The Braves have claimed right-hander Amos Willingham off waivers from the Nationals, per a team announcement. Righty Allan Winans was designated for assignment in a corresponding move. Washington had designated Willingham for assignment last week.
Willingham, 26, is a Georgia native and Georgia Tech product who’s pitched in the majors in each of the past two seasons with the Nats. He’s totaled only 25 1/3 innings and been torched for a 7.11 ERA in that tiny sample, but the 6’4″, 223-pound righty has enjoyed plenty of success in the upper minors. Willingham was unscored upon in the brief 10 2/3 innings he spent at the Double-A level and carries a combined 3.47 ERA in parts of two Triple-A seasons (93 1/3 innings). He’s punched out a solid 23.3% of his Triple-A opponents — albeit against a more problematic 10.8% walk rate.
The claim of Willingham adds a power arm to the Braves’ depth chart — one who still has a minor league option year remaining. Willingham has averaged 95.9 mph on his heater in the majors and ran it up to 98 mph in his lone big league outing this past season. Though his strikeout rate in Triple-A was roughly in line with the major league average, his 13.1% swinging-strike rate against minor league opponents was well north of MLB’s 11.1% average. He pairs that heater with a 90 mph cutter and 85 mph slider.
Winans, 29, has pitched in the majors in each of the past two seasons as well. He’s similar to Willingham — beyond their identical ALW initials — in that both have struggled in the big leagues but pitched well in Triple-A. Winans has an ugly 7.20 earned run average with a 20.9% strikeout rate and 6.6% walk rate in the majors. In parts of three Triple-A campaigns, however, he touts a 3.26 ERA, 21.8% strikeout rate and 6.9% walk rate. That’s come in a sample of 256 innings, as Winans has operated primarily as a starting pitcher. Both pitchers also have one minor league option remaining.
The similarities broadly stop there. Winans sits just 90-91 with his four-seamer and 89-90 with his sinker. He pairs those modest fastballs with an upper-70s slider and a changeup that sits 82-83 mph. He’s generally gotten by in the minors with sub-par velocity thanks to strong command and a knack for inducing weak contact. Big league hitters haven’t made a lot of hard contact on average, but when they do square Winans up, the results haven’t been pretty. He’s yielded a 10% barrel rate and been tagged for an average of 1.80 home runs per nine innings pitched.
The Braves will have five days to look for a potential trade partner for Winans. At that point, they’d have to place him on outright waivers, which take an additional 48 hours to process.
miggywrld
The Louisiana Law gonna getcha Amos! It ain’t legal huntin’ alligator down in the swamp boi!
Skyrider123
Aww man! I was looking forward to seeing Allan Winans get lit up again in a spot start for the Braves this season. There’s always Bryce Elder!
AL B DAMNED
AA Fishing in the Waiver Pool Again!
It takes a while for GMs to figure out that
Free Agents ARE NOT FREE! Only DFAs are FREE!
ATTN, LIBERTY MEDIA..OPEN THE WALLET!!!!
NYCityRiddler
One AW for another, funny, I suddenly have an irresistible urge for some Root Beer. Ahahahaha!
inkstainedscribe
Good swap of roster spots. Winans looked like a BP pitcher out there.
Braves20
Our guy does more dumpster diving while our rival Mets sign AJ Minter. Disheartening.
SoCalBrave
With Winans gone, who are we now gonna trade for Pablo Lopez, Taylor Ward, Bo Bichette, and all the other players we want?
braveshomer
hahaha good one! lol