Baseball is often referred to as a game of failure. Perhaps nowhere is that statement more on display than in the life of a major league pitcher, whose fate hangs on every pitch.
Atlanta, GA
Falcons deny Cowboys’ request to interview DC Jeff Ulbrich, per report
The Atlanta Falcons are in the process of hiring a new head coach and general manager, but that doesn’t mean the team is completely cleaning house. Defensive coordinator Jeff Ulbrich has done an incredible job with the Falcons defense since replacing Jimmy Lake in the offseason.
The Falcons would prefer to keep Ulbrich, as team owner Arthur Blank stated, but the new head coach will have the final say. According to a report from ESPN’s Todd Archer, Atlanta blocked the Dallas Cowboys’ request to interview Ulbrich on Thursday.
“The Cowboys were denied by Atlanta to talk with Jeff Ulbrich for DC job, according to sources,” wrote Archer. “He remains under contract [with] the Falcons despite their search for a head coach. A potential interview can be revisited later if they hire a [head coach], who has a different coordinator in mind.”
Blank discussed Ulbrich’s impact during his Thursday press conference and said he was impressed with the work he did with the team’s rookie draft class. James Pearce Jr. led all rookies in sacks with 10.5 this season, while third-round pick Xavier Watts racked up a rookie-high five interceptions as the team’s starting safety.
“You can’t dictate to the new head coach who their coordinators would be, but I’d certainly recommend to the new head coach to consider Ulbrich,” Blank said of the Falcons’ current defensive coordinator.
It sounds like the Falcons aren’t going to let Ulbrich out of their sights, and it’s hard to blame them. The Falcons defensive coordinator helped the team record a franchise-record 57 sacks this season, just one year after finishing 31st in the NFL with just 31 sacks.
Follow along with each request and interview with our Falcons head coach tracker.
Atlanta, GA
Bryce Elder’s perseverance is paying off in Atlanta Braves rotation
Pitch by pitch, batter by batter, inning by inning, game by game — a pitcher benefits from preparation, execution and the ability to wipe the slate clean when results stray from intended or expected outcomes.
It requires perseverance. That is something Bryce Elder personifies.
From All-Star to also-ran and seemingly back again, Elder’s time with the Atlanta Braves has been a roller coaster. But the right-hander’s unflappable demeanor helped him weather the storm and make adjustments that are paying off at the best possible time for his team.
Over the first five weeks of the season, all Elder is doing is running with the opportunity to start every fifth day, compiling a 1.88 ERA that ranks second in the National League heading into the weekend.
After two seasons of bouncing between Atlanta and Triple-A Gwinnett, Elder emerged from his prolonged struggles as a better version of himself. This is the kind of thing that can only be found by going directly into and through the storm.
“Something that I’ve always understood is being healthy, you’re going to get the chance,” Elder said. “If you’re good enough and healthy, you’re going to get the chance. I try to handle my business correctly to keep me out there. It’s a weird game, the more time you spend out there. It’s not always going to go well, but the more things you learn as long as you’re paying attention.”
Elder entered his fifth major league season with a somewhat tenuous hold on a spot in the rotation, once again underscoring that the best ability may very well be availability. Last year, he led the Atlanta staff with 28 starts and 156 1/3 innings, but 2026 marked the first time Elder cracked the Braves’ opening day roster.
Strong pitching is a major factor in Atlanta’s early season success. Considering the injury news that filtered out of Spring Training almost immediately, it may qualify as the most surprising aspect of the Braves’ incredible 23-10 start.
Elder is a key performer on a surprisingly productive Atlanta pitching staff that owns a 3.17 ERA, the second best mark in Major League Baseball behind the New York Yankees’ 3.05 ERA.
While you might expect to see Chris Sale fronting the rotation and posting his requisite numbers, Elder’s inclusion in the starting five came only after Spencer Strider, Spencer Schwellenbach and Hurston Waldrep all began the season on the injured list.
Despite those circumstances, Elder and the Braves both believed the righty tapped into something down the stretch last year. After pitching to a 6.11 ERA in his first 21 starts and 111 2/3 innings, Elder finished with a 2.82 ERA over his final seven starts and 44 2/3 innings.
Rather than trying to avoid bats and live almost exclusively in the margins of the strike zone, Elder started approaching his opponents much more directly. As a result, he cut down his walk rate while seeing his strikeout rate rise across those seven outings.
Attacking hitters helped Elder find the kind of consistency he’s been searching for since the first half of his career-best 2023 season.
“That’s something I learned last year,” Elder said. “The good run I went on last year literally started with me saying, ‘If I give up five or six runs, that’s fine, but I’m going to progress the game. The game is going to move forward. I’m not going to get in bad counts and situations.’ And, obviously, it’s still going to happen, but progressing the game forward and keeping it moving, it’s turned out that I realize maybe my stuff is a little better than I thought it was. So, I’m kind of staying in the zone and making hitters swing.”
Something else Elder is benefiting from is the fact that not all swings are created equal.
He has been proficient at avoiding barrels. According to MLB Statcast data, Elder is in the 86th percentile with just a 3.3 percent opponent’s barrel rate. That elite level of barrel suppression correlates directly to Elder’s career-best home run rate of 0.4 per nine innings. Keeping the ball in the park always bodes well for a pitcher’s chances on any given day.

Elder’s overall success owes largely to an improved arsenal that includes a mix of three fastball types in addition to his slider and changeup. Having more weapons and a purpose for each pitch has Elder feeling like a new man on the mound compared to the one who was searching for answers over the past three seasons.
Perhaps his best weapon is the slider, a pitch he throws roughly a third of the time and has limited opposing hitters to just a .183 average and only one home run thus far this year. That’s a marked improvement over the .259 average and 8 home runs allowed on the pitch in 28 starts a year ago.
Braves manager Walt Weiss believes that is a weapon that looks better than ever this year.
“I think it’s all of his pitches and the secondary stuff is better,” Weiss said. “His slider is an underrated pitch. If you go back to 2023, when he made the All-Star team, you would see a lot of hitters swing at bounced sliders. I think he’s got that slider back again. He’s getting a lot of swing and miss on it. He’s getting some takes on it (because) they just don’t see it very well.”
Along with refining the slider, Elder reintroduced a cutter to go along with his sinker and four-seamer. That trio of fastball offerings can be utilized to do different things to different hitters in different counts, to say nothing of the occasional changeup Elder can keep in his back pocket.
It all adds up to the most complete version of Elder that the Braves have ever seen.
“He’s got the cutter to add to the arsenal,” Weiss said. “He had it once upon a time and he brought it back. It’s a good pitch for him (and) complements the changeup really well. His changeup has gotten better. All of his stuff has ticked up – the two-seam, the four-seam. So, he’s got three different fastballs – the two-seam, the four-seam and the cutter – and it makes it difficult on a hitter when you’ve got three different fastballs and the other stuff is working, too. He’s throwing the ball really well.
Elder’s stuff has definitely ticked up on the radar gun. The four-seam fastball that average 90-91 mph over his first three seasons is clocked up to 94 mph this year and average 92.5 mph.
In addition to tapping into a little more velocity, Elder added the cut-fastball to his repertoire, primarily as a weapon against left-handed hitters.
“Last year, the four-seam had a lot of good action to it and I was getting good results with it,” Elder said. “I still plan on using that, but I think the cutter just kind of creates another plane. Everything is usually up and down for me, being a higher arm-slot guy. So, (it’s) a little different plane moving into the lefties… I’ve been working on it.”
While he may eventually show it to right-handed hitters, Elder is using the pitch with great results against lefties. They are batting just .176 and slugging just .294 against the changeup in 76 offerings.
Braves catcher Drake Baldwin has been behind the plate for Elder over the past two seasons and sees the improved arsenal and extra velocity as the keys to success.
“I think his velocity is ticking up,” Baldwin said. “He has a little bit different pitch mix, a little more north-south and using that four-seam and cutter more. I think that pitch mix has helped him keep hitters a little bit more off balance.”
In a game that requires constant adjustments, Elder was able to bring what he learned down the stretch last year and add to it this season. While the results may have changed for the better, his teammates still see the pitcher they’ve always known, a tireless worker.
“He’s the same guy,” Baldwin said. “He’s always come in, worked his tail off and done everything he can scouting report-wise to know (hitters). This pitch mix is working more for him, and he’s been doing really well.”
When Elder went to the All-Star game in 2023, he was coming off a great first half. He went 7-2 with a 2.97 ERA in 18 starts before stumbling in the second half and falling out of favor and subsequently in and out of rotation over the two years that followed.
A litany of injuries to other starters afforded Elder an opportunity to keep pitching in the big leagues despite posting a 5.47 ERA combined between 2024 and 2025. Those extended struggles represented a chance to refine his mental and physical approach to the game.
With an improved pitch arsenal and grounded perspective, Elder appears to be on the right path to find success for both himself and the team.
“I’ve had a lot of good runs, and I’ve had a lot of bad runs,” Elder said.” I think more than anything just trying to – it sounds cliché, but it’s the truth – go one at a time and just keep my stuff crisp and keep my work right. Whatever happens every fifth day, that’s what happens.”
Atlanta, GA
8x MLB All-Star Atlanta Braves Must Consider Acquiring In A Trade
Getty
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – APRIL 17: Aroldis Chapman #44 of the Boston Red Sox pitches against the Detroit Tigers during the ninth inning at Fenway Park on April 17, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Brian Fluharty/Getty Images)
On Friday evening, the Atlanta Braves had a big win over the Colorado Rockies in Denver.
The Braves overcame a six-run deficit to win 8-6.
Michael Harris hit the go-ahead home run in the ninth inning.
After missing the 2025 MLB playoffs, the Braves are off to an incredible start to the season.
They are at the top of the National League East with a 23-10 record in 33 games.
So far, the Braves look like they will have a chance to win their second World Series in the last five years.
8x MLB All-Star Atlanta Braves Must Consider Acquiring


GettyAroldis Chapman #44 of the Boston Red Sox reacts after striking out Trent Grisham #12 of the New York Yankees (not pictured) to end game one of the American League Wild Card Series at Yankee Stadium on September 30, 2025 in the Bronx borough of New York City.
In the playoffs, having the right pitchers in the bullpen can make the difference in winning a series.
Aroldis Chapman (of the Boston Red Sox) is off to an incredible start to the 2026 season with a 1.04 ERA and five saves in nine games.
@TalkinBaseball_ wrote (on April 26): “Aroldis Chapman now has 1,341 career strikeouts, passing Goose Gossage for the second most in MLB history among relievers. Hoyt Wilhelm holds the all-time record with 1,363”
Chapman has been one of the best relievers in the MLB for well over a decade.
At 38, he has proven to still be pitching at an elite level.
That said, the Red Sox are at the bottom of the American League East with a 13-19 record in 32 games.
If they continue to struggle (and end up sellers at the trade deadline), Chapman would be an incredible addition to the Braves.
The Red Sox could get value out of a player who will not be part of their long-term future, while the Braves would be able to acquire a two-time World Series Champion for their playoff run.


GettyAroldis Chapman #44 and Carlos Narvaez #75 of the Boston Red Sox share a hug after the final out of the 3-0 win over the Cincinnati Reds on Opening Day at Great American Ball Park on March 26, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Chapman’s MLB Career


GettyAroldis Chapman #54 of the Cincinnati Reds pitches in the ninth inning against the Detroit Tigers at Great American Ball Park on August 24, 2015 in Cincinnati, Ohio. The Reds defeated the Tigers 12-5.
Chapman spent the first six years of his career with the Cincinnati Reds.
He then had stints with the New York Yankees, Chicago Cubs, Texas Rangers, Kansas City Royals and Pittsburgh Pirates over 17 seasons.
His titles came with the Cubs (2016) and Rangers (2023).
Over 872 games, Chapman has gone 60-49 with a 2.50 ERA (and 372 saves).


GettyAroldis Chapman #54 of the New York Yankees takes the field prior to game one of the American League Division Series against the Minnesota Twins at Yankee Stadium on October 04, 2019 in New York City.
How the Red Sox perform over the next few months will be worth watching, as Chapman (and other veterans) could become available.
Ben Stinar Ben Stinar has been covering the NBA for over seven years.
He has written for OnSI, Forbes, Amico Hoops, The Big Lead and had a podcast with former All-Star Jameer Nelson. More about Ben Stinar
Atlanta, GA
Search for missing southwest Atlanta teen enters fourth day
Search for missing Atlanta teen enters fourth day
The search for 16-year-old Benjamin Brath remains active in southwest Atlanta as classmates and family members gather to plead for his safe return, according to Atlanta police and school leaders.
ATLANTA – Benjamin Brathwaite, a 16-year-old student at KIPP Atlanta Collegiate, has been missing since Monday night after leaving his Southwest Atlanta home.
Community rally for missing teen
What we know:
Classmates, teachers, and family members held a rally Friday afternoon to plead for the safe return of the 6-foot-5 teenager. Brathwaite was last seen Monday night leaving his home in the Regency Trace neighborhood off County Line Road.
He was reportedly wearing a black hoodie, black joggers, and Nike running shoes when he disappeared. His family noted that he left without his cellphone or any of his belongings.
Ongoing police search efforts
What we don’t know:
Investigators have not yet determined where Brathwaite may have gone or what his current destination might be. Police have not released a specific motive or reason for why the teen left his home Monday night.
While the search remains active, authorities have not indicated if they have found any physical evidence or leads during their ground and air sweeps.
Law enforcement response
What they’re saying:
“As we speak, we have the helicopter flying over the house, the area, and checking the area,” a police investigator said. “We have our K-9 unit, our drone unit, checking the areas. We will not stop.”
School principal Authur Washington also delivered a message to the student. “Your doors, home, they are open to you, you have friends here, and they want to see you,” Washington said.
Family plea on father’s birthday
The backstory:
The search is now in its fourth day, coinciding with a difficult milestone for the family. Friday is the birthday of Brathwaite’s father.
“The only gift he wants is for you to come home, to be able to wrap his arms around you,” the teen’s brother, William “BJ” Brathwaite, said during the rally.
Next steps in search
What’s next:
A prayer vigil is scheduled for Friday night at Cascade United Methodist Church to support the family and the search efforts.
Community search parties plan to continue looking for the teenager throughout the weekend. Anyone with information is urged to contact the Atlanta Police Department or Crime Stoppers.
The Source: The information in this story was gathered from a FOX 5 news script and broadcast transcript featuring interviews with Benjamin Brathwaite’s family, his school principal, and the Atlanta Police Department.
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