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Phillies Receive Brutal New Ranger Suarez Prediction
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As the hot stove heats up, Ranger Suárez finds himself in an awkward spot with the Philadelphia Phillies.

At just 30 years old, the left-hander checks nearly every box a contender looks for in a long-term rotation piece: a 2024 All-Star nod, battle-tested excellence in October, and the kind of durability that quietly anchors a staff.

Yet Philadelphia’s front office faces a cold reality. Even without Suárez, the rotation remains elite—especially if Zack Wheeler returns on schedule from thoracic outlet syndrome surgery. Meanwhile, the looming free agencies of Kyle Schwarber and J.T. Realmuto create positional holes that are far tougher to fill than replacing a No. 3 or No. 4 starter.

That math could push the Phillies toward letting Suárez test the open market. The catch? No one in red pinstripes wants to watch him carve up their lineup four or five times a year wearing the colors of a division foe.

Enter the Atlanta Braves.On Thursday, Just Baseball’s Ryan Finkelstein projected that Atlanta will swoop in and make Suárez the finishing touch on a rotation that was decimated by injuries in 2025, costing the Braves any realistic shot at overtaking Philadelphia in the NL East.

“For this Braves team, Suarez would be a breath of fresh air, giving them a second lefty they can lean on in their rotation,” Finkelstein wrote. “If everything clicks, Ranger is starting Game 3 or even Game 4 of a playoff series for the Braves next October. As the Phillies have taught us, that’s a good place to be.”

Suárez’s glittering 1.48 ERA across 42 2/3 career postseason innings is the headline-grabber, but his regular-season résumé deserves more respect than it sometimes gets. While he has yet to log a 162-inning season that would qualify him for the ERA crown, he has eclipsed 150 innings in three of the past four years—a mark of consistency that often gets overlooked.

If the Braves are prepared to pay up for that blend of October dominance and everyday reliability, Suárez could transform from a Phillies postseason hero into public enemy No. 1 in Citizens Bank Park overnight.

Atlanta’s rotation is undeniably hungrier for help than Philadelphia’s at the moment, but the Braves have traditionally been cautious about handing big-money, multi-year deals to starting pitchers in their 30s.

Whether they break from that pattern could decide if Suárez stays in the division—or if the Phillies manage to keep one of their most clutch performers away from their closest rival.

This article first appeared on Viral Sports News and was syndicated with permission.

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