TODAY: The Braves officially announced Fried’s activation and optioned lefty Dylan Lee to Triple-A to make room on the active roster. Lee, 30, has a 2.00 ERA in 35 appearances with the Braves this year but is the only player with options remaining in Atlanta’s bullpen after the club acquired right-hander Luke Jackson from the Giants ahead of the trade deadline last week.
AUGUST 3: The Braves are planning to activate left-hander Max Fried from the 15-day injured list in order to start the club’s game against the Marlins tomorrow afternoon, as manager Brian Snitker told reporters (including Gabriel Burns of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution). The southpaw has been on the shelf since late last month due to forearm neuritis. Atlanta will need to make room for Fried on the active roster prior to the start of tomorrow’s game.
Fried, 30, had an uncertain timetable for return when he was first placed on the shelf but fortunately will enjoy a near-minimum stay on the IL when all is said and done. It’s surely a relief for Braves fans that Fried was able to return so quickly given the club’s recent struggles; the club is just 14-13 since July 1 and 7-7 since the All Star break. Other clubs in the NL Wild Card race have caught up to the Braves while they’ve been spinning their wheels, as the Diamondbacks are currently just 1.5 games back of Atlanta for the top Wild Card spot, while the Mets and Padres are both tied for the third and final spot just half a game behind Arizona.
With so much crowding in the Wild Card picture, the Braves must be eager to welcome back Fried, who has been one of the league’s steadiest pitchers ever since breaking out during the shortened 2020 season. Since the start of that year, Fried has posted a dominant 2.73 ERA and 3.12 FIP in 101 starts despite a relatively pedestrian 23.3% strikeout rate. It’s been more of the same for the lefty this year as he’s posted a 3.08 ERA and 3.55 FIP in 18 starts for the Braves this year even after a brutal start to the season where he allowed 15 runs (14 earned) in his first 16 1/3 frames this year. He’s been nothing short of dominant since then, however, helping to form a three-headed monster at the front of Atlanta’s rotation alongside Chris Sale and Reynaldo Lopez that has helped the club overcome its lackluster performance on offense.
In welcoming Fried back to the rotation, the Braves figure to buy themselves a little bit more time in figuring out how to deal with Lopez’s own injury woes. The righty left his most recent start for the club on Sunday after just three innings due to forearm tightness. While an MRI ultimately revealed no structural damage, Lopez has nonetheless been day-to-day ever since. MLB.com’s Mark Bowman relayed earlier today that the right-hander still has yet to throw a bullpen since leaving his start at the beginning of the week, though he added that it “seems like” the club believes he could return to the mound within the next week. That would seemingly make it unlikely that Fried is set to replace Lopez in the rotation, as an IL stint can only be backdated a maximum of three days, meaning a trip to the 15-day IL for Lopez would still keep him out of action for nearly two weeks after he’s removed from the active roster.
With rookie Spencer Schwellenbach having generally impressed with a 4.03 ERA and 3.46 FIP through 11 starts, it seems possible that righty Grant Holmes could be the odd man out in the rotation mix upon Fried’s return. A former first-round pick by the Dodgers back in 2014, Holmes made his big league debut with Atlanta back in June and has pitched well for the club to this point with a 2.54 ERA and 2.22 FIP in 28 1/3 frames. Fried’s return doesn’t necessarily mean the end of Holmes’s time on the roster, however. With Lopez out of commission for the time being, the club could certainly benefit from moving Holmes back into his previous role as a multi-inning reliever or perhaps even keeping him available as a spot starter in the event that Lopez does wind up requiring a trip to the injured list.