The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Newcomer d’Arnaud next in the catcher mix

Once again, Tyler Flowers will be part of club’s tandem approach.

- By Gabriel Burns Gabriel.Burns@ajc.com

Brian McCann’s farewell season will be remembered fondly in Braves history. McCann, a hometown product, began and finished his career with the organizati­on. But when McCann announced his decision to retire shortly after the Braves were eliminated in October, it opened a gaping hole at catcher.

The Braves found success in recent seasons with a co-catcher formula. Veteran Tyler Flowers paired with McCann and Kurt Suzuki to give the Braves a productive backstop tandem over the past few years. They’ll hope newcomer Travis d’Arnaud can team with Flowers and provide similar production.

Sold on the franchise by his brother, Chase, a former Brave, d’Arnaud has the task of managing an up-and-coming group of pitchers while adding steady offen

sive production. The Braves moved quickly to secure d’Ar- naud earlier in the winter, confident he would be a per- fect fit with the organizati­on and his new teammates.

Meanwhile, in the minors, last year’s first-round pick, Shea Langeliers, will be developing as the potential catcher of the future. William Contreras, the younger brother of Chicago’s Will- son, also has a fair amount of upside. The Braves have opted for stopgaps at the position while the future simmers in the minors.

Roster locks (2019 stats)

■ Travis d’Arnaud

(.251/.312/.433, 16 HRs, 69 RBIs)

■ Tyler Flowers

(.229/.319/.413, 11 HRs, 34 RBIs)

On the bubble

Alex Jackson

Key stat: 23 and 79

McCann and Flowers combined for 23 homers and 79 RBIs a year ago. Flowers, another year older, is what he is at the plate. Can he and d’Arnaud combine for similar production? Already, the Braves likely will suf- fer at least a modest drop- off in power at the clean-up spot. The lineup is a bit suspect after the team’s top four, so sustaining the tandem production at catcher certainly would help. D’Ar- naud is coming off a bounceback season, and there’s reason for optimism with his bat. Production similar to a season ago, when he hit .251 with 16 homers and 69 RBIs, would be enormous for this group.

Key player: d’Arnaud

To continue on the above point, d’Arnaud’s offense is an important piece of the puzzle. The Braves are comfortabl­e with what Flowers provides, and they’re confident d’Arnaud will be an asset behind the plate. They need to fortify the bottom of the order, and d’Arnaud maintainin­g his 2019 pace would help.

What to watch for over the season

Health is the obvious factor, as the Braves lack the upper-minors depth to comfortabl­y navigate a long-term injury to d’Arnaud or Flowers. Jackson, who’s shown little thus far as a fringe majorleagu­er, is the next man up. Jonathan Morales, Carlos Martinez, Langeliers and Contreras haven’t appeared in a major-league game. Like past years, the Braves probably will add veteran depth to stash in Triple-A, be it before opening day or at some point during the season.

Langeliers’ and Contreras’ developmen­t is worth following. It’s not inconceiva­ble either could work his way to the majors this year, though that shouldn’t be the expectatio­n. Langeliers is a well-seasoned college product who was considered closer to MLB-ready when he was drafted. Contreras didn’t develop as hoped in 2019, but he’s on the 40-man roster and could debut sooner if there’s an injury.

Overall, the Braves are happy with another veteran duo working with their younger pitchers and guiding the team through what they hope is a third consecutiv­e postseason run.

 ??  ?? Tyler Flowers
Tyler Flowers
 ??  ?? Travis d’Arnaud
Travis d’Arnaud
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Tyler Flowers has worked well in the Braves’ tandem approach to catching over the past few years.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Tyler Flowers has worked well in the Braves’ tandem approach to catching over the past few years.

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