November 7, 2024

Atlanta Braves Offense Could Join Rarified Air in 2024

Atlanta Braves Offense Could Join Rarified Air in 2024 - Sports Illustrated Atlanta  Braves News, Analysis and More

The Atlanta Braves offense could do something only seen once before in baseball history.

The Atlanta Braves offense was historic in 2023 from a power perspective, launching a record-tying 307 homers and setting a new MLB high-water mark with a team .501 slugging percentage.

But in 2024, they have a chance to do something even better.

Per Baseball Reference’s Stathead database, only one MLB team in history has gotten over 200 home runs and 200 steals in the same season, the 1996 Colorado Rockies. With contributions from current and former Braves coaches Walt Weiss and Eric Young Sr., the 1996 Rockies had four different hitters with 30 or more bombs and six double-digit base stealers. Young led the team with 53 steals, while Andrés Gallaraga had 47 homers for a club that – somehow – finished only 83-79 and in third place in the NL West

Let’s look at what needs to happen for Atlanta to reach that milestone in 2024.

Atlanta feels like they’re going to be set from a power perspective – after hitting 307 bombs last season (and somehow missing out on even more from Ronald Acuña Jr and Matt Olson), Jarred Kelenic is the only new piece in the lineup, replacing the left field platoon of Eddie Rosario and Kevin Pillar.

Even accounting for some basic regression, it feels like a lock for this roster to his more than two hundred homers. 21 players across all of baseball had 250 batted balls with an EV50 of 103.3 mph or more. Of those 21, Atlanta by far leads the pack with six, with Ronald Acuña Jr (106.4) being 2nd in all of baseball and joined in the top ten by Matt Olson (104.8, 6th). Michael Harris II, Austin Riley, Marcell Ozuna, and Sean Murphy are all in the top 25, as is.

No other MLB team currently has more than two such players – Philadelphia is the only team with more than one, with Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber as their duo, although the pairing of DH JD Martinez & 3B Matt Chapman are currently free agents and could bump that number.

(EV50 is the average of the hardest 50% of a hitter’s batted ball events, a newer measure from Statcast designed to illustrate overall power in a hitter’s profile better than just using average exit velocity.)

For context on the lineup’s addition and subtractions, Jarred Kelenic’s 101.5 EV50 from Seattle replaces Eddie Rosario’s 98.6 and Kevin Pillar’s 98.4. (Pillar was short of the minimum 2.1 PAs per team game to qualify for the leaderboards.)

So, does Atlanta have a 200/200 season in the tank?

It seems unlikely, from where we sit in late February. But never say never – Ronald’s said he intends to continue stealing bags from the leadoff spot, eliciting comparisons to Oakland A’s great Rickey Henderson, and there’s an easy path to increased contributions from Harris, Albies, Kelenic, and Wall getting Atlanta closer to 200.

But it feels like a tall task.

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