Talented young Braves experience growing pains

Atlanta Braves second baseman Ozzie Albies shakes hands with third base coach Ron Washington after hitting his first of two home runs in Wednesday night's home win against Toronto. Albies has been a bright spot lately, but the Braves have lost six of their past eight games.
Atlanta Braves second baseman Ozzie Albies shakes hands with third base coach Ron Washington after hitting his first of two home runs in Wednesday night's home win against Toronto. Albies has been a bright spot lately, but the Braves have lost six of their past eight games.

ATLANTA - As well as things have gone for the Atlanta Braves in the season's first half, lately there are troubling signs that something is not right.

Or maybe a lot of things are not right.

The Braves have lost six of eight games and this week briefly fell out of the NL East lead for the first time since May 30, though they moved back into a first-place tie with Philadelphia with Wednesday night's win over Toronto. Atlanta was off Thursday before tonight's opener of a home series against the Arizona Diamondbacks, and the Braves are looking to regain their momentum entering next week's All-Star break.

"We just have to get back to getting the whole thing going," Braves manager Brian Snitker said Wednesday. "We're obviously struggling in a lot of different areas."

Snitker was far from panicked. He believes the downturn can be easily explained as a part of the normal flow of a season and said, "I just think teams are going to do that."

Even so, Snitker said he has examined all options, including tweaks to his lineup. General manager Alex Anthopoulos also has to look closely at the team's recent downward trends as he considers possible trade options.

The Braves have interest in Baltimore's Manny Machado but are seen as a long shot to acquire the All-Star shortstop. Anthopoulos has said the team is unlikely to give up top prospects for a short-term rental, and Machado is approaching free agency.

Anthopoulos may be more willing to trade a pitching prospect now that starters Mike Foltynewicz, Sean Newcomb and Mike Soroka have enjoyed success in Atlanta this season.

Trading a prospect for immediate help wouldn't have been considered a likely move for Anthopoulos at the beginning of the season. The rebuilding Braves were expected to contend in a year or two, but now that they have spent much of the schedule in first place, the timetable for aggressive moves may have changed.

Injuries have left the rotation full of questions. Soroka (right shoulder inflammation), Brandon McCarthy (right knee tendinitis) and Anibal Sanchez (right hamstring strain) are on the 10-day disabled list.

Left-hander Luiz Gohara, who had been in the bullpen, was optioned to Triple-A Gwinnett after Wednesday night's game. He is expected to use his time in Gwinnett to prepare for a possible spot in Atlanta's rotation after the break.

The team has been nicknamed the "Baby Braves" - the same moniker was applied to a youthful Atlanta roster in the mid-2000s - thanks to a group of key players that includes 21-year-old All-Star second baseman Ozzie Albies and 20-year-old left fielder Ronald Acuna Jr. When Soroka, 20, was in the rotation, the Braves had the three youngest players in the majors. Gohara, 21, could add even more youth.

Two more important players are only 24 - Newcomb and shortstop Dansby Swanson - and Foltynewicz is a first-time All-Star at 26. With so much youth, growing pains were inevitable.

Foltynewicz and Newcomb have proven capable this season, but each has allowed five earned runs in two straight starts. Hard-throwing left-handed reliever A.J. Minter has four saves but gave up four runs (three earned) while recording only one out in Tuesday night's 6-2 loss to Toronto.

Meanwhile, leadoff hitter Ender Inciarte is hitting only .246, and Snitker pulled him from Sunday's loss in Milwaukee for a lack of hustle. Inciarte was back in the lineup for the two-game series with Toronto.

Snitker wouldn't blame the team's recent offensive struggles on "one or two guys."

"We haven't been hitting on all cylinders," he said.

Nick Markakis, selected to his first All-Star team at 34, veteran first baseman Freddie Freeman and Albies have helped keep the team in first place.

On Wednesday, Albies became only the sixth player in franchise history to hit homers from both sides of the plate in the same game. He already has 20 homers this season, the most for a Brave before the All-Star break since Andruw Jones hit 20 in 2006.

Albies has hits in 19 of his past 20 games, pushing his season average to .288.

Freeman described Albies as "unbelievable to watch," and Foltynewicz said "I'm excited he's on my team."

Snitker hopes Albies can be a model for teammates who are struggling after strong starts.

"He's adjusted," Snitker said. "He's doing what good players do."

Upcoming Events