ESPN forecasts Atlanta will only have five All-Star selections in 2024…..

ESPN forecasts Atlanta will only have five All-Star selections in 2024

According to ESPN, the Atlanta Braves will have three starters among their five selections

As the reporting date for pitchers and catchers is rapidly approaching, baseball’s attention is turning towards the 2024 season and ESPN thinks the Atlanta Braves will underperform last season in one specific aspect.

In 2023, the Atlanta Braves dominated the All-Star Game, with eight selections. Ronald Acuña Jr led all of baseball in votes, while the Braves had three starters for the “Midsummer Classic” in Acuña, shortstop Orlando Arcia, and catcher Sean Murphy.

Pitchers Spencer Strider and Bryce Elder, first baseman Matt Olson, second baseman Ozzie Albies, and third baseman Austin Riley all made the team as reserves.

But the 2024 All-Star team won’t be nearly as full of Braves, if ESPN’s correct. Senior Writer David Schoenfield, writing an admittedly “way-too-early” preview of the game, has only five Braves making this year’s game, being held in Globe Life Field in Arlington, TX.

Here’s who he had making the game…and maybe more importantly, who he didn’t:

This one isn’t hard. If Ronald produces anything like last season, he’s an absolute shoe-in for the All Star Game.

Joining Ronald as a starter is Corbin Carroll of the Arizona Diamondbacks and Fernando Tatis Jr of the San Diego Padres.

Riley made last year’s team as a backup to Nolan Arenado of the St. Louis Cardinals. But Arenado’s coming off of a relatively down year, where the 32 year-old batted .266 with the second-highest strikeout rate (16.5%) of his career.

That opens the door for Riley, who just capped his third-straight season of finishing in the top seven of MVP voting with a .281/.345/.516 statline and 37 homers.

Manny Machado of the San Diego Padres is the projected backup to Riley in this exercise.

Last year’s strikeout leader for all of baseball was an alternate last season and opted out of pitching in the game, but this year he’s projected to be the starter.

At the All-Star Break last season, Strider was 11-2 with a 3.44 ERA and 166 strikeouts in his first 18 starts, a strikeout number that led all of baseball.

Money Mike makes his first All-Star Game in this exercise, slotting in with Lars Nootbaar of the St. Louis Cardinals and Nolan Jones of the Colorado Rockies on the “second-team”.

Harris started slow last season, missing time with a back injury and a hyperextended knee, but rebounded to bat .328/.354/.539 from June 3rd through the end of the season. If he starts off that hot, Harris is a lock to make his first All-Star Game.

First base is a loaded position in the National League, and it’s even deeper with the addition of Bryce Harper of the Philadelphia Phillies to the mix.

Harper’s the starter in this hypothetical exercise, with Olson slotting behind both him and Freddie Freeman of the Los Angeles Dodgers.

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