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Top 50 Atlanta Braves

The history of the Atlanta Braves began well over a century ago and it went through two previous locations before it arrived in Georgia.

The Braves actually predate the formation of the National League as they were members of the National Association in 1869 to 1875 as the Boston Red Stockings, which actually makes the team the oldest in the game but statistically, we are only focusing on 1876 and beyond when the franchise was in the NL.  The Red Stockings would win the 1877 and 1878 Pennant and they would change their name to the Beaneaters (mostly thanks to the press) in 1883.  That year they would win the pennant again in 1883 and five more times in the 1800s, but the formation of the American League and they were decimated when many of their players jumped to the team that is now known today as the Boston Red Sox.

The Beaneaters would go onto a downward spiral and they would experiment with their name going by the Doves (1907-1910) and the Rustlers (1911) before settling on the Braves in 1912 and they would win their first World Series Championship in 1914, though this was considered a miracle season of sorts as they exceeded all expectations and defeated a heavily favored Philadelphia Athletics team to win it all.  After a couple of seasons as a contender, the Braves regressed again and were not contenders for years.  A microcosm of this era is when they traded for Babe Ruth who was at the end of his career and his play deteriorated so badly that season (1935) in the year that he could barely run, couldn’t field, and pitchers threatened to boycott if Ruth was on the field. 

New ownership came in and in another attempt of reinvention the Braves became the Bees but success was still alluding them and they took back the Braves' name a few years later.  Warren Spahn and Johnny Sain would help turn the team’s fortunes around and in 1948 they won the pennant but lost the World Series to Cleveland but they would go back to mediocrity and dwindling attendance (especially while competing with the Red Sox) would see the Braves relocated to Milwaukee. 

Milwaukee embraced the Braves and with an offensive attack led by Hank Aaron and Eddie Mathews they would win the 1957 World Series and would return to the Fall Classic in ’58, though would lose to the New York Yankees.  The Braves would be sold again but this time the group wanted to move the team to a larger market and they liked what they saw in Atlanta, which was a city on the rise.  They would move to the South in 1966 but it should be mentioned that the Braves never had a losing season in the 11 years they played there.

Frankly, the city of Milwaukee got shafted and on a sidebar, we are happy they would gain a team quickly thereafter, the Milwaukee Brewers, but let’s go back to Atlanta!

Atlanta’s record went up and down and would be bought by media conglomerate Ted Turner in 1976.  He was an eccentric owner but with his ownership of TBS, the Braves were seen nationally and he dubbed them “America’s Team”.  While the Braves were seen by more viewers they were not successful, that is until the 1990s.

With a pitching staff of Greg Maddux, John Smoltz, and Tom Glavine the Braves went from “worst to first” and made the World Series in 1991, losing to the Minnesota Twins.  They made the World Series again the year after, this time to losing to the Toronto Blue Jays but they would win it all in 1995 with a win over the Cleveland Indians.  They continued to make the playoff every year until 2006 and would reach two more World Series losing both in 1996 and 1999 to the New York Yankees.

Since 2005, the Braves would make the playoffs five times and won the 2021 World Series.  As of this writing, they are one of the most recognized team in not just the National League but all of Major League Baseball.

This list is up to the end of the 2024 season.

Note: Baseball lists are based on an amalgamation of tenure, traditional statistics, advanced statistics, playoff statistics, and post-season accolades.

We need to bring this up as much as we can… Regardless of the era Hank Aaron is one of the greatest baseball players that ever existed.  Period. 
Not only are we comfortable saying that Warren Spahn was the greatest Pitcher in Braves history, but he is also in the top ten all-time and the greatest left-hander ever. Calling anyone the greatest Braves Pitcher of all time is no small statement considering the legends who took the mound.  A Cy Young winner in 1957 (the inaugural winner), Spahn had a later start: he debuted for the Boston Braves in 1942 but missed the next three years due to military service.  The southpaw would emerge as an All-Star for the Boston Braves, winning 21 Games and the ERA and…
Kid Nichols played the entire 1890’s for the Boston Beaneaters, and there was a time when he was arguably the best Pitcher of the National League.  Nichols’s rookie season in 1890 would see him win 27 Games lead the NL in bWAR for Pitchers and he followed that up with four consecutive 30 Win seasons, which would have another league-leading bWAR campaign. As good as he was in his first five seasons from 1896 to 1898, he would again win 30 Games, all of which topped the league.  In those last two seasons, he would again finish first in bWAR,…
The only player in franchise history to play for the organization when the team was in Boston, Milwaukee, and Atlanta, Eddie Mathews is historically regarded as one of the best Third Baseman in the game’s history. Mathews debuted in 1952 with the Boston Braves where he finished third in Rookie of the Year voting but in 1953 when the franchise moved to Milwaukee he would become an All-Star for the first of nine times.  This was only his second season of seventeen years in the Majors yet it was arguably his best as he had career highs in Home Runs…
One of ten Pitchers to have struckout 3,000 batters and rack up 300 Wins (when will we ever see that again!), Greg Maddux accomplished a lot of that with the Atlanta Braves. When Maddux arrived to Atlanta in 1993 via free agency he was the reigning National League Cy Young Award winner and it was certainly hoped that he could replicate that performance or come close to it, however he certainly exceeded all expectations that the Braves could have hoped for.  Maddux would anchor the best starting rotation in the 90’s along with Tom Glavine and John Smoltz and in…
Phil Niekro played an incredible 24 seasons in the Major Leagues, 20 of which took place in a Braves uniform, and seemingly no matter how old he was (and how old he looked), he defied Father Time much longer than any Pitcher had the right to. The secret to his success was the knuckleball, a pitch that is hard to master but does not take as much toll on your arm.  Niekro would debut in 1964 and found himself a permanent fixture on the Atlanta rotation in 1967, the season in which he won the ERA Title, and he would…
The Atlanta Braves essentially stole John Smoltz when they traded what was left of Doyle Alexander to the Detroit Tigers for him, and doesn’t the latter wish he could have that one back? Smoltz would go eight All-Star Games and is the only Pitcher in history to record 200 Wins and 150 Saves.  The righthander would establish himself as an elite Pitcher in the 1991 postseason, where he went 2-0 in the NLCS and had a 1.26 ERA in the World Series.  Smoltz would again have a strong playoff in 1992, going 3-0 and earning NLCS MVP.  As part of…
While the Atlanta Braves of the 1990s and early 2000’ will always (and should be) known primarily for the elite starting pitching, Chipper Jones had the perfect path to greatness from the number one draft pick in 1990 to first ballot Hall of Fame inductee in 2018. Jones was an Atlanta Brave during his entire career, winning the World Series in his rookie season (1995).  The loaded organization was expected to win more championships, and though they did not, it wasn’t for lack of effort from the Third Baseman, who proved to be one of the most consistent players in…
Along with Greg Maddux and John Smoltz, Tom Glavine was part of a devastating Hall of Fame trio that dominated starting pitching in the 1990s.  It wasn’t all wine and roses for Glavine when he started, as his first few seasons were a mixed bag, but in 1991, he would break out with a league-leading 20 Wins with a 2.55 ERA and a Cy Young Award win.  Glavine would prove this wasn’t a fluke as he led the NL in Wins the next two seasons, finished second and third in Cy Young voting, and, in 1995, anchored the Braves to…
From Curacao, Andruw Jones made his debut with the Braves at age 19, and it was clear from the beginning that this was a star in the making.  Jones would have his first 30-HR season in 1998, and from 2000 to 2003, he would hit that mark with three 100-RBI seasons and a .300 season in 2000, which was surprisingly the only one he ever had.  Jones would add to his already prolific power numbers in the 2005 season, where he had a league-leading (and career-high) 51 Home Runs and was also the champion in Runs Batted In with 128.…
Dale Murphy was the offensive star of the Atlanta Braves through the 1980s and was also one of the top power hitters of the game.  Murphy was named the National League MVP in back-to-back seasons (1982 & 1983), and he would finish atop the NL leaderboard in Runs Batted In while also being named an All-Star, a Silver Slugger, and a Gold Glove winner.  The next two seasons were almost as good as he was. While he was not the MVP, he would repeat the All-Star/Silver Slugger/Gold Glove trifecta and would win the Home Run Title in both of those…
Freddie Freeman played his first dozen seasons with the Atlanta Braves, where he was shown to be one of the best First Basemen in the National League.  In 2011, Freeman was the runner-up for the National League Rookie of the Year (losing to teammate Craig Kimbrel), and in 2013, he was named an All-Star and finished fifth in MVP voting when he had a .319 Batting Average with a career-high 109 Runs Batted In.  Again an All-Star in 2014, the First Baseman would have a 34 Home Run season in 2016 and would go on a three-year run in which…
Tommy Bond arrived in Boston in 1877 after a disagreement with his former Manager with the Hartford Dark Blues and the then-named Red Stockings would quickly love having the Irish-born Pitcher on the team.  Bond was a huge force on the mound where the sidearmer was arguably the best Pitcher in the National League from 1877 to 1879.  In that timeframe, which was basically the infancy of baseball, Bond won 40 Games each year, the first two of which were league-leading. He would also win the ERA Title twice, the Strikeout title twice, and was also first in WHIP twice. …
Prior to his arrival in Boston, John Clarkson was considered one of the best Pitchers in the National League.  With the Chicago White Stockings (which would later be named the Chicago Cubs), he finished first in Wins twice (1885 & 1887) and was considered an elite Pitcher.  The Boston Beaneaters sure thought so, and they purchased him from Chicago for $10,000, which was a fortune in 1888!  This proved to be a decent choice, and Clarkson had a good 1888 with a 33 Win season (2nd overall), but exploded the following season with what has to be considered one of…

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Debuting as a rookie with the Boston Beaneaters in 1898, Vic Willis would win the ERA Title as a sophomore with a 2.50 ERA with 27 Wins.  He was also first for bWAR for Pitchers that season.  1900 was not great, as his ERA ballooned above 4.00, but he rebounded with four straight seasons with an ERA below 3.00, and he finished with Boston in 1905 with a 3.21 ERA.  Unfortunately, in his last two seasons in Boston, he posted records of 30 and 54 because he received limited run support.  He would finish his stint in Boston with a…
Lew Burdette was a consistent Pitcher for the Milwaukee Braves, where he would win 179 Games for the franchise.  Burdette first came to notice in the 1953 season, going 15-5 and finishing 7th in ERA.  The hurler remained solid for a couple of years, and in the last half of the 50’s, he would go on his best run, where from 1956 to 1961, he never had less than 17 Wins, and in three of those seasons, he was the National League leader in BB/9.  Burdette would also win the ERA Title (1956) and the Wins leader in 1959. An…
We return back to the 1880’s (we seem to be in the 1800’s a lot on this franchise list) with Righthander, Jim Whitney who had a 133 and 121 record over his five seasons with the Boston Red Caps/Beaneaters and as a rookie (1881) he was first in both Wins (33) and Losses and would later have two seasons where he was first in FIP (1883 & 1884) and three straight where he was first in SO/BB (1883-85), a stat in which he is still first all-time in the franchise.  Whitney never finished with an Earned Run Average over 3.00…
Hugh Duffy was somewhat of a maverick in early baseball as he bounced from the National League to the Federal League to the American Association and back to the National League in a four year span.  It was the latter that would see him join the Boston Beaneaters, the precursor to the Atlanta Braves.
From the moment the Atlanta Braves signed Ronald Acuna Jr. as an amateur Free Agent from Venezuela, they knew they had someone special.  From a baseball family, Acuna wasted little time in making the Braves roster, receiving a call-up while still a teenager on April 25, 2018, and would win the Rookie of the Year award with 26 HR/.917 OPS year.  Acuna was an All-Star in his second season, blasting 41 Home Runs with 101 RBIs and was the league-leader in Runs (127) and Stolen Bases (138).  Also winning his first Silver Slugger, Acuna was fifth in MVP voting and…