Tag Archives: Braves

Phillies vs. Braves: Prediction, pick, TV channel, time, NLDS Game 2 live stream, odds, starting pitchers – CBS Sports

  1. Phillies vs. Braves: Prediction, pick, TV channel, time, NLDS Game 2 live stream, odds, starting pitchers CBS Sports
  2. Fried’s finger an important storyline leading into Phillies-Braves Game 2 NBC Sports Philadelphia
  3. Philadelphia Phillies vs Atlanta Braves LIVE Updates: Score, Stream Info, Lineups and How to Watch MLB Match VAVEL.com
  4. Phillies Take NLDS Game 1 with Comprehensive Bullpen Effort and Killer Trea Turner Double Play Crossing Broad
  5. Phillies vs Braves Odds, Prediction Today | NLDS Game 2 Preview (Monday, October 9) The Action Network
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Braves’ Ronald Acuña Jr. shares message after Atlanta wins NL East title: ‘If you don’t like it, stop it’ – CBS Sports

  1. Braves’ Ronald Acuña Jr. shares message after Atlanta wins NL East title: ‘If you don’t like it, stop it’ CBS Sports
  2. Braves star Ronald Acuña Jr. calls out Phillies manager over perceived celebration jab USA TODAY
  3. Braves: Ronald Acuna Jr.’s World Series message from Brian Snitker ClutchPoints
  4. Phillies manager prefers ‘people act like they’d been there’ after taking issue with Braves homer celebrations Fox News
  5. Braves Pitcher Backs Ronald Acuña Jr. After Phillies Manager’s Criticism Sports Illustrated
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Sean Penn Grills Zelenskyy, Braves Fox News and Enrolls Miles Teller to Rally Ukrainian Soldiers in Gonzo Documentary ‘Superpower’ – Variety

  1. Sean Penn Grills Zelenskyy, Braves Fox News and Enrolls Miles Teller to Rally Ukrainian Soldiers in Gonzo Documentary ‘Superpower’ Variety
  2. Sean Penn’s Ukraine War Doc ‘Superpower’ Receives Warm Reception at Berlin World Premiere Hollywood Reporter
  3. Watch Clip Of Sean Penn’s Ukraine Doc ‘Superpower,’ A Berlin Premiere – Deadline Deadline
  4. Sean Penn’s ‘Superpower’ catches Zelenskiy at moment of Russian invasion Yahoo News
  5. Berlin Film Festival: Ukraine war dominates the screen Al Jazeera English
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Braves Sign Sean Murphy To Six-Year Extension

The Braves tonight announced they’ve extended catcher Sean Murphy on a six-year, $73MM contract. The deal comes with a $15MM club option for 2029 which does not include a buyout. As part of the deal, Murphy will take home $4MM in 2023, $9MM in 2024, and $15MM in 2025-28. He’ll also donate 1% of his salary to the Atlanta Braves Foundation. Atlanta had only acquired the Rowley Sports Management client as the headliner of a three-team trade that included the Brewers and Athletics earlier this month. Murphy was first-year arbitration-eligible going into 2023, so this deal buys out his remaining three years of club control as well as potentially four free agent years.

The move continues Atlanta’s recent trend of extending their core of starting players, and Murphy joins Austin Riley, Matt Olson, Ronald Acuna Jr., Ozzie Albies, Spencer Strider and Michael Harris as players on the current roster that have received long-term extensions while still under club control. That group of players can now be controlled by Atlanta through 2027, while only Acuna Jr. and Albies have deals that expire before 2029.

The 28-year-old Murphy has established himself as one of the best catchers in all of baseball in recent seasons with Oakland. At the plate, he’s hit 46 home runs and a combined .236/.326/.429 line across parts of four big league seasons. That’s been good for a wRC+ of 116, indicating he’s been 16 percent better than the league average hitter. He took a step forward at the plate in 2022 as well, knocking around 5% off his career strikeout rate and posting a .250/.332/.426 line over 612 plate appearances.

Defensively, he’s posted 12 Defensive Runs Saved since 2020 which places him in the top ten league wide. Fangraphs framing metric ranks him as the third-best pitch framer in the sport in that same period as well. That combination of strong defense and above-average offense has amounted to a career haul of 10.6 fWAR, with 2022 accounting for 5.1 of that tally.

Murphy’s form, Oakland’s rebuild and a thin free agent market for catchers made him one of those most hotly talked about trade chips in the sport going into the off-season. Sure enough, as many as nine teams were connected with him in the weeks leading up to his December 12 trade. It was a good old-fashioned blockbuster as well, as the Braves sent Royber Salinas, Manny Pina, Kyle Muller and Freddy Tarnok to Oakland, and William Contreras and Justin Yeager to the Brewers to complete the deal.

The match with Atlanta wasn’t always the most obvious fit on paper, given the Braves had a strong catching trio of Travis D’Arnaud, Pina and Contreras on the books moving forward. Clearly though, general manager Alex Anthopolous saw an opportunity to upgrade that group and shipped out Pina and Contreras to make room for Murphy.

It’s now the second-successive winter that Atlanta have traded for one of Oakland’s stars and immediately extended him. Last off-season, they acquired Olson and a day later signed him to an eight-year, $168MM extension. Olson has already established himself as a key part of the Braves’ core, and now it seems Murphy will do the same from 2023 onwards.

As mentioned earlier, a raft of extensions have established a strong core in Atlanta. As well as those, they also have Max Fried under control through 2024, rookie Vaughn Grissom through 2028, and Kyle Wright through 2026. For a team that won 101 games in 2022, it’s certainly heartening for Braves fans to know that much of that core – and now their biggest off-season addition – will be around long term.

Per MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz’ predictions, Murphy was slated to earn $3.5MM in arbitration this season, so he’ll take home only a $500K raise on that figure for next season. That is significant for luxury tax calculations though, which account for a contract’s AAV. In Murphy’s case, that’ll be an AAV of just over $12MM which pushes the Braves into the first tier of luxury tax, despite RosterResource estimating their actual payroll sitting at around $198MM currently (the first luxury tax threshold is $233MM). Of course, the Braves could look to unload salary to get below that mark, but it’d only be a small penalty on any overage at this stage. Further, they’ll have just over $50MM worth of club options (with no buyouts) on Charlie Morton, D’Arnaud, Kirby Yates, Collin McHugh, Orlando Arcia and Eddie Rosario to decide on next winter, which could comfortably get them back under the threshold.



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Atlanta Braves, Sean Murphy agree to six year extension

On one hand, when it came to the Braves making a significant trade this offseason to upgrade a position, that upgrade being at the catcher position was likely a surprise to many.

However, it should come as no surprise that Alex Anthopoulos once again moved quickly to make sure a talented player such as Sean Murphy stayed in Atlanta for quite a while.

Just a few weeks after acquiring Murphy from the Athletics, the Braves moved quickly to potentially keep him in Atlanta through 2029. Though Murphy is still three years away from free agency, the fact that he has quickly established himself as one of the most durable and best two way catchers in baseball makes this a logical investment for Atlanta.

Of course, this is the second time in the past nine months that the Braves have traded for a player from Oakland and quickly extended him to be a part of the Braves present and future core. When the Braves traded for Matt Olson in March of 2022, he was signed to an eight-year extension within hours of the trade being announced. With Murphy now signed, the Braves have long-term deals in place with their catcher, first baseman, second baseman, third baseman, center fielder, and right fielder. Four of these six players were an All-Star in 2021 or 2022, while Michael Harris II is the reigning NL Rookie of the Year and Murphy produced the third highest fWAR in baseball last year among catchers.

The $73 million guaranteed investment to Murphy over the next six years is currently the fifth highest investment to a catcher in baseball. Since Sean Murphy debuted in 2019, he has the third highest fWAR among major league catchers. Three of the other four catchers in the top five are also three of the four catchers with higher overall contracts currently in terms of dollars (J.T Realmuto, Willson Contreras, Yasmani Grandal). The other is Dodgers catcher Will Smith, who in time will likely become the highest paid catcher in the game.

In other words, while the Braves are paying top dollar compared to what other catchers make in baseball, this seems to be a deal that will be of good value over time for the Braves. Especially with changes that are coming in 2023 and beyond, Murphy’s value as both a fielder and hitter could make this deal be of great value for years to come.

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Braves Acquire Hoy Park – MLB Trade Rumors

The Red Sox announced that they have traded infielder/outfielder Hoy Park to the Braves. In exchange, they will receive a player to be named later or cash considerations. Park was designated for assignment earlier this week.

Park, 27 in April, has been bouncing around the league over the past couple of seasons. Originally a Yankee farmhand, he got out to a blistering start in 2021. In 48 Triple-A games, he hit .327/.475/.567 for a wRC+ of 180. On the heels of that torrid stretch, he went to Pittsburgh in the deal that sent Clay Holmes to the Yankees.

Unfortunately, his performance since that deal has made that hot streak look like a mirage. He hit .195/.297/.336 in 45 games for the Pirates after the deal. In 2022, he spent most of his time in Triple-A, getting into 89 games and hitting just .225/.332/.354 for a wRC+ of 86. He also got into 23 big league games but slashed a meager .216/.276/.373, 79 wRC+.

The Pirates designated him for assignment in November and then flipped him to the Red Sox for prospect Inmer Lobo, only for Boston to send him back into DFA limbo again a few weeks later. Despite the tepid offense over the past season and a half, Park continues to get interest due to his defensive versatility and speed. He regularly posts double-digit steal totals and can play all three outfield slots as well as the three positions left of first base. If his bat can even take a little step forward to be average-ish, he could be a valuable contributor.

For the Braves, they have most of their infield set with Matt Olson, Ozzie Albies and Austin Riley in place. Shortstop is still a question mark with Dansby Swanson having hit free agency and still on the open market. If he ends up signing elsewhere, it seems the plan would be to install Vaughn Grissom there. In the outfield, Michael Harris II and Ronald Acuña Jr. have two spots accounted for with Marcell Ozuna, Eddie Rosario and Sam Hilliard candidates for another. Park still has two option years remaining, which will allow the club to keep him in the minors as depth to be brought up as needed. But he could also compete for a bench/utility role with the likes of Orlando Arcia, Braden Shewmake and Ehire Adrianza.

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Rosenthal: Inside the trade of Sean Murphy to Braves and the catalyst for the three-team deal

The Oakland A’s wanted two major-league-ready position players for catcher Sean Murphy. The Braves weren’t about to trade Vaughn Grissom, whom they are grooming to potentially replace free agent Dansby Swanson at shortstop. And the A’s didn’t need William Contreras, not after acquiring another catcher from the Braves, Shea Langeliers, in the Matt Olson trade nine months ago.

Effectively, the teams had no match. But on Tuesday, the Braves landed Murphy anyway, parting with six players in a three-team trade. Contreras and minor-league right-hander Justin Yeager went to the Brewers, along with reliever Joel Payamps from the A’s. Left-hander Kyle Muller, catcher Manny Piña, and minor-league righties Freddy Tarnok and Royber Salinas went to the A’s, with Muller substituting for the second position player Oakland was unable to acquire.

Two separate occurrences helped the deal come together, according to sources familiar with the discussions. The first was the Cardinals’ pivot away from Murphy to sign Contreras’ older brother, Willson Contreras, to a four-year, $87.5 million free-agent contract. The second was the Braves’ willingness to send William Contreras to the Brewers so they could access center fielder Esteury Ruiz, a player whom the A’s had identified to clubs as one they wanted for Murphy.

Ruiz, who turns 24 on Feb. 15, was part of the Brewers’ return for Josh Hader at the trade deadline. His arrival in Oakland could jeopardize the future of Cristian Pache, another player the A’s acquired in the Olson trade. Ruiz finished the season with a .447 on-base percentage in 541 plate appearances at Double A and Triple A. He also stole 85 bases in 99 attempts, and should benefit from the new rules baseball is introducing to enhance base stealing in 2023 — bigger bases, pickoff and step-off limits, a pitch clock.


Esteury Ruiz (Joe Camporeale / USA Today Sports)

Why would the Brewers trade such an athlete? Because in William Contreras, they are getting a different type of athlete, a 2022 All-Star they are confident their coaches can help improve defensively, even if the Braves viewed him more as a bat-first catcher. Why would the A’s value Ruiz so highly despite his lack of power? Because they love his speed and ability to play center. Because he improved his contact and walk rates last season. And because they never agreed on a trade with the Cardinals.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, citing a source, reported the A’s sought a return from the Cardinals that included outfielder Lars Nootbaar, Gold Glove-winner Brendan Donovan and a power young pitcher like Gordon Graceffo. However, another source briefed on the talks said the A’s wanted Nootbaar or Donovan plus Graceffo. The Cardinals were unwilling to trade any of those players, and instead wanted the A’s to choose two from a group of four consisting of outfielder Dylan Carlson, second baseman Nolan Gorman, outfielder Alec Burleson and first baseman Juan Yepez.

When the teams could not reach agreement, the Cardinals signed Willson Contreras, forfeiting their second-highest pick in the 2023 draft and $500,000 from their international bonus pool, but keeping all of their young talent. The evaluation of the Murphy trade, then, will include an analysis of whether the Cardinals would have been better off trading for three years of Murphy, 28, than signing Contreras, who turns 31 on May 13, to the largest deal in club history to a free agent from another club. And the questions won’t end there.

Was this deal necessary for the Braves? Did they give up too much? The answers will not be apparent immediately, and might change if the Braves sign Murphy to one of their patented long-term extensions. Still, William Contreras, Piña and Travis d’Arnaud helped the team produce the highest OPS at catcher of any team last season. Contreras, who bats right-handed but produces opposite-field power like a left-handed slugger, is under club control for five more years.

One of the fascinating aspects of this deal is that the Braves set a high bar for their catchers defensively and view William Contreras as similar to Willson, merely adequate behind the plate. Brewers general manager Matt Arnold, on the other hand, noted that Piña, Yasmani Grandal and Omar Narváez became better defenders under the tutelage of Milwaukee’s staff, indicating he believes William can do the same.

The rest of the Brewers’ haul is less intriguing. Payamps, one of the two pitchers they acquired, was likely to be designated for assignment by the A’s, who need to clear 40-man roster spots. Yeager, the other pitching addition, was left unprotected by the Braves and did not get selected in the recent Rule 5 draft.

Muller, Tarnok and Salinas, the pitchers who went from the Braves to the A’s, are more highly regarded. Muller was down on the Braves’ depth chart, and likely would have been out of options at the end of the season, but the A’s believe he has nothing left to prove at Triple A. Tarnok, too, was part of the Braves’ 40-man roster, and the A’s see him as a potential 100-mph reliever. Salinas, more of a lottery ticket, struck out 175 in 109 innings last season at two levels of A ball.

One executive with another team that wanted Murphy described the A’s return as, “meh,” saying the messaging from Oakland was, “never volume but two of your best.” As is always the case in baseball trades, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. And for the A’s, so much will depend upon Ruiz.

If the A’s had wanted William Contreras, they could have made this deal straight-up with the Braves, without including the Brewers. But the A’s only began entertaining offers for Murphy at the trade deadline because they were dealing from a position of strength at catcher.

Langeliers is entering his first full season. Tyler Soderstrom, the A’s No. 1 prospect, according to MLB Pipeline, was the team’s first-round pick in 2020, and could end up at first base rather than catcher. Daniel Susac, the team’s first-rounder in 2022 and No. 4 prospect, is further away from the majors, but likely to stay behind the plate.

Ruiz, meanwhile, could be the A’s long-term solution in center, another up-the-middle position. He appeared in only three games for the Brewers during a week-long call-up, but made a strong impression. “He’s really mature,” one Brewers person said. “Billy Hamilton fast with an aggressive swing and an idea at the plate. A 60 to 70 stolen-base type. Impressive in short stint. Unfazed by MLB.”

On Monday, he was the catalyst of a three-team, nine-player trade. The A’s think he can be the catalyst of much more.

(Top photo of Sean Murphy: G Fiume / Getty Images)



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Sean Murphy trade grades: Braves and Brewers get high marks in catcher swap; the A’s get an ‘F’

The Braves, Brewers, and Athletics agreed to terms on Monday on a three-team, nine-player trade that sent Gold Glove backstop Sean Murphy to Atlanta, All-Star catcher William Contreras to Milwaukee, and a five-player package led by outfielder Esteury Ruiz and lefty Kyle Muller to Oakland. 

Here’s the trade in whole:

  • Braves receive: C Sean Murphy
  • Brewers receive: C William Contreras, RHP Joel Payamps, LHP Justin Yeager
  • Athletics receive: OF Esteury Ruiz, LHP Kyle Muller, RHP Freddy Tarnok, C Manny Piña, RHP Royber Salinas

You should know the drill by now. We here at CBS Sports are nothing if not the judgemental kind, and that means that whenever a big trade happens, we dissect it by grading how the respective parties did. We will note, as always, that this exercise is for entertainment purposes only and it’s fine to disagree with our assessment. We’d rather overreact to baseball trades than spend our finite time on this plane of existence dreading the nightmare waiting for humanity just around the bend. We suspect that the same is true of you.

With that in mind, let’s get this show on the road.

Braves: A

Let’s put it this way. The only reservation we can muster on Atlanta’s side of the trade is that this deal further thins an already spent farm system — and it does so to upgrade a position the Braves seemed to be set at. That’s about it. Otherwise, it’s hard to foresee a scenario where the Braves regret this deal.

In Murphy, the Braves obtained a 28-year-old catcher with three more seasons of remaining team control. Backstops who can contribute both at and behind the plate are always in high demand and short supply. Murphy is one of those.

Murphy has posted a 114 OPS+ for his career, yet there’s reason to believe he may have more to offer. To wit, last season he set a new career-best in maximum exit velocity, ranking in the 94th percentile. That put him in company with the likes of Bryce Harper, Mike Trout, and Rafael Devers. Even if the Braves don’t attempt to help him better tap into his raw strength, getting away from Oakland’s spacious ballpark seems like a move that will empower him to top 20 home runs for the first time in his big-league career. That’s an enticing proposition given his willingness to walk and the improvements he made last season on his strikeout rate (from 25.4 percent to 20.3 percent).

Murphy is also a highly skilled defender. He ranked in the 86th percentile in framing and in the 96th percentile in pop time (how long it takes for him to get the ball to second base). Factor in how he receives high marks for his leadership and staff handling, and he’d be worth employing and starting even if he were a below-average hitter. That he comes equipped with an above-average stick makes him one of the best backstops in the game.

Again, the Braves already had a sweet catching stable with Travis d’Arnaud, Contreras, and Piña, but you can understand why they made this deal, beginning with it being wise to upgrade whenever and wherever one can — and especially with the New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies adding stars left and right to their collections. Plus, while the Braves probably would’ve been fine running the same catching situation out there for another year, it is worth noting that d’Arnaud is getting up there in age and has never been physically sturdy; Contreras is a subpar defender; and Piña is an aging backup. There was no reason not to acquire Murphy if the cost made sense. (Coincidentally, the most painful part of the trade for the Braves may not have involved the Athletics at all, but sending Contreras to the Brewers.)

The question for the Braves now is what they do at shortstop. Acquiring Murphy certainly doesn’t price them out of making another run at retaining Dansby Swanson, that’s for sure, though it does give them even fewer prospects to deal if they opt instead to hit the trade market.

Brewers: A

How’s this for an opportunistic piece of business by the Brewers. They traded one player, in Ruiz, who was maybe the third or fourth most important piece of their return on Josh Hader; in exchange, they acquired Contreras, a part-time catcher who hit well enough to post a 138 OPS+ and earn an All-Star Game nod in 2022.

Contreras, soon to turn 25, can really put a charge into the ball. He’s homered 28 times in 153 career big-league games, and his power is legit: his maximum exit velocity last season ranked in the 97th percentile. He also mostly minds the strike zone, giving him a good offensive base from which to build. Contreras has his warts, too, sure. He’s highly prone to swinging and missing (his whiff rate was 10 percent points higher than the league-average mark) and he’s a well-below-average receiver behind the plate, to the extent that the Brewers will likely look to get him some reps in the outfield and at DH.

It’s reasonable to fear Contreras’ strikeout rate ballooning and sinking his offensive value as he takes on an everyday role, or the Brewers growing tired of him costing their pitchers strikes. But the transaction cost here is such that the Brewers would have been fools to pass on this deal. Plus, it’s possible that catching instructor Charlie Greene can help Contreras’ glovework the way he did with Omar Narváez (and others). And who knows, maybe the automated strike zone gets installed in a year or two and eliminates framing as a skill? 

In addition to Contreras, the Brewers nabbed two relievers. Payamps is a 28-year-old who has now changed teams seven teams since November 2020. He appeared in 41 games last season, amassing a 3.23 ERA and a 2.56 strikeout-to-walk ratio. He figures to be part of Milwaukee’s Opening Day pen. Yeager could pitch in the majors in 2023, too. He has erratic control over his power fastball-slider combination.

Whatever path fate takes, Contreras is under team control through the 2027 season. He won’t be arbitration eligible until winter 2024. The Brewers added a long-term piece here without giving up a player they’re likely to miss. What a gift, what a blessing. These kinds of opportunities don’t come along often. 

Athletics: F

There’s no way to quantify this sentiment, but it sure feels like the Athletics’ front office is the one most inclined to experience tunnel vision about players (and skill sets) they like. For evidence, you can look back at some of the trades they made last summer or spring. Or, heck, you can just gawk at this one, which saw them take the most desired player on the trade market, shop him around to most of the league, and then somehow accept this package.

The only way to view this return as fair value for Murphy is to believe that Ruiz and/or Muller are future stars. Is that a reasonable stance to take? Not to us, nor to the handful of scouts and analysts we talked to for this piece.

Ruiz, 24 in February, has now been traded three times, including twice in the past six months. (He was sent to Milwaukee in the Josh Hader trade.) He put up phenomenal statistics in the minors, batting .332/.447/.526 overall with 16 home runs and 85 steals, but he doesn’t hit the ball hard. What he does do is provide secondary value with his legs in the outfield and on the basepaths.

The expectation for Ruiz has been that he ends up as a reserve. Put simply, it’s hard to maintain a good average or a healthy on-base percentage when pitchers don’t fear your ability to sting mistakes. The Athletics are gambling that Ruiz’s hit tool translates and, to be fair, they have had success with other batters who had substandard exit velocity. Those hitters tend to overcome their deficiencies by spraying the ball around the diamond at an optimized angle. Maybe Ruiz is the next in line, but if he is, it’s a collection that has included the likes of Tony Kemp, Yan Gomes, and Robbie Grossman. Solid players, just not the kind of player you’d like to fetch in return for Murphy.

Muller, 25, is a 6-foot-7 left-hander with loud stuff (including a mid-90s fastball and a swing-and-miss slider) and a history of control problems. He’s walked more than five batters per nine innings for his professional career, though he did shave that rate to under three last season. There’s genuine upside here if Muller’s command improvements prove sustainable. If not? He’s probably just a reliever, albeit one who could pitch in high-leverage situations. The A’s have every reason to give him a season or two to prove he can start.

Tarnok and Salinas are both relievers in the eyes of other teams’ scouts. Tarnok is a 24-year-old with a good fastball who has already reached the majors. Salinas is a 21-year-old who throws hard and struck out 13 batters per nine in High-A. As with Muller, the Athletics could give them ample chances to start, even if they still end up pitching in the bullpen when all is said and done.

Piña, 35, isn’t a long-term piece for the Athletics. Supposing that he sticks for the winter, he’s a quality backup who should be able to help youngster Shea Langeliers adjust to life as an everyday big-league catcher. Piña holds a club option for next season. It’s hard to see the A’s employing him for that long. Look for him to change teams sometime between now and next winter.

To recap: the A’s surrendered several seasons from one of the best catchers in baseball for a package that may include — again, in the eyes of professional evaluators — a fourth outfielder, a mid-rotation starter, two relievers, and a backup catcher. Shy of the Athletics being more correct in their evaluation than those sources CBS Sports spoke with, it’s hard to be optimistic about this deal.

Indeed, it’s hard to be optimistic about the A’s at all. They won’t spend money on talent and they haven’t drafted well enough to have it coming through their pipeline in waves. Once they decided it was time to punt on their last core (because of the group’s rising salaries) and rebuild, their best bet at returning to relevance in the near future was to nail their slate of reset trades, the way they have time and again over the last two decades. 

Unfortunately, it doesn’t appear the A’s did that, here or previously. Maybe time will tell a different tale and Oakland will get the last laugh; it’s happened before. But the story being spread within the industry has the Athletics falling out of touch and out of focus while falling behind the curve. These A’s aren’t dancing on the bleeding edge anymore, they’re just bleeding. 

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Braves Acquire Sean Murphy, Brewers Acquire William Contreras In Three-Team Trade

The Braves, Brewers and A’s have agreed to a three-team blockbuster that will see each team get a new catcher with nine players involved in total. The full trade is as follows:

Braves get Sean Murphy, giving up Kyle Muller, Royber Salinas, Justin Yeager, Freddy Tarnok, Manny Pina and William Contreras.

Brewers get William Contreras, Joel Payamps, Justin Yeager, giving up Esteury Ruiz.

A’s get Kyle Muller, Esteury Ruiz, Freddy Tarnok, Royber Salinas and Manny Pina, giving up Sean Murphy and Joel Payamps.

This move finally brings an end to a trade saga that has been going on for about a year now. After the 2021 season, the A’s leaned hard into a rebuild that saw them trade away Matt Olson, Matt Chapman, Sean Manaea and Chris Bassitt before Opening Day, with Frankie Montas getting flipped at the 2022 deadline.

Murphy was widely seen as the next to go for a number of reasons. Firstly, he just crossed three years of MLB service time in 2022 and will now be making higher salaries via arbitration. MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz projected that Murphy will jump to $3.5MM in 2023 with two further bumps before reaching free agency after 2025. Secondly, the A’s received an excellent catching prospect from Atlanta in the Olson deal in Shea Langeliers. He had an excellent season in Triple-A and carried himself well in a 40-game debut in the majors. Given all those factors, it seemed more and more likely that the A’s would hand the job over to Langeliers and trade Murphy for improvements elsewhere on the roster.

By taking this path, the A’s are parting with one of the best catchers in the game. The 28-year-old Murphy has 330 games in the big leagues under his belt thus far and has performed well in just about every facet of the game. He’s hit 46 home runs and has a combined batting line of .236/.326/.429. That production leads to a wRC+ of 116, indicating he’s been 16% above the league average hitter and even further ahead of the average catcher, since they generally come in a bit lower than others. He also took a step forward at the plate in 2022, striking out in just 20.3% of his plate appearances after being above 25% in his career prior to that.

Defensively, Murphy gets rave reviews as well. Since the start of 2020, he’s posted 13 Defensive Runs Saved behind the plate, a number that places him in the top 10 in the league. FanGraphs’ framing metric gives him a 19.5 in that timeframe, the third-highest such tally. Those all-around contributions have allowed him to produce 10 wins above replacement in those three seasons, according to FanGraphs, second among all MLB catchers with only J.T. Realmuto ahead of him.

Taking all that into consideration, it’s hardly surprising that Murphy garnered plenty of interest around the league. The Diamondbacks, Astros, Cubs, Guardians, Twins, White Sox, Red Sox, Rays, and Cardinals were some of the teams connected to him at various points in recent months. It was reported about a week ago that the Braves were getting close to acquiring him but president of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos shot down those reports, saying that he didn’t anticipate a trade. That was either a bluff or something drastically changed in the past week since Atlanta have now indeed closed the deal.

Atlanta always seemed a curious fit for Murphy given that they already had three viable catchers on the roster in Contreras, Pina and Travis d’Arnaud. They have cleared out that logjam and acquired Murphy in one fell swoop by including two of those catchers in the deal. On the surface, it seems that the club was keen to swap out Contreras for Murphy as a way of improving behind the plate. However, since the A’s seem set to give Langeliers a shot, it’s possible they were less interested in Contreras, which necessitated Milwaukee’s involvement.

That’s not to say that Contreras isn’t an exciting young catcher in his own right. It’s just that, as mentioned, Murphy is one of the best in the game. Contreras will now join his older brother Willson Contreras, who recently signed with the Cardinals, in the NL Central. The younger Contreras has gotten into 153 games in his career so far, hitting 28 home runs and producing an overall batting line of .260/.338/.471 for a wRC+ of 121. His defensive work isn’t as highly rated as his bat, but he’s still quite young, turning 25 later this month. Even with subpar defense, he’s produced 2.5 fWAR in his brief career thus far, meaning any developments in that department would make him tremendously valuable. It had been recently reported that the club was interested in catching upgrades, but since the club has been paring back a tight payroll, they never seemed like candidates for a big free agent splash. Instead, they’ve acquired a young backstop who has yet to reach arbitration eligibility and has five years of club control remaining.

For the A’s, it’s been reported that they have been prioritizing MLB-ready talent in their trade talks and they have achieved that here. Muller, 25, has appeared in each of the past two major league seasons, logging 49 innings so far. He has an unimpressive 5.14 ERA in that time, but he’s fared much better in the minors. He’s made 40 Triple-A starts in the past two years and has a 3.40 ERA, 28.4% strikeout rate and 9.2% walk rate. Baseball America recently ranked him the top prospect in Atlanta’s system.

More to come.

Talkin’ Jake of Jomboy Media first reported that the Braves, Brewers and A’s were lining up on a deal, as well as the involvement of Contreras (Twitter links). Jeff Passan of ESPN first reported Murphy going to the Braves, as well as the involvement of Pina and the eventual final deal. Robert Murray of FanSided first mentioned Ruiz and Tarnok (Twitter links). Joel Sherman first mentioned Payamps and Yeager on Twitter. Kiley McDaniel first had Muller’s name on Twitter.



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Braves Sign Tyler Matzek To Two-Year Contract

The Braves announced that they have signed lefty Tyler Matzek to a two-year deal worth $3.1MM. There’s also a $5.5MM club option for 2025 with no buyout. He’ll make $1.2MM in the first year and $1.9MM in the second, according to Justin Toscano of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Matzek had Tommy John surgery in October and will likely miss the entire 2023 season.

Matzek, 32, has been a feel-good story in recent years, as he was away from baseball for a while due to “the yips.” He pitched for the Rockies in 2014 and 2015 but then dealt with control problems so bad that he was relegated to the minors for chunks of the 2016-2019 period, including missing the 2017 season entirely and pitching in indy ball in 2018. He eventually made his way back to the majors and established himself as a useful piece of the Atlanta bullpen. From 2020 to the present, he’s thrown 135 2/3 innings with a 2.92 ERA, 38.2% ground ball rate and 27.4% strikeout rate, despite a high 13.4% walk rate.

Unfortunately, his story hit a snag at the end of this season, as he was left off the club’s NLDS roster due to elbow discomfort. The next day, it was announced that he would require Tommy John surgery. Given the typical 12-18 months required to recover from such a procedure, Matzek will almost certainly miss the entire 2023 campaign.

He went into this winter with just over four years of MLB service time, meaning he still had two more years of club control via the arbitration process. Given the lengthy absence he’s facing, Atlanta could have considered non-tendering him before tonight’s deadline, but they have instead agreed to a contract that will cover both his remaining arb seasons and potentially one free agent year as well. Matzek made $1.4MM in 2022 and was projected by MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz, prior to the Tommy John news, for a bump to $1.8MM. Atlanta will pay Matzek around the same rate he got in 2022 and won’t get anything for that investment in 2023 but could see it pay off down the line. For Matzek, it’s possible that he could have found a somewhat similar deal in free agency, as teams occasionally give two-year deals to injured pitchers even when they know they won’t be healthy for the first one. But he’s decided to stick with an organization he knows, continuing to earn a paycheck while rehabbing with the knowledge that he has a job waiting for him once he’s healthy.



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