Braves potential outfield trade targets
Heading into the 2023-2024 offseason, there are three areas on the Braves roster that must be upgraded in some fashion — the rotation, the bullpen, and left field.
Pitching will be the primary focus. The Braves need to add at least one arm to the rotation, multiple if Charlie Morton decides to retire, and several pieces to the bullpen. But left field also cannot be ignored. Kevin Pillar is a free agent and Eddie Rosario has a $9 million option. It’s very possible both of them will not return next year, but Anthopoulos needs to find a better right-handed platoon option at the very least.
There are plenty of options that will test free agency; however, there could be even more trade targets available for the Braves.
Braves Outfield Trade Targets
Anthony Santander
The Orioles had their coming out party this season, locking up the #1 seed in the AL after winning over 100 games, and Santander was a big part of that. He mashed 28 homers with a .797 OPS, accumulating 3.0 WAR. However, he’s going into his final year of arbitration and is projected to make nearly $13 million. That would make him the highest-paid player on the Orioles roster. Baltimore is always trying to shed salary and trading Santander would clear out a logjam they have in the outfield while netting them a decent prospect in return. He’s a very realistic and attainable trade target for the Braves.
Tyler O’Niell
O’Niell looked as if he was going to be one of the league’s premier outfielders in 2021, hitting 34 home runs with a .912 OPS over 138 games while winning a Gold Glove. However, injuries have limited him to just 168 games over the last two seasons and affected his production, as he’s only hit 23 homers with a .707 OPS in that stretch. The Cardinals have a crowded outfield, making O’Niell expendable as he enters his final year of arbitration.
Max Kepler
Kepler has a $10 million club option that the Twins will surely pick up this offseason, but that doesn’t mean he will play his home games in Minnesota. The Twins have some young players ready to step into full-time roles in the outfield, and Kepler carries some trade value coming off one of the best seasons of his career, where he hit 24 homers with an .816 OPS in 130 games.
Dylan Carlson
Another Cardinals player on this list. Carlson hit 18 homers with a .780 OPS on his way to a third place finish in the NL Rookie of the Year race. But like O’Niell, he’s really struggled over the last two seasons. In a crowded outfield, the Cardinals could look to deal him, and the Braves might want to take a flier on a 25-year-old that has shown he can perform at the major-league level in the past.
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