Agent Casey Close Denies Report He Withheld Braves' Last Offer from Freddie Freeman
Jun 30, 2022
DENVER, COLORADO - JUNE 29: Freddie Freeman #5 of the Los Angeles Dodgers circles the bases after hitting a solo home run against the Colorado Rockies in the first inning at Coors Field on June 29, 2022 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)
On Wednesday, Doug Gottlieb of Fox Sports reported that Freddie Freeman fired his agent, Casey Close, after Close didn't tell Freeman that the Atlanta Braves made him a final offer in free agency this past winter before Freeman signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
"There is no truth whatsoever to what Doug Gottlieb recklessly tweeted, and I would testify to that under oath," he told Sports Illustrated'sTom Verducci in a statement. "We are currently evaluating all legal options in this matter."
Close further addressed the matter to ESPN on Thursday:
Agent Casey Close is accusing the Atlanta Braves of creating a "false narrative" around Freddie Freeman's departure from the organization. Close also said that he communicated all offers from the Braves to Freeman.
On Tuesday, ESPN's Buster Olney reported that Freeman was cutting ties with Excel Sports Management, the agency that employs Close.
Sources: Freddie Freeman, who has told friends he's angry with how his free-agent negotiations played out, is changing representation, away from Excel. He is currently listed as being self-represented.
Freeman, however, didn't go so far as to say that he had cut ties with Excel or Close completely in the following statement: "Last weekend in Atlanta was a very emotional time for me and my family. I am working through some issues with my longtime agents at Excel. My representation remains a fluid situation and I will update if needed."
Freeman was also asked about Gottlieb's report on Wednesday and declined to comment.
Per Verducci, the Braves made Freeman a six-year, $140 million offer in March but "when talks stalemated, Atlanta pivoted to trade for A's first baseman Matt Olson."
Atlanta then signed Olson to an eight-year, $168 million extension. Freeman, meanwhile, would go on to sign a six-year, $162 million deal days later, with $57 million deferred.
Up until this season, Freeman had spent his entire career with the Braves (2010-21). The 32-year-old was a five-time All-Star and the 2020 National League MVP, and he helped lead the Braves to a title in 2021.
His return to Atlanta for the first time over the weekend was an emotional one:
"Last time I was on this field, there was a big stage in the middle of this field, because we accomplished something so special," Freeman said after receiving his World Series ring. "From the bottom of my heart, and my family's heart, we thank you for the support you've shown my family and I for the last 12 years."
Whatever the details of Freeman's departure from Atlanta, it certainly seems as though he wanted to remain with the organization. Based on some of the reporting regarding the situation, it would appear he's placing some of that blame on his representation, though the particulars of how those negotiations fell apart remain unclear.
Braves' Ronald Acuna Jr.'s Foot Injury Not Expected to Be Serious After Leaving Game
Jun 26, 2022
ATLANTA, GA MAY 24: Atlanta right fielder Ronald Acuna Jr. (13) reacts after getting a base hit during the MLB game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Atlanta Braves on May 24th, 2022 at Truist Park in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by Rich von Biberstein/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Atlanta Braves superstar outfielder Ronald Acuna Jr. exited Saturday's 5-3 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers with left-foot soreness and will be further evaluated, manager Brian Snitker said, according to The Athletic's David O'Brien.
Snitker does not believe the injury is serious, though it's unclear if he will play Sunday's game.
Acuna fouled a ball off his foot in the third inning of Saturday's game and wasn't removed until the eighth inning. Snitker said he wanted to be cautious with the ailment, removing Acuna before the ninth inning.
Acuna, 24, tore his ACL in July 2021 and cut short what had been shaping up to be a fantastic season (.283 with 24 homers and 52 RBI in 82 games).
Even without him, however, the Braves still went on to win their first World Series title since 1995.
This season, Acuna dealt with a Grade 1 quad strain in May and missed five games that month with right groin tightness. The Braves generally haven't overworked Acuna this season as he works back from last season's ACL tear.
"It really was a long, difficult process," Acuna told reporters in late April when he returned from that injury. "I'm just really excited to be back."
When on the field, he's been excellent yet again, hitting .282 with seven homers and 18 RBI in 42 games.
"What he can do offensively, defensively, on the bases, he's a game-changer," third baseman Austin Riley told reporters in April regarding Acuna. "To have him back in the lineup is huge."
That makes any injury to the young star a major concern. While he's out of action, look for Guillermo Heredia to handle right-field duties.
We all understand baseball is a streaky game. The season is long, data immense and trends are fun to follow, especially when they help construct narratives....
Buying or Selling the Streaking Braves to Overtake the Mets for NL East Crown
Jun 17, 2022
Atlanta Braves William Contreras (24) reacts with Ronald Acuna Jr. after his game winning single in the ninth inning of a baseball game against the Philadelphia Phillies, Tuesday, May 24, 2022, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Todd Kirkland)
It's hot in Atlanta, where temperatures are breaking records and the reigning World Series champions just can't lose.
After failing to launch with a 23-27 record in April and May, Atlanta's title defense has blasted all the way off in June. Brian Snitker's club has won 14 straight to trim its deficit to the New York Mets in the National League East from 10.5 games to 4.5 games.
We'd like to thank Atlanta for making good on our prediction that it would turn things around eventually, but now it's time for a new "buy or sell" question: Will Atlanta now go on to leapfrog the Mets and capture a fifth straight division title?
You can find the short answer to this question by skipping down to the section marked "Verdict." For those who prefer the long answer, just keep reading.
The Case for Buy
WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 14: Dansby Swanson #7 of the Atlanta Braves celebrates with teammates after a 10-4 victory against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on June 14, 2022 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Greg Fiume/Getty Images)
Let's start with a basic assumption that Atlanta always was supposed to be good in 2022.
Not exactly a reach, to be sure. The club didn't Marlins it after winning its first World Series since 1995, after all. It notably replaced 2020 NL MVP Freddie Freeman with All-Star Matt Olson at first base and boosted its payroll by nearly $50 million over 2021.
At the outset, FanGraphs gave Atlanta a 23 percent chance of winning the division and a 68 percent chance of making the playoffs in any capacity. Though neither figure denoted them as the NL's best team, the Braves were clearly going to be...well, there's that word again: "good."
This wasn't the case right away, and even Ronald Acuna Jr.'s return from a torn ACL on April 28 didn't change much. Atlanta went just 15-16 in 31 games after he came off the injured list.
As for what's changed since then, Acuna is as good a place as any to start.
The 24-year-old has had a big hand in the winning streak, putting up a .918 OPS and going yard four times. He even single-handedly erased an early deficit on June 7 against the Oakland Athletics, homering twice to make it 2-2 en route to an eventual 3-2 win.
Yet it's not just Acuna who's been carrying the load offensively for Atlanta in June. In fact, he's been one of the team's colder hitters.
They've sent 10 different players to the plate at least 30 times this month, and only two of them bear a wRC+ below the leaguewide average of 106:
The sustainability of the performances at the high end is obviously suspect, but there's no denying the talent at play here.
A healthy Acuna is one of the best players in baseball. Austin Riley is a superstar in the making at third base. Adam Duvall, Travis d'Arnaud and Dansby Swanson have been known to get hot. And while we don't really know what William Contreras and Michael Harris II are just yet, the former used to be one of Atlanta's top prospects and the latter is the best prospect the team has right now.
Besides, the overall effect passes the smell test. Atlanta's offensive dominance in June is most evident in its league-leading totals for home runs (35) and barrels (58). This is essentially a return to normalcy after Atlanta finished last season ranked third in the former and fourth in the latter.
Lest anyone think it's all about the bats, right-hander Spencer Strider wasn't wrong when he said this after he paced Atlanta to its 14th straight win Wednesday: "Everything seems to be clicking right now. Top to bottom."
One part of the "everything" is a pitching staff that's really turned things around in June, specifically in the arts of racking up strikeouts and avoiding walks:
A big key here is the swinging strike. Atlanta pitchers have gotten those at a 14.1 percent clip this month, easily topping the New York Yankees' 13.0 percent for the best in MLB. Strider himself has been a major contributor. Or, more accurately, his fastball has been:
Strider has used his heater to dominate with a 1.76 ERA in three starts this month, and Kyle Wright and Max Fried haven't been far off his pace. The three hurlers have a 2.13 ERA in nine starts and are therefore showing they can be every bit as good as the trio that Fried formed with Ian Anderson and Charlie Morton last year.
As for the bullpen, well, it's now the "Arm Barn" instead of the "Night Shift." Otherwise, there's no real difference between what the team got from its top relievers last October and what it's getting from them now. Snitker has called on newcomers Kenley Jansen and Jesse Chavez, returnee Darren O'Day and holdovers A.J. Minter, Will Smith and Dylan Lee 33 times in June, and they've produced a 1.06 ERA over 34 innings.
Defense was a quality that Atlanta found late in 2021, with its transformation happening right around when it started shifting more. The gloves are once again coming on strong in June, wherein Atlanta ranks fourth with five outs above average. Shifts are once again a factor, as the infield is shifting about three percentage points more often in June than it did through May.
It goesโor should goโwithout saying that the Braves are not going to continue to win every game they play. But nobody can say they've just been scraping by throughout the streak, nor can anyone say they've been playing above their heads.
What they've been doing is becoming what they have been and were supposed to be again: a leading contender for the NL East crown.
The Case for Sell
ATLANTA, GA - JUNE 10: Ozzie Albies (1) of the Atlanta Braves reacts to a called strike during the Friday evening MLB game between the Atlanta Braves and the Pittsburgh Pirates on June 10, 2022 at Truist Park in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by David J. Griffin/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Then again, it's easy to win games when you're playing exclusively against teams that are very good at losing them.
Atlanta's 14 wins have come against the Arizona Diamondbacks, Colorado Rockies, Oakland Athletics, Pittsburgh Pirates and Washington Nationals. Their combined winning percentage is .394.
Atlanta isn't yet done with said soft spot. Up next are the Chicago Cubs, who are 23-39 overall and mired in a nine-game losing streak. It thus won't be a major surprise if Atlanta's winning streak reaches 17 by the end of the weekend.
After that, though, things get tough. Atlanta will host the San Francisco Giants and Los Angeles Dodgers at Truist Park for seven games and will then head to Philadelphia to take on the similarly red-hot Phillies. And so it will go for the rest of their season, for which FanGraphs puts their remaining opponents' projected winning percentage at .509.
Whereas Atlanta is just 12-14 in games against winning teams, the Mets have hardened themselves with a 25-15 record in such games. Atlanta still has to play them 15 times.
Plus, the Mets are also in the middle of a success story. They're 17-9 since May 18, a date which coincided with Max Scherzer's oblique strain and the arrival of an especially difficult slice of the club's schedule. Those things could have broken the Mets. They have not.
And now, their schedule is set to get a little easier and their roster stands to get a whole lot stronger. In the coming weeks, both Scherzer and fellow multi-time Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom are due to return:
.@Ken_Rosenthal on deGrom & Scherzer's return from the IL:
"For deGrom we are looking at July. For Scherzer, best case scenario probably late June. But I suspect probably longer than that." pic.twitter.com/2pPQeuRG7s
For Atlanta, the news on the injury front isn't as positive. Even if he hadn't been a particularly hot hitter during the winning streak, it still hurts quite a bit to lose Ozzie Albies for the next few months with a broken foot. That's a two-time All-Star and Silver Slugger they'll be missing.
What's more, Atlanta also has some slumping players worthy of concern.
Though he's still a key cog in the lineup, the slump (i.e., .694 OPS) that Olson has been in since April 24 serves as a reminder that slugging types aren't always consistent. Nor are slugging lineups, as Atlanta knew all too well as it put up a middling 97 wRC+ through May.
On the mound, Anderson and Morton have a combined 5.23 ERA for the season and an even uglier 6.33 ERA in June. Both of their trademark pitches (the changeup for Anderson and the curveball for Morton) have actually done more harm than good.
It's easy to ignore red flags like these during a 14-game winning streak, but that doesn't mean they aren't there. And in time, they could doom Atlanta.
The Verdict
NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 14: Pete Alonso #20 of the New York Mets is congratulated by Francisco Lindor #12 after scoring on a sacrifice fly Eduardo Escobar #10 against the Milwaukee Brewers during the first inning of a game at Citi Field on June 14, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Rich Schultz/Getty Images)
Oof...sell?
Yeah, sell.
Look, at the heart of this discussion is a simple question: Can Atlanta not only be as good as the Mets down the stretch, but better?
As good, maybe. But to believe Atlanta will be better than the Mets requires believing that the former has only just begun the peak of its season and that the latter is already finished with its own. The Mets have been lucky enough for this door to be open a crack, but it isn't falling off the hinges.
The Mets have an exceptionally strong backbone in an offense that's more multifaceted than Atlanta's. Pete Alonso supplies the power, while everyone else more so works on the team's MLB-best .335 on-base percentage and likewise MLB-high .287 average with runners in scoring position. Synergy like that simply plays.
By far the biggest area of concern in Queens is the volatility of the Mets pitching staff. The looming returns of Scherzer and deGrom only cut against this concern so much, as both are old and well-traveled enough to remain high-risk for injury. Tylor Megill is certainly not old and well-traveled, but he's already been on the injured list with biceps tendinitis and may be due for another IL stint after exiting his Thursday assignment with shoulder discomfort.
Yet the Mets' saving grace may reside in their 14th-ranked farm system. Not in the sense that they have a host of talented, MLB-ready arms down there, but rather in that its collective talent could be useful on the trade market. In, say, deals for pitchers of interest such as Frankie Montas and Tyler Mahle.
It was, of course, at last year's trade deadline that Atlanta's World Series run began in earnest. But it won't be so easy to pull off similar scores for guys like Jorge Soler, Eddie Rosario and Joc Pederson. The budget seems tighter, and there won't be much in the farm system once Harris loses his prospect eligibility. As it is, it's only the 25th-best in MLB.
But even if all this makes the Mets out to be the better horse in our eyes, it's hard to imagine this race ultimately being won by any more than a nose. If it's Atlanta's nose that crosses first, told-ya-sos will be in order.
With a massive winning streak to begin the month of June, the Atlanta Braves have gone from one of the most disappointing teams in baseball to right in the...
LeBron James on Ronald Acuna Jr.'s Tributes to Lakers Star: 'Man I Love This Kid!'
Jun 11, 2022
ATLANTA, GA - JUNE 08: Ronald Acuna Jr. #13 of the Atlanta Braves reacts as his necklace is broken after a hit during the first inning against the Oakland Athletics at Truist Park on June 8, 2022 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/Getty Images)
Atlanta Braves center fielder Ronald Acuna Jr.'s home run celebrations have caught the attention of LeBron James.
The Los Angeles Lakers star responded enthusiastically to Acuna's baby-powder celebration in Atlanta's dugout following his leadoff homer in Saturday's game against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Ayyeeee!! ๐๐๐. Man I love this kid! ๐จ๐จ๐จ๐จ๐จ๐จ๐จ๐จ๐๐พ๐๐พ๐ https://t.co/byyr6X1EZD
This marks the second time in less than a week that Acuna has paid homage to one of James' signature moments. He used the four-time NBA MVP's silencer celebration after hitting a homer in a June 5 game against the Colorado Rockies.
Ronald Acuรฑa Jr. hits the LBJ silencer after matching his career high with a 441-foot ROCKET ๐ @BRWalkoff
Acuna previously received a stamp of approval from James to use the silencer when he first pulled it out on May 7.
It's not a surprise to see Acuna, who was six years old during James' rookie season in 2003-04, is influenced by the NBA icon.
It's also apparent that Acuna is just a big basketball fan. He used Trae Young's "Ice Trae" celebration two days after breaking out the silencer.
Acuna has established himself as one of the best and most exciting players in Major League Baseball. The 24-year-old was the 2018 NL Rookie of the Year and is a two-time All-Star.
A torn ACL suffered in July 2021 kept Acuna out of action for Atlanta's run to the World Series last season.
Since making his season debut on April 28, Acuna hasn't shown any rust. He entered Saturday hitting .319/.412/.522 with five homers and 11 stolen bases in 30 games.
The Atlanta Braves have spent the first two months of the 2022 season hovering around the .500 mark, but they're rolling to start June and are poised to be a...
It has not been a smooth start to the 2022 season for the World Series champion Atlanta Braves , as they continue to hover just below the .500 mark in the shadow of an upstart New York Mets in the NL East...
The Atlanta Braves have not looked much like defending World Series champions this year, but as they continue to hover around the .500 mark, they are still more than capable of getting hot and playing their way into the NL East picture...
The Atlanta Braves have been slow out of the gates in their quest to defend their World Series title, but there's too much talent on their roster to count them out of contention just yet as they continue to hover around the ...