The Braves have made offseason additions in the bullpen, the infield and the outfield thus far, bringing in veterans Raisel Iglesias, Robert Suarez, Ha-Seong Kim, Mauricio Dubon, Jorge Mateo and Mike Yastrzemski via free agency or trade. (Kim suffered a hand injury after signing and will miss several months of the season.) The rotation, however, remains untouched as January nears its conclusion.
Jon Heyman of the New York Post reports on MLB Network (video link) that Atlanta is in the market for some form of rotation upgrade, however, specifically listing right-handers Lucas Giolito and Chris Bassitt as free agents of interest. Neither pitcher received a qualifying offer, so neither would require any draft forfeitures. The Braves are over the luxury tax threshold, per RosterResource’s estimates, but they weren’t tax payors in 2025 so the penalty for signing either veteran would be minimal.
Giolito, 31, started 26 games for the Red Sox in 2025 after missing the 2024 season due to a UCL procedure. He pitched well enough to convert his 2026 club option into a mutual option, which he declined in order to return to the open market. Giolito started the season in rocky fashion (6.42 ERA through seven starts) before rebounding to the tune of a 2.51 ERA in his final 19 starts and 111 1/3 innings. His 20.3% strikeout rate and 9.7% walk rate over that dominant run of 19 starts don’t support such a strong earned run average, and metrics like SIERA (4.67) and FIP (3.97) were much more bearish. Still, Giolito performed like a capable midrotation arm at the very least.
Were it not for a late elbow injury, Giolito’s market might have been more aggressive. (Although, had he been fully healthy, Boston may also have given more consideration to extending a qualifying offer.) Giolito’s surgically repaired ulnar collateral ligament received a clean bill of health at the time, but September testing on the right-hander revealed some irritation in his flexor tendon and a bone issue in his elbow that required some downtime. He missed the Red Sox’ postseason run as a result, but by November he was viewed as “fully healthy” and ready for a normal offseason.
A former first-round pick and top prospect, Giolito has had a roller-coaster tenure in the big leagues. He struggled greatly in his first 45 MLB appearances from 2016-18 (5.48 ERA) before settling in as a durable No. 2 starter with huge strikeout numbers for the White Sox. From 2019-21, he pitched 427 2/3 innings with a 3.47 ERA, 30.7% strikeout rate and 8% walk rate. Giolito stayed healthy and kept missing bats from 2022-23, but home run troubles inflated his ERA to 4.88 over 63 starts between those two seasons. He signed a two-year deal with the Red Sox covering the 2024-25 seasons and affording him the opportunity to opt out after ’24. A spring UCL injury that year wiped out his 2024 campaign and naturally led him to pick up his ’25 player option rather than test the market last winter.
Despite the up-and-down nature of his results, Giolito carries a respectable 4.30 ERA in his career — and that number dips to a flat 4.00 if you set aside the struggles he experienced from ages 21 to 23 back in ’16-’18. Last year’s career-low strikeout rate is a concern, but Giolito’s 93.3 mph average four-seamer is an exact match for his career levels, so it’s not as though he came back from surgery working with dramatically reduced stuff. Clubs aren’t going to view him as the clear playoff-caliber starter he was during his three-year peak with the ChiSox, but it’s not out of the question that he can get back to pitching at that level. Even last year’s level of output would make him a third or fourth starter in a good rotation.
As for Bassitt, he’s considerably older but has been more durable and more consistent. The 36-year-old righty (37 next month) ranks seventh in the majors in games started and eighth in innings pitched over the past six seasons. During that time, he’s pitched to a combined 3.57 earned run average with a 22.7% strikeout rate, 7.2% walk rate and a 44% ground-ball rate. All of those are right at the league average, if not slightly better.
Bassitt has made at least 30 starts and pitched at least 170 innings in four straight seasons. His 2025 campaign featured 170 1/3 frames with a 3.96 ERA and rate stats right in line with his overall marks from the past six seasons. Bassitt also shined with the Blue Jays in the postseason, shifting to a relief role without missing a beat. He fired 8 2/3 innings of one-run ball and allowed only three hits and two walks while punching out 10 in that time.
If there are any red flags with Bassitt, they’re not as much with his recent performance as they are simply with the aging process of any pitcher. He’ll pitch all of the upcoming season at 37. Last year’s results were strong, but it’s worth noting that his 91.5 mph average fastball was the lowest of his career by a decent margin. His prior career-low was 2023’s 92.4 mph. He bounced back slightly with a 92.6 mph average in 2024 but lost about a mile per hour off that heater in ’25. That said, it didn’t have an impact on his ability to miss bats; Bassitt’s strikeout rate and swinging-strike rate were both better in 2025 than in 2024.
Though the Braves currently have a talented rotation, there are plenty of question marks regarding both health and workload among the bunch. Chris Sale, Spencer Strider, Spencer Schwellenbach, Reynaldo Lopez and Hurston Waldrep rank among the best quintets in the sport from a pure talent level. However, Sale was limited to 20 starts due to fractures in his ribcage. Strider made 23 starts but posted a 4.45 ERA with diminished rate stats in his first season back from UCL surgery. Schwellenbach started only 17 games due to a fracture in his elbow. Lopez made only one start due to shoulder surgery. Waldrep, a former first-rounder and top prospect, looked very good in nine major league starts but had shakier numbers in Triple-A and has just 63 1/3 big league innings under his belt.
Atlanta has some depth options in the form of Bryce Elder, Joey Wentz, Grant Holmes and Didier Fuentes, the latter of whom has garnered some top-100 prospect love this offseason. Still, given the plethora of injury troubles Atlanta faced, Sale’s age/injury track record and Strider’s downturn in results, augmenting the current group would be wise. MLBTR’s Anthony Franco recently argued as much at greater length in a recent piece for Trade Rumors Front Office subscribers.
The Braves’ current cash payroll of $262MM would already be a franchise record, while their $258MM of luxury tax obligations are the second-highest in franchise history. Bringing in either Bassitt or Giolito would surely bump Atlanta into the second tier of luxury penalization but would leave them shy of the third tier — the point at which a team’s top draft pick is dropped by ten spots. The Braves will owe a 20% tax on the next $6MM or so spent ($1.2MM) and a 32% tax on the next $20MM. If we presume Bassitt is targeting something similar to the two-year, $40MM deal signed by fellow 37-year-old starter Merrill Kelly, he’d come with about $5.7MM of taxes for the Braves, on top of his actual salary.

It would be good if the Braves pick one up. That’ll help accelerate the FA market.
I think Ca$hman must be sleeping outside somewhere again? Please go find him!!!
I wonder if John Holmes will end up in the bullpen.
Holmes stuff would play up in a reliever role. I would be down with that. I think he could be a high leverage arm as well. Keep that arm from throwing 130+ innings he had issues last season.
He’d be about 80 years old, if he were still alive.
Never forgave him, for doing too many of those foreign films truthfully. They weren’t really my thing or whatever.
it would be big for sure.. his presence would be huge I am sure.
He’d be a good long man IMO
Well, yeah.
Rather a trade for someone slightly better but it looks like that option may not be available
If the Braves sign Giolito, it’ll be a reunion for him and Reynaldo Lopez.
Same guy: wearing a wig?
Maybe they sign Dane Dunning too…
Tough to do that. Dunning just signed w/Seattle.
Love that they have played together for 4 different teams
I’m interested in following Rhea Seehorn home, just a couple times a week. To start.
I wish the Os would (after signing Fromber) then go and sign Bassitt for the pen with some spot starts. I’ve always liked him and he showed he can help in relief.
Idk. Giolito finally had a decent season last year but the injury at the end spoiled it for me. I’ll take Littell over these two
I have Bassitt to the Braves, make it so.
Surprised that Giolito hasn’t signed somewhere yet. I wonder if his asking price is too high. I could see him angling for a 3year deal but if I’m a front office I’d really only be comfortable with 1. Maybe a vesting option based on IP for a second year.
MM
“I wonder if his asking price is too high”
Offers are too low
of course this Heyman saying they’re interested, so take that for what it’s worth
So sign one of these two, bump Waldrep back to AAA, and push Ritchie out of the picture entirely? Then they’ll have to deal or waive both of Elder and Wentz because they have no options left. Franco claimed the Braves off season is a failure unless they sign one of these two or a pitcher w/a QO attached (Valdez, Gallen.) Using Heyman as a source to “prove” that Atlanta “has interest” in Giolito and Bassitt? Odd, since neither of the two are represented by Boras. Seems there’s an agenda here on getting these two signed by Atlanta—-no matter the wonky fit, despite Giolito’s obvious injury risk, an ugly 2 year salary projection for Bassitt ($38M), and pushing the Braves closer to the 3rd luxury level. If AA decides to waste salary and block Holmes, Waldrep, Ritchie, Elder, and Wentz, I hope he considers a more reasonable option like Verlander.
A more “reasonable” option, like 42 year old Verdander?
I do not think that word means what you think it means…
If he’d be willing to take a 1yr @ 10-12.5 mil deal with another 2 mil in reachable incentives, then yeah that would be reasonable. In a pinch I’d rather have JV start a game 4 start over Elder, Holmes, or Waldrep just because of his experience and not too mention the mentoring he could do for all of the young RH pitchers we have.
Meant exactly what I said. Compare Verlander’s numbers over the last 19 starts in 2025 to Bassitt’s. Verlander’s easily the better choice. Giolito’s flexor and elbow injuries in September make him a no go no matter what his salary demands are. Braves can probably sign Verlander to a 1 year deal @ $10ish M. 37 year old Bassitt’s projected for 2 years @$38M. “I do not think” that BP snark sounds as smart as “you think” it does……
Verlander is likely to command an AAV similar to Giolito, if for only one year vs two so no difference in luxury tax. Both Waldrep and Ritchie start the year in AAA…losing Elder or Wentz doesn’t really concern me ..Elder could start the year in the bullpen..Holmes in the pen as well. We know injuries will happen with this staff. We are NOT signing any of QO FA’s. Verlander is like 86 years old….
This seems to be the right move for AA. A trade for a SP is an option but saving the prospects for the trade deadline makes sense. I have a feeling we’ll need a bat by then. Too many questions in this lineup. Prefer Bassitt over Giolito but I’m sure $$$ will matter ..
FGDC projections
Pitcher FIP, WAR/IP
Sale 3.06, 4.0/165
Strider 3.63, 2.8/159
S-BACH 3.48, 3.2/169
Lopez 3.77, 1.7/113
Waldrep 4.26 1.3/140
Holmes 4.17, 0.7/66
Elder 4.16, 0.7/64
That’s a super talented rotation, but if they feel they don’t have the depth…
Giolito 4.64, 1.3/156
Bassit 4.22, 2.0/162
Elder 4.16, 0.7/64
I’ll take the over on that ERA. And I’d be willing to bet quite a lot.
Projections are how you show movies.
Make believe stuff.
Why not sign both ? We all know Injuries are guaranteed .
You know you’ve lost the magic of baseball when your hope for who your team signs lines up so well with who the team is going after and that player is a no.4 pitcher who’s almost 37. 😂 Im selling this guy a bit short. Maybe Bassit can turn the clock back just a couple years but he is durable, soaking up a lot of innings. With all of the Braves rotation injuries they really need that.
This is one of the teams that I was hoping would sign Valdez. For some reason I’m not feeling him on the Orioles. I don’t think he wants to be there. So if he’s somewhere he doesn’t want to be he’ll be more miserable than usual.