Dayton Daily News

Donaldson’s rebound is key to Braves’ infield success

Former Cleveland Indian to play third base for Atlanta.

- By Gabriel Burns

ATLANTA — The Braves were set in the infield until they weren’t. Johan Camargo was the everyday third baseman until he wasn’t. Josh Donaldson wasn’t an option until he was.

Such is life. Not even a month after publicly endorsing his infield, Braves general manager Alex Anthopoulo­s made his biggest bet of the offseason, securing Donaldson ahead of the market for $23 million and inserting him at third base.

It was a two-pronged decision. Aside from the theoretica­l benefit of Donaldson’s offense, it turned Camargo into the Braves’ renaissanc­e man. He’ll play whenever and wherever while Donaldson handles the daily grind at third.

The story of the infield, and perhaps the team’s season, will be how Donaldson rebounds from an injury-plagued 2018. There was a point last season he couldn’t throw the ball from third to first. Even if he’s healthy now — and both parties insist that’s the case (he played well in a 16-game sample size with the Indians) — we’ve yet to see him over a longer course.

Donaldson and Anthopoulo­s took a dual-gamble. The Braves will face immense criticism if Donaldson underwhelm­s. He was their highpriced acquisitio­n in a winter they hyped for years. Donaldson, meanwhile, needs to produce for another substantia­l payday, be that in Atlanta or elsewhere. He’ll be 34 next December and we’re seeing how the market is treating older (or rather, all) free agents.

Aside from Donaldson, the Braves return last season’s infield. Freddie Freeman will be the offensive centerpiec­e as usual. Ozzie Albies will be a potential highlight every at-bat, though he has to prove he’s more first half than second half of last year. Dansby Swanson enters a do-or-die year offensivel­y.

More on Albies: He scorched the earth in April and maintained enough production to earn All-Star honors in his first full season. The Braves do not win the National League East last season without his early postings. He hit .281 with 20 homers, 55 RBIs and 74 runs.

The second half left plenty on the table. Albies admitted fatigue played a role, and his dynamic gappers and base running became harder occasions to find among scattered pop-ups. His production dropped to .226 with four homers, 17 RBIs and 31 runs. Perhaps refreshed and prepared, Albies needs to show more of the former than latter.

Swanson will take it easy through spring training as he recovers from wrist surgery. Since an illustriou­s 38-game start in 2016, Swanson’s hit .235/.308/.359. While his defense has become outstandin­g, the bat hasn’t shown growth. After hitting .287 in 26 games across April and May, he didn’t have another month above .253.

If Swanson’s struggles persist, perhaps the Braves opt for Camargo on a more regular basis. Shortstop is his natural position and he could provide more punch if the offense is lacking. But Swanson’s defense still makes him a valuable player; the offense determines his ceiling.

Defense was a focal point for the 2018 Braves. Freeman finally got his gold glove. Albies’ speed is an asset at second. Camargo isn’t as consistent but can make the spectacula­r play. Swanson is the best of the crop.

It’s safe the say the Braves boast one of MLB’s better infields. Defense and speed don’t slump — and rarely does Freeman. The infield’s upside depends on Albies’ consistenc­y, Swanson’s offense and Donaldson evading injury and stalling Father Time.

 ?? TIM WARNER / GETTY IMAGES ?? The Atlanta Braves are hoping Josh Donaldson, formerly of the Cleveland Indians, turns out to be a smart buy at $23 million. He was injury plagued in 2018 and hopes to rebound this season.
TIM WARNER / GETTY IMAGES The Atlanta Braves are hoping Josh Donaldson, formerly of the Cleveland Indians, turns out to be a smart buy at $23 million. He was injury plagued in 2018 and hopes to rebound this season.

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