ATSWINS

Braves’ Brian Snitker feeling the heat as managerial carousel spins faster

Updated May 12, 2025, 11:15 p.m. by Alvin Garcia, Yardbarker 1 min read
MLB News

In just days, MLB clubs in Colorado and Pittsburgh cut ties with long-tenured managers.

Bud Black is out.

Derek Shelton, gone.

Brandon Hydes name keeps surfacing in Baltimore .

And now? Eyes are turning south to Atlanta.

On paper, the Braves shouldnt be in crisis mode.

This team still features Marcell Ozuna, Matt Olson, Michael Harris II, Austin Riley and Ozzie Albies.

Theyre nearing full health and just a few games under .500, but in a season where expectations havent been met, manager Brian Snitker is suddenly part of a league-wide hot-seat conversation and for the first time in his 10-year tenure, it doesnt seem far-fetched.

The Braves sat at 19-21 on Monday, third in the loaded National League East.

For a team with this much talent and one that won 104 games in 2023 thats not just disappointing, its alarming.

Their .475 win percentage has them behind the Phillies and Mets, and their overall performance has felt middling at best.

Atlanta ranks 15th in MLB in OPS (.690), and while their pitching staff has a respectable 1.25 WHIP (tied for 14th), it hasnt been enough to string wins together consistently.

A Friday night loss to the Pirates, where a pitch-clock violation botched a late-game substitution and led to a critical strikeout, didnt help Snitkers optics .

The scrutiny isnt just about results its also about how Snitker has handled adversity.

The incident involving Jarred Kelenic and Ronald Acuna Jr.

earlier this season raised eyebrows, with questions about how the manager managed clubhouse tensions.

Kelenic is now in Triple-A , but the episode left a mark.

More recently, Snitkers interaction with Acuna sparked concerns about strained relationships behind closed doors despite the star outfielder still working back from injury.

Add an underachieving first half from stars like Albies and Michael Harris II, and the perception of a disconnect grows.

Snitker is no rookie.

Hes managed the Braves since 2016 and spent nearly 50 years in the organization.

He led Atlanta to seven straight postseason appearances and a World Series title in 2021.

His record as manager 753-602 is impressive.

But resumes only go so far when momentum shifts, and in 2025, Atlanta hasnt looked like a contender.

Bleacher Report listed Snitker as No.

2 on its recent ranking of managers most at risk of being let go.

While the article notes that firing him would be doing him dirty, the inclusion speaks volumes.

Even if a midseason firing feels unlikely, theres growing speculation that this could be Snitkers final year unless the Braves turn things around and fast.

This weekends series in Pittsburgh wasnt just a matchup against a struggling NL opponent it was a spotlight moment.

The Pirates had just fired their manager.

The Braves lost two of three, including a game decided by a mental lapse.

Symbolically and practically, it raised red flags.

And as teams like the Rockies and Pirates act swiftly to reset their futures, the Braves stare down their decision point.

Snitkers contract ends after this season .

If the team doesnt surge back into contention, Atlantas front office may decide the window needs a new voice to lead it.

The good news for Snitker? Help may be on the way.

Both Spencer Strider and Acuna are expected back within the month.

A healthy lineup could ignite a run and quiet the chatter.

But MLB is a results-driven business.

And with the leagues managerial landscape shifting fast, even a World Series ring wont protect you forever.

If the Braves want a different result in October, they may need a distinct voice in the dugout by then.

Alvin Garcia is an experienced baseball writer who covers MLB and has covered various teams across multiple platforms, including Athlon Sports, FanSided, LWOS, and NewsBreak.

Since starting his baseball writing career in 2022, he has provided insightful analysis and a passionate perspective..

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