The Braves have designated relievers José Suarez and Joel Payamps for assignment, per a club announcement. Right-hander Hunter Stratton has been recalled from Triple-A Gwinnett, and fellow righty Anthony Molina has had his contract selected from Gwinnett as well.

Suarez has been with Atlanta in each of the past two seasons and has totaled 35 2/3 innings of 4.04 ERA ball. The 28-year-old has been tagged for a 6.61 ERA in this season’s 16 1/3 frames, however, and is out of minor league options. Suarez has piled up strikeouts at career-high levels in 2026 (26.6% strikeout rate, backed by a sharp 12.8% swinging-strike rate), but his already wobbly command has deteriorated even further; he’s walked 15.2% of his opponents this season.

Back in 2021-22, Suarez looked to be emerging as a quality fourth starter in Anaheim. He gave the Halos 207 1/3 innings with a 3.86 ERA with a slightly below-average strikeout rate but a walk rate that was a bit better than average. The wheels came off in 2023, due in no small part to a shoulder strain that sent him to the injured list for several months. He posted an 8.29 ERA in 33 2/3 innings that season and was only marginally better in 52 1/3 frames the following season (6.02 ERA).

Suarez has experience working both as a reliever and a starter. He’s making just $900K this season, so a team in need of some left-handed depth or a swingman to provide long relief could have some interest — if said club can look past this year’s ugly walk rate. Metrics like SIERA (4.12) and xERA (3.97) feel Suarez has been a good bit better than his more rudimentary earned run average would indicate. If he clears waivers, he’d have the right to reject an outright assignment, though doing so would require forfeiting the remainder of that $900K guarantee, so he’d probably accept an assignment to Gwinnett.

The 32-year-old Payamps has had a tougher season. He’s pitched 7 2/3 innings with Atlanta, who plucked him off waivers from the Brewers last September, and been tagged for seven earned runs on nine hits and four walks. Two of those nine hits left the yard.

Payamps was a solid middle reliever for the A’s in 2021-22 and a revelation with the Brewers in 2023-24 after Milwaukee picked him up alongside William Contreras in a three-team trade that turned out to be a heist on their end of things. (Sean Murphy went to the Braves; Esteury Ruiz, Kyle Muller, Freddy Tarnok, Royber Salinas and Manny Piña went to Oakland.) Payamps was dominant with the Brew Crew in ’23-’24, logging a 2.78 ERA, 48 holds and nine saves with a 26.1% strikeout rate against a 6.7% walk rate.

The 2025 season saw Payamps falter, however. He was roughed up for a 7.23 ERA in 23 2/3 innings before eventually being designated for assignment late in the year. Atlanta clearly still believed in the right-hander’s stuff, as the Braves not only claimed him in September but tendered him a $2.25MM contract over the winter. Any team that claims or acquires Payamps would be responsible for the remainder of that $2.25MM sum.

As is the case with Suarez, Payamps has enough service time to reject an outright assignment if he clears waivers, but not enough to do so while retaining the remainder of his salary. Given that salary and the fact that his struggles date back to 2025, it seems likely that Payamps will indeed pass through waivers. If that happens, he’ll surely head to Gwinnett to retain that salary and hope to pitch his way back into the major league mix.

Stratton pitched well in 16 1/3 innings with Atlanta last year and is out to a decent start in Gwinnett this season. Molina was a December waiver claim out of the Rockies organization. He’s a four-pitch reliever (four-seamer, slider, curveball, changeup) with good command but well below-average strikeout numbers in the majors. He was tagged for a 6.96 ERA in 94 1/3 innings with the Rox from 2024-25, but he’s worked to a 4.50 ERA with the Stripers while enjoying a nearly two mile-per-hour spike in velocity and a big 51.1% ground-ball rate.

In addition to the shaky performance from Suarez and Payamps this season, both were out of minor league options. That left Atlanta with minimal flexibility in the bullpen. For a chunk of the current season, the Braves’ only optionable reliever was lefty Dylan Lee, who is deservingly entrenched in the setup ranks and was never going to be sent down. Today’s pair of DFAs and Raisel Iglesias‘ trip to the 15-day IL have created some extra wiggle room. Lee, Stratton, Molina and prospect Didier Fuentes (a starter in the minors but currently in the Braves ‘pen) all have options left, which should give the club more flexibility when they need to bring up a fresh arm.

View Comments (11)