The Braves inked Harold Ramírez to a minor league contract and assigned him to Triple-A Gwinnett. The news was announced (on X) by Gwinnett broadcaster Dave Lezotte.
It’s the third organization of the season for the right-handed hitting outfielder. Ramírez began the year with the Rays. He struggled over the first couple months and was released in June. He caught on with the Nationals, where he hit .243/.273/.365 in just under a month of play. Washington released him last week.
Between the two teams, Ramírez hit .261/.280/.324 across 246 plate appearances. A dearth of walks or power left him with a fairly empty batting average. Ramírez was a much more productive hitter between 2022-23. He combined for a .306/.348/.432 slash in nearly 900 trips over that two-year stretch in Tampa Bay. He made an extremely aggressive offensive approach work with good bat-t0-ball skills and a willingness to hit all fields. Ramírez feasted on left-handed pitching, teeing off a .374/.412/.509 clip with the platoon advantage.
There’s no downside for Atlanta in sending him to Gwinnett to see if he can recapture some of that form. The Rays are responsible for Ramírez’s $3.8MM salary. If the Braves call him up, they’d only need to pay the prorated portion of the $740K minimum for any time he’s on the MLB roster. Ramírez would technically be eligible for arbitration and controllable through 2025 in that instance, but he’d need a monster finish to the season for Atlanta to consider tendering him a contract that’d likely top $4MM.
Jorge Soler is back in tonight’s starting lineup after missing a few games with a hamstring issue. That should push Ramón Laureano back to the bench. Laureano, who played poorly enough early in the year that the Guardians released him, has rebounded with a .284/.318/.520 slash in 29 games for Atlanta. He has solidified his roster spot in the process. Barring injury, Ramírez’s best path to a job would be to replace Adam Duvall. The Braves have stuck by Duvall, who has mashed lefties (.260/.350/.529) but been unplayable against righty pitching (.146/.184/.224).
Ramírez would be eligible for postseason play if the Braves wanted to give him a look. That’s true regardless of whether he’s on the 40-man roster by September 1. Players who are in an organization on a non-roster deal by the start of the month can participate in the playoffs if the commissioner’s office approves them as injury substitutes. That’s a formality and happens with a couple players around the league in most years.