Braves win again, now hope fallback plan can carry them

Mike Minor pitched his fourth straight strong outing for Braves, giving rotation hope. (AP photo)

Mike Minor pitched his fourth consecutive strong outing for Braves, giving rotation hope. (AP photo)

(Updated: 9:35 p.m.)

When this season started, Ben Sheets was a youth-league coach in Louisiana and Kris Medlen had pitched 2 1/3 innings in 20 months, the byproduct of Tommy John surgery. They now comprise 40 percent of the Braves’ starting rotation.

So much for the blueprint.

The Braves made official Saturday what can best be described as the backup plan: Medlen, who has been impressive out of the bullpen, will return to the starting rotation Tuesday against Houston barring an unlikely turn of events (completing a trade for a starter). Medlen joins Sheets, who hadn’t pitched a game in two years before signing with the Braves and immediately becoming subject matter for a power point at the next AMA convention.

This is the rotation that likely will guide the Braves down the stretch. It’s not quite what anybody envisioned in the spring and may not be the ideal five to get the Braves back to a postseason. But then the St. Louis Cardinals already set the standard for baseball improbabilities last October.

Kris Medlen showed up in spring training, hoping to get another shot at starting. (Jason Getz/AJC)

Kris Medlen showed up in spring training, hoping to get another shot at starting. (Jason Getz/AJC)

Sometimes Plan B’s work out. But this one needs to unfold like a parlay in a Las Vegas sportsbook.

The team’s postseason chances hinge on: 1) Tim Hudson’s ability to stay healthy; 2) Sheets continuing to defy medical logic (one earned run in 18 innings after major surgery and semi-retirement); 3) Tommy Hanson fixing some of his issues; 4) Mike Minor staying consistent after some early hiccups; 5) Medlen pitching as well in a starting role as he did coming out of the bullpen.

We’ll start with Minor, only because he just gave another performance worthy of Frank Wren screaming, “Hah! Told you we didn’t need Zach Greinke!”

After so many early-season issues, Minor is on a roll now. He allowed Philadelphia just one run on four hits in eight innings and struck out nine at Turner Field on Saturday night, leading a 2-1 victory. In his past four starts, Minor has yielded just seven runs in 27 1/3 innings.

In the past five games (four wins), Braves starters Minor (twice), Hudson, Hanson and Sheets have allowed eight earned runs in 33 innings.

That will get it done. But does asterisks by all five starters in the rotation cause some discomfort?

(The depth chart at the start of the season was Hudson-Hanson-Jair Jurrjens-Minor-Brandon Beachy, although Hudson’s back surgery forced him to miss the start of the season.)

Medlen deserved this shot, and he believes the comeback from surgery and the uncertainty of his role all season has made him mentally tougher. Physically, he said, “I feel great. I really feel like my secondary pitches are coming back. I guess it’ll be two years [since the surgery] in August. For the first month or two I felt like I was pitching with just fastball.”

Despite failing to land Greinke and having a deal for Ryan Dempster blocked, the Braves say they’re still trying to make a trade. When asked before Saturday’s game whether Sheets’ improbable ascent makes the team feel any less desperate to acquire a pitcher, manager Fredi Gonzalez said, “No, no, no. We’re looking to upgrade.”

But the reality is there’s probably nothing left on the market that would upgrade the Braves’ pitching. Greinke went to the Angels. Dempster prefers the Dodgers. (He hasn’t been moved yet, but the chances of a 180 seem remote.)

There are two other potential game-changers on the market: Miami’s Josh Johnson and Tampa Bay’s James Shields. But both have time left on their contracts after this season, so it follows the Marlins and Rays don’t feel desperate, and their trade respective requests are inflated.

There are other pitchers available. But all are depth guys – no better than what the Braves already have. So it’s probably not worth it for them to make a move.

From this point on, the Braves will rely on a rotation of 2s, 3s and 4s, their bullpen and what generally has been strong hitting (Dan Uggla’s .209 batting average notwithstanding).

Could this work? The Braves have won four straight, starting the night four games back of Washington in the National League East. Consistency has been an issue all season, particularly in starting pitching.

We’ll know soon enough if this is an aberration.

By Jeff Schultz

277 comments Add your comment

The Dude Abides... Still

July 29th, 2012
1:37 pm

Not sure what John is seeing if he thinks this is a great pitching staff. During the Spring, the braves were going Hudson, Beachy, Hansen, Minor, Jair. Two weeks ago Beachy was most likely in Physical theropy, Hansen has been walking every other hitter, Minor wouldnt stop pouting and Jair was a mess. That leaves us with Hudson. Today, the braves have Hudson, and amazing reclaimation project in Sheets, Hansen is still a mess, Minor that maybe can act like an adult and stop pouting at the first sign of adversity and a stretched out reliever that does have decent stuff. Just enjoy the rest of the season. I know the goal is to go deep into the playoffs. They will make the playoffs. Like every year, the team that can get on an roll usually wins the championship.

Trey

July 29th, 2012
1:47 pm

Hopefully, the Braves can rough up Halladay.

PHILLY PHAN

July 29th, 2012
2:01 pm

Hello everyone!!!

huddyroyal

July 29th, 2012
2:07 pm

yo- jeff, what do you know about Gus Schlosser up in Lynchburg? 11W-4L 2.88era 1.06 whip. Why does’t Frank W. move him on up? Can you get some info?

PHILLY PHAN

July 29th, 2012
2:08 pm

uggla the man!!! give him a rise

Buzz2011

July 29th, 2012
2:35 pm

Uggla gets a hit Sunday!! It had been so long since he has had one, he wasn’t
sure if he should head toward third base or first base.

RaleighDawg

July 29th, 2012
3:54 pm

Nice hustle Chipper…way to lead by example…

Drew

July 29th, 2012
4:41 pm

Well Frank Wren has made yet another horrible decision. He is so indecisive. Medlen has been mediocre in the bullpen and won’t do any better in the starting five.

And Uggla Strikes Out

July 29th, 2012
4:47 pm

Just keep Hanson and Jurrjens off the hill and the team will be fine.

GTT

July 29th, 2012
5:04 pm

Hope they trade Uggla and his .209 average. That’s ridiculous.

Hillbilly D

July 29th, 2012
6:03 pm

What a difference a day makes.

Rt

July 29th, 2012
7:08 pm

DREW, you need to check your stats on Medlen!

Bob Davis

July 29th, 2012
7:08 pm

Simply amazing how negative Shultz comes across in his articles about our Braves! I actually wonder some times just whose side he’s on. What a Debbie Downer….

thomas smith

July 29th, 2012
7:19 pm

trade uggla,hanson,jurrens to minnesota fo josh willingham and scott diamond.keep janish he is way better than jack wilson.

Benny

July 29th, 2012
8:21 pm

Today, Toronto released Vladimir Guerrerro. Any takers?

George R. Malone

July 29th, 2012
8:34 pm

I guess it would have been good to have dumped Smoltz, Glavine, and others who became stars and their talent took us a long way. To trade like we did for Drew, and the rotten Texas deal which gave them a big winner is not smart. Check out Smoltz and Glavine’s first year. Also check out Maddox, and other hall of famers their first year. Willy Mays was an initial flop. The Giants were not stupid and dumped him for some overaged athlete. See how Heyward, and Freddy are growing into big time stars. Two and half months and then lose them to untenable salaries to Boston, NY, or LA is stupid. We built our big winners with our own home grown. The Marlins have dumped high paid stars twice and the kids have taken them to the World Series.

barrock odrama

July 29th, 2012
8:47 pm

legendary john would surely have insisted the cubbies take delgado,tehran and betancourt .he then would have sold you idiot atlantans another few hundred books” how too build a winner in texas in one easy trade” lol

Josh Smith for 3

July 29th, 2012
9:13 pm

This is getting ridiculous. Uggla has never been known for a high average, but I’m pretty sure he wasn’t known for these kind of slumps with the Marlins either. In two seasons thus far, Uggla has proven that when he goes cold, he goes absolutely frozen tundra cold…

Braves Fan

July 29th, 2012
9:33 pm

If they do it will blow up in their faces. What they did to Medlen IMO was wrong. The kid was a really good starting pitcher, he had surgery and they put him in the pen. Knowing that the starters at the bottom were week they still kept him in the pen. Then they sent him to AAA to get stretched out and then they put him back in the pen. Medlen is a starter, he can pitch so for God sakes let him pitch. Having him in the pen does nothing for the team if they cant get out of the second inning with these rookies.

Beltrans' Right ear mole

July 30th, 2012
2:38 am

When are folks going to point out that Uggla clearly has some sort of a HEX on him for disrespecting the sun?

Quoting DOB on the exact moment Uggla’s slump started.

http://tinyurl.com/d99wwpp

Uggla’s mammoth ninth-inning homer was conservatively estimated at 432 feet and caromed off a sun located more than halfway up a garish pop-art sculpture that stands beyond center field at the colorful retractable-roof ballpark.

“They came back and told me I hit the sun,” Uggla said. “That’s cool…. This is where I started my career. To get my 200th here is awesome. To hit it here or Atlanta would’ve been awesome.”

That’s cool? Uggla asked for this hex. I hoped maybe when he got beaned in Miami the other night it might snap him out of it, but not so sure anymore.

best,
Beltrans’ Right ear mole –

(not to be mistaken for “Carlos’ Beltrans Mole” http://twitter.com/moleofbeltran )

O'Sheet

July 30th, 2012
10:15 am

Note to Dan Uggla–Since all the coaching in the world will never soak in, how do you plan to finish your career? As the ALL TIME strike out king??? It seems you are just too stubborn to give in–to listen, to try a new idea. Why??? If you did not have your “buddy” as manager, do you think you would still be in MLB? Whatever the answer is it’s not working for you. I suggest instead of upper cutting everything try hitting it into the ground–as hard as you swing it will go so high you should be on third base before it comes down!

Chief Knock A Homa

July 30th, 2012
10:30 am

I wouldn’t mind seeing the Braves take a chance on Beckett if the Sox are willing to eat a good portion of his salary, which it sounds like they are likely willing to do… His numbers aren’t too far off from his career stats, and he has post season success…

His last ten outings – earned runs – 4, 4, 3, 6, 2, 4, 2, 4, 2, 1… With him pitching into the 6th and 7th inning in the majority…

He could be a great, unexpected pickup without having to give up too much to get him…. But, again, only if the Sox eat most of the salary…

james

July 30th, 2012
10:38 am

Wow a site full of Fredi,s

HardHat

July 30th, 2012
11:28 am

@JEFF……Medlan pinch hitting for Uggla

HardHat

July 30th, 2012
11:34 am

@FREDI G…….playing the odds… Braves pinch hitting and Hinski up there, the other team changes to a lefty why pull Eric and put in Tyler P just to have the by the book lefty vs righty… Please a rookie vs vetern who would you rather have up there. Change for change sake. I am tired of it.

dre

July 30th, 2012
1:28 pm

baseball season started?

Jim

July 30th, 2012
2:46 pm

Why would the Braves sign a 41 yr old has been (or never was) who has been shuffled around more than a chess piece. Perhaps Batista will fill a hole at Gwinett made by calling up someone with promise.