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Braves Sign Ken Giles To Minor League Deal

By Steve Adams | February 2, 2024 at 9:10am CDT

The Braves announced their slate of non-roster invitees to spring training Friday, and while the majority of names within have already been reported or announced over the course of the offseason, there are a few notable names revealed within today’s release. Former Astros and Blue Jays closer Ken Giles, who recently worked out for teams, will be in camp after inking a minor league pact. Former Reds infielder Alejo Lopez and former Royals catcher Sebastian Rivero have also signed minor league contracts with non-roster invitations.

Now 33 years old, Giles was one of the game’s best relievers at his peak. He debuted with the 2014 Phillies and delivered consecutive sub-2.00 ERA seasons. From 2014-19, Giles racked up 114 saves between Philadelphia, Houston and Toronto while pitching to a 2.67 ERA and striking out one-third of his opponents against a 7.5% walk rate. Injuries have derailed that excellent start to his career; he underwent Tommy John surgery in 2020, which wiped out his 2021 season entirely.

Giles inked a two-year deal with the Mariners spanning the 2021-22 seasons, with Seattle hoping he’d be healthy for the second year of that arrangement. A strained tendon in his pitching hand pushed back his debut, however, and Giles only wound up pitching 4 1/3 innings with the M’s over the course of that two-year contract. Seattle declined a club option for the 2023 season. He pitched 20 innings in the Dodgers’ minor league ranks last year and fanned 32 hitters but also walked 19 while recording an 8.55 ERA.

Four full seasons have now been completed since Giles was last a dominant big league reliever. It’s perhaps a long shot for him to ever recapture that form, but there’s also little harm in the Braves taking what amounts to a no-risk look at him during spring training. Jon Heyman of the New York Post reports that the Rowley Sports Management client would earn at a $1.75MM rate if he’s added to the big league roster at any point.

Lopez, 27, has seen MLB time in each of the past three seasons with Cincinnati. He’s played second base, third base and all three outfield positions while posting a .265/.309/.329 batting line over the course of 181 plate appearances. The versatile Lopez has excellent bat-to-ball skills, evidenced by a 14.9% strikeout rate in the big leagues. In Triple-A, he’s walked at a 12.5% clip against a tiny 11.4% strikeout rate while batting .289/.384/.412 in 1030 plate appearances.

The 25-year-old Rivero appeared with the Royals in 2021-22, appearing in 34 games and batting .167/.236/.197 in 73 plate appearances. Rivero spent the 2023 season in the White Sox minor league system, splitting time between Double-A and Triple-A. He slashed .219/.273/.326 in that one-year stint with Chicago and is a career .247/.297/.369 hitter in parts of three Triple-A seasons. Rivero is touted as a plus defender behind the plate and sports strong framing marks in the minors in addition to a solid 27% caught-stealing rate across all levels in his professional career.

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Atlanta Braves Transactions Alejo Lopez Ken Giles Sebastian Rivero

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Jimy Williams Passes Away

By Darragh McDonald | January 29, 2024 at 3:15pm CDT

Former player, manager and coach Jimy Williams has passed away, according to announcement from his previous clubs. He was 80 years old.

Williams was born in Santa Maria, California in 1943 and started his professional career by signing with the Red Sox. He was selected by the Cardinals in the 1965 Rule 5 draft and made his major league debut with that club. His playing career was quite modest, as he got into just 14 big league games with the Cards, 13 in 1966 and one more the following year. He made 14 plate appearances, walking once and striking out six times. His three singles in 13 at-bats gave him a batting average of .231.

He was traded to the Reds after the 1967 season and selected by the Expos in the 1968 expansion draft, but he never made it back to the big leagues. Though his playing career was limited, he managed to have brushes with greatness. His first appearance was against Sandy Koufax and his first hit came off Juan Marichal, both of whom eventually became Hall of Famers.

He transitioned to coaching and managing in the ’70s, starting in the Angels’ farm system. He got to the big leagues as the third base coach of the Blue Jays in 1980. He was promoted to the manager’s chair in 1986, with Bobby Cox vacating the role and heading to Atlanta. The Jays posted a winning record the next three seasons though didn’t make the postseason. Toronto fans of a certain vintage will remember that the 1987 club had a 3.5-game lead over the Tigers before losing their final seven contests for a heartbreaking second-place finish despite winning 96 games on the year. In 1989, the Jays got out to a slow start and Williams was fired in May, replaced by Cito Gaston.

Williams’ next gig was with Atlanta, reuniting him with Cox. Williams served as the third base coach in Atlanta from 1991 to 1996. The 1994 season wasn’t finished because of that year’s strike, but Atlanta won the National League East in every other season during that stretch, winning the World Series in 1995.

He got another managerial gig in 1997, getting hired by the Red Sox. They finished in fourth in the American League East in the first of his seasons in Boston but then got up to second place and earned the American League Wild Card spot in both 1998 and 1999. Williams won American League Manager of the Year honors in the latter of those two seasons, but the Sox didn’t make it back to the postseason in 2000 and then Williams was fired in August of 2001.

A few months later, Williams was hired to manage the Astros. They finished with winning records but shy of the postseason in 2002 and 2003, before Williams was fired midway through the 2004 campaign. That would be his last managerial gig, but he was hired to be the Phillies’ bench coach going into the 2007 season. The Phils won the National League East that year but lost to the Rockies in the NLDS. The next year, they won the division again and eventually won the 2008 World Series, a second ring for Williams as a coach. He decided not to return to the club the following year, finishing his career on a high note.

Over his career, Williams managed parts of 12 seasons with a combined record of 910-790, a .535 winning percentage. His two sons, Brady Williams and Shawn Williams, went on to become professional baseball players and minor league managers/coaches. We at MLB Trade Rumors join the rest of the baseball world in sending our condolences to the Williams family as well as Jimy’s many friends, acquaintances and fans throughout the game.

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Latest On Max Fried

By Mark Polishuk | January 28, 2024 at 9:22pm CDT

Max Fried is feeling healthy after an injury-plagued 2023 season, and the Braves ace is looking to focus just on baseball rather than a possible trip to free agency next winter.  “I feel like a lot of that is, I would say it’s out of my control right now,” Fried told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Justin Toscano and other reporters.  “But the Braves do things a certain way, and I know that privacy and having that just kind of be more behind closed doors is the way things are done, so I’m gonna respect that.  But I know that I love being here, and I’m really excited to get started with this group….We didn’t accomplish what we wanted to last year, but I know that we have a really determined group, and I’m really excited to get started.”

It isn’t known whether or not the Braves and Fried’s reps at CAA have had any more talks since the two sides discussed an extension last spring, since as Fried noted, the Braves tend to avoid leaks when it comes to transactional or contract news.  Atlanta is more aggressive than any other club when it comes to extending players, yet the fact that Fried has gotten so close to free agency might hint that either side might ultimately be comfortable in parting ways next winter.

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Atlanta Braves New York Mets Notes Washington Nationals Max Fried Stone Garrett Wandy Peralta

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Rangers Trade J.P. Martinez To Braves

By Steve Adams | January 26, 2024 at 9:33am CDT

The Rangers announced Friday that they’ve traded outfielder J.P. Martinez to the Braves in exchange for minor league right-hander Tyler Owens. Texas needed to open a spot on its 40-man roster in order to finalize yesterday’s reported signing of David Robertson, and a trade of the 27-year-old Martinez seemingly paves the way for that signing to be made official. Robertson is taking his physical in Texas today.

Martinez made his big league debut with the Rangers in 2023, appearing in 17 games and tallying 44 plate appearances late in the season. He hit .225/.250/.325 with a homer, a double and an unsightly 16 strikeouts (36.4%) during that cup of coffee. His output in 77 Triple-A games (353 plate appearances) was far more encouraging. The lefty-swinging Martinez slashed .298/.418/.543 with 14 long balls, 21 doubles, four triples and a hefty 38 stolen bases in 42 attempts. The small-sample strikeout woes that plagued him in the majors weren’t present in Triple-A; he walked at a 15.6% clip in Round Rock and fanned at a much more manageable 22.9% rate.

It’s worth noting that Martinez was older and more experienced than much of his competition in Triple-A. In addition to five minor league seasons, he played five years in the Cuban National Series (Cuba’s top professional league) and spent two seasons in the independent Canadian-American Association. Be that as it may, it was still an impressive showing and far and away his most productive minor league performance to date since signing with the Rangers organization in March of 2018. Martinez at one point ranked second among Rangers prospects, per Baseball America, but he dropped to 27th the following year (2020) and has been off the radar on major prospect rankings for the organization since.

The Braves’ outfield is full with Jarred Kelenic in left, Michael Harris II in center and reigning National League MVP Ronald Acuna Jr. in right field. It’s feasible that Martinez could compete with Forrest Wall and non-roster veteran Jordan Luplow for a bench spot to begin the season. Martinez (two) and Wall (three) both have minor league option years remaining, so either could be sent down without needing to first be exposed to waivers. Luplow isn’t on the 40-man roster and would need to earn a job this spring.

Turning to the Rangers’ side of the swap, they’ll add a 23-year-old righty who was the Braves’ 13th-round pick in the 2019 draft. Owens split the 2023 season between High-A and Double-A, working to a combined 3.03 ERA in 65 1/3 innings split between the bullpen and the rotation. He fanned 23.4% of his opponents against a 7.7% walk rate, although both his strikeout and walk rate took a turn for the worse when moving up to the Double-A level from High-A.

Listed at 5’10” and 185 pounds, Owens is undersized but nonetheless elevated his prospect status with his 2023 performance. Baseball America ranked him 22nd among Braves prospects this offseason, touting a plus fastball that reaches 98 mph and befuddles hitters thanks in part to a lower-than-usual release angle. BA’s report also notes that Owens has a slider with strong spin rates which could be a plus pitch if he can locate it more consistently — which he’s struggled to do at this point in his career.

Owens gives the Rangers a potential bullpen arm who could be in the big leagues at some point in 2024 or in 2025, although it should also be noted that all 29 other teams passed on selecting him in December’s Rule 5 Draft despite being eligible.

The Rangers have more outfield depth in the upper minors and on their big league bench than the Braves, who have a stacked bullpen that left Owens with little chance of breaking through in the immediate term (barring multiple injuries on the MLB roster). Martinez is more interesting than the standard player who might be designated for assignment to make room for a free agent signing, and the Braves accordingly sent a relatively near-term bullpen prospect who seemingly has a chance to make it in the big leagues. Both clubs dealt from positions of depth and addressed areas of need; on the whole, it seems like a sensible swap for both parties.

Francys Romero first reported that Martinez had been traded to Atlanta.

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Atlanta Braves Texas Rangers Transactions J.P. Martinez Tyler Owens

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Collin McHugh Announces Retirement

By Steve Adams | January 22, 2024 at 11:57pm CDT

Veteran right-hander Collin McHugh announced his retirement from the game Monday (Instagram link). The 36-year-old pitched in parts of 11 MLB seasons from 2012-23 and accrued more than nine years of big league service along the way.

“I was never the best player on any team I played for,” McHugh wrote in his announcement. “Including my 7th grade church league team, on which I played catcher. I never did travel baseball. I went to a small private high school and a small NAIA college. I got drafted in the 18th round by the Mets, most likely as a favor to my college coach. I threw 90 mph. I was NEVER supposed to make it out of A ball. 16 years later, it’s finally time for me to hang ‘em up. And as cringey as it might sound, I’m proud of myself. Proud that I didn’t give up. Proud of the clubhouses I’ve been lucky enough to have a locker in. Proud to be a member of the MLBPA alongside this generation of amazing ballplayers. To the Mets, Rockies, Astros, Red Sox, Rays, and my hometown Braves: Thanks for taking a chance on a kid like me. I’ll never forget it. And don’t worry, I’m pretty sure I’ll be around the game forever. So if we see each other at a park near you, come say hey!”

McHugh, indeed, was never regarded as a top prospect. He debuted with the 2012 Mets and was tagged for a 7.59 ERA in 21 1/3 frames as a rookie. His struggles in Queens continued into the following season, and McHugh was traded to the Rockies in exchange for outfielder Eric Young Jr., who’d been designated for assignment in Colorado. Things didn’t pan out at Coors Field either; McHugh was torched for 21 runs in 19 innings as a Rockie.

Despite the lack of success, the Astros both tried to trade for McHugh prior to his Rockies acquisition and then later claimed him off waivers when Colorado removed him from its 40-man roster. That interest and subsequent acquisition came back in 2013, prior to the public advent of a great deal of pitching data that is now commonplace. At the time, the high spin rate on McHugh’s curveball gave the Astros confidence that with some tweaks to his repertoire and general approach to hitters on the mound, that could be a plus breaking pitch that fueled a breakout for the little-known righty.

Houston’s interest proved prescient. In 2014, McHugh stepped into the Astros’ rotation and made 25 starts while working to an excellent 2.74 ERA over 154 2/3 frames. He fanned just over a quarter of his opponents against a tidy 6.6% walk rate while keeping the ball on the ground at a roughly average clip. A year later, McHugh followed up with a career-high 203 2/3 innings, pitching to a 3.89 ERA in a full slate of 32 trips to the hill.

McHugh finished fourth in AL Rookie of the Year voting during that 2014 breakout and was eighth in Cy Young voting during his followup effort. He made another 33 starts for Houston during the 2016 season before sustaining a shoulder injury that limited him to 12 starts of 3.55 ERA ball in 2017. McHugh returned as a reliever in 2018 and went from a key member of the Houston rotation to a similarly important reliever; he fired 72 1/3 innings of 1.99 ERA ball in 2018 before struggling to more pedestrian results in a 2019 campaign split between the rotation and bullpen.

Overall, McHugh went from a nondescript late-round pick to a clear-cut big leaguer during his time in Houston. He pitched 753 1/3 innings of 3.63 ERA ball there before hitting free agency and taking a one-year deal with the Red Sox that was wiped out by injury and the pandemic-shortened schedule. McHugh landed with the Rays in 2021 and bounced back in a major way: a 1.55 ERA in 64 innings. That prompted a two-year deal with the Braves — a homecoming for a pitcher who went to high school in Lilburn and college in Mount Berry — where McHugh went on to throw another 128 innings of 3.38 ERA ball.

All told, McHugh’s career will draw to a close with a 71-47 record, 46 holds, one save and a 3.72 ERA in 992 2/3 innings at the MLB level. He struck out 967 hitters against 280 walks and added another 27 innings of 4.00 ERA performance in the postseason. McHugh won a World Series ring with the controversial 2017 Astros club that is now infamous for its sign-stealing setup. FanGraphs valued McHugh’s career at nearly 16 wins above replacement, while Baseball-Reference pegged him at 12.4 WAR in a career that netted him just under $27MM in earnings. Few 18th-round signees can boast anything close to that type of success; McHugh and Mike Cameron stand as two of the best ever selected in that round. McHugh’s comment about being “around the game forever” seems to leave the door open for some kind of role with a team in the future. Best wishes to the righty on whatever the next step may be.

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Braves Sign Jordan Luplow To Minor League Deal

By Leo Morgenstern | January 17, 2024 at 6:38pm CDT

The Braves signed outfielder Jordan Luplow to a minor league deal last Wednesday, according to his transaction log on MLB.com. Luplow, a client of ALIGND Sports Agency, signed with Atlanta last offseason, too, but was designated for assignment before playing a game on the big league squad. He split the rest of his season between the Blue Jays’ and Twins’ organizations.

Luplow began his career with the Pirates, who selected him in the third round of the 2014 draft. After two seasons with Pittsburgh in 2017 and ’18, the 30-year-old outfielder was traded three times in three years, first to the Guardians, then to the Rays, and finally to the Diamondbacks. His best performance came in 2019, his first year in Cleveland, when the righty batter hit 15 home runs in 85 games, slashing .276/.372/.551. Unfortunately, he struggled in the pandemic-shortened season, lost much of the following year to an ankle injury, and produced what was arguably the worst performance of his career the year after that. The veteran hit .176 with a .634 OPS across 83 games in 2022, and the D-backs DFA’d him in November.

Shortly thereafter, Luplow elected free agency and signed a one-year, $1.4 million contract with the Braves. However, he was cut five days into the season, having played just three games at Triple-A Gwinnett. The Blue Jays scooped him up off waivers but didn’t have much big league playing time to offer; Luplow played 48 games at Triple-A Buffalo and only 7 with Toronto. The Jays DFA’d Luplow after the trade deadline, and this time the Twins came calling. They had more opportunities for Luplow, getting him into 32 big league games over the final two months of the season, but left him off the postseason roster in October. Overall, he hit .208 with a .647 OPS in 39 MLB games last season, while slashing .237/.342/.418 across 54 contests in the minors.

Although his offensive numbers have been uninspiring for several years now, Luplow has always drawn walks at a high rate, and his career splits against left-handed pitching are rather impressive (33 home runs and an .833 OPS in 565 PA), even if his 2019 season is doing most of the heavy lifting in that department. What’s more, his strong arm and slightly above-average speed make him a capable option in an outfield corner.

Atlanta has one of the most talented rosters in the league, but there could be a spot for Luplow if he shines in Spring Training. Forrest Wall is currently penciled in as the fourth outfielder, but the long-time minor leaguer only has 15 MLB plate appearances under his belt. What’s more, the Braves currently have just 12 position players on their 40-man roster, and they’re surely planning to add more before Opening Day.

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Atlanta Braves Transactions Jordan Luplow

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MLBTR Podcast: The Cubs’ Activity, Marcus Stroman And Jordan Hicks

By Darragh McDonald | January 17, 2024 at 10:54am CDT

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 Tim Dierkes of MLB Trade Rumors to discuss…

  • The Cubs signing Shota Imanaga (1:20)
  • The Cubs acquiring for Michael Busch and Yency Almonte from the Dodgers (8:30)
  • The Yankees signing Marcus Stroman (13:20)
  • The Giants agreeing to sign Jordan Hicks (17:50)
  • The Braves extending Alex Anthopoulos (22:30)

Plus, we answer your questions, including…

  • Ben Cherington of the Pirates has repeatedly said that he would be active in the market for another starting pitcher and another outfielder. With Spring Training starting in about one month, has he given up on this quest? (25:35)
  • Why do general managers not come out and say reports are B.S.? Use the Jays as example. They are not interested in Blake Snell but their name gets thrown in for leverage. Should GMs step in and say this report is false? The endless number of sources is ridiculous and leads nowhere except larger pay days or trade hauls because of fake competition. (27:30)
  • I think most of the baseball world is getting really sick of the Dodgers and Yankees buying all the major names. It’s terrible for parity and makes for season after season of “wash, rinse, repeat” storylines. Is the league ever going to enact a salary cap? It’s done great things for the other three major sports leagues. What is the reason for the resistance to it? (31:40)

Check out our past episodes!

  • Teoscar Hernández Signs With L.A. And The Move-Making Mariners and Rays – listen here
  • Yoshi Yamamoto Fallout, the Chris Sale/Vaughn Grissom Trade and Transaction Roundup – listen here
  • Tyler Glasnow, Jung Hoo Lee, D-Backs’ Signings and the Braves’ Confusing Moves – listen here

The podcast intro and outro song “So Long” is provided courtesy of the band Showoff.  Check out their Facebook page here!

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Atlanta Braves Chicago Cubs Los Angeles Dodgers MLB Trade Rumors Podcast New York Yankees Pittsburgh Pirates San Francisco Giants Alex Anthopoulos Jordan Hicks Marcus Stroman Michael Busch Shota Imanaga Yency Almonte

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Braves Sign Top International Prospect Jose Perdomo

By Anthony Franco | January 15, 2024 at 10:59pm CDT

  • Jose Perdomo, SS, Braves: A right-handed hitting infielder from Venezuela, Perdomo leads the class with a $5MM signing bonus. MLB Pipeline ranks him as the #3 prospect in the group. He’s regarded as a polished hitter with a good chance to stick somewhere on the infield. Badler notes (on X) that the $5MM bonus is the largest ever for a Venezuelan player.
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2024 International Prospects Atlanta Braves Chicago Cubs Cincinnati Reds Los Angeles Angels Los Angeles Dodgers New York Mets San Diego Padres Seattle Mariners Texas Rangers Washington Nationals Dawel Joseph Fernando Cruz (b. 2006) Jose Perdomo Leodalis De Vries

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Charlie Culberson Attempting To Become Pitcher, Re-Signs With Braves On Minors Deal

By Darragh McDonald | January 12, 2024 at 3:42pm CDT

Charlie Culberson has re-signed with the Braves on a minor league deal and will report to minor league camp as a pitcher, per reports from Jon Heyman of The New York Post and Justin Toscano of the Atlanta Journal Constitution.

Culberson, 35 in April, has served as a utility player in the majors for over a decade now. He debuted with the Giants back in 2012 and has since suited up for the Rockies, Dodgers, Braves and Rangers, getting into 590 games in his career. He’s never been a huge threat at the plate, having hit .248/.293/.385 overall for a wRC+ of 76, but he has generally received strong defensive grades while lining up at every position on the diamond except catcher and center field.

That includes some brief stints on the mound, which have gone well. He has tossed 7 1/3 innings over his eight appearances in the big leagues, allowing just one earned run, three walks and seven hits while striking out one opponent. He also made four appearances in Triple-A last year, allowing two earned runs in 3 2/3 innings, with five strikeouts and two walks. As noted by Toscano, Culberson was clocked at 93.7 miles per hour in an appearance back in 2018. In Triple-A last year, he hit 93.1.

Perhaps focusing on pitching full-time will allow him to push that velocity further, or maybe it will be harder for him to maintain it with a larger workload. Attempting to suddenly become a pitcher on the cusp of one’s 35th birthday is obviously an unusual path but there’s some logic to it for Culberson. He would have been hard-pressed to find a meaningful role as a utility player going forward. In 2023, he had two separate month-long stints on the big league roster in Atlanta but received just one major league plate appearance for the year. Incidentally, he got a single and finished the year with a slash line of 1.000/1.000/1.000 and a wRC+ of 475. But instead of languishing on the bench or in the minors again, he’ll take a different path.

It will also be fun storyline for supporters of the club. Culberson has become something of a fan favorite over his many stints with Atlanta and he’ll now set his sights on a new and surprising task.

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Atlanta Braves Transactions Charlie Culberson

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Braves Extend Alex Anthopoulos Through 2031

By Steve Adams | January 12, 2024 at 9:08am CDT

The Braves announced this morning that they’ve signed president of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos to an extension that will keep him with the team through the 2031 season. Anthopoulos had previously been entering the final season of a three-year contract extension that spanned the 2022-24 seasons. He’ll now be in Atlanta for an additional seven years.

“Alex and I have enjoyed a wonderful working relationship, and I look forward to that continuing for many years to come,” Braves CEO Terry McGuirk said in the team’s press release announcing the extension.

“I have been around this game a very long time and know that Alex’s track record of success is truly something special. There is simply no one better in the business. This extension gives Alex the runway to make long-term decisions and the opportunity to continue his track record of assembling teams that are perennial contenders. I have the utmost confidence in his ability to deliver championship baseball for our fans well into the future.”

The seven-year term of the contract extension is massive in relation to Anthopoulos’ baseball operations peers throughout the sport; most president of baseball operations and/or general manager contracts are three to five years in length. Given the unparalleled young core that the Braves have not only developed but also largely managed to sign to club-friendly contract extensions under Anthopoulos’ watch, however, it’s not surprising to see the team reward him with an uncommonly lengthy contract of his own — one that’ll allow him to see the bulk of those player extensions play out in full.

The 46-year-old Anthopoulos’ ascension to the top of the sport’s executive sphere is one rooted in the humblest of beginnings. His first job in baseball came with the Expos, where he was an unpaid intern working in their mail room and printing stat sheets. Expos scouts eventually took Anthopoulos under their wing, and he was moved to the team’s scouting department before being hired by the Blue Jays in 2003. From there, Anthopoulos climbed the ranks of Toronto’s baseball operations staff, rising all the way to general manager — a role he’d hold through 2015 before rejecting an extension under incoming president and CEO Mark Shapiro.

The Dodgers quickly added Anthopoulos to their front office, hiring him as a vice president of baseball operations working alongside president of baseball ops Andrew Friedman and then-GM Farhan Zaidi. That proved to be less than a two-year stop, as Atlanta hired Anthopoulos away from Los Angeles and named him general manager after former GM John Coppolella was dismissed and banned from baseball following reported violations on the international free agent market and in the MLB draft. (Major League Baseball lifted Coppolella’s “lifetime” ban after six years, in 2023.)

While some of the core pieces comprising the Braves’ roster were signed or drafted under the former regime — most notably, Ronald Acuna Jr., Ozzie Albies, Austin Riley and Max Fried — it was Anthopoulos who oversaw the extensions for each of Acuna (eight years, $100MM), Albies (seven years, $35MM) and Riley (ten years, $212MM). While Anthopoulos himself doesn’t necessarily oversee the draft, he did hire now-former scouting director Dana Brown — who’s since been hired as Houston’s general manager — and set the stage for a remarkable run of success in the amateur draft. (Brown and Anthopoulos worked together both in Montreal and in Toronto.)

From 2019 onward, Atlanta drafted names like Michael Harris II, Spencer Strider, Bryce Elder, Vaughn Grissom and Shea Langeliers (among others), each of whom has either emerged as a core contributor or been included in a trade to help build out the club’s current roster. (Langeliers was sent to Oakland in the Matt Olson trade; Grissom recently was traded to the Red Sox for Chris Sale.)

In addition to Acuna, Albies and Riley, Anthopoulos has succeeded in brokering long-term deals with the majority of Atlanta’s core. While Freddie Freeman and Dansby Swanson did ultimately depart in free agency — and Fried could well do the same next winter — the Braves have had more success on the extension front than any team in the game. Harris inked an eight-year, $72MM deal midway through his rookie season. Strider followed suit with a six-year, $75MM contract.

Less than 48 hours after acquiring Olson in what’s now a wildly lopsided trade with the A’s (who received Langeliers, Cristian Pache, Joey Estes and Ryan Cusick in return), Anthopoulos signed his new first baseman to an eight-year, $168MM extension. A year later, Anthopoulos again pried a star away from Oakland on the trade market, acquiring catcher Sean Murphy in a three-team deal that sent William Contreras to Milwaukee. As with Olson, Murphy quickly put pen to paper on a new contract: a six-year, $73MM deal.

The Braves, under Anthopoulos, have also made veteran Charlie Morton a fixture in the rotation, repeatedly signing him and extending him on a series of short-term contracts. Morton, originally drafted by Atlanta back in 2002, is now entering his fourth straight season as a Brave and has given the team 521 innings of 3.77 ERA ball and was a key part of the team’s 2021 postseason staff (3.24 ERA in 16 2/3 innings). Similarly, catcher/designated hitter Travis d’Arnaud has become a veteran staple on the club, winning a Silver Slugger in 2020 and making the 2022 All-Star team while combining for a solid .256/.315/.446 slash in four seasons since originally signing.

That 2021 postseason run, of course, is the crowning achievement of Anthopoulos’ career thus far. The Braves, powered by a juggernaut core and buoyed by deadline acquisitions like Jorge Soler and Eddie Rosario, blitzed through the second half of the season as the sport’s hottest team and rode that momentum all the way to a 2021 World Series title.

As with any baseball operations executive, not every move Anthopoulos has made has worked out. The three-year, $40MM deal for lefty Will Smith and the four-year, $65MM signing of Marcell Ozuna have had mixed results, at best, and the trade to swap out Smith for Odorizzi played out poorly as well. Smith rebounded in Houston, while Odorizzi struggled in Atlanta before being sent to the Rangers, with the Braves remaining on the hook for the bulk of his 2023 salary after Odorizzi exercised a player option. The Braves also acquired Kevin Gausman at what now looks like a bargain rate from the Orioles in 2018 but cut him loose via waivers a year later after he struggled in Atlanta. Gausman signed with the Giants the following offseason, broke out in San Francisco, and has since become a bona fide No. 1 starter in Toronto, where he signed a five-year free agent deal.

In comparison to the litany of successes under Anthopoulos, however, those misses are relatively minor in nature. And, while perhaps the Braves would like mulligans on some of those decisions, the simple fact of the matter is that none of them have stood as roadblocks to success. The Braves have won the NL East in all six of Anthopoulos’ seasons as general manager, and the team’s unrivaled collection of talent under long-term contract has positioned Atlanta as a legitimate dynasty in the division.

We’re reminded each year of the MLB postseason’s intrinsic randomness, but it’d be a surprise if the Braves didn’t reach the playoffs in the majority of the seasons under this new contract for their president — and another World Series appearance (if not victory) wouldn’t be a bad bet, either. It’s somewhat fitting that an executive known for his ability to hammer out club-friendly extensions now secures his own long-term deal — one that’ll assure him the opportunity to reap the benefits of the incredible crop of talent that’s been drafted, acquired, developed and signed long-term under his watch.

“I’d like to thank Terry for his continued support and trust,” Anthopoulos said in his own statement this morning. “The Braves are an incredible organization to be a part of, and I’m proud of the success we’ve achieve together. I am grateful for the opportunity to continue to lead baseball operations and to strive to bring another World Series to Atlanta.”

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Atlanta Braves Newsstand Alex Anthopoulos

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