
The Atlanta Braves are living up to the label of favorites early in the year, but which players led the charge and who struggled in the hot opening week?
Entering the 2023 MLB season, the Atlanta Braves were circled as one of the favorites to not just compete in the National League but to win the World Series. And while NL East foes in the same conversation like the Mets and Phillies have gotten off to inauspicious starts, the Braves have come out firing on all cylinders, even with some early hardships.
Atlanta started the year winning two games in a three-game set against the Nationals but then followed that up by going to Busch Stadium and sweeping a talented St. Louis Cardinals club, winning every game by at least three runs. Now they are 5-1 as they head into their home-opener against the San Diego Padres.
With a start like that, itās no shock to find that a lot of the Braves players have been starring to begin the season, but four in particular have been ultra-impressive. Meanwhile, thereās one outlier who has been struggling mightily out of the gate. Letās take a look at who falls into which bucket there.
Atlanta Braves: 4 players who impressed, 1 who struggled in opening week
Ronald AcuƱa Jr. looks back to his superstar for for the Braves
When Ronald AcuƱa Jr. returned from injury last year, he performed solidly, but its seemed quite obvious that he still wasnāt 100%, whether that was health, rust, or a combination remaining unknown at that point. But to start the 2023 season, heās clearly all the way back.
Out of the gate, AcuƱa is slashing .370/.433/.630 with two home runs, a double, four RBI and two stolen bases in only six games. Thatās impressive production and it also doesnāt take into account that heās been a monster defensively as well.
Perhaps the best part about AcuƱaās start to the season, though, is how he just looks at the plate. Heās obviously still swinging for power, but it looks controlled, smooth and patient when heās in the box. If he keeps this up, he could be a legitimate MVP candidate, which is what the Braves always knew he could be.