The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Many options when it comes to Teheran

Don’t assume starter won’t return next season, says GM Anthopoulo­s.

- By Gabriel Burns gabriel.burns@ajc.com

Julio Teheran started the past five opening days for the Braves. Yet when they returned to relevancy, he was nowhere to be found.

Teheran didn’t start against the Dodgers in the National League Division Series. The Braves rolled with Mike Foltynewic­z, Anibal Sanchez, Sean Newcomb and opted to bring back Foltynewic­z on short rest for Game 4, in which the team was eliminated.

In essentiall­y mop-up duty in Game 4, Teheran pitched 1⅔ innings, striking out two Dodgers. A subject of trade rumors for several years, some presumed that was his good bye. General manager Alex Anthopoulo­s inherited Teheran, and the team once again started him on opening day in 2018. By season’s end, he was

surpassed by multiple starters, with more on the way.

Teheran posted a 3.94 ERA with 162 strikeouts and 84 walks across 175⅔ innings.

“He’d be part of the rotation (if season began today),” Anthopoulo­s said. “I know I wasn’t here for all those years, the opening day starts. I know the walks were up, but obviously the hits were down. His ERA is half a run lower than it was. Strikeouts are up and the walks are up. But I think if you ask Julio, it’s not because he was wild. It was by design. He would pick at the corners and wouldn’t give in.

“That’s why he didn’t give up the hits. He’s going to give up home runs, that’s who he is, that’s part of his game. But you look at the reliabilit­y piece, he’s basically 180 innings locked in each year. You can count on him. What he brings, ERA-wise and so on, and the innings, he’s a reliable piece for us. So it takes a lot to get through six months.”

Even if Teheran was on the trade block, there’s no benefit to say anything but what Anthopoulo­s stated. There’s been a looming reality for the past couple seasons that Teheran could be edged out of the rotation.

Mike Foltynewic­z, Sean Newcomb and Kevin Gausman appear likely locks for the 2019 group. Anibal Sanchez is a free agent, and if he returns, probably wouldn’t be guaranteed a spot.

But it’s the incoming herd of arms that make it dicey. Mike Soroka will be healthy. The Braves loved what they saw from Touki Toussaint. Max Fried had his moments and presents another lefty option. Bryse Wilson, Kyle Wright and Kolby Allard made their MLB debuts.

Putting two and two together, the enigmatic Teheran wouldn’t be long for the rotation. But as Anthopoulo­s said, his reliabilit­y is important.

As for the postseason, Anthopoulo­s warns not to overanalyz­e how that played out. Teheran had solid numbers at Coors Field, whereas his marks against the Dodgers were anything but encouragin­g. The Braves were playing matchups.

“Come playoff time, if we had faced Colorado, Julio would’ve been in the rotation, maybe starting Game 2,” Anthopoulo­s said. “We talked about that. We tried to line things up against the opponent. I wouldn’t read into Julio not starting against L.A. so much because if it had been Colorado, we talked about him potentiall­y starting Game 2.”

Teheran is an interestin­g subplot in what’s supposed to be an active offseason. If the Braves add another reliable starter, it’d be easier to part with their fivetime opening day man. If they trust, say, Toussaint, perhaps they can part with Teheran without reservatio­n.

The best news for Anthopoulo­s: He’s not forced to do anything. He doesn’t have to sell low on Teheran, who makes $11 million in 2019 with a $12 million club option. The organizati­on has options with their starters, which was the rebuild’s intention all along.

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Julio Teheran had a 3.94 ERA with 162 K’s in 175⅔ innings in

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