Braves sign Top utility man In New York Mets…….
ATLANTA (AP) — The Atlanta Braves added depth to their bench on Friday by signing former New York Mets utility infielder Luis Guillorme to a $1.1 million, one-year deal.
The 29-year-old Guillorme spent the last six seasons with the Mets, playing second base, shortstop and third base. He hit .224 in 54 games last season. He has a career .261 batting average.
Guillorme appeared in a career-high 102 games in 2022, hitting .273 and making 61 starts at second base.
Guillorme will compete with David Fletcher, acquired from the Los Angeles Angels on Dec. 8, for a bench spot.
Atlanta traded infield prospect Vaughn Grissom to Boston for left-hander Chris Sale last week. The team announced Thursday that Sale agreed to a $38 million, two-year deal.
The Braves also announced they signed right-hander Huascar Ynoa to a one-year, $825,000 deal, avoiding arbitration. Ynoa, who missed the 2023 season following elbow surgery, could compete for the No. 5 spot in the rotation or a long relief role
Ynoa was 4-6 with a 4.05 ERA in 2021, when he started 17 games but had his season shortened when he punched a bench following a poor outing and suffered a fracture in his right hand. He made only two starts in 2022.
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What the Atlanta Braves are getting in Luis Guillorme
The Atlanta Braves made a big move to solidify their major league bench on Friday night, agreeing to a one year deal with former New York Mets utility infielder Luis Guillorme. What should we expect from the 29 year-old next season?
Capable, if unspectacular, defense
Guillorme was seen as the best defensive infielder in the Mets system prior to his 2018 debut, and time has done little to diminish those defensive chops.
In 2022, the last year Guillorme got significant and extended defensive play, he was a 79th percentile defender via MLB Statcast, contributing five OAA (Outs Above Average). He manages to contribute defensively despite not having a great arm or foot speed, relying on his positioning, instincts, and quick first step to field his position with excellent range.
He graded out positively at all three non-first infield positions in 2022, with 3 OAA at second base (+1% success rate added), 1 OAA at third base (+2% success rate added), and 2 OAA at shortstop with an astounding 10% success rate added.
Given his arm strength, he’s best suited to 2nd base, but there’s plenty of perfectly capable defenders in the major leagues at third base that don’t have great arms, with Jeimer Candelario (then of the Nationals and Cubs) a good example from last year.
And Guillorme’s hands are great, as this barehanded snag of a flying bat shows us:
(For those asking why we didn’t dive into Guillorme’s 2023 defense: he only had 104 total defensive opportunities because of injury, including only 4 at shortstop, so the defensive numbers aren’t a statistically significant sample.)
Offensively, he can be a contributor but not a leader
For Guillorme’s career, he’s rocking a .261 batting average but only a .677 OPS. The issue there comes down to a lack of power – his average exit velocity (86.6) is below major league average, with the league as a whole sitting around 88.4 mph. He’s decidedly anti-Braves like in this regard, as Atlanta prefers guys who hit strikes hard.
But Guillorme’s got a few things going for him offensively. For starters, while not being entirely platoon proof, he’s not terrible against lefties, with his career batting average of .230 against left-handed pitching mostly colored by struggles against talented lefty relievers. Guillorme’s batting .266 against lefty starting pitching, and so he’s someone you won’t need to sub out of the lineup if facing a lefty starter on any particular day.
Additionally, he’s not going to be counted on to carry this team. With as many talented offensive performers as the Braves have in their offense, he’ll be batting 8th or 9th in most lineups. The thing he does well offensively is his approach – again looking at 2022, he rarely chased out of the zone and was even better at not swinging and missing, making pitchers attack him in the zone. He put up only a 21.3% Chase percentage and a Whiff% of only 13.3%, leading to a sub-14% strikeout rate.