When Ronald Acuña Jr. exited Tuesday's matchup against the Royals, Atlanta Braves were mildly concerned. You never want to see a franchise star pulled from a game early, but he did at least jog off the field under his own power. However, Acuña Jr.'s comments after the game while in a walking boot about being "worried" and about how much pain he is in when he puts pressure on that foot changed that mild concern to full out panic.
Ignoring for the moment that the Braves absolutely should not have let Acuña Jr. play knowing that his Achilles was bothering him, this has the potential to be a true disaster. Missing time this season doesn't really matter as 2025 is a lost cause, but Achilles' tendon injuries can be very long-term injuries especially if they require surgery and can ruin careers in the worst cases. Go ahead and ask old friend Michael Soroka how hard it is to come back from an actual Achilles tear.
Not only is there a chance that Acuña Jr.'s injury could threaten to impact his (and the Braves') 2026 season, but it could potentially put him in an "exclusive", but unfortunate club of uber talented players that never reached their potential because of injuries if he isn't in there already.
Ronald Acuña Jr.'s injury could threaten his and the Braves' long-term futures
Right now, the odds of Acuña Jr.'s injury lingering into 2026 don't seem overly high. Again, Achilles' tendon ruptures are not injuries you jog off the field with and while he is in pain now, the odds are that we find out that it is a more minor ailment that will heal with some rest. Frankly, getting Acuña Jr. off the field the rest of this season and allowing his entire body to heal up may not be the worst thing in the world.
However, Acuña Jr.'s injury is just the latest in a line of major injuries that have befallen the 2023 NL MVP. He had only just returned from his second major knee surgery (one on each knee) and Braves fans only got to enjoy him for a couple months before getting hurt again.
If that sounds like a familiar tale, that is because it is and we aren't just talking about Soroka here. Mike Trout is probably this generation's best hitter, but back and knee injuries have robbed him of the tools he once had. Stephen Strasburg basically put the Nationals on his back in route to the 2019 World Series title, but thoracic outlet syndrome essentially ended his career after that.
Hell, the easiest parallel to Acuña Jr.'s situation right now is probably Eric Davis. Davis was a perennial MVP candidate who terrorized the league in the late 1980's including a 30/50 season in 1987 before his knees broke down and he struggled to stay on the field for the back half of his career.
It isn't a possibility that is fun to talk about, but it is one that probably needs to be entertained at this point. Acuña Jr. may very well be the most talented player to ever wear a Braves uniform and he will certainly go down in franchise lore either way, but it just feels like his body just isn't going to let him ascend to all-time greatness right now. Sadly, he would have plenty of company in that club if that is how things actually go down.
