The Braves enter play tonight seven games below .500. They’re 12 back of the Mets in the division and 6.5 out in the Wild Card race with five teams to jump. They’ve got their work cut out for them in getting to October for an eighth straight season, but that remains the focus for the front office.
President of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos spoke with Nick Cellini and Chris Dimino of 680 The Fan this afternoon. The veteran executive made clear he’s operating with a buyer’s mentality six weeks before the trade deadline. He was even more forceful in pushing back against the idea that they’d consider trading away key players — at least barring a terrible stretch of play in July.
Anthopoulos interrupted a question about other clubs potentially attempting to pry defending Cy Young winner Chris Sale out of Atlanta. “No, zero. I’ve seen the speculation. It’s completely ridiculous to me. We are not selling, especially someone that has club control beyond the current year,” he said. “Will not happen. I never make definitive statements unless I’m going to stick to them. Once you make definitive statements and then you go back on them, you’re a liar and you’re done.
Will. Not. Happen. Bold, italicize it, caps. So much so that I’m trying to make a trade now — it’s very hard to make a trade in June — just to signal to everybody that we will not sell. (If) you get to the end of July and things are completely changed, I guess we would reevaluate, but you’d have to be extreme. We’re built to win. Our expectations are to win. Our expectations are to go for it the entire time.”
It’s not common for an executive to rule out trading a player that definitively. It’s even rarer for them to reverse course after making a public statement to that effect. Skeptics will point to Nationals’ GM Mike Rizzo saying the team was “not trading Juan Soto” less than two months before they did exactly that, but the turn of events required Soto rejecting an intervening $440MM extension proposal. Anthopoulos left the door slightly open to selling if the team’s play over the next month and a half made a postseason run all but impossible. Even in that scenario, it’s not clear that they’d be willing to discuss players who are signed beyond this season.
MLBTR examined the Sale situation in a post for Front Office subscribers last week. He’s playing this year on a $22MM salary and is under control via an $18MM option for one more season. They’ll rubber stamp the option unless he suffers a significant injury in the second half. Sale would command upwards of $30MM annually (for at least two and possibly three years) if he were a free agent. After running into some tough batted ball luck in April, he’s been every bit as dominant as he was last season. Sale had not allowed more than two earned runs in any of his past 10 starts coming into tonight’s game against the Mets. He is through another six scoreless innings at the time of this writing.
Even if the Braves miss the postseason in 2025, they’ll certainly go into next year expecting to contend. Having Sale atop the rotation makes that much more reasonable. At the same time, they’d bypass an opportunity at a massive trade haul this summer. Teams would be willing to give up significant young talent for the ability to control Sale for two postseason runs. The Braves still expect to be in that position themselves. If they remain well below .500 on July 31, however, they’d arguably be leaving significant value on the table as an at best long shot contender for one of Sale’s two remaining control years.
Anthopoulos argued that the next few weeks represent a huge opportunity. They’re currently playing the second game of a three-game set against the Mets. They’ll head to Miami this weekend before squaring off against the Mets (for four) and Phillies (for three) next week. They rearranged their rotation to ensure that Sale is lined up for both New York series rather than starting last weekend against the Rockies and taking on the Marlins in a few days.
They’re far enough behind New York and Philly that it’s difficult to see them winning the NL East, but they could theoretically pull back into the race if they go on a tear over the next two weeks. They’ll also take on St. Louis, one of the teams above them in the Wild Card standings, in their final series before the All-Star Break. While those will be tough sets, they have softer matchups against a few teams toward the bottom of the American League standings (the Angels, Orioles and A’s) in the first two weeks of July.
In the meantime, they’re evidently searching for a short-term boost. In this morning’s radio interview (which Atlanta fans will want to give a full listen), Anthopoulos identified the offense as the team’s biggest disappointment to date. Jon Heyman of The New York Post wrote last week that they were pursuing outfield and shortstop help.
Nick Allen is a Gold Glove-caliber shortstop but isn’t going to provide anything offensively. Left field would be the obvious area to upgrade in the outfield. Neither Alex Verdugo nor Eli White have stepped up since Jurickson Profar’s performance-enhancing drug suspension. The Braves will get Profar back in early July, but he’s coming off a nearly three-month layoff and faces questions about the sustainability of last year’s breakout season. He’s also ineligible for postseason play this year, so the Braves probably want a contingency plan for that position regardless of how Profar performs next month.
“Batted ball luck in April”. He may very well have but you dismiss it as “nothing but” definitively. It was obvious he wasn’t right. It wasn’t bad luck, tho there was some
It is nothing but sheer bad luck. All of his current peripheral stats are near identical to last season except his Babip which now is at .347 (.299 career).
This is the perfect example of how statistics can be misleading. Sale was so obviously not the same pitcher as last year to anyone who observed his starts. Yes, he had some bad luck which was noticeable but his velo was down and he didn’t execute nearly as well as he has been more recently. Most people attributed it to his arm-slot. Many games he was sitting in the low 90s most of the time. As soon as the stuff went up he got better.
Dumb. This is borderline malpractice. One of the worst teams in the NL and have virtually no chance at the playoffs.
They should be better on paper so I could see not wanting to sell on a team that can perform better
Why does everyone hate the braves so much?
Are they better on paper though?
Let’s think about past this year (I.e. no Ozuna)
They have maybe 2 hitters they can count on regularly with Acuna and Riley. Olson is third on that list but tends to be more streaky. Albies and Harris have been below average players for multiple seasons now. Murphy has not shown the ability to hit at all. No SS. And profar as your third OF who has 1 good season in his entire career which the Braves then overpaid for only for him to get tagged for PED use.
There is Baldwin who I actually really like at the plate but still learning and they don’t play him full time anyway with Murphy.
So on paper what is better about them? People who think on paper they are good must mean they expect Albies, Harris, and Murphy to ramp up production but I’m not sure what y’all are seeing that would indicate they aren’t playing like the players they really are. There’s little signs of life from them.
The starting pitching, yes, is good. The bullpen? No idea what’s good on paper there. Iglesias would fit that I guess but remember he’s also gone after this year with Ozuna.
So on paper, are they really that good to contend in 2026? Last year the excuse was injuries. Now they have people back this year and the offense is still really below average. The starting pitching can only do so much.
Just wondering how long some of you hang on to this whole “they’re good on paper” perspective. At some point you need to readjust the paper when it’s continuously underperforming. So it’s a serious question, how many seasons does it take for Albies, Harris, and Murphy to underperform the paper standards for some of you to admit the paper expectations are just wrong?
What if Olson finds his consistency again? What if albies hits 30 homers again? What if Riley comes back to normal? Same with Harris?
I know that’s a lot of ifs but the on paper part means these guys used to accomplish a lot and they aren’t even that old
Looking for impartial takes, you run across a guy named “Braves Rebuild 2025”. It’s a rather long winded rant against the team he has been upset by this year after dedicating so much of his time and focus to what he now considers a lost cause after they let him down so many times. But cheer up lad. It’s only June. You aren’t gonna get a big influx of young players in trades for those expiring contracts. It’s not wise to trade guys like Sale under contract for 2026 just because you are down on the team. It’s not even worth saying forget about the games this summer as that will just be a bore and a lame thing to do. I wanna watch competitive baseball games in 2025 regardless of what the outcome will be. Even if it’s only for another month. The postseason is exciting but the regular season has most of the action. It’s not a failure to not win a World Series. If you looked at it like that 30 teams will be failures every year. So what’s the point of being a fan of MLB?
Nahh – most folks don’t hate the Braves; more like a mild distaste. Case in point – a friend of mine (huge Braves fan) just had a bypass and stent procedure; doing well and in a rehab facility now. I texted him yesterday that in honor of his hard recuperation work, I would root for the Braves for the next three games just as hard as I root for my Phillies.
Purely coincidental that they are playing the Mutts in a 3 game series; so far so good.
Guess this means we should be reading about his trade any day now then. There’s always the big denial before the deal goes through. LMAO
He basically said they ll assess where they are at when deadline approaches. What would be dumb is publicly stating this is a lost season and he does not believe in their players.
Poverty Lou with the number 2. Post that is.
Man you’re dumber than a door nail
He’s LAF.
Complete incompetence. This rebuild is going to take a very long time because by the time they start to take it seriously most of their assets to trade will be gone. Content to always just let people walk
Atlanta should keep him and tell teams that for leverage purposes so that they could command a potential huge offer
At the same time they need to get big bear ozuna out of Atlanta he’s not worth the money and everyday DH spot
The Phillies broke the Braves’ organization. They never recovered from the humiliation of back-to-back NLDS eliminations.
Phillies choked horribly coughing up a 2-0 lead and losing at home against the Diamondbacks in 2023 with their #1 in MLB payroll, and lost in the NLDS pretty badly to the Mets last year. Phillies might be broken too
They are starting to get old
Even Harper is now an old guy
“Once you make definitive statements and then you go back on them, you’re a liar and you’re done.” – Message sent to Red Sox front office and Cora!
If you’re surprised and/or hurt by Alex Cora’s lies, you’re either naive or just not paying attention. Dude is a liar of ASTROlogical proportions.
ASTROnomical?
Chris Sale is too valuable to trade for the Braves! They want to win and will definitely need him if they want to do that. The so-called haul of prospects are exactly that. Potential is what prospects are, with upside. Nothing is guaranteed with even the good prospects. Stick with what you know and have! The Braves GM Alex has spoken, and I believe him!
This is all very true but completely goes against the Braves philosophy.
Their refusal all these years to go sign proven talent for what is as close to guaranteed as you can get is what I’m talking about here.
It’s constantly a parade of guys like Arcia and Eli White and Kelenic where they hope for miracle bets to hit the jackpot instead of paying guys with strong track records to shore up the teams weaknesses. Look at the bullpen this year as another example. And when Ozuna and Iglesias leave are any of you confident the replacements for those roles will be with someone who has a track record of MLB success? Fat chance.
AA won that trade by a landslide…but now refusing to reap the benefits of that same trade when the team you built in 2025 is lackluster (spare me the its Liberty Media/Terry McGuirks fault, which i wholeheartedly understand)…is asinine.
He left the door open for trading without publicly stating he gave up on the team and this is a lost season. I put almost zero stock into this interview. He just gave the status quo response as he should have. I expect if Braves still where they currently are at as deadline approaches they ll be sellers.
Doubtful. They actually think they’ll contend in 2026 is the real problem.
This is a FO that is completely unwilling to acknowledge they blew it for the last 3 years. They had every opportunity and they chose to be cheap at every turn and can’t fathom that they’ve finally dismantled the team to the point they’ve run out of legit opportunities.
Sure they’re not the worst team out there. It’s like a .500 caliber, which is exactly what we are seeing this year. I’d bank money it’s .500 the rest of the way too.
They need multiple pieces now to bring it back to contention in 2026. And if this were say the Yankees or Dodgers or even the Mets… anyone that’s willing to go out and sign 3-4 good players in the offseason 2026 could be saved.
But that’s not this org. They weren’t even willing to go out and sign 1 guy when the only hole was corner outfield back in 2022. You expect them to go sign 3-4 guys to fill DH, OF, SS, and bullpen? No way.
They will keep Sale though.
Sounds like he slammed the door shut on the possibility of trading Sale though. Not smart even if he indeed doesn’t want to trade him. I’d be at least curious to see what other teams would give up for him, assuming the Braves end up selling at the deadline.
Why waste his own time listening to offers when he knows he isn’t trading him? Integrity is a real thing.
If a team wants to go crazy and make an offer he can’t refuse, they’ll find a way to let him know.
but on the flip side if a team wants to go crazy and trade to get him why waste their time if he already said he not listening to anything. So if the pirates said skenes for sale (crazy i know) why bother reaching out.
We’re going to not only ignore reality, we’re going to make believe we’re in the hunt for the postseason and keep this team together despite its lack of chemistry and consistency. We’re not focused on the future which is a solid maybe. We’re focused on now which is a flimsy maybe.
He did not deny anything. He gave an ultimately vague response. Its nid June and plenty of games til the deadline. The last thing he should do is publicly state he is no confidence in the team.
At least listen to the offers being made. Not listening at all is crazy…
Do you really think they dont listen to offers if another GM or one of their staff calls? Guarantee these guys listen to all offers, whether they entertain them for further discussion is another story. That’s like labeling someone “untouchable” nobody is truly untouchable, their is a price for everything how realistic and palatable that price is varies wildly. But for the right offer every player is available.
Every year the braves are in it. AA is excellent at his job, and continuously makes the Braves into a team that’s a consistent problem for the National League.
But braves fans think he doesn’t know what he’s doing all of a sudden?
Please let him go, and maybe the dodgers can add another excellent baseball mind to their team. And they wouldn’t be alone in trying.
So he is 100% a buyer this trade season, unless they suck in July, then we will see?? How far AA has fallen…
I love that he said this so definitively so that this can be put to bed. Trading Sale would be an absolutely awful idea. Thankfully, it sounds like AA recognizes this, too.
Play it out, see what happens.
When is the next Sale injury?
“Next Sale injury”…Why do people act like Chris Sale has spent the majority of his career on the I.L? Sale has different 9 seasons of at least 147 innings pitched.
Among those 9 seasons, 4 were over 200 ip and another was 192 ip. Some of the others were 147 ip, 192 ip and 158 ip. Many pitchers would love this production(especially at Ace-level)
As I remember, Chris Sale is not “injury” prone, but did have one Tommy John surgery with the usual after effects and somewhat diminished performance moving forward.
all those 4 were pre covid look below for pretty much every year but last year he has missed significant time and outside of last year has not really hit much over a 100 innings.
2018: Shoulder inflammation sidelined him twice, once in July and again in August, according to House That Hank Built.
2019: Elbow inflammation and a UCL tear led to his season being cut short.
2020: He missed the entire season due to Tommy John surgery on his left elbow.
2021: Returned in August after Tommy John surgery, but his season was limited.
2022: A rib stress fracture, COVID-19, a fractured pinky finger, and a broken wrist (from a bicycle accident) significantly limited his playing time.
2023: A stress reaction in his scapula resulted in another stint on the 60-day injured list
@Roll…That’s a lot of vague, general injury information for one post. What good is mentioning an injury, if you don’t mention innings pitched, games missed or at least the total time spent on the I.L?
@mlb
“As I remember, Chris Sale is not “injury” prone, but did have one Tommy John surgery with the usual after effects and somewhat diminished performance moving forward.”
you did not mention anything about innings but i addressed that in the first line and was a 2 second google search.
“all those 4 were pre covid look below for pretty much every year but last year he has missed significant time and outside of last year has not really hit much over a 100 innings”
but without copying and pasting his baseball reference for each year from the end of 2019 season to the end of the 2023 season he accumulated 149 innings in 4 seasons so not even a full season worth of innings in 4 years even if you want to be gracious and give him 2 years for TJ thats another additional season lost worth of innings and that is not even really hitting 150 innings.
if you want to mention covid season as one of those, that was the year he was out for TJ as mentioned above
I don’t know. On one hand I think the Braves are built to win not only this year but in the next few years. But they aren’t winning now and the value a guy like Sale or Ozuna have is probably worth considering moving them. If they trade Sale then sign Valdez in the offseason that would make sense. But they would actually need to do that. I don’t know I think thet should st least listen to offers.
Sale isn’t a FA like Ohtani was, when Halos refused to move him. He’s for another rest with us, low priced, and can attract FA candidates with his class and with his love of Braves. If he wants to go to contender like ex teammate Devers did, he’ll let Alex know.
Translation…he’s going to be traded
Braves built on long haul with good priced contracts on position players. Its been the starting pitching compiled with injuries compounded with a org unwilling to spend on free agents that haven’t always lived up to their contract. Braves need to trade for starting pitching.
Whats the point of seeing Sale pitch for the Dodgers in the playoffs? These teams even have aaa or major league ready players they are going to trade away?
There was a rumor Padres Dylan Caese was going to be traded spring training.. never happened.