The Red Sox are paying a ridiculous amount of money for Chris Sale to play for the Braves

The Red Sox are paying a ridiculous amount of money for Chris Sale to play for the Braves

The Boston Red Sox certainly sweetened the pot for the Atlanta Braves to take Chris Sale off their hands.

Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic shared some interesting details this week about the big trade that just sent Sale from Boston to Atlanta. Rosenthal reveals that the Braves will pay Sale a mere $500K of the $27.5M he is owed in salary next season.

The Red Sox, meanwhile, will be footing the bill for $17M (with the other $10M deferred until 2039). Rosenthal describes the deal as a “financial coup” for the Braves.

For Boston, though they still have to pay Sale most of what he is owed, they are effectively slashing $10M in payroll (helping them stay under the competitive balance tax). They also get a talented young infielder in Vaughn Grissom for their troubles.

For Atlanta, a team essentially strapped out on cash next season, they receive a quality middle-of-the-rotation starter for mere pennies (albeit one with significant injury risk).

Sale, a seven-time All-Star, will turn 35 in March and has pitched just 151 total innings since 2019 due to various ailments (including Tommy John surgery in 2020 and a stress reaction in his shoulder in 2023).

But at the price the Braves are getting him for, it should be a risk well worth taking (especially since Sale has a $20M club option for 2025 which the Braves can decline if it does not work out).

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Atlanta Braves: Finding the Perfect Right-handed Bench Bat

If there is one significant move left to be made this offseason for the Atlanta Braves, it’s likely finding a right-handed bench bat who can play in the outfield.

If there is one significant move left to be made this offseason for the Atlanta Braves, it’s likely finding a right-handed bench bat who can play in the outfield.

And “significant” doesn’t necessarily mean “expensive”. Last year the Atlanta Braves signed Kevin Pillar to a minor league deal in January and he served as the primary right-handed bench bat all season. Depending on whether he decides to hang it up or not, Pillar could be a viable option to serve the same role in 2024.

While the hope is Jarred Kelenic will become the everyday left fielder, that’s not a guarantee. When the Seattle Mariners were in a postseason race the last week of 2023, they consistently sat Kelenic against lefty starters.

The Braves will at the very least need someone on the bench who can handle left-handed pitching in case Kelenic’s struggles against southpaws continue (it was better at the beginning of 2023 but fell off in the second half).

As Lindsay pointed out here, the Braves could be up against their luxury tax budget of $277M after the trade for Sale — if they don’t want to go over that third threshold.

We’re talking about finding someone for less than $5 million, or even on a split contract.

Former Braves trade acquisition Robbie Grossman would be nice with his 158 wRC+ against lefties last year, but he’s likely too expensive. Same for Randal Grichuk as he would be another solid option.

Michael A Taylor would be very intriguing because of his ability to not only hit lefties but also play good center-field defense in case something happened to Michael Harris II. You can say the same for Harrison Bader as well.

But even those two might be out of the Braves price range.

A lot of Braves fans keep mentioning Adam Duvall as an option, but some may be surprised to know he has a wRC+ of 87 against lefties over the past three seasons.

Other free agents who make sense but might be too expensive include A.J. Pollock, Kiké Hernández, Whit Merrifield, and Tommy Pham.

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