Live from the ballyard: The stars keep aligning for the Braves

Six days ago the Braves learned they’d lost their cornerstone for the duration. The trade deadline was already gone, meaning any Braves’ trade target would have to clear waivers. And, these being the Braves, any trade target would need to come cheap.

On Wednesday the Braves traded for Derrek Lee, who’d cleared waivers before Chipper Jones had gotten hurt and therefore couldn’t be blocked by, say, the Phillies. They traded for a first baseman with a great glove who hits in the middle of the lineup and who just happens to be a free agent at season’s end, meaning the Braves are only on the hook for a pittance of his salary before Lee leaves to make room for Freddie Freeman.

All of which leads us to say: This is the Braves’ year.

Said Frank Wren, the general manager: “There have been a lot of things that have happened that have gone well for us. I can’t deny that.”

Chipper Jones gets hurt in mid-August, and that’s one of the worst breaks a team could have. But this particular team had an All-Star second baseman (Martin Prado) about to come off the disabled list and an All-Star utility man (Omar Infante) capable of holding down second while Prado moved to third. And now it gets a true first baseman and a real power hitter for three marginal prospects, and just like that a tattered infield becomes a shiny new creation.

Said Chipper, ambling freely about the clubhouse four days after surgery: “You’ve got to applaud Frank for being pro-active. This was the only A-plus move you could make, and the players really, really appreciate it.”

Smiling, Chipper also offered this: “It kind of makes me upset that it took me getting hurt for this to happen. D-Lee is a guy I’d love to have in the lineup with me.”

Five years ago D-Lee hit 46 homers and flirted with a Triple Crown. He’s no longer that guy, but he’s a clear upgrade on poor creaking Troy Glaus, who’d given this team all he had and now goes on the disabled list and then to Gwinnett to see if he can re-learn third base. (Said Wren, referring to Glaus’ bravura May: “We’re not here in position to make a trade like this if not for Troy Glaus.”)

A clubhouse that has seen 20 victories in the final at-bat has been handed another tangible reason to believe. The deal made at the deadline for Kyle Farnsworth and Rick Ankiel was one of those a GM makes just to show his team he’s trying. The deal for D-Lee is one that could make the difference between a September fizzle and a banner October. If Wren wasn’t already the executive of the year, he is now.

“We’re all competitors, whether we’re in uniform or in the office,” Wren said. “When you’ve got a group of guys who’ve put in the effort these have, you want to do everything you can possibly do … We want to win this thing.”

They just might. The timing of this deal’s development was uncanny. Wren called Jim Hendry, his Cubs’ counterpart, on Sunday to inquire about Lee, who went out and hit two home runs. (Then he tweaked his back and left the game.) Lee, who’d vetoed a trade to Anaheim in July, agreed to this one. And there was nothing the Phillies or anyone else could do to stop it.

Chipper: “If a third baseman comes up on waivers after I get hurt, he’d have been blocked.”

Wren: “That’s why I was vague with you [reporters] last week about what we were looking for. I didn’t want to tip our hand.”

Skill was involved in this maneuver, and so was serendipity. When those two concepts collide … well, that’s what we in the astronomy business call a harmonic convergence.

Said Wren: “Four or five days ago I didn’t know if we could get to this point. You don’t find many 3-4-5 hitters.”

But Wren did. He found one who plays the absolute right position with the absolute perfect contract. When it’s your year, it’s your year. And this year is the Braves’.

And with that, we’ll open the floor — a bit belatedly, but things have been hopping at the ballyard — for your comments, questions and reactions to the D-Lee deal. I thank you in retrospect for your patience, and I thank you in advance for your participation.

458 comments Add your comment

todd grantham

August 18th, 2010
9:01 pm

and if not for Glaus in april, june, july and august they might be 9 games ahead of phillie.

OldSchool

August 18th, 2010
9:01 pm

Actually, this was the perfect time – low risk, low money, etc. Say what you want, given his physical condition, Glaus did a helluva job. Forget Glaus’s stats, what was the Braves record in the past 30 days? It is supposed to be a TEAM…..

Dr. Kenneth Noisewater

August 18th, 2010
9:01 pm

i feel a miracle by conrad coming up

Mark Bradley

August 18th, 2010
9:02 pm

Not exactly a grand slam, but an expertly positioned broken-bat bloop single by Conrad.

Troy Glaus

August 18th, 2010
9:02 pm

the time has come for us to say syanara

Dr. Kenneth Noisewater

August 18th, 2010
9:03 pm

we’ll take it, come on INFANTE!!!!!

todd grantham

August 18th, 2010
9:03 pm

just being the cynic tonight. bases loaded. one out. i feel a dp coming on

Mark Bradley

August 18th, 2010
9:04 pm

Well, I guess it evens out. Infante lines out to Hernandez.

Jeremiah

August 18th, 2010
9:04 pm

Dr. Kenneth Noisewater

August 18th, 2010
9:04 pm

up to the Kid now…use some of that Chipper’s insights

Wroger

August 18th, 2010
9:04 pm

If Rick Ankiel keeps playing bad what do we do about center field?

todd grantham

August 18th, 2010
9:05 pm

Heyward. hero or goat?

NCBravesFan

August 18th, 2010
9:05 pm

MAN! That was clutch by Hernandez!

Let’s go Jason!

Bluestreak

August 18th, 2010
9:05 pm

Let’s say the week does Glaus good (I know, but go with me here) and 3rd fits him like a glove again. If we could get a rejuvinated Glaus and Lee in the same lineup and move Infante to center or left, wouldn’t our offense be vastly improved (thinking fresh-legged, May-June Glaus and Lee playing for his last shot at the WS) while the defense is as good if not better with Lee at first.

Lots of what ifs, but just wondering if others see this as a good or bad thing.

Jarka

August 18th, 2010
9:05 pm

Heyward loves taking that first pitch. They need to tell him to start swinging.

todd grantham

August 18th, 2010
9:06 pm

Don

August 18th, 2010
9:06 pm

Listen to that stupid crowd on a pop up.

Dr. Kenneth Noisewater

August 18th, 2010
9:06 pm

great, more runners stranded. PERFECT

gcs

August 18th, 2010
9:06 pm

JHey took the 1st pitch for a strike – AGAIN

.

todd grantham

August 18th, 2010
9:07 pm

maybe the Gov should launch an investigation as to why the Braves cant score with the bases loaded and 1 out.

Mark Bradley

August 18th, 2010
9:07 pm

Jarka, isn’t swinging at the first pitch the reason another right fielder got shipped out of Atlanta?

Dr. Kenneth Noisewater

August 18th, 2010
9:07 pm

oh hey everyone, personality plus Don decided to join us again

todd grantham

August 18th, 2010
9:08 pm

that makes 9,663 runners left on base since the allstar break.

todd grantham

August 18th, 2010
9:08 pm

Mark, could Francour get past waivers?

Mark Bradley

August 18th, 2010
9:09 pm

If Troy Glaus could hit as he did in May, the Braves would put him at shortstop, Bluestreak.

Mtn Brave

August 18th, 2010
9:09 pm

Battle of the pens…

Mark Bradley

August 18th, 2010
9:09 pm

Livan is out of the game. Break for the home side.

Venters pitching.

Mark Bradley

August 18th, 2010
9:09 pm

He could, todd grantham, but the Braves wouldn’t be interested.

Mark Bradley

August 18th, 2010
9:10 pm

Hinske with a sliding play at first base.

Archangel

August 18th, 2010
9:10 pm

We’re approaching the 9th inning. I guess they will decide to win the game now.

Jarka

August 18th, 2010
9:11 pm

Okay mark. Start every count at 0-1 then. All I am saying is he has no intention to swing at all. Have your mind set on a pitch. If it’s thrown, great. If not, lay off. It seems like he starts out 0-1 90% of the time since back from his injury. And 0-1 seems to get to 0-2 50% of the time. Just sayin..

Don

August 18th, 2010
9:12 pm

Phillies SIX
giants 2

Katherine

August 18th, 2010
9:12 pm

ok….heyward needs to step it up…he kinda sucks lately :)

OldSchool

August 18th, 2010
9:12 pm

Glaus makes that play, would not have had to jump because he can’t…

Don

August 18th, 2010
9:12 pm

Ibanez is the man!!

Don

August 18th, 2010
9:13 pm

Phillies SEVEN
giants 2

Sonny Clusters

August 18th, 2010
9:13 pm

We know he would like to play in a town with a Dairy Queen.

Archangel

August 18th, 2010
9:13 pm

Let’s not forget that Heyward is a rookie. They tend to tire toward the end of seasons.

Archangel

August 18th, 2010
9:14 pm

You’re outta here!!!!!

Mark Bradley

August 18th, 2010
9:14 pm

Zimmerman just got tossed by plate ump Scott Barry. He hated the 3-1 call. Looked like a strike to me.

Katherine

August 18th, 2010
9:15 pm

I see don is continuing to be an arse lol Don….the lead will probably change several times between now and the end of the season…..do you not have anything better to do then to be a negative nancy on these blogs on a daily basis?

Mark Bradley

August 18th, 2010
9:15 pm

Zimmerman threw his bat. Then he threw his helmet. Barry let him slide on the first. Not the second.

NCBravesFan

August 18th, 2010
9:15 pm

Oh, dear. Emotions running high in Mudville!

Sonny Clusters

August 18th, 2010
9:16 pm

We could read Zimmerman’s lips and know what kind of blizzard he was ordering.

gcs

August 18th, 2010
9:16 pm

Zimmerman sent straight to be without any supper.

.

Mark Bradley

August 18th, 2010
9:16 pm

Now Jim Riggleman gets ejected.

NCBravesFan

August 18th, 2010
9:17 pm

Don is mildly entertaining. He’s like the scary uncle the cool kids avoid at the family picnic. :lol:

todd grantham

August 18th, 2010
9:18 pm

wriggleman tossed too?

NCBravesFan

August 18th, 2010
9:18 pm

Sonny Clusters: never seen that flavor of Blizzard on the menu! :lol:

Mark Bradley

August 18th, 2010
9:18 pm

Braves take the lead this inning. Prado leading off, Hernandez out. Just you watch.