Atlanta Braves rumors: looking at a trade for Joc Pederson

LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 05: Joc Pederson #31 of the Los Angeles Dodgers tags back former teammate Charlie Culberson #16 of the Atlanta Braves after his double during the first inning in Game Two of the National League Division Series at Dodger Stadium on October 5, 2018 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)
LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 05: Joc Pederson #31 of the Los Angeles Dodgers tags back former teammate Charlie Culberson #16 of the Atlanta Braves after his double during the first inning in Game Two of the National League Division Series at Dodger Stadium on October 5, 2018 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images) /
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Atlanta Braves
PHOENIX, AZ – SEPTEMBER 26: A.J. Pollock #11 of the Arizona Diamondbacks is congratulated by Paul Goldschmidt #44 after hitting a three-run home run during the fifth inning of the MLB game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Chase Field on September 26, 2018 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Jennifer Stewart/Getty Images) /

Here’s that Rumor bit

Regardless of the reason, here’s the actual story – as told by Ken Rosenthal in TheAthletic (subscription required):

"* [A.J.] Pollock, as a right-handed hitter, would be a better fit for the Dodgers’ predominantly left-handed lineup — though Harper, a left-handed hitter, actually has better career numbers than Pollock against lefties. Yasiel Puig and Matt Kemp, traded to the Reds last month, both bat right-handed. Pollock hits lefties better than Puig and is a better defender than Kemp. A trade of the left-handed-hitting Joc Pederson — which is under discussion, sources say — would balance the lineup further."

Okay, that’s nice, but what does that have to do with the Atlanta Braves?

Fair question… let’s read more from the same source, emphasis added:

"* Two things to like about Joc Pederson, who is drawing interest from the White Sox and possibly the Braves and others: His strikeout rate has dropped for four consecutive seasons, from 29.1 percent to 27.3 to 21.1 to 19.2. He also crushes right-handed pitching: .893 OPS with 24 homers in 386 plate appearances last season, .842 OPS for his career."

That might be useful for the Braves.

The only head-scratcher I have with this is the notion that the Dodgers’ think that Pollock might be enough of an upgrade to warrant the idea of trading Pederson and increasing their own costs.

Of note, though:  Pederson is terrible vs. left-handed pitching, meriting an entirely anemic .512 OPS last season and a 38 wRC+ score… a number that is scaled to make 100 the ‘average’ for major league players.  The Dodgers face quite a bit of that in their division.

As it turns out, the Braves might have that covered in the person of Johan Camargo.  If he can handle left field – probably – then he could be used against left-handers (which actually aren’t that prevalent in the NL East anyway – the newly arrived Patrick Corbin being the most notable exception).

Camargo’s 2018 splits had him at over .800 OPS and with a 116 wRC+ score vs. southpaws.  That would play nicely with Pederson while also adding a more-defined role for Camargo.

At this point, there’s the obligatory mention that Alex Anthopoulos was working for LA’s Andrew Freidman and that the pair have already hooked up in a couple of transactions since the former executive’s relocation to Atlanta.  Okay, that box is now checked.

But in all seriousness, such a deal does fit the parameters of what Anthopoulos was saying this past weekend, including the part about waiting for a ‘situation that could be resolved soon’.

  • The Dodgers need to sign another OF… whether Pollock or Harper.
  • Any trade idea between the clubs needs to be finalized.
  • At least there’s no 40-man roster move necessary; they have 39 listed as of this morning.