· 2026-07-07

Atlanta Braves have added two of their highest‑rated arms to the big‑league roster, recalling JR Ritchie and selecting the contract of former first‑rounder Owen Murphy for a debut on Monday. The moves come as the club sits 3rd in the National League with a 52-37 record, on a L2 streak, and looks to halt a recent 7‑13 slump.
The Braves placed starter Martin Pérez on the 15‑day injured list after a line‑drive struck his forearm on Sunday, creating a vacancy in the bullpen. At the same time, they designated Carlos Carrasco for assignment, freeing a roster spot. Both pitchers were drafted only 15 picks apart in 2022—Murphy at 20th overall and Ritchie at 35th—so their simultaneous call‑up highlights the success of Alex Anthopoulos’s scouting.
Murphy, the organization’s No. 6 prospect per MLB Pipeline, spent five seasons in the minors before Tommy John surgery halted his progress in June 2024. He returned last season with a 1.19 ERA over 30.1 innings and this year posted a 4.44 ERA, 92 strikeouts and a 1.26 WHIP across 81 innings. He will not start; instead, he and Ritchie will work out of the bullpen for the final seven games before the All‑Star break, likely as openers or long relievers.
Ritchie is currently the No. 49 overall prospect in baseball and has already logged nine major‑league appearances this season, posting a 4.53 ERA and a 1.42 WHIP over 43.2 innings. His command remains shaky—he’s walked 26 batters—but his strikeout ability (41 Ks) gives the Braves a swing‑and‑miss option. Both arms arrive as the staff’s collective ERA has risen to 4.66 over its last 20 outings, contributing to a 7‑13 stretch that let the Phillies close to within three games in the NL East.
The club lost 6‑7 to the New York Mets on July 6, 2026, but hopes the fresh arms will help stabilize the rotation before the All‑Star break. The next challenge arrives on July 7 against the Pittsburgh Pirates, a game that could provide Murphy and Ritchie a chance to prove they belong at the major‑league level. If they can keep runs down, Atlanta could snap its recent slump and protect its third‑place standing.
With Pérez sidelined and Carrasco gone, the Braves’ bullpen now features veteran relievers plus the two rookies. Manager Brian Snitker will likely blend experience with the raw talent of Murphy’s four‑pitch mix—low‑90s fastball, curve, slider, changeup—and Ritchie’s power arm. Their performance in the next week could dictate whether the Braves maintain their L2 streak or slide further.
Atlanta sits 52‑37, just two games behind the NL East leader, and a strong finish before the break could solidify a playoff push. The call‑ups are a gamble, but they also reflect a broader strategy: develop home‑grown talent to fill gaps caused by injuries. If Murphy and Ritchie can deliver consistent innings, the Braves may avoid a mid‑season overhaul and keep their postseason hopes alive.