Waterloo Region Record

Phillies eager for opening day, Braves hopes still on hold

- PAUL NEWBERRY

The Philadelph­ia Phillies are eager to get started on a new, winning era.

For the Atlanta Braves, opening day still feels like it’s a few weeks away.

The NL East rivals begin the season Thursday at two-year-old SunTrust Park, where Julio Teheran will make his fifth straight opening day start for the Braves against Philly’s Aaron Nola.

The Phillies are coming off their fifth straight losing season, a 96-loss debacle that left them at the bottom of the division, but all signs points to a team on the rise.

Stocked with young talent on the big league roster and plenty of top prospects in the minors, Philadelph­ia began to fill in the gaps from its long rebuilding job. The team doled out a three-year, $75 million contract to 2015 Cy Young winner Jake Arrieta. Carlos Santana received a threeyear, $60 million deal. “The chemistry is coming together,” said Nola, who will make his first opening day start after going 12-11 with a 3.54 ERA last season.

“The guys are coming together well. We respect the older guys who’ve come in here and what they’ve already done and we’re lucky to have them on our team,” he said.

While the Phillies are eager to move up, the Braves are still a team in transition.

Alex Anthopoulo­s took over as general manager after John Coppolella was fired — and banned for life by Major League Baseball — for ignoring rules on signing internatio­nal players, an embarrassi­ng scandal that also cost Atlanta several top prospects and will prevent the team from bargaining at full strength for Latin American players until 2021.

The Braves are coming off their fourth straight losing season (72-90) and still appear at least a year or two away from being a serious playoff contender. But hope is on the way. Twenty-year-old Ronald Acuna is perhaps baseball’s top prospect, an outfielder who hit .325 with 21 homers, 82 RBIs and 44 stolen bases while working his way up from Class A to Triple-A last season. He continued to dazzle in the Arizona Fall League, then sent the hype into overdrive by batting .432 with four homers in spring training.

Acuna is clearly ready for the big leagues , but he’ll be right up the road at Triple-A Gwinnett until at least April 13. By delaying his big league debut, the Braves push back Acuna’s eligibilit­y for free agency by a full year — the same sort of contractua­l skuldugger­y that the Chicago Cubs pulled on Kris Bryant.

“Naturally, I was a little disappoint­ed, but that isn’t going to deter me at all from my work ethic or stop me at all,” Acuna said through an interprete­r.

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