Braves have opening vs. Nats, but still need to make move

Frank Wren shouldn't let opportunity of this season slip away without a move. (Curtis Compton/AJC)

Frank Wren can't let this season's opportunity slip away without a move. (Curtis Compton)

(Second update: 11:35 p.m.)

John Smoltz looks at the Braves and sees what everybody else sees.

“They’ve made some adjustments offensively, but the inconsistency of their starting pitching has them where they are,” he said. “Win six, lose eight. Win five, lose four. They’re stuck in neutral.”

Neutral isn’t necessarily a bad place to be, particularly in the National League East. When baseball’s second half opened Friday, the Braves were only four games behind the Washington Nationals, which is better than being four games behind a team with an actual resume. The Nationals’ franchise last made the playoffs 31 years ago in a whole different language (Montreal).

There’s also this curious matter of Stephen Strasburg. Washington maintains it’s serious about this plan to limit its best starting pitcher (and his surgically repaired arm) to 160 innings. That could be construed as telling Nats fans, “We really, really want to win the division,  but not really,” and/or telling the Braves, “Do you want to win the division? Here, we’ll put the ball on the tee for you.”

Strasburg is only 61 innings from hitting the mandated ceiling. Washington plays 79 games after the All-Star break. In a five-man rotation, that factors to 16 starts for Strasburg in normal circumstances. But at an average of six innings per start, there’s room for only 10 starts before the medical stop sign goes up. So the Nationals would lose six potential starts from their No. 1 starter … in a pennant race … when they have never made the playoffs in Washington.

The Nationals' Stephen Strasburg could be shelved the equivalent of six starts in second half. (AP photo)

The Nationals may shelve pitcher Stephen Strasburg for equivalent of six starts in the second half of the season.

“I don’t buy it,” Tommy Hanson said. “I mean, good for us – we don’t have to face him.”

“I’ll believe it when I see it,” Chipper Jones said.

“I’m sure when they came up with this plan, they didn’t expect to be this good this year,” Smoltz said. “It’s a good problem to have for the future. But right now it’s a PR nightmare.”

The Braves’ return Friday had a nightmarish look. There was a blackout in the second inning, causing a 16-minute delay. Tim

Tim Hudson left in the fifth inning after allowing four runs on eight hits.

Tim Hudson was mediocre, leaving in the fifth inning after allowing four runs on eight hits. (AP photos)

Hudson had his own power outage (four runs, eight hits allowed in four-plus innings). The strange decision to not immediately bring in a shortstop to replace the injured Andrelton Simmons backfired when backup Jack Wilson suffered a dislocated finger in the fourth, forcing Martin Prado to move in from left field and Eric Hinske to come off the bench. (Even if general manager Frank Wren figured he was close to a trade, the one-game risk was nonsensical.)

To open the second half, the Braves didn’t look like a smooth operation. Still, they defeated the New York Mets 7-5, and the big picture is unchanged: They have an opportunity. This should be viewed by management as a go-for-it season. That means make a deal for a starting pitcher and loosen the death grip on the pitching prospects.

The Braves can’t really know what this team will look like next season. Jones is retiring, which leaves a hole in the clubhouse. A number of other big contracts are up. And those perceived great pitching prospects (Mike Minor, Randall Delgado, Julio Teheran) that Wren has refused to let go of? Not so great yet.

“I’d like to see us get a pitcher,” Jones said. “You would be amazed how consistent you play when you’ve got five guys who expect to win every time they walk out there.”

But when asked about trading youth, he added: “The Braves have been very stingy with their young guys, and we saw first-hand what can happen when you mortgage the future for the quick fix in [the Mark] Teixeira [trade]. I don’t see them going all out again.”

They shouldn’t hold back. The main names that are circulating: Milwaukee’s Zack Greinke and the Chicago Cubs’ Ryan Dempster and Matt Garza (4.32 ERA). But Wren said Friday he has had only casual conversations with other clubs, and he still doesn’t have a sense for what clubs will demand in trade.

“Teams haven’t measured the market yet,” he said. “Right now the conversations are, ‘If this guy is available, would you be interested?’”

Does his team need starting pitching?

“We got a starting pitcher in Ben Sheets. We’ll get a chance to see Ben in the next few weeks leading up to the deadline and see what else we need.”

What they need seems pretty obvious, and the Nationals may leave an opening.

By Jeff Schultz

364 comments Add your comment

Hillbilly D

July 14th, 2012
12:44 pm

“I’ll believe it when I see it,” Chipper Jones said.

Me and Chipper agree on that.

Hillbilly D

July 14th, 2012
12:51 pm

Need to keep Uggla. His OBP is only 9 points behind Bourn and 29 points ahead of Freeman, 11 ahead of Heyward.

That’s sort of an apples to oranges comparison. Bourne’s job is to get on base; Uggla’s job is to drive in runs. In run production ( [runs scored + RBI] – HRs ), they are virtually the same. Uggla is at 87 and Bourne is at 86. Uggla has actually scored more runs than he’s driven in and is second to only Bourne, in runs scored. Uggla is tied for second in RBIs. I’m not a big Uggla fan but his production doesn’t seem to be a problem.

WTF

July 14th, 2012
12:54 pm

How FG decided that Wilson was better suited to start over Pastor is beyond me. We all know that defensively he doesn’t have the range at SS, but he can at least hit his weight and puts up some tough ABs. If I were him, I would take this a vote of no confidences and would be hoping to be included in a trade. FG and Wren have absolutely no plans for him in the future if you can read between the lines. I think he would be fine for a stop gap while Simmons is out. Why waist some valuable resources on a trade for a SS when they need to be allocated towards pitching? Only way Martin should continue to play SS is if they could get Carlos Quentin from the Padres. Always thought he would look good in LF and in a Braves Uni.

JASon

July 14th, 2012
1:01 pm

“Man filling potholes himself”
“Tired of ‘Call Me Maybe’? Singer isn’t”

way to go ajc, you are #1

Bill

July 14th, 2012
1:03 pm

That is an opening?? The Brave seem to be coming together, but a real opening would be if the Nats lose a game once in a while.

Hillbilly D

July 14th, 2012
1:19 pm

a real opening would be if the Nats lose a game once in a while.

That’s the advantage to being in first place, you control your own destiny.

Sherrill

July 14th, 2012
1:37 pm

I’m glad McCann finally had his baby; maybe he will look thinner now.

big o

July 14th, 2012
1:38 pm

nice article… our shortstop plays in Texas yall

Marco Pillow

July 14th, 2012
2:19 pm

Uggla has become the Braves Joe Johnson. Big contract with paltry production.

Scott Brantley

July 14th, 2012
2:49 pm

Why does anybody give a damn about being FIRST when they post?

da[01

July 14th, 2012
9:56 pm

Wren is looking like he is over his head. Can’t we get someone who is NOT on the scrap heap? Can’t we call up a SS that is only 25 miles up the road? Can’t we have a capable hitter somewhere on our bench or in our minors to help?

The front office handling of the whole SS situation since the end of last year is horrible.

[...] Braves have opening vs. Nats, but still need to make move [...]

coach13

July 15th, 2012
11:29 am

Fact is the Braves need starting pitching help.They are a team without an ace on their staff. I seriously doubt a 33 yr old pitcher who hasn’t pitched in 2 years and whose had 2 arm surgeries is the answer. If Greinke or Demptser can be locked up for a long term (heck, even 3 years) it is worth mortgaging whatever you need to. They draft pitchers every year in the draft, they’ll be fine. The Braves can’t always be planning for the future.

[...] followed this one nearly two weeks ago: “I’d like to see us get a pitcher,” Jones told AJC columnist Jeff Schultz. “You would be [...]