle all of shortstop, second base and third base at an least an average level.
Wisely bounced around the waiver circuit this winter and could get scooped up by a team looking for a left-handed bat who can play multiple infield additions and perhaps serve as a fifth outfield option. He’s a career .275/.372/.433 hitter in Triple-A. Since he’s out of minor league options, he’ll have to be added directly to the major league roster of any club that claims him or acquires him in a trade. Atlanta can trade Wisely or place him on waivers at any point in the next five days, and waivers themselves are a 48-hour process. The outcome of his DFA should be known within the next week.
MLBTR Podcast: The PCA and Sanchez Extensions, And Prospect Promotions And Reassignments
The latest episode of the MLB Trade Rumors Podcast is now live on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and wherever you get your podcasts! Make sure you subscribe as well! You can also use the player at this link to listen, if you don’t use Spotify or Apple for podcasts.
This week, host Darragh McDonald is joined by Anthony Franco of MLB Trade Rumors to discuss…
- The extension between the Cubs and Pete Crow-Armstrong (recorded prior to the numbers being reported) (2:20)
- The extension between the Phillies and Cristopher Sánchez (7:00)
- The Braves losing Spencer Strider to the injured list (14:00)
- Is there a trend of starting pitcher prospects being used in major league bullpens? (18:15)
- The Nationals optioning Dylan Crews and Harry Ford, with Josiah Gray landing on the 60-day IL (23:35)
- Carson Benge making the Mets‘ Opening Day roster (30:30)
- JJ Wetherholt making the Cardinals‘ Opening Day roster (35:40)
- The Pirates not breaking camp with Konnor Griffin (39:15)
- The Guardians not breaking camp with Travis Bazzana (44:40)
- The Blue Jays starting the season with José Berríos and Trey Yesavage on the injured list (49:20)
- The Marlins optioning Braxton Garrett (55:55)
Check out our past episodes!
- Banged-Up Reds And Braves, Kevin McGonigle, And Spring Breakouts – listen here
- Jesús Luzardo’s Extension, Atlanta’s Depth, And Zack Littell – listen here
- Max Scherzer, The Red Sox’ Lineup, Spring Extension Candidates, And More! – listen here
The podcast intro and outro song “So Long” is provided courtesy of the band Showoff. Check out their Facebook page here!
Photo courtesy of Kyle Ross, Imagn Images
Braves Claim Osvaldo Bido
Yankees right-hander Osvaldo Bido has been claimed off waivers by the Braves, per announcements from both clubs. Atlanta placed left-hander Joey Wentz on the 60-day IL to create a spot on the 40-man roster. Wentz suffered a torn ACL midway through spring training and is expected to miss the 2026 season.
This marks the second time since last season concluded that Atlanta has acquired Bido. They also plucked him off waivers from the A’s back in early December. That claim set off a series of transactions in what went on to become one of the most whirlwind winters any player has experienced in recent memory. Bido went from the A’s, to the Braves, to the Rays, to the Marlins, to Angels, to the Yankees in a dizzying sequence of DFAs and waiver claims. Hopefully for his sake, today’s return to an Atlanta organization in dire need of innings is the last move for some time.
Bido has had a solid spring with the Yankees, tossing seven innings and holding opponents to a run on five hits and three walks. He’s been working one-inning stints with New York but has worked as a starter and swingman in recent seasons with the Pirates and Athletics.
Bido spent seven seasons in the Pirates system before making his MLB debut as a 27-year-old in 2023. He’s spent the past two seasons with the A’s. Listed at a wiry 6’3″ and 175 pounds, he’s pitched 193 2/3 innings in the majors and pitched to a 5.07 earned run average. It’s been a roller-coaster run, with poor numbers in ’23, strong output in ’24 and more struggles in ’25. Overall, metrics like SIERA (4.60) and FIP (4.67) view him a bit more favorably, but Bido has typically pitched like a swingman or sixth starter.
Bido averages 94.7 mph on his four-seamer and sinker alike. He’s only a bit worse than average in terms of strikeout rate (20.9%) and walk rate (9.6%), but home runs were a major issue in 2025. Bido is an extreme fly-ball pitcher, and a 2024 season spent pitching home games in the cavernous Oakland Coliseum during the Athletics’ final season there treated him well; conversely, a 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 this past season, compared to just six on the road (35 1/3 innings).
The Braves entered camp thin on rotation depth and have seen their limited stock of arms ravaged by injury. In addition to Wentz’s ACL tear, right-handers Spencer Schwellenbach and Hurston Waldrep both required elbow surgery to remove loose bodies. Fellow righty Spencer Strider was diagnosed with an oblique strain just this week and will open the season on the injured list.
Atlanta will open the season with Chris Sale, Reynaldo Lopez and Grant Holmes locked into rotation spots. Lopez pitched only once last year due to shoulder surgery. Holmes suffered a UCL tear last summer and rehabbed without surgery. Sale’s injury history is well known.
Righty Bryce Elder and lefty José Suarez are both out of minor league options and both expected to fill out the rotation, though the team hasn’t formally said as much. Non-roster veteran Martín Pérez seems to at least still be under consideration. Bido, like Elder and Suarez, is out of minor league options. He’s now in strong position to break camp in a swing role, giving Atlanta a bit of extra depth.
Braves To Place Spencer Strider On Injured List
Braves righty Spencer Strider is going to start the season on the injured list due to an oblique strain, manager Walt Weiss announced to the team’s beat this morning (via Mark Bowman of MLB.com). The team hasn’t provided a formal timeline, but even Grade 1 oblique strains can sideline players for around a month.
Strider, 27, last pitched a full season in 2023. He made only two starts in 2024 before requiring UCL surgery that would sideline him into the 2025 campaign. The rehab from that surgery, combined with a hamstring strain, limited Strider to 23 starts last year. He pitched 125 1/3 innings but worked with diminished velocity and overall stuff, leading to a 4.45 ERA and rate stats that were markedly worse than their pre-injury levels.
The hope had been for a healthier Strider to bounce back closer to his brilliant 2022-23 form. Instead, he’ll be the latest addition to a list of key players who are unavailable to begin the year. It’s been a nightmare spring for Atlanta. The Braves have lost righties Spencer Schwellenbach and Hurston Waldrep for months following surgeries to remove loose bodies from their elbows. Left-hander Joey Wentz tore his ACL and is out for the season. Shortstop Ha-Seong Kim suffered a hand injury in a fall before even reporting to camp and will be out for more than a month to begin the year. Left fielder/designated hitter Jurickson Profar was suspended for the entire season following a second positive PED test.
Atlanta’s lack of pitching depth has been a story throughout camp. With Strider headed to the injured list, the Braves will open the season with Chris Sale, Reynaldo Lopez and Grant Holmes as their top three starters. Lopez pitched only once last year due to shoulder surgery. Holmes suffered a UCL tear last summer and rehabbed it without surgery.
Plans beyond that top trio are murky for the time being. Right-hander Bryce Elder and left-hander José Suarez are out of minor league options and will presumably both make the roster, though either could be bound for the bullpen. Bowman calls Suarez a “likely” starter to begin the season and adds that the club could consider selecting the contract of non-roster veteran Martín Pérez, who’d previously been informed he was not making the club. Right-hander Didier Fuentes is still ticketed for the bullpen, Weiss tells Bowman.
It’s a paper-thin rotation group at this point, so it wouldn’t be surprising to see president of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos make some form of addition to further stockpile some depth. There ought to be several veterans opting out of/being released from minor league deals in the final days of camp, and arms of varying quality will be designated for assignment due to the annual Opening Day roster crunch.
Braves To Include Didier Fuentes On Opening Day Roster
TODAY: The Braves are planning to send Fuentes down to Triple-A in a couple of weeks to stretch him back out as a starter, MLB.com’s Mark Bowman writes. It seems like Fuentes’ long relief role will last only through Atlanta’s season-opening 13-game stretch.
MARCH 21: Right-hander Didier Fuentes has won himself a spot on the Braves’ Opening Day roster, ESPN’s Jeff Passan writes. The 20-year-old Fuentes made his big league debut last season with four starts and 13 innings for Atlanta, and he’ll now return to the Show in what Passan says will be a relief role.
Fuentes’ bullpen assignment provides some more clarity to the Braves’ rotation picture. Chris Sale, Reynaldo Lopez, Spencer Strider, and Grant Holmes have the top four positions, and Bryce Elder and Jose Suarez now appear to be the last two candidates for the fifth starter role. Fuentes is headed to the bullpen, top prospect JR Ritchie was assigned to the minor league camp yesterday, and minor league signing Martin Perez will remain in the organization but isn’t being included on the Opening Day roster.
With Spencer Schwellenbach, Hurston Waldrep, and Joey Wentz all felled by injuries, rotation depth has been one of the primary storylines of Atlanta’s spring. This opened the door for multiple pitchers to try and win a job, and while Fuentes isn’t being ticketed for rotation duty, he certainly caught the Braves’ attention with an incredible Grapefruit League performance. Over three appearances and nine spotless innings, Fuentes didn’t allow even one walk or a hit, while striking out 17 batters — one HBP was the only thing keeping Fuentes from an unofficial perfect game during his spring work.
It is certainly possible Fuentes could receive a proper starting assignment, depending on how exactly the Braves choose to line up their rotation through a busy opening to the season. Atlanta doesn’t receive its first off-day until April 9, so it is very likely that both Elder and Suarez (or Fuentes) could get starts if the Braves deploy a six-man rotation in the early going. Even if Fuentes may not start, his ability to eat multiple innings out of the pen should prove useful as the Braves navigate this stretch of 13 straight games.
Fuentes has started 48 of his 52 career games in the minors, and his 2025 season saw the righty pitch at three different minor league levels as well as his four-start cup of coffee with the Braves. It may have been too much too soon for Fuentes since he was torched for an 13.85 ERA in his first exposure to MLB hitters, but the Braves had to dig into their depth chart after a swath of injuries wiped out their rotation last summer.
Fuentes has shown a knack for recording strikeouts and limiting walks in the minors, and some bad batted-ball luck might be why his 3.73 ERA over 202 2/3 minor league innings doesn’t exactly stand out. Still, there’s some obvious potential here even at Fuentes’ young age, and his huge spring numbers indicate that Fuentes might thrive as a reliever. While the Braves’ hand with Fuentes may have been forced by injuries last year, the team hasn’t been shy about quickly promoting prospects they feel can provide immediate help.
Braves Release Kyle Nelson
The Braves have released left-hander Kyle Nelson, according to the transactions log at MLB.com. He had been with the organization on a non-roster deal.
Nelson made sense as a potential depth piece for Atlanta. He has a serviceable 4.34 ERA in 116 big-league innings dating back to 2020. He has struck out 23.1% of opposing hitters while walking 9.0% of them. Most of the strikeouts came in 2023 with the Diamondbacks, when he pitched a career-high 56 innings with a 4.18 ERA. In every other season, he has run a sub-20% strikeout rate. Nelson’s numbers fell off a bit in 2024, and he missed most of that season recovering from thoracic outlet surgery. Though he returned in 2025, he was designated for assignment in early July and sent outright to Triple-A. He only pitched two innings over three appearances with Arizona in 2025, electing free agency after the season.
Nelson made just one appearance in the Braves’ big-league camp, allowing one earned run in one inning against the Red Sox on March 17. He clearly faced an uphill battle to make the Braves’ season-opening bullpen. Raisel Iglesias and Robert Suarez will handle the late innings. Meanwhile, the club has three lefties in Dylan Lee, Aaron Bummer, and Jose Suarez to cover the middle innings and long relief. Lee has been excellent in the last two years with a 2.74 ERA and a 23.9% K-BB rate. Bummer is one of the game’s best at inducing groundballs, while Jose Suarez impressed with a 1.86 ERA in a limited sample last year.
For now, Nelson will return to the market and look for a club to take him on as minor-league depth. Though he has been in the league since 2020, he is still younger than 30 and can be controlled through 2028 via arbitration. If he can work his way back to the majors, he can also provide roster flexibility through his one remaining option year.
Photo courtesy of Allan Henry, Imagn Images
Braves Sign Dominic Smith, Kyle Farmer To Split Contracts
The Braves announced that Dominic Smith and Kyle Farmer have been signed to Major League split contracts for the 2026 season. The two veterans were already in camp on minor league deals, but as Article XX(B) free agents, Smith and Farmer had the ability to opt out of their contracts five days before Opening Day if they weren’t added to the Braves’ 40-man roster.
These new deals mean that Smith and Farmer will be breaking camp with the club. The Braves have two open spots on their 40-man roster, so they can easily accommodate officially selecting Smith and Farmer closer to the team’s first game. Both players are out of minor league options and the Braves would have to designate either for assignment and then sweat out any waiver claims before sending either to the minors, plus Smith and Farmer have enough MLB service time to just reject a minor league assignment anyway.
It seemed like the two veterans were both somewhat long shots to make Atlanta’s roster, yet some opportunity was created when Jurickson Profar was issued a season-long PED suspension, and Ha-Seong Kim suffered a torn finger tendon that will keep him out until at least the start of May. The door may now be open for Smith to earn some at-bats as a left-handed hitting option for the DH spot, even if his usual first base spot is obviously filled by Matt Olson on an everyday basis. Smith has played in just one Major League game as an outfielder over the last four seasons, but he could get some occasional backup work if Ronald Acuna Jr. or Mike Yastrzemski needs a rest day.
For Farmer, Mauricio Dubon taking over the shortstop role in Kim’s absence means the Braves are short some versatile infield depth. Jorge Mateo and Brett Wisely are also competing for bench jobs and Eli White is expected to be the primary backup outfielder, and both Wisely and White are also out of minor league options.
Martin Perez is another minor league signing in Atlanta’s camp, and MLB.com’s Mark Bowman reports that Perez has been told he isn’t making the team. However, the veteran southpaw will forego his first Article XX(B) opt-out clause and remain in the organization as a Triple-A depth farm.
Braves, Rowdy Tellez Agree To Minor League Deal
The Braves are signing first baseman Rowdy Tellez to a minor league contract, reports Jon Heyman of The New York Post. Ari Alexander of Boston 7 News reports that the Primo Sports Group client would earn a $1.25MM base salary if he secures a spot on the MLB roster.
Atlanta only has four Spring Training games left. It’s not clear if they’ll try to get Tellez any Grapefruit League action or will wait until the beginning of the regular season. The lefty-hitting first baseman figures to begin the season at Triple-A Gwinnett either way. Tellez isn’t coming in completely cold despite lingering on the free agent market. He played for Team Mexico in the World Baseball Classic, going 1-9 with two walks and strikeouts apiece over four games.
Matt Olson is locked in as the everyday first baseman. He essentially never takes a day off. Tellez’s path to playing time is as a designated hitter or bench bat. Jurickson Profar is officially suspended for the entire season after his second failed performance-enhancing drug test. That opened DH playing time that might go to Dominic Smith, another lefty-swinging first baseman who is in camp as a non-roster invitee. Smith has hit .258/.343/.387 over 11 Spring Training games after a solid .284/.333/.417 showing for the Giants a year ago.
As MLBTR’s Steve Adams noted on Tuesday, Smith is among the veteran players whose deal contains an automatic opt-out opportunity this week. It’s not known if he exercised that, but if he did, the Braves would either need to put him on the Opening Day roster or grant him his release tomorrow. Either outcome would leave a spot for Tellez in the minors. A Smith opt-out would mean he’s either in the big leagues or back in free agency.
The automatic opt-out only applies when players with sufficient service time sign a minor league deal at least 10 days before the start of the regular season. Tellez’s deal comes too late to meet that criterion. His camp could still negotiate some opt-out or upward mobility opportunities into the contract.
Tellez played in 112 MLB games last year. He struggled early with the Mariners but had a better second half after signing with the Rangers. The end result was a .228/.276/.443 slash with 17 home runs across 312 plate appearances. Tellez has plus power against right-handed pitching but runs subpar averages and on-base marks. He’s a limited defender and baserunner whose game is built on slugging.
