The Atlanta Braves are not pursuing a contract extension with Drake Baldwin, the 25-year-old backup catcher who posted a .783 OPS across 127 plate appearances in 2024, according to reporting from Ken Rosenthal. The decision leaves Baldwin on track for arbitration eligibility in 2026 and potential free agency in 2028, assuming he accumulates the required service time.
Baldwin hit .256/.340/.443 last season in a platoon role behind starter Sean Murphy, who is signed through 2028 at $73 million guaranteed. The Braves' front office, led by general manager Alex Anthopoulos, has historically avoided paying market premiums for players with fewer than 500 career plate appearances, a threshold Baldwin has not yet reached. The club's extension history under Anthopoulos—Michael Harris II at $72 million, Spencer Strider at $75 million, Matt Olson at $168 million—skews toward players with multiple seasons of established production or controllable arbitration years remaining.
The stall matters less for Baldwin's immediate value than for what it signals about Atlanta's roster construction through 2027. Murphy's deal carries an average annual value of $24.3 million, making him the third-highest-paid catcher in baseball behind J.T. Realmuto and Will Smith. Extending Baldwin now would likely require a $8-12 million annual commitment to secure his arbitration years, a figure that conflicts with the Braves' stated priority of preserving payroll flexibility for pitching additions. The club entered 2025 with roughly $35 million in estimated payroll space beneath the competitive balance tax threshold, a narrow margin given pending arbitration cases for six players, including outfielder Michael Harris II and reliever Pierce Johnson.
Baldwin's trade value presents a secondary consideration. Backup catchers with above-average exit velocity metrics—Baldwin ranked in the 68th percentile for average exit velocity in 2024, per Baseball Savant—typically draw interest from contenders seeking platoon bats or insurance depth. The Braves have historically monetized similar assets: they flipped catcher William Contreras to Milwaukee in December 2022 as part of the Sean Murphy acquisition, extracting controllable talent while resetting the depth chart. If Baldwin's performance remains steady through June 2025, Atlanta enters the trade deadline with leverage to convert him into pitching depth or a lottery-ticket prospect, particularly if Murphy remains healthy and the front office prioritizes rotation reinforcements.
Watch whether Baldwin's playing time increases if Murphy's workload management becomes more aggressive in the season's first half. Murphy caught 133 games in 2024, above the league average of 118 games for primary starters, and the Braves' medical staff has historically throttled catcher usage in late-season stretches. A bump to 60-70 plate appearances by June would boost Baldwin's arbitration platform and trade value simultaneously. Also watch Atlanta's activity in the international free-agent market for catching prospects; the club has $4.9 million in available international bonus pool space for the 2025-26 signing period, enough to land a top-15 Latin American prospect who could serve as organizational depth insurance if Baldwin is moved.
The Braves' next extension conversation will likely center on Harris, whose $72 million deal expires after 2030 but includes no opt-outs. Baldwin, meanwhile, will report to spring training with no long-term security and a clearer sense of his role: trade chip or arbitration case, depending on Murphy's health and Anthopoulos's July calculus.