The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

GM Anthopoulo­s lays some groundwork

Braves spent time working on potential trades, not free agents.

- By Gabriel Burns gabriel.burns@ajc.com

Braves general manager Alex Anthopoulo­s leaves the general manager meetings with a better understand­ing of the market, but nonetheles­s in a similar spot before his arrival.

Anthopoulo­s and 29 other GMs, along with abundant agents and reporters, gathered in Carlsbad, Calif., in recent days. Transactio­ns usually are made later; the meetings are more about laying groundwork for future deals. Baseball’s winter meetings are in December.

“There are some players we weren’t certain would be available in trade before we got to the meetings that we now have informatio­n about,” Anthopoulo­s said. “That does open things up for us.”

The Braves’ entourage spent most of its time

meeting with other teams. They had not met with agents or proposed any trades as of Wednesday night. There were reports to the contrary, linking the Braves to prominent trade targets or free agents, but those were inaccurate.

The Braves spoke with every team before their arrival, since it’s unrealisti­c to meet with every organizati­on over the allotted span. Instead, Anthopoulo­s identified a number of clubs — it can range from two to eight — with whom it’s conceivabl­e to consummate a deal. The Braves spent the majority of their time with those franchises.

“We’re spending the bulk of our time here on trades,” Anthopoulo­s said. “We’re not spending our time on free agents.”

Anthopoulo­s has been adamant the Braves’ chief needs are corner outfield and catcher. They’ve stayed in touch with Nick Markakis and Kurt Suzuki, their free agents at those spots, and remain open to retaining them.

The same can be said of starter Anibal Sanchez, whose mystical season doesn’t supersede the fact he would block a plethora of young talent. They could add another starter, more likely in the ace-mold.

Four rotation spots currently are locked in, per Anthopoulo­s — Mike Foltynewic­z, Sean Newcomb, Kevin Gausman and Julio Teheran — while Mike Soroka, Touki Toussaint, Max Fried, Kyle Wright, Bryse Wilson and others will battle for the fifth spot.

On the bullpen side, they haven’t closed the door on Brad Brach or Peter Moylan, who indicated he could continue his playing career at 40. Rather than address their reliever needs immediatel­y, the Braves could wait out the market hoping to find value.

“Right now, relievers are not something we’re actively going after,” Anthopoulo­s said.

As for what they are going after, that’s more complex. Their most noticeable improvemen­ts will likely come via trade, which requires parting with their treasured youth. Just because the Braves have such prospect wealth doesn’t mean they’re armed for multiple highlevel moves.

The expression, “A fool and his money are soon parted,” applies to prospects. Few teams are positioned better than the Braves, and while they’ll be aggressive, they won’t let the temptation of now deplete their lifeblood.

“We’re reluctant to move them for obvious reasons,” Anthopoulo­s said. “Doesn’t mean we won’t, we just have to be careful of quantity because we need to have our depth. With our payroll being mid-market and so on, having that depth is key to getting through a season. So that said, we’re trying to add players in trade. Some (prospects) are going to go. We have to be very selective of who we pursue in trade. You start making three or four trades and you’re going to be down to 10 players.”

Despite fan desires for splashy moves, the Braves don’t feel pressure to act quickly. Anthopoulo­s thinks the National League East will be better, crediting the Nationals and Phillies as good clubs with the Mets having their opportunit­ies to improve.

Philadelph­ia, in particular, could be formidable. They’re involved in the Bryce Harper and Manny Machado biddings, along with other celebrated stars. If they secure a big fish, the Braves won’t be reactionar­y.

“We never worry about what anybody else is doing,” Anthopoulo­s said. “That doesn’t mean we don’t pay attention and we don’t watch and have an opinion because they’re in our division, but I just don’t believe in it. We just worry about ourselves, how we make our team better and how we make wins. The rest will take care of itself. … We are strictly focused on our own team.”

That philosophy trickles into how they’ll handle free agency. Much is made of the Braves’ spending room. That doesn’t mean a lengthy, historic deal is in the best interest of the organizati­on’s health.

“Does it mean we’d never give out a really long deal? We’re open to it,” Anthopoulo­s said in terms of pure free agents, not necessaril­y extensions for his own players. “Where most of those 10-to-12 year deals go, you look in the past where those deals have gone — there may come a time where it makes sense for us but I don’t necessaril­y expect that to be the case right now. Doesn’t mean we won’t look.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Braves general manager Alex Anthopoulo­s identified a number of clubs at the GM meetings — it can range from two to eight — with whom it’s conceivabl­e to consummate a deal.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Braves general manager Alex Anthopoulo­s identified a number of clubs at the GM meetings — it can range from two to eight — with whom it’s conceivabl­e to consummate a deal.

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