Atlanta Braves roster looks tired: No real relief in sight

ATLANTA, GA - MARCH 29: Fans walk in The Battery Atlanta prior to Opening Day at SunTrust Park between the Atlanta Braves and the Philadelphia Phillies on March 29, 2018 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)
ATLANTA, GA - MARCH 29: Fans walk in The Battery Atlanta prior to Opening Day at SunTrust Park between the Atlanta Braves and the Philadelphia Phillies on March 29, 2018 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)
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ATLANTA, GA - AUGUST 13: Touki Toussaint #62 of the Atlanta Braves pitches in the second inning of his MLB debut during game one of a doubleheader against the Miami Marlins at SunTrust Park on August 13, 2018 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)
ATLANTA, GA – August 13: Touki Toussaint #62 of the Atlanta Braves pitches in the second inning of his MLB debut during game one of a doubleheader against the Miami Marlins at SunTrust Park on August 13, 2018, in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

The innings issue

ERA’s are down thanks to the arrival of Gausman and Brach and some excellent pitching by starters Touki Toussaint and Bryse Wilson. Sean Newcomb had two, back-to-back games where he pitched superbly and the game before those wasn’t awful either. Unfortunately, he followed those two games with two that weren’t good.

Part of the reason for his problem may have been the catcher.  Newcomb’s ERA is two runs higher with newly extended Tyler Flowers receiving than with Kurt Suzuki putting down the signs. The other contributing issue is fatigue.

Newcomb’s thrown 141 innings this season. He threw a combined 157 innings last year between Atlanta and Gwinnett and 149 innings in AA during 2016.  The Braves wanted to give their rotation extra rest to mitigate the issue but Kolby Allard’s stumbles made them reconsider. The six-man rotation didn’t die:  by all accounts, it will return when Toussaint is able to rejoin the team.  That helps the starters but there are innings issues in the bullpen.

Relief is just a few days away – or is it?

The best relievers so far this season are Dan Winkler, Jesse Biddle, Shane Carle, Luke Jackson and A.J. Minter. All except Jackson are near or past their previous high in innings pitched.

  • Biddle’s thrown 51 2/3 innings, his previous high is 57 (MLB+AAA 2017)
  • Carle’s thrown 54 1/3 innings, his previous high is 62 (AAA 2017)
  • Jackson’s thrown 51 1/3 innings, his previous high is 75 ( 50 2/3 MLB, 24 1/3 AAA 2017)
  • Minter’s thrown 51 innings, his previous high is 39 (24 MLB, 15 AAA 2017)
  • Venters’ thrown 23 innings, his high since multiple surgeries is 23 (AA 2017)
  • Winkler’ thrown 53 1/3 innings, his previous high is 70 in 2014, prior to his TJ surgery.
    • Since his surgery, he’s never thrown more than 14 1/3 innings.

    Biddle, Minter, Venters, and Winkler are TJ surgery survivors. Carle’s on the DL with shoulder inflammation.  Jackson missed time with a shoulder last year and had back issues in 2016.

    Vizcaino is unlikely to return at anywhere near his normal effectiveness this year if he returns at all. Moylan is no longer a quality reliever and Freeman is no longer a lucky reliever.  Neither of the last two can be counted on for anything significant.

    The bullpen may get an extra arm in September, but according to Mark Bowman, roster issues mean it won’t be as much or who the fans expect.

    "Let’s go with McCarthy, Wright, Wilson, Toussaint and Peter Moylan as the pitchers who will be added. Shane Carle will likely eventually be activated from the disabled list, but I have my doubts about Vizcaino returning this year."