• McLouth gives Atlanta a legitimate leadoff hitter. Think Alfonso Soriano, with defense and about five years younger. The Braves also have the opportunity to bat him third at times, especially when Chipper Jones may be out of the lineup.
• Compare Soriano’s average season since leaving the Yankees after 2003 with McClouth’s season last year:
o Soriano: .280/.332/.529 34 HR, 37 2B, 94 R, 87 RBI, 25 SB
o McClouth: .276/.356/.487 26 HR, 46 2B, 113 R, 94 RBI, 23 SB
Although Soriano has considerably more home run power, McClouth makes up for it with gap power and a much higher OBP
• Adding Nate the Great gives the Braves a gold-glove caliber CF, something they have missed since Andruw Jones was 25. Jordan Schafer may have a load of defensive potential, but at times he looked lost.
• Speaking of Jordan Schafer, he can have all the time he needs to straighten himself out in Gwinnett. Don’t get me wrong, we’re big fans of his. But he was overmatched, hitting .176 with 59 strikeouts in 148 at-bats since starting the year at .421 over the first five games.
• We can expect the new lineup to look something like this:
CF Nate McLouth
SS Yunel Escobar
3B Chipper Jones
C Brian McCann
LF Garrett Anderson
1B Casey Kotchman
2B Kelly Johnson
RF Jeff Francoeur
• And the pitching to look like this:
Derek Lowe
Javier Vazquez
Jair Jurrjens
Kenshin Kawakami
Tommy Hanson
• Oh yeah, did I mention Tommy Hanson debuts Saturday? Now to the rest of the division…
• The Mets are a banged up bunch, who lack both pitching and hitting depth. Other than Johan Santana, the Braves AAA squad is as good as their starting staff. Carlos Delgado looks to miss more and more time, and could be out for the season. That leaves only Wright, Beltran, and Reyes as legitimate offensive threats, and Reyes’ legs don’t look to be in good shape. This team is about to take a ride and start fallin’, “Free Fallin’”
• Only the Phillies remain, and forgive me for not thinking Moyer will have a sub-4.00 ERA again (it currently stands at 6.75). Again, other than their ace, Cole Hamels, the Phillies are relying on a mix of aging veterans and unproven youngsters. I’m a little skeptical that J.A. Haap and Antonio Bastardo can continue to pitch lights out. And unless Raul Ibanez is going to actually hit the 62 or so homers he’s on pace for, that lineup is going to come back to earth too. Sure, they’re sitting pretty now at 10 games over .500, but a team can only play over their heads for so long. A year and a half seems long enough.
• Did I mention Tommy Hanson debuts Saturday?