Atlanta Braves Prospects, Coaches and Executives Talk Rebuild at Hot Stove Event

Nov 8, 2016; Scottsdale, AZ, USA; Atlanta Braves general manager John Coppolella during the MLB general managers meeting at the Omni Scottsdale Resort. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports
Nov 8, 2016; Scottsdale, AZ, USA; Atlanta Braves general manager John Coppolella during the MLB general managers meeting at the Omni Scottsdale Resort. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports /
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Atlanta Braves 18 year old Rookie third baseman Austin Riley was named to MLB Pipeline's list of the top ten third base prospects in baseball.
Atlanta Braves 18 year old Rookie third baseman Austin Riley was named to MLB Pipeline’s list of the top ten third base prospects in baseball.  Screencap created by Fred Owens for Tomahawk Take /

John Coppolella talks rebuild, scouting, player evaluation

Braves general manager John Coppolella had a lot to say about the progress that’s been made down on the farm, and at Rome specifically. “We took this over in 2014. Our first draft was 2015, and our first four picks were from high school,” Coppolella said. “The first four guys were all on this Rome team: Allard, Soroka, Riley, Herbert. They all played big parts.”

Coppy also spoke on successful trades that paid off, like Touki Toussaint and Max Fried. “A lot of different players from a lot of different backgrounds came together and did something really special, and we’re really proud of that.”

I asked Coppolella about the importance of a player’s competitive toughness, a phrase that the Super Bowl-bound Falcons used in their rapid rebuild, and how characteristics like that contribute to the success of his overall plan.

“That all starts in the draft with [scouts] Brian Bridges and Roy Clark, and in the foreign market Gordon Blakeley and his group,” Coppolella said. “They do such a great job looking at a player’s makeup.” He said front office staff will often personally meet with a lot of players, and takes an active role getting to know prospects.

“It’s not just about one guy, but it’s about the other 24 that he’s with, so want to get to know these players,” the Braves GM said. “From that standpoint I think it’s something that we seek out from the very start of it, but for us more than anything, the cream rises to the top, and I think these guys push each other.”

Brian Snitker on building “the right way”

Atlanta manager Brian Snitker had a lot to say about getting back to building from the bottom up. “This rebuild, or however you want to say it, that John [Coppolella] and John [Hart] have instrumented, is very similar to what Bobby [Cox], Stan Kasten, Paul Snyder and that group did, back when Bobby took over.”

“They started at the ground floor, which is your minor league system, and they did it the right way, and they reaped the benefits of that for a long time,” Snitker said of the 80’s and 90’s Braves front office. “We got away from it, I think, but now we’re kind of getting back there, and I think it’s going to be very similar to what we saw back in the 90’s.”

Randy Ingle on player development

The only other person in the Braves organization with as much tenure as Brian Snitker would be Rome manager Randy Ingle. I asked the South Atlantic League Hall of Famer about keeping low-A players focused and motivated through their first taste of full schedule professional baseball.

“The key ingredient is staying positive, and believing in them,” Randy Ingle said of young prospects. “They can see right through you if you don’t [believe]. Our staff does a great job on that. If we lose a game, we come back trying to teach, and trying to get better. If we win, we come back trying to get better for next time.” 

With an embarrassment of riches on the mound at Rome this season, I also asked how Ingle’s staff managed to keep his top prospects focused on development over statistics through a rough first half for his club.

Related Story: A Look at the Atlanta Braves’ Minor League Managers for 2017

“Our pitching coach Dan Meyer did a great job,” Ingle said, deflecting credit. “When they see it actually work, and when they see it in the bullpen, that gives them confidence, and makes believers. Then the only thing they have to do is put it to work in the game, stay with it, and believe in it.”

Ingle said he’s ready to get started on the next group this spring, and is ready to see what the next group of young prospects has to offer.

“With the talent we had here last year, the scouts do a tremendous job,” Ingle said. “They’ve got some really good talent out of that [Rome] club last year, and also some players they’ve signed in high school and college last year that are coming up next year.”

Speaking of Braves organization veterans like Brian Snitker and Randy Ingle, their general manager had a lot of praise for his most experienced managers.

Coppolella on Brian Snitker

“Snit is a Brave, and when we brought him in as interim manager, we knew that he would always put our players first, always do the right things, and put the Braves organization first. Seeing what he did, I think even if you ask him, probably exceeded expectations. That being said, everybody knows Brian Snitker, they’ve seen him for 40 years, and know what he’s about.”

“Snit is always going to watch out for our players, he’s always going to put them in the best spot.

This is somebody that, for me as the team’s GM, I have never experienced: roughly three quarters of the team finding me, singling me out, and saying this is the best manager I’ve ever had, hire this man. It was to where, if I didn’t, we’re all facing some kind of mutiny here,” Coppolella said smiling.

“Brian earned it. Brian has always put the Braves first. No matter what, whether he’s our manager for the next 20 years, or whatever he is… Brian is a Brave, and through highs and lows, through all levels of it, this is a good man who we’re very fortunate to have, and that we hope is going to be here a very long time.”