The Braves Are Running Out of Time (2024)

The Braves Are Running Out of Time (1)

Before the start of the season, the Atlanta Braves were the consensus pick to win the NL East. While it wasn’t unanimous – try getting a few dozen writers to fully agree on something – 22 of 25 FanGraphs writers predicted the Braves to win the division for the seventh straight season. Sportsbooks offered odds on Atlanta that had an implied probability of 75-80% for winning the division. ZiPS projected the Braves to win the most games in the majors and gave them a 63% chance to take the NL East crown. But as we approach the end of the first third of the season, it’s the Philadelphia Phillies who are on top of the division with the best record in baseball. The team’s six-game lead over Atlanta isn’t an insurmountable barrier, but it’s still a comfortable cushion for this point of the season. So, how concerned should the Braves be? And how long do they have to overcome their rivals and keep their division streak alive?

Frequently, when I discuss surprise first-place teams at this point of the season, I compare the situation to a hypothetical foot race between Usain Bolt and me. It goes without saying that Bolt is a much faster runner than I am, to the degree that he’d probably beat me in a race hopping on one foot. But what if he gave me a head start so I could get a sufficient lead? How far ahead would I have to be to have a chance to hold off the world’s fastest man? Uhhh, 10 steps from the finish line by the time he starts running might get it done. Obviously, this isn’t the perfect analogy, because even if Bolt is the Braves of running, I certainly am not the Phillies. But you get the idea: At some point in the season, a division race becomes a question of time, not talent.

First things first, let’s take a look at the current simulated ZiPS projected standings, through Thursday night’s games.

ZiPS Projected Standings – NL East (Morning of 5/24)

TeamWLGBPctDiv%WC%Playoff%WS Win%80th20th
Philadelphia Phillies9864.60562.2%34.4%96.6%10.8%103.891.4
Atlanta Braves94684.58036.4%53.7%90.1%11.1%100.787.5
New York Mets798319.4881.4%23.2%24.6%1.2%85.873.0
Washington Nationals699329.4260.0%2.1%2.2%0.0%75.863.1
Miami Marlins679531.4140.0%0.8%0.8%0.0%73.461.0

Well, at least if you go by the ZiPS projections, Atlanta fans aren’t getting the happiest version of this tale. ZiPS still thinks the Braves are the better team, but the margin has narrowed considerably. What was a 10-win gap in March has thinned to just a hair over a three-win separation per 162 games (20 points of winning percentage, to be exact). In fact, the Phillies are now projected to have an almost identical probability of winning the division as the Braves did at the start of the season, despite Atlanta’s aforementioned 10-game edge; as I remind people, the future is almost always far more uncertain than you think.

This is actually an impressively durable change, which further complicates matters for the Braves. Projections for teams don’t usually move quickly because, well, baseball history says they shouldn’t. ZiPS has been doing team projections since 2005. If all you had to go on to project the last two-thirds of a season was a team’s preseason projection in ZiPS and the team’s actual record for the first-third of the season, the best mix based on two decades of projections is about two-thirds ZiPS and one-third actual record.

The offenses tell much of the story, so let’s start with Philadelphia’s offense. Here are the differences between ZiPS preseason WAR and the current projected final WAR. The latter consists of the WAR already on the books and the rest-of-season projections. Remember, this already includes all those grumpy old regressions toward the mean.

Phillies Offense – ZiPS Preseason vs. Final 2024 WAR

NamePreseason WARProjected Final WARDifference
Alec Bohm1.614.683.06
Bryce Harper3.695.131.45
Bryson Stott2.583.941.36
Edmundo Sosa1.282.331.05
J.T. Realmuto3.224.170.95
Brandon Marsh1.742.550.80
Trea Turner5.055.620.56
Johan Rojas0.940.980.03
Kyle Schwarber1.761.72-0.04
Whit Merrifield0.760.53-0.23
Cristian Pache0.820.53-0.30
Garrett Stubbs0.32-0.11-0.43
Nick Castellanos0.52-0.65-1.18

That’s eight players projected to finish with at least a half-win more than at the start of the season. Castellanos is the only Phillies player whose projected WAR is now a half-win worse, but the projection systems didn’t expect much from him going into the season anyway. None of the hitters who are smashing the ball right now are expected to turn into midnight pumpkins. Even Bohm, the infielder ZiPS was most suspicious of, is now in the top 10 for most projected WAR added for 2025. And it’s not shocking that Harper, Realmuto, Turner (who is currently on the IL), and Stott are projected to maintain their strong starts.

As for the pitching, we projected the Phillies to have the second-best rotation in baseball, so their awesomeness is hardly surprising. Philadelphia’s stars have more than balanced out some of the outfield question marks and its depth hasn’t truly been tested yet, except for Turner’s injury —and as Jon Becker noted in his morning column on Tuesday, Turner’s replacements in the lineup, Sosa and Kody Clemens, have excelled in his absence.

As for the Braves, their vaunted offense has come out rather impotent. They rank seventh in the NL in runs scored, which isn’t disaster territory, but Ronald Acuña Jr., Matt Olson, and Austin Riley have all been just barely above league-average hitters this year. Sean Murphy has been out with an oblique injury that he suffered on Opening Day, but that’s been less of an impact because Travis d’Arnaud has been solid as the everyday backstop. Things might be a lot worse right now if not for the performances of d’Arnaud and Marcell Ozuna.

Atlanta’s current place in the standings is the fault of its underperforming stars, not its complementary talent. And that’s what makes it tough for the Braves to turn things around with a few trades, as they did in 2021 before surging to win the World Series. It’d be one thing if the problem were someone like Orlando Arcia, because the Braves wouldn’t think twice about benching or trading him to acquire a better shortstop. But when it comes to Acuña, Olson, and Riley, all Atlanta can do is wait for them to catch fire. What adds to this general feeling of helplessness is that the team’s biggest problem on the pitching side is Spencer Strider’s season-ending UCL injury. Even if the Braves were to try and swing a trade, their farm system is one of the weakest in baseball right now and only a few teams are currently out of contention. Major reinforcements aren’t on the way anytime soon.

The good news for Atlanta is that its stars are capable of breaking out of their funks at any moment, but the longer it takes them to turn things around, the more time the Phillies have to pull away. To get an idea of how much time the Braves have left, I took the current projected standings and had ZiPS simulate the rest of the season with both teams posting the same record going forward (for the sake of the example, I’m going with a 94-win pace) to see how quickly the divisional probabilities would change. Without picking up ground but also not losing any, Atlanta would slip to two-to-one divisional underdogs by June 10, and hit the three-to-one spot on the last day of the month. If this continues to the morning of the trade deadline, the Braves would find themselves with only an 18% projected chance to win the NL East, while the Phillies’ divisional odds would climb to 81%. (The Mets would still retain a few tenths of a percentage point.)

Let’s be clear: Despite the relatively gloomy outlook for Atlanta, a six-game deficit heading into Memorial Day Weekend is not insurmountable. In fact, the Phillies have the same divisional odds now as the Braves did two months ago. That said, for the first time since 2011, the NL East is the Philadelphia’s division to lose.

The Braves Are Running Out of Time (2024)

FAQs

Will the Braves ever leave Atlanta? ›

Is it shocking for folks in the A-T-L that the Braves, who have called downtown Atlanta home since Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium opened in 1966, will eventually be moving away from the city? Sure, but they won't have to travel all that far into the suburbs to catch a game.

What was the longest Braves game? ›

On July 4, 1985, the Atlanta Braves played the New York Mets in a game that lasted nearly 10 hours. On July 4th, 1985, one of the greatest, strangest, longest games in baseball history happened right here in Atlanta.

Why was Braves game postponed? ›

ST. LOUIS -- The Cardinals announced that Tuesday's 6:45 p.m. CT game against the Atlanta Braves at Busch Stadium has been postponed due to inclement weather.

Why did Braves build a new stadium? ›

The Atlanta Braves had a vision. Faced with an expiring lease, the team wanted to build a new,41,000-seat, world-class ballpark surrounded by a true live-work-play village –but they needed to move fast.

Will the Atlanta Braves be sold? ›

No, The Atlanta Braves Are Not For Sale.

Where are the Braves moving to? ›

The Atlanta Braves, according to their team's stadium lease, cannot move again until 2047 at the earliest. The team, which moved from Turner Field in Atlanta to their current home Truist Park (originally SunTrust Park), just outside of Atlanta in Cobb County in 2017. The team has a 30 year lease at Truist Park.

Are the Braves the oldest team? ›

The club was known by various names until the franchise settled on the Boston Braves in 1912. The Braves are the oldest continuously operating professional sports franchise in North America.

What was the hottest Braves game ever? ›

The first-pitch temperature was 104 degrees, and many reported the mercury climbing to an all-time city record of 106 by the middle innings. Heat-related issues forced Nats ace Stephen Strasburg to an early exit, but many Braves fans found ways to stay cool at the park.

Have the Braves ever had a perfect game? ›

A perfect game, a special subcategory of no-hitter, has yet to be thrown in Braves history. As defined by Major League Baseball, "in a perfect game, no batter reaches any base during the course of the game."

Why did the Braves stop playing on TBS? ›

As a result of Turner's decision to allow FSN to broadcast over 85 games per season, TBS no longer served as the Braves' primary broadcaster.

What happens if Braves game is rained out? ›

When a rainout occurs the affected game can either be delayed/postponed, canceled, or rescheduled. If the event is postponed or delayed due to weather, the game is usually played later that same day, once the weather clears.

Why are Braves Cardinals delayed? ›

Tuesday's game between the Atlanta Braves and St. Louis Cardinals has been postponed due to inclement weather.

Who owns the Braves? ›

The Braves are one of many entertainment holdings that Liberty owns, including Formula One Group, SiriusXM, and LiveNation. The Braves are wholly owned by Liberty but operate independently: Liberty Media does not take money out of the team nor put money into the team.

What are the Braves changing their name to? ›

Team name and branding

The Braves released a statement, announcing that discussions were still ongoing about the chop, but the team name would not be changed. In an interview, Braves president Terry McGuirk said, "we are so proud of our team's name, and our expectation is that we will always be the Atlanta Braves".

Why did the Braves leave Disney? ›

The area also doesn't present the traffic problems that come with the Orlando are and Interstate 4. Travel along I-75 isn't nearly as taxing. The Braves also don't like Disney having total control on the operation in spring training, including ticket prices.

Are the Atlanta Braves going to keep their name? ›

In an interview, Braves president Terry McGuirk said, "we are so proud of our team's name, and our expectation is that we will always be the Atlanta Braves". In July 2020, Richard Sneed released a statement about the tribe's conversations with the Braves.

Why did Braves go to Atlanta? ›

The dwindling fan support that caused the Braves to move from Boston also caused them to move from Milwaukee to Atlanta. That didn't mean the city of Milwaukee and State of Wisconsin would go down without a fight. After a series of court battles, injunctions and appeals, the team finally arrived in Atlanta in 1966.

Who bought the Braves to Atlanta? ›

Media magnate Ted Turner purchased the team in 1976, and played a large role in the team's operation. In 1976, the team was purchased by media magnate Ted Turner, owner of superstation WTBS, as a means to keep the team (and one of his main programming staples) in Atlanta.

Why did the Braves move to Cobb County? ›

ATLANTA — The Atlanta Braves moved to Cobb County from Turner Field in 2017 because they wanted a new baseball stadium combined with a mixed-use development. The Battery Atlanta is thriving as a mixed-use space adjacent to the Braves home stadium, Truist Park.

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