Took a 100 L's, in The Chop House-The final season of the 2016 Atlanta Braves at Turner Field

How many games will the 2016 Atlanta Braves win?

  • 70 or less

    Votes: 21 87.5%
  • 80 plus wins

    Votes: 1 4.2%
  • 90 plus wins and a wild card

    Votes: 1 4.2%
  • 95 plus wins and a division title

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 100 plus wins and a World Series championship breh!

    Votes: 1 4.2%

  • Total voters
    24

AVXL

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For those of you who don't know by now, this year is the final season of the Braves in Turner Field before the "White Flights" move to Cobb County (and make my daily commute a daily hell :mjcry:)

Anyway, this year's team is projected by many to be the worst in baseball and maybe the worst Braves team in a generation (those 30 and under) and that's coming off last year's 95 loss disaster

But fukk it, still gotta support the local squad, brothers post up :blessed:

@Stone @The ADD @AVXL @1BadBamaFan @Rekkapryde @Sly Cookin @Rebel Soldier @FreshFromATL@We Ready @#1 pick @ATLien @King Karim @jmspro @freddykruegeronapill @Schmoove @We Ready
 

AVXL

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Spring training is well underway, so what better time than to start running through our annual team-by-team previews? We're running these in reverse order of 2015 finish, and now it's the Atlanta Braves' turn.

Previous: Phillies | Reds

Last season, the Braves lost 95 games, which is their worst such mark since 1990. From that 95-loss squad, the Braves have parted ways with a handful of core performers. The rebuilding process is going swimmingly, especially when it comes to young pitching, but in 2016 things aren't going to be pretty, at least at the major-league level …

The lineup

As always, this is merely a best guess at what's a fluid situation for every team ...

1. Ender Inciarte, CF
2. Erick Aybar, SS
3. Nick Markakis, RF
4. Freddie Freeman, 1B
5. Adonis Garcia, 3B
6. A.J. Pierzynski, C
7. Jace Peterson, 2B
8. Michael Bourn, LF

Gone are Andrelton Simmons and Cameron Maybin from a year ago. While Simmons added a great deal of overall value, his bat won't be missed terribly much. Needless to say, though, the drop-off from Simmons to Aybar in the field is substantial. Replacing Maybin in center is Inciarte, and that profiles as a modest upgrade.


NL East preview: Can Mets repeat?

Last season, the Braves ranked last in the NL with a measly 573 runs scored, and for the most part a lack of power was to blame, as Atlanta also ranked last in home runs and slugging percentage. To be sure, a healthy Freddie Freeman should help matters (he played in just 113 games in 2015, mostly because of oblique and wrist injuries), but this figures to remain for the most part a deeply power-starved lineup. In general terms, the Braves could flirt with replacement-level production from second base, third base, and left field. That's a lot of dead weight in the lineup, and that's why, even with a healthy Freeman and a full dose of Inciarte (and assuming Markakis runs a strong OBP once again), this team will struggle to get to 600 runs on the season.


USATSI_9151379-freeman.jpg

A healthy Freddie Freeman could help the Braves be somewhat less awful in 2016. (USATSI)



The rotation

1. Julio Teheran
2. Matt Wisler
3. Manny Banuelos
4. Bud Norris
5. Williams Perez

The Braves parted with Alex Wood at the 2015 non-waiver deadline, and of course they dealt away Shelby Miller in a brilliant deal with the Diamondbacks this past offseason (a deal that netted them Dansby Swanson and Inciarte, among others). So they're no more.

As for the current arrangement, Teheran's platoon issues will probably prevent him from ever being a genuine ace, but he should enjoy a bit of a bounceback when it comes to preventing home runs and stranding runners. He's at best a mid-rotation type, though. Elsewhere, you're looking at a string of guys who probably can best an ERA in the mid-4.00s in 2016. Wisler, Banuelos, and Perez are all young enough to have some future value to the organization. Of them, Wisler has the best chance to stick as a member of the rotation long-term, as he profiles as useful No. 3 or No. 4 sort. Banuelos' health concerns may push him into a relief role, and Perez's has a terrific sinker but perhaps not the secondary offerings to make it as a starter. Don't expect great things from this unit in 2016, but keep an eye on Wisler's development.

Should things fall apart, Mike Foltynewicz is there to provide depth, as are veteran retreads Jhoulys Chacin, Kyle Kendrick, and Chris Volstad. Uninspiring names, those. Tyrell Jenkinsshould make his way to Atlanta at some point in 2016, and thus will begin a fairly stead influx of high-ceiling arms. Also on the way are the likes of John Gant, Sean Newcomb, Aaron Blair, Kolby Allard, and Touki Toussaint. We'll probably also see Gant and Blair at some point in the season to come.

In any event, you can expect the Braves to have one of the NL's worst rotations in 2016, but this organization right now is all about building future value. There's plenty of that in place.

The bullpen

Yes, closer Jason Grilli is 39, but skills retention is more important than age with pitchers, so there's every reason to expect he'll continue to be effective in 2016, barring injury. Arodys Vizcaino will be effective from the right side, and Chris Withrow can miss bats. Shae Simmons could crack the roster after coming back from Tommy John surgery, and he profiles as useful. Don't be surprised if the Braves start the season relying on Jim Johnsonand veteran NRIs like Alex Torres, Alexi Ogando, and David Carpenter. Allowing those guys to establish some near-term value in advance of the trade deadline may help the Braves be active on that front. After Aug. 1., the Braves may transition to a younger bullpen and start evaluating for the future.

The outlook

Yes, the Braves are going to be a bad team in 2016. The SportsLine projection system tabs them for an MLB-worst record of 63-99, and that's a reasonable forecast. Again, though, the Braves, in their final season in Turner Field before moving to suburban Cobb County, have no present designs on contention. It's all about 2018 and beyond (they'd probably say 2017, but let's be realistic about things).

Since they added Swanson, the top overall pick of 2015, via trade and will pick No. 3 overall (and No. 40) in June of this year, those are more potential impact talents added to a system that's already brimming with upside. It's entirely possible they wind up with the top overall pick in 2017, as well. This is already perhaps the strongest farm system in baseball, and they've still got a couple of bullets left to fire. Another thing to watch in 2016 as the losses mount is whether the Braves look to trade Inciarte or even Markakis in exchange for more future value. Meantime, they'll battle with the Phillies for deep last place in the NL East.
 

AVXL

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There's literally nothing to be excited about with this team..

Dansby Swanson :ld:

GOAT farm system :blessed:

Even tho I hate how they're leaving Turner Field (it's only been 20 years), that new stadium which I get to see almost daily is gonna be a work of art, they already got apartments built up over there...The Battery I think it's called, so there's some things, but yea this team will be AWFUL this year
 

Motife43

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There's literally nothing to be excited about with this team..

Nah breh. This team is 1000% a lot more to be excited about than last year. We didn't have shyt but past their prime or just plain washed castoffs (EY Jr, Trevor Cahill, etc). Our farm system is top 5 and we actually have major league talent that'll last more than one season with the team. After that Arizona trade, I'm confident in Coppy's ability to turn this franchise back into a winner. There's meaning behind all those deals that hurt so much (Kimbrel, Simmons, Heyward). Yall don't realize we fleeced St Louis, hell and Arizona too (twice including the Gosselin for Touki deal) just off that Heyward for Miller deal

An ATL Coli Meetup at a Braves game is more realistic than anything....what yall tryna do?

I actually met up with the breh @NY's #1 Draft Pick last season at a Marlins game
 
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