What a wonderful game, all the way around. On his 25th birthday, Spencer Schwellenbach was masterful yet again, going 6 and a third, striking out 11 and walking none. He held them scoreless on 5 hits. The bullpen (Daysbel, Lee, and Montero) shut them out the rest of the way. PDQ is one of the most impressive young pitchers I remember in my now long Braves fandom.
Offensively there was a lot to like. Ronald had two hits, including a two run homer off Walker Buehler. That alone was worth the price of admission, as it evoked memories of the grand slam he hit off Ferris in the 2018 playoffs. I’d say Ronald is back. His OPS is 1.174. Riley also homered, Olson doubled, and El Oso Grande had a couple of hits. Now here’s something you might not believe if you were not watching: Michael Harris II had 3(!) hits on the day. I’m not going to declare him back (he’s got a looong way to go), but his OPS is now up to .611. Ozzie didn’t get a hit, but he did earn a base on balls, which in some ways I find even more encouraging.
Still, the Braves finish May with a record of 27-30, 8.5 games out of first and 5 games out of the final wild card spot. That’s not good!
But as bad as the Braves stand here on May 31, it’s not hopeless. There is still a long season ahead. On the last day of May, 2022, the Braves were 23-27, 10.5 games out of first place. They then had a terrific June, cutting the lead to 3.5 games by the end of the month. They finally caught the Mets in September, winning 101 games and the division (and sweeping that memorable series at Truist in the last weekend).
Let’s look at 2021: on the last day of May, our guys were 25-26, 4 games out of first. But unlike 2022, it got worse from there. By June 16, they had fallen 5 games below .500 and 8 games out of first. Even on August 1, they were 3 games below .500 and 5 games out of first. You might remember how that season turned out.
I remember well another dismal May. After the remarkable, magical worst-to-first season of 1991, in the first third of 1992 the team had regressed. On the last day of May, they were 23-27, 5 games out of first. But then they had a terrific June (19-6) and went on to win the division by 8 games.
Speaking of 1991: Unlike 2022, 2021, and 1992, they were in pretty good shape at the end of May—6 games over .500 and only a half game out of first. Best the team had looked in many years. But then reality set in. By the All Star break in July, the team had dropped to 39-40 and 9.5 games out of first. Right after the break, though, the team was torrid, and they went on to win the division in the last weekend.
While we’re reflecting on in-season turnarounds, let’s not forget 1993: they were 9 games out of first as late as August 11. One month later they were up by 1 game. They went on to win 104 games and edge the Giants by a game in one of the all-time great pennant races.
Am I predicting a similar turnaround this season? Certainly not. Unless several guys in the lineup up their production substantially in the next month, and also the bullpen gets more reliable, it won’t happen. But’s it’s not impossible! We still don’t know how good this team is. They may turn out to be mediocre, or even terribad, but this is still the team that most preseason forecasts and projections had winning well over 90 games.
I do realize how incredibly frustrating this team has been and how excruciating some of the losses have been. You are certainly within your rights to decry the state of this team, and it’s entirely reasonable to expect them to remain at or below .500 and finish well out of the playoffs.
But as for me and my house, we choose to remain hopeful. We have lived through the magic of those remarkable in-season turnarounds in the recent and not so recent past. Why not expect it again?
Tomorrow is June 1. Bryce Elder against Garrett Crochet. Time to get a streak going.

It’s a whole lot better to get off to a good start than a bad start, but there are still 4 months left. The winter’s long enough without giving away the summer too.
Our run differential is now +15. The Padres are +14. The Phillies are +25. Those teams are powerhouses while we are slated to pick 6th in the 2026 draft.
We are 9-14 in 1-run games. Only Boston has more such losses (15) in all of MLB.
We have been unlucky. Having a shaky has helped us be unlucky.
My choice for hope is not just blind unreasoning optimism. We have indeed been unlucky. Our Pythagorean would have us over .500 and much closer to the playoffs. The starting pitching has been excellent. We desperately need more offense but it is not unreasonable to expect positive regression from Ozzie and MHII and to a lesser extent Riley. And Ronald is back!
Late, but just wanted to say how much I enjoyed the recap, tfloyd. Ah, 1993….
Question about 1-run losses for the analytics crowd. A game that is 2-1 after 6 innings and ends 2-1 was much more “anybody’s game” than a game that was 5-0 after 6 and ended 5-4. Is there a way to quantify this difference? Maybe a way to look at win probability share late in the game? A game that is tied after 6 is worth about half a win to either team, for example.
Welcome back, Bryce … sigh … stuck with him every fifth day.
Bryce Elder predictably freed up my Sunday afternoon
Looks like Bryce is not fully on board with my choice for hope.
Two on, none out and absolutely terrible.
Geez, it’s a good thing MLB sped up the games, because this team has been horribly boring (offensively)since last season. They can’t blame everything on the new hitting coach.
Sure MLB messing with the balls is a big part of the issues, but…..ugh, I just can’t handle them much anymore. I haven’t been this disinterested since the Fredi Gonzalez years.
A .500 team since Memorial Day of last year.
It is what it is. Mediocre. Meanwhile, Snitker yawns away in the dugout, only noticing the obvious when someone like Spencer Strider points it out to him. Club management seems okay with all this, because its bold offseason acquisition was six new buildings. It doesn’t care because the stadium and Battery cash registers keep spinning, so I’m starting to wonder why I should — which would probably be welcome because then I wouldn’t vent here anymore.
Can somebody check this? It seems to me that Aaron Bummer is lights out when we’re behind but he’s automatic runs when we’re tied or ahead
Recapped.