The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

10 key questions about the Braves

- By Tim Tucker ttucker@ajc.com

With the Braves’ pitchers and catchers reporting to spring training today, here are 10 key questions about the season ahead: 1. Will Josh Donaldson stay healthy and return to a reasonable approximat­ion of his peak years to power the Braves’ batting order alongside Freddie Freeman and Ronald Acuna? 2. Since it’s unlikely the Braves will have as good a record against an improved NL East as they did against the division last season (49-27), will they fare considerab­ly better against out-of-division opponents (41-45 last season)? 3.

Will the Braves’ young starting pitchers develop, improve and hold their own in a division where the Nationals and Mets have superior rotations on paper? And if not, will the Braves find a way to acquire an establishe­d ace at some point? 4. Will Ozzie Albies be closer to the hitter he was before the All-Star break last season (.281 batting average, 20 home runs, 55 RBI, .834 OPS) or the hitter he was after the break (.226 batting average, four home runs, 17 RBI, .624 OPS)? And will he improve as a left-handed hitter (.231 batting average and .695 OPS last season, compared to .333 and .904 as a right-handed hitter)? 5.

The question Braves fans probably worry about the least: Will Acuna’s second season be everything that his rookie season portended? And more? 6. After team owner Liberty Media revealed strong financial results for the Braves through the first nine months

of 2018 — revenue up from $366 million to $410 million and operating profit before depreciati­on and amortizati­on up from $49 million to $105 million, compared to the same point in 2017 — shouldn’t some of those additional funds have been used to bolster the roster by increasing the player payroll, which instead is lower today than it was last season? 7. Will the bullpen be reliable? Or will it prove problemati­c, especially in light of bullpen investment­s this offseason by three NL East teams (Mets, Phillies and Nationals)? 8.

Will Nick Markakis be closer to the hitter he was in the first 120 games last season (.319 batting average, .878 OPS, 14 home runs) or the hitter he was in the final 42 games (.229 average, .586 OPS, no home runs)? 9. Can Dansby Swanson, who made great strides defensivel­y last season, progress offensivel­y from last year’s .238 batting average? 10. Will the catching tandem of Brian McCann-Tyler Flowers be productive enough? Or will the decisions not to re-sign Kurt Suzuki, now with the Nationals, and not to relinquish the considerab­le prospects required to acquire J.T. Realmuto, now with the Phillies, be rued?

The answers to those 10 questions won’t come during spring training, but during the grind of the long season. Collective­ly, the answers could determine the difference between first place and fourth place in the NL East.

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