Bishop Media Sports Network

Flat Out Crime

By: TJ Hartnett

GeorgiaSportsEdition.com news services

I’ve made the case for several years now that Fred McGriff should be in the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame.

His time on the BBWAA ballot has come to a close with this year’s vote, his tenth shot at immortality the old-fashioned way. As he didn’t surpass 25% last year, it’s a safe bet to assume he won’t be reaching the 75% needed to be inducted into Cooperstown this summer.

That is a shame and has been for a decade now. But something happened earlier in December that makes it all the more shameful: Harold Baines was selected for inclusion in the Hall of Fame.

Now, I don’t mean to knock Harold Baines. He was a force for the White Sox in the 80s, and I’m sure he’s a very nice man but what he was not better than Fred McGriff.

To be clear, Baines was not elected to the Hall via the BBWAA ballot. He was elected by the Eras Committee, which is 16 people who vote in overlooked players from particular eras of the game.

This years’ batch, the Today’s Game Committee, inducted Baines and former all-time saves record holder Lee Smith. This makes the BBWAA’s failure to elect McGriff more palatable. Let’s not rule out the Crime Dog finding himself enshrined through this same process, but Baines is still going to have a plaque on the hallowed walls first.

To the naked eye, it might seem like Baines and McGriff are relatively similar players, or even that Baines is superior. Look closer.

Baines had more hits. He had more RBIs. He had a higher batting average. He also played in 370 more games than McGriff. That’s not insignificant if you’re comparing counting stats. If McGriff had played 370 more games even at his lowest level of production, he’d easily make up the RBI difference and close the hit gap, if not pass him there as well.

There is also the matter of intangibles. If Baines is a Hall of Famer, then surely McGriff is based on their respective significance. Baines was a consistent hitter throughout his long career, but was never a dominant one who could be considered the best. McGriff in the late 80s and early 90s was as feared as any hitter in the game at that time.

Baines was a piece of the puzzle on the teams he played for. McGriff was traded for in 1993 and both literally and figuratively Atlanta caught fire. He was the cleanup hitter for the 1995 championship team, Atlanta’s first ever.

Baines, on the other hand, spent the prime of his career on White Sox teams that were mired, in what would eventually be, an 88-year championship drought.

These “intangibles” are not nothing. Many voters will tell you that they vote as much on whether or not a player “feels” like a Hall of Famer as much as they will vote on their statistics.

Jack Morris’ entire argument for getting into the Hall of Fame was his postseason dominance and his 1991 National League Championship Series Game 7 performance in particular. Morris, for what it’s worth, also failed to get into the Hall through the traditional ballot but was selected by the Modern Era committee for induction last year.

While Baines’ induction this month and McGriff’s inevitable snub next month will be frustrating to those who believe that the slugger (who is just seven home runs shy of 500) is deserving of the call, all hope is not lost.

In fact, Baines’ induction should comfort those same people. Because once the Era Committees cycle back around to Today’s Game, they won’t have a leg to stand on in keeping the Crime Dog out of the Hall. It will be overdue, but it will be very deserved.

 

Beasts From The East

By: Mike Anthony

GeorgiaSportsEdition.com news services

From beginning to end, the 2018 Major League Baseball season went mostly as the experts predicted.

High payroll teams that fattened up even more before April got the returns on investment that were expected as the Red Sox, Yankees and Dodgers all lit up scoreboards throughout the season, with Boston ultimately topping Los Angeles in the World Series as the Dodgers came up just short for the second consecutive season.

Other teams that entered 2018 with rosters that were mostly the same as their winning counterparts from 2017 also excelled.

The defending world champs from Houston made it to another American League Championship Series, Cleveland once again dominated the AL Central and the Chicago Cubs looked like a World Series contender until hitting a late snag.

The one division that played against type last season was the National League East. The division was supposed to be the Nationals’ for the taking, but Washington spun its wheels for two-thirds of the season and never looked like a playoff team. The Mets once again had all the pitching in the world and once again watched as all of those pitchers went down with injuries.

In the end, it was Atlanta and Philadelphia. They were picked fourth and fifth in most preseason predictions. The Braves ultimately claimed the lone playoff spot out of the division, only to bow out in the divisional series.

That left an interesting question heading into the offseason and the always-exciting winter meetings. Would the Nationals and Mets take advantage of windows to win that were allegedly still open, or was the standings flip-flop a sign of big changes coming?

The NL East seems to have chosen option ‘C’, in which just about everyone is making moves as if they expect to be making noise in October.

Washington had a busy December, picking up former Braves Kurt Suzuki and Matt Adams for bench depth before signing arguably the best left-handed pitcher on the free agent market in Patrick Corbin.

The Mets were involved in one of the biggest trades of the offseason so far, as they shipped veteran Jay Bruce and some prospects to Seattle in return for eight-time All-Star Robinson Cano and ace closer Edwin Diaz.

The Braves signed former American League MVP Josh Donaldson to upgrade at third base. Another former All-Star – and fan favorite – will return to town as Brian McCann returns to the club where he cut his teeth in Major League Baseball.

Philadelphia traded for an All-Star shortstop in Jean Segura, signed former NL MVP Andrew McCutchen and remain as a team constantly linked to free agent crown jewels Manny Machado and Bryce Harper.

And in much less interesting news, the Marlins will still be the Marlins.

Regardless of the myriad moves sure to be made between now and Opening Day, gauging the National League East will be a tough task.

The recent bullies on the block (Washington and New York) have been too inconsistent to believe that the division will be one of the best in the league. Yet, the quick turnarounds and evident investment into continued improvement of Atlanta and Philadelphia will make it tough to write off any team in the division that isn’t playing its home games in Miami.

Injuries, a brutally long season and the notoriously quirky ups and downs of baseball make it impossible to make a call on the division as the final days of 2018 tick away, but anyone paying attention to the offseason hot stove will agree that the NL East should provide plenty of drama next season.

Wide Open Fields

By: JJ Lanier

GeorgiaSportsEdition.com news services

As fans, we always want to believe the teams we root for are in the right. When other teams are caught cheating, we want to think our team would never do that. When a player chooses to sign with the program, we like to tell ourselves he or she made that decision because they bleed the school colors.

So, when a program is caught being less than truthful, or in the case of Justin Fields, there are rumors a player may leave the program, we tend to not handle it very well.

When news broke that Fields was considering a transfer, there may have been a sense of betrayal within the Georgia fan base, but for those of us whose two favorite colors aren’t black and red, it wasn’t that much of a surprise.

It’s nothing against Fields, who has the potential to be a very good college quarterback when given the opportunity, but rather says more about Jake Fromm proving that he deserves to be the starter.

I know there have been a lot of comments regarding Fields lack of intestinal fortitude, to put it nicely, when it comes to battling for the starting job. I’m sorry, but that’s ridiculous.

Yes, he could stay and battle it out against Fromm during the spring, but unless Fromm were to completely lay an egg in the Sugar Bowl, it would be a huge gamble- on the field, as well as on the recruiting trail- to sit him in favor of Fields.

Benching a two-year starter, who has put up good numbers while leading his team to two of the most successful back to back seasons in program history, is just a bad look.

Saban was able to navigate through it this year because one, he’s Nick Saban, but also because it was a bit of a different situation. Jalen Hurts was always considered to be limited and once Tagovailoa performed the way he did in last year’s championship game, it was obvious who the starter should be.

This has nothing to do with Fields being “scared” to battle for the position, but instead being realistic on the probable outcome.

And because players with the talent that Fields has don’t pick a college with their heart- no matter how much we wish they did- it makes perfect business sense for him to look elsewhere.

Playing for your dream school only matters when you’re getting the playing time you think you deserve. If you think you can further your career at another school, your childhood dream school goes out the window. As a Duke fan, I feel like this way of thinking has become an annual conversation I have with myself.

Like most things in college athletics, this whole situation is fluid. As I mentioned above, if Fromm and Fields have a Hurts/Tagovailoa moment in the Sugar Bowl, this could all change. I have to believe part of Fields hesitation to announce his intentions, whatever they may be, is because he wants to see how the bowl game plays out.

Regardless of whatever Fields decides, it has nothing to do with his competitive drive or his feelings for Georgia; it has everything with showcasing his talent and getting to the NFL.

So, if he decides to stay, forget his inclination to leave and enjoy his time in Athens.

If he chooses to go though, wish him luck and hope everything turns out for the best; it’s what you would do if this were happening to any other program.

Just Another Jones

By: TJ Hartnett

GeorgiaSportsEdition.com news services

The available options to fill the Braves’ need in the outfield are starting to shrink.

The Houston Astros inked Michael Brantley to a deal last week, taking a player that had been linked to Atlanta off the table.

There are four remaining outfielders that the Braves could seek to reasonably replace Nick Markakis in 2019: Bryce Harper, AJ Pollock, Adam Jones, and Markakis himself.

Assuming that Harper won’t be joining the home team at Suntrust Park (and you should be assuming that), that leaves three. Pollock is an interesting option, though he’s also a bad combination of being oft-injured but talented enough to be expensive. Let’s set him aside for now.

That leaves two long-time Orioles and former teammates in Markakis and Jones. Braves fans have spent the last four years seeing and appreciated what Markakis has done both on the field and in the clubhouse. He’s a known quality and a perfectly fine option if the length of contract is agreeable.

Let’s take a look at the unknown for a moment and advocate for Adam Jones joining Atlanta.

The first thing that jumps out about Jones is the seeming notion that he will cost less than the last two free agent outfielders to sign (Brantley and Andrew McCutchen), both of whom will be making roughly $16 million per year over the course of their respective contracts.

What’s fascinating about that is how quickly the world seems to have written off Adam Jones after one down season.

At 33, Jones is on the down slope of his career, but retirement is still very far off. He’s not as quick as he once was when he was winning his four Gold Gloves, but the Braves don’t need him to play center field.

Jones would slide into a corner spot while Ender Inciarte patrols center and Ronald Acuna, Jr. backs him up. He could roam left or right field with at least the kind of skill that Markakis did for nearly half a decade.

Offensively, the criticism of having a “down year” for Jones is mostly levied at his power numbers. After seven straight seasons of 25 or more home runs (and nine straight of 19+), Jones knocked out only 15 round trippers in 2018.

However, it doesn’t seem to have been a sign of his overall season at the dish, as his batting average was .281, which is above his career average and his on-base percentage was only five points lower than his career OBP.

Interestingly, while he did not play substantially fewer games than normal at 145, he struck out fewer than 100 times for the first time since 2009.

Additionally, he would replace Markakis as the veteran leader in a young clubhouse (albeit with some assistance now from Josh Donaldson and Brian McCann). He’s a different flavor of personality that the ever-reserved Markakis, but he has the same track record of consistency, which was Kake’s calling card.

It all boils down to what I find to be a rather puzzling circumstance: Adam Jones might cost around $10 million annually for a two-to-three-year contract, despite his consistent health and production and his positive reputation in the clubhouse.

I enjoyed and admired Markakis over the past four years, but I am somewhat baffled at the notion that he may command more annual money than Adam Jones, who frankly has been a better and more dynamic plater over the course of his career.

Not one to look a gift horse in the mouth, I would also point out that signing Jones for $8-10 million for two years also gives the Braves breathing room to pursue the free agent relief pitching that they so desperately crave.

Is he the best free agent outfielder on the market? He isn’t. But he does make some sense. So, for your consideration: Adam Jones.

Jason Bishop Show with Kipp Branch December 22

Jason Bishop Show with Kipp Branch December 22
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Sugar Sweet For Dawgs?

By: Kipp Branch

GeorgiaSportsEdition.com news services

It has been an interesting football season. Georgia won the SEC East and came up just short in the SEC title game against Alabama. Georgia led Alabama for 58 minutes and 51 seconds and just missed the college football playoff.

Texas has a proud football history, but has struggled as of late. Tom Herman is building the Longhorns back into a national brand. The Longhorns lost to Oklahoma in the Big 12 title game 39-27. Texas beat Oklahoma during the regular season.

The two blue bloods meet in the Sugar Bowl on New Year’s Night in New Orleans.

Georgia is coming into the game as a 13 point favorite against the 9-4 Longhorns. The last time the two teams matched up was the 1984 Cotton Bowl where Georgia beat Texas 10-9.

Both teams have just finished signing top 10 recruiting classes during the early signing period.

Georgia is led by QB Jake Fromm and a pair of 1,000 rushers in Swift and Holyfield. Will Georgia feel the effects of the SEC title game loss, or the saga of Justin Fields and his potential transfer?

Sam Ehlinger has given the Longhorns a consistent, quality player at quarterback for the first time in 8-10 years. He was responsible for 38 touchdowns. Only Longhorn legend Vince Young has produced more in a single season.

He’s smarter with the football (only five interceptions vs. seven last year) and he’s a great option in the run game, using his legs to get many key first downs.

Texas has two big-time receivers on the outside in Collin Johnson and Lil’Jordan Humphrey. They are two big, physical pass-catchers who have given opponents problems all season. It’s still on Ehlinger to get the ball to them, which he has done consistently.

Georgia is going to run the football in this contest and Texas, like most teams in their conference, struggles at time against the run. Georgia has the best defense Texas will see this season.

Texas is looking for its first 10-win season in almost a decade, and I think the Longhorns will come in highly motivated to show the country they belong in this contest. Texas is always going to have great athletes and UGA better come into this game expecting a 60-minute fight to the end.

Keys to the game: The Texas run defense. Can Texas slow down the power run game of UGA?

Georgia’s motivation. Will the Dawgs be motivated to play at peak level?

Can Texas exploit the Georgia secondary?

Will Georgia open up and attack the Longhorn secondary?

I think this will be a great contest that UGA wins 41-28 and finishes 12-2. This may set up a national championship run in 2019.

Texas is on its way back in being a national power. UGA is a national power. Enjoy these times Dawg Nation.

Rambling Wreck To Quick Lane Bowl

By: Kenneth Harrison Jr.

GeorgiaSportsEdition.com news services

One of the best things about the holiday season is bowl games.

We all know the prestigious bowl games are played closer to the start of the New Year like the Rose Bowl or Orange Bowl. Then we have the games that occur prior to that.

That takes us to the Quick Lane Bowl played the day after Christmas. I’ve always heard it was lovely in Detroit in late December so this is a great location.

Georgia Tech and Minnesota will square off in this game. Several Tech players felt disrespected by this bowl selection and took to social media to express that.

“Feels like a slap in the face,” offensive lineman Scott Morgan tweeted.

A-back Qua Sercy: “How do we finish FOURTH in the ACC and get the lowest bowl in the ACC!!! HOW!!!”

Quarterback TaQuon Marshall: “I’m baffled at this bowl game.”

The Belk Bowl seemed like the most likely destination since it’s played in Charlotte and they would have played an SEC team. Virginia was selected to that game despite losing to the Ramblin Wreck. They also were not picked for the Pinstripe and Military Bowl over teams they beat (Miami & Virginia Tech).

One thing that played a factor is attendance. The Yellow Jackets average home attendance (43,087) is the lowest since 2001, which was before Bobby Dodd Stadium’s capacity was expanded. It will be Tech’s first bowl game outside of the Southeast or Texas since playing in the Humanitarian Bowl in 2007 in Boise, Idaho.

This is the first game between Minnesota and Georgia Tech. The Golden Gophers (6 -6) were 3-6 in Big Ten play. This should be a good way to send Paul Johnson out with a win. The Jackets will be short one player, quarterback James Graham who is academically ineligible. He is the backup behind Marshall and No. 2 Tobias Oliver.

Tech is healthy and should have all available weapons for the bowl game.

“I’ve tried to approach it like every other game,” Johnson said. “It’s more about the players. They’re the ones who won six of the last eight games and we want to try to give them a good plan to get ready to go play and certainly (we) want to go out as a winner if we can. That’s been all my effort.”

Tech leads the nation in rushing, averaging 335 yards per game. This is the final game using the triple option so we can expect a heavy dose of the ground game. Minnesota is ranked 63rd in total defense so I don’t expect them to stop the rushing attack.

The Gophers have some explosive weapons on offense. Wide receiver Tyler Johnson leads the team with 1,112 yards, 10 touchdowns and averages 15 yards per catch. Freshman running back Mohamed Ibrahim has 936 yards and 7 TD’s. They had an injury to starting freshman QB Zack Annexstad back in October and he was replaced by Tanner Morgan. They’re almost identical statistically, both throwing over 1,200 yards.

This should be a high scoring game but I expect Georgia Tech to win.

Coming In Flocks

By: Mike Anthony

GeorgiaSportsEdition.com news services

Bowl games often promote themselves as an entire week of fun and a celebration of what the competing teams have accomplished over the course of a long season.

Maybe some teams and fan bases out there play favorites with their bowl games and destinations, but for a Georgia Southern team that suffered through a pair of losing campaigns that ended without a postseason, there was never a doubt that the Eagles’ bowl would serve as an early Christmas present to everyone.

Well before the season had ended, Georgia Southern fans were making their bowl plans. As soon as the Eagles hit the six-win mark, hotel rooms in Mobile, Montgomery, New Orleans and Orlando began to fly off the shelves. The destination was ultimately Montgomery and Eagle Nation paid its first visit to Alabama’s capital city.

Montgomery could have easily been mistaken for Statesboro over the weekend. Not only did Georgia Southern set a record for Camellia Bowl tickets sold through a school’s athletic department, but most corners of downtown Montgomery were sporting blue and white, both before and after the game.

The party started before most fans even set off for Montgomery. In fact, it was how some fans made the trip that grabbed the early headlines.

When a bus chartered for students by Georgia Southern head coach Chad Lunsford quickly filled up, Eagle alumnus and country music star Cole Swindell stepped in and got another bus in on the action. And then a GSU booster chipped in for even more seats to be made available. By the time all was said and done, it wasn’t just bus seats, but also tickets and t-shirts that had been donated by various sponsors and organizations.

Montgomery got its first taste of the full force of Georgia Southern 24 hours before kickoff. A week’s worth of soggy and cool weather did nothing to dampen Eagle spirits, nor did it keep anyone from taking full part in the festivities.

According to one Twitter account, an Eagle fan made his way to a designated fan meetup following a Friday evening pep rally for the team. In keeping with a competitive nature that seems to bridge the gap between Eagle players and fans, the supporter was about to ask a bartender how the fan participation compared to Appalachian State’s previous appearances in the Camellia Bowl, only to be told that Eagle fans had already topped their Sun Belt rivals in that category.

I awoke on the morning of the game to photographic evidence that proved Saturday would be an even more overwhelming showing of support by Eagle fans. Numerous emails sent to tailgaters stressed that the parking lots wouldn’t open until 9 a.m. On Friday, more emails stated that 8 a.m. was the absolute earliest anyone should show up.

The photo I received showed my friend’s tents and flags already assembled in the tailgating lot with a grill warming up. It was 6 a.m.

By the time the team arrived at the stadium, Eagle Nation was in a fever pitch. Once again arriving in style in some yellow busses borrowed from local schools, the team had to stop short of its designated drop-off. The sea of Eagle fans was too thick to drive through, but the players were happy to walk the rest of the way while doling out high-fives.

The game offered its own excitement that can be diagnosed and debated, but if the purpose of a bowl game is really to celebrate a good season, Georgia Southern fans and players were winners well before Tyler Bass split the uprights for the Eagles’ 23-21 victory.

All through the winter, spring and summer of 2018 the Eagles put in the work that was necessary to turn a 2-10 squad into a 10-3 bowl winner.

During the offseason, the fans were relegated to nervous optimism on the sidelines, but came forward in droves to spur the team on once it became evident that winning football was back in Statesboro.

In the end, both groups had every reason to celebrate – and they did.

From chartered bus trips, to late-night parties, to several clutch plays that will be recounted again and again, Georgia Southern took everything that bowl season had to offer.

And after a week’s worth of Georgia Southern fans and players doing what they do best, it might be Montgomery – and any future bowl destinations for the Eagles – that is left wanting more.

 

Blazing Fire

By: JJ Lanier

GeorgiaSportsEdition.com news services

It’s difficult in any sport to finish a season undefeated. Sure, with a shorter schedule and in certain cases, a large discrepancy in talent, it does take place in football more often than others. Still, that doesn’t take away from a team accomplishing it; there’s a reason why the ‘72 Dolphins are still popping champagne 46 years later.

When it comes to Valdosta State’s national title this past season, I’m not sure what I’m more impressed by, the fact they were able to finish the season undefeated, or the sheer dominance they displayed in etching their names in history.

There are two types of dominating feats. The first is when you see something unexpected, calmly nod your head in approval, and mumble “Huh, that was pretty cool.” The second takes place when the act is so nonviolently vicious that you scrunch your face, look away from the carnage, and yell “DAMN”. Valdosta’s season was the second.

Over the course of the season Valdosta State averaged 52 points and scored less than 47 only once. That was time was when they put up a measly 30 points in the national semifinal game.

Now, you may be saying to yourself “Hey, scoring lots a of points is terrific, but if the Blazers couldn’t stop anyone, all it proves is they’re a smaller version of a Big 12 team.”

Well, their defense allowed an average of only 22 points per game. For all us mathematicians out there, that makes the average margin of victory 30 points for the entire season.

And believe it or not, that margin is actually a little skewed because they won their last two games by 6 and 2 points. Take away those games and it’s even more dominating.

To have an offense put up the type of numbers they did, which in turn increases the number of offensive possessions the opposing team receives, only allowing 22 points a game is pretty incredible.

It’s not like they didn’t play anyone either. In 5 out of the 14 games they played, and three out of their last five, their opponents tasted defeat for the first time.

All of this just intensified the difficulty Valdosta State faced in actually finishing their miraculous season off with a national title.

Sports history is filled with teams that couldn’t finish an undefeated regular season off with a title; the ‘08 New England Patriots and ‘15 Kentucky Wildcats immediately come to mind.

To have a group of 18-22 year old kids stay that focused and be able to perform at that high of a level week in and week may be the most underrated part of their accomplishment.

As the bowl season winds down and an FBS champion is crowned there will be a lot of talk about where that particular team ranks among the greats, especially if it winds up being Alabama or Clemson.

There will be a lot of discussions about which conferences performed more admirably in the bowl games, as well as debates about whether or not to expand the playoffs to eight teams; all worthy topics.

It’s a shame though there won’t be more made of this Valdosta State Blazers team. A team picked in the preseason to finish fifth in their conference, yet steamrolled through an undefeated season on their way to a national championship; their fourth in the last sixteen years.

A team that broke records on a school, conference, and national level. The one team that made me look up and say “Damn!”

Brave Silence

By: TJ Hartnett

GeorgiaSportsEdition.com news services

The MLB Winter Meetings are always an exciting time in the baseball offseason. Each teams’ front office in close proximity and free agents’ representation present too. The chance for trades and signings is high.

This year’s meetings saw some movement, with the likes of Joe Kelly, Charlie Morton, Ian Kinsler, and Andrew McCutchen signing with new teams. Edwin Encarnacion, Ivan Nova, and Carlos Santana being traded (Santana was moved twice).

The Atlanta Braves, however, remained quiet, with their only transaction being one of deduction after the Baltimore Orioles claimed Rio Ruiz off of waivers.

The lack of moves is surprising only in relation to the amount of times Atlanta was mentioned in relation to trades or free agents. It seemed like every day the Braves were name-dropped, be that as a potential trade partner with the Marlins for JT Realmuto or as a destination for a free agent like Michael Brantley.

However, the Meetings ended (Braves General Manager Alex Anthopoulos actually left early to attend a Liberty Media meeting in Denver) and no triggers were pulled on any front.

It’s easy to look at what the Braves have and haven’t done and be worried. The signings of both Josh Donaldson and Brian McCann made for an exciting Monday, but the three things the Braves really needed to address – a front-line starter, bullpen help, and a starting catcher – remain on Atlanta’s to-do list as the new year draws closer.

However, just because the Winter Meetings have ended without those holes being filled, there is no reason to panic. After all, despite a few big moves there is a lot left to do in the offseason for many teams and several free agents. The two big fish that are Bryce Harper and Manny Machado are still swimming around the pool, for example.

JT Realmuto is a still a Marlin, though that is still likely to change before Spring Training. That being said, the news regarding a trade with Atlanta is contradictory: on Saturday, the Braves were reported as frontrunners to land the All-Star catcher, followed by a report just a few hours later that Atlanta was no longer pursuing a trade for him. Believe what you will, but just because the Braves didn’t make a move doesn’t mean that they no longer can.

The same goes for filling a corner outfield spot. While McCutchen could have been a fit, there are other outfielders that might serve Atlanta well.

The biggest issue caused by Cutch’s deal with Philly was actually how much he was paid – $50 million for a 3-year contract. That obviously doesn’t hurt the Braves’ wallet directly, but the former NL MVP is on the downslope of his career. Thus, signing for that average annual value drives up the cost of younger outfielders like Brantley and AJ Pollock.

Unless the Braves want to pony up for those guys, a trade, like the rumored trade for the Tigers’ Nick Castellano, might be the road Anthopoulos could choose to take.

There’s also the possibility of a reunion with Nick Markakis, who will be cheaper than the aforementioned outfielders even after his All-Star campaign in 2018.

While he shouldn’t be expected to repeat that production, he was an integral part of Atlanta’s clubhouse last season, so he would still be welcome there.

The point is, there are still plenty of options, not just in the outfield but on the mound as well. Patrick Corbin has been signed, but Dallas Keuchel remains a free agent; Corey Kluber and Madison Bumgarner have not been traded; relief pitchers can come from nearly anywhere (there’s also Craig Kimbrel, but if his rumored asking price of 6 years, $100 million plus is to be believed, he’s not coming back to Atlanta).

The Winter Meetings may be over, but the Braves’ offseason is far from it.