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TNT Sports welcomes DailyMail.com to its Atlanta studios for a behind-the-scenes look at Inside The NBA as the network takes aim at British and Irish fans with help from Charles Barkley and Shaquille O’Neal

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TNT Sports welcomes DailyMail.com to its Atlanta studios for a behind-the-scenes look at Inside The NBA as the network takes aim at British and Irish fans with help from Charles Barkley and Shaquille O’Neal


It’s about 20 minutes until TNT Sports’ ‘Inside the NBA’ halftime show when Charles Barkley saunters on set, where his esteemed co-host Ernie Johnson is already scribbling notes about a handful of ongoing games.

‘Who these people?’ the Basketball Hall of Famer asks staff in his famous Alabama drawl, gesturing to a group of infiltrators at the famed Studio J in Atlanta.

The answer, as Barkley learned, is a small group of reporters with British and Irish readers, all of whom TNT Sports hopes to convert into NBA fans. And although he’s not briefed on the journalists’ precise story angles, he reliably assumes they’re writing about him and, arguably, the most popular show in sports entertainment. So while he’s not about to give a full interview, Sir Charles does offer a single, sarcastic quote as he slowly makes his way to his customary seat, stage left: ‘This is hard work!’

It’s not long before co-hosts Kenny ‘The Jet’ Smith and Shaquille O’Neal arrive at the cavernous studio, where a steel-reinforced basket has been erected on the chance that the seven-foot, 300-something-pound Shaq decides to throw down a two-handed slam. Only on Tuesday night, with just a few minutes to spare before showtime, O’Neal is lining up for a baseline jumper — the kind of shot he abstained from as a pro, but Smith is wagering $100 he’ll miss, so the big fella opens fire and casually drains a 15-footer.

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‘Shaq owes me more than that,’ Smith said later when Mail Sport asked if he’d be paying O’Neal $100. ‘You know how many bets that he hasn’t paid? And how many shots that I probably hit over the years that he’s never paid me?’

All of this takes place off the air, but to Inside The NBA devotees, it’s a familiar sample of the show’s DNA: What starts with basketball (in this case, O’Neal’s baseline jumper) evolves into an entertaining debate between friends, colleagues, and competitors.

Shaquille O’Neal (left), Ernie Johnson (center left), Kenny Smith (center right) and Charles Barkley (right) on Tuesday’s show 

Shaquille O'Neal, 51, and Ernie Johnson, 67, have now worked together on Inside The NBA for around a dozen seasons

Shaquille O’Neal, 51, and Ernie Johnson, 67, have now worked together on Inside The NBA for around a dozen seasons

Smith (left) says Barkley (right) is responsible for '99 percent' of the controversies on TNT Sports' Inside The NBA

Smith (left) says Barkley (right) is responsible for ’99 percent’ of the controversies on TNT Sports’ Inside The NBA 

Such an exchange might be less familiar to British and Irish audiences, but TNT Sports’ parent company, Warner Bros. Discovery, aims to change that this season after obtaining the NBA’s regional media rights.

As a result, TNT Sports will broadcast nine games a week across the British Isles through the regular season and the first two rounds of the NBA playoffs. Additionally, the channels will air five games on Christmas, three matchups on Martin Luther King Day (January 15), and the knockout stages of the league’s inaugural in-season tournament, not to mention the last two rounds of the NBA postseason, ending with the Finals in early June.

But simply blasting some basketball games across the North Atlantic in hopes of cultivating an audience isn’t practical. 

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Two TNT Sports execs bringing the NBA to the UK: Atlanta-based Craig Barry (left) and London-based Scott Young

Two TNT Sports execs bringing the NBA to the UK: Atlanta-based Craig Barry (left) and London-based Scott Young 

For starters, there’s the inconvenient time-zone difference, not to mention younger viewers’ reluctance to watch entire games from start to finish. 

So in addition to the live, pre-dawn game broadcasts, daytime shows featuring highlights and commentary have been crafted to inform fans about what they missed while they were sleeping.

Above all, the content has to feel authentic, whether it’s consumed by live television audiences or someone scrolling though social media the following day. 

‘This generation that really enjoys watching NBA loves the style of production that comes out of the US,’ said Scott Young, Senior Vice President of Content and Production for Warner Bros. Discovery Sports Europe. ‘They love the US narrative.’

And that’s where Inside The NBA factors into the equation: An American cultural touchstone, offering something to both hardcore and casual basketball fans. 

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‘I think we really love that intersection of sports and culture,’ said Craig Barry, the Executive Vice President and Chief Content Officer for Warner Bros. Discovery Sports. ‘We understand our obligation to the hardcore fan, but we also understand our equal obligation to the casual fan, right? And that’s kind of the differentiation in the way that we create our content. [We] approach it in this really honest, unapologetic, authentic way.’

Intertwining basketball with pop culture has been Johnson, Barkley, and Smith’s approach for two decades, or so, including the last dozen years with O’Neal.

Yes, it is a sports broadcast, but Inside The NBA aspires to attract more than just sports fans. 

‘I think we’re the number one entertainment show,’ said Smith, a former NBA guard. ‘Not sports — entertainment. Because it just happens we’re talking about basketball. That’s the subject that we’re talking, but we entertain and that’s what separates it. And Shaq is an entertainer; Charles is definitely an entertainer; I’m an aspiring entertainer, I guess; and Ernie entertains.

‘So the greatest compliment that we ever get is, I hear this a lot now: ”I don’t watch the game. I watch you guys.”’

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Kenny Smith illustrates a point at TNT Sports' expansive replay screen, which dominates the cavernous studio in Atlanta

Kenny Smith illustrates a point at TNT Sports’ expansive replay screen, which dominates the cavernous studio in Atlanta

The reach of the show is so remarkable, according to Smith, that he’s received fan feedback while traveling as far away as Abu Dhabi.

‘And not only one person, it’s the frequency of it,’ added Smith, who says he is easily better known for his on-air work than winning two titles with the Houston Rockets in the mid-1990s.

Even within the US, where the NFL sits atop the national sports hierarchy, Inside The NBA still stands out from rival programing for its cultural significance. 

‘It’s my favorite show,’ retired NFL star Champ Bailey told Mail Sport from Studio J, where he’s already made several pilgrimages.

TNT Sports has a policy against releasing audience data, Mail Sport was told, but broadcasts are typically watched by anywhere from a 500,000 US viewers to 1.3 million, according to USTVDB.com.

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Former NFL star Champ Bailey (pictured in Studio J) told Mail Sport that Inside The NBA is actually his 'favorite show'

Former NFL star Champ Bailey (pictured in Studio J) told Mail Sport that Inside The NBA is actually his ‘favorite show’

However, that’s an imperfect metric because it fails to account for the show’s impact across all media. Inside The NBA has been the subject of everything from Saturday Night Live sketches to serious national news reports, and just about everything in between. 

Take O’Neal’s heartfelt reaction to the 2020 death of his former teammate, Kobe Bryant, or the time Barkley lost an on-air bet and was forced to kiss Smith’s ‘ass’ (a pet donkey): Both moments have been immortalized on the internet, albeit for very different reasons. 

‘Because let’s face it, in the sports business, we’re in the business of moments,’ Barry said.

One such moment occurred in 2015, when O’Neal tripped while trying to race Smith to the expansive replay screen that dominates the background of Studio J. 

Typically, when it’s time for Smith to review replays for the audience, he jogs back from the desk to the massive screen, occasionally outracing Barkley or O’Neal in a childish duel of NBA retirees.

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Only this time, O’Neal’s zeppelin-sized feet got tangled with some power cords, causing him to crash to the floor and sending his three co-hosts into hysterics.

But the moment wasn’t just funny. To Barry, it was a revelation.

‘This door swung open for us and we realized it’s not Shaq, it’s us,’ said Barry, who admittedly made a mistake by originally casting O’Neal as a serious counterweight to Barkley’s comedic presence.

As Barry explained, Inside The NBA producers realized they were ‘not producing him correctly.’

Instead of allowing Shaq to be Shaq, they were stifling his best asset: a physical presence approaching 400 pounds.

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‘He fell and it shook the set,’ Barry said. ‘It kind of woke us all up.’

And like everything with Barry and Inside The NBA, this wasn’t preplanned in a production meeting.

In fact, O’Neal, Barkley and Smith never attend production meetings — and Barry believes that’s what gives the show an authenticity he hopes will connect with British and Irish audiences.

‘Charles and Kenny and Shaq aren’t invited,’ Barry said of production meetings. ‘Not that they would come, anyway.’

Ernie Johnson and Kenny Smith share a laugh in Atlanta during halftime of Tuesday's Thunder-Spurs game in Oklahoma City

Ernie Johnson and Kenny Smith share a laugh in Atlanta during halftime of Tuesday’s Thunder-Spurs game in Oklahoma City

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A peek inside the TNT Sports control room, where Inside the NBA and an array of other sports-related shows are produced

A peek inside the TNT Sports control room, where Inside the NBA and an array of other sports-related shows are produced 

‘It’s real conversation,’ Smith said. ‘It’s real dialogue. It’s not rehearsed… So you see Shaq, when he’s mad at Chuck, he’s really mad. He didn’t have a segment to practice it and get mad and then calm down and do the segment. No, he’s mad in that moment.’ 

Johnson, the son and namesake of a former Milwaukee Braves pitcher, attends every production meeting. And when he’s not there, he spends most of his time hunkered in his office, where the media veteran diligently prepares notes for all of the NBA action on a given evening. 

Barkley, O’Neal and Smith, on the other hand, spend their off-air moments watching games from their custom-made chairs, which are allegedly so enormous that they needed to be disassembled before they could fit into their private viewing room. 

Of course, the image of Barkley, Smith, and O’Neal lounging in front of the TV dovetails with criticism of the show — namely that three former NBA stars have become curmudgeons, perpetually dissatisfied with the generations of players who succeeded them. 

Most famously, Phoenix Suns star Kevin Durant has bristled at Barkley’s criticism.

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‘This ain’t gettin tiring chuck?’ Durant tweeted in March after Barkley called him ‘sensitive’ during a 60 Minutes segment.  

‘Great player,’ Barkley said of Durant, before adding: ‘He’s part of that generation who think he can’t be criticized.’

Bill Hader as Ernie Johnson Jr., Kenan Thompson as Charles Barkley during the "Inside the NBA" skit on May 16, 2009

Bill Hader as Ernie Johnson Jr., Kenan Thompson as Charles Barkley during the ‘Inside the NBA’ skit on May 16, 2009

SNL's Inside The NBA sketch returned in 2022, with Alex Moffat as Ernie Johnson and Chris Redd (right) as Kenny Smith

SNL’s Inside The NBA sketch returned in 2022, with Alex Moffat as Ernie Johnson and Chris Redd (right) as Kenny Smith

Barkley, who certainly faced his share of criticism as a player, refrains from getting too personal. O’Neal and Smith are even less judgmental, and when it does come time to criticize someone, they try to stick to the facts as much as possible. 

‘I never question your passion, your work ethic or your, your integrity,’ Smith said. ‘I can’t measure that. But I can measure if you didn’t run back on defense. And I could show that multiple times [on replay] and I could prove my point. But to say that you’re not running back because you don’t have passion, then it becomes subjective and then we are losing the point of ”you’re not running back.”’

And besides, Johnson, Barkley, Smith and O’Neal aren’t particularly concerned about criticism from outsiders. 

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‘I don’t think anyone criticizes or makes fun of us more than we do of each other,’ Smith added. ‘Like, we know each other so well that we could dig to a place that no one else could dig. And we do it.’

There was no shortage of that on Tuesday.

When Johnson did some basic arithmetic during one segment, Barkley quickly disparaged his subsequent gloating: ‘You’re bragging because you know how to count?’ 

Minutes later, O’Neal took an opportunity to remind the 60-year-old Barkley: ‘You just got a new hip.’

Unbothered, Barkley boasted right back: ‘I got two of ’em.”

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Ernie Johnson (center left) tries an iGrow laser-based hair-growth helmet during a 2017 episode of Inside The NBA

Ernie Johnson (center left) tries an iGrow laser-based hair-growth helmet during a 2017 episode of Inside The NBA 

The back and forth continues off screen, the only difference being that Barkley sometimes wears bifocals and O’Neal’s low-decibel speaking voice is barely audible without a microphone. 

Whatever the conversation, though, the four do have their respective roles. 

‘The slapstick, I’m not gonna lie, is mostly Shaq,’ Smith said. ‘Shaq comes up with most of the stuff when it comes to hardcore slapstick comedy. He’s very quick with it.

‘The controversy always — 99 percent — comes from Chuck,’ Smith continued. 

‘I’m the team psychologist and Ernie is the overall referee — he’s there to make sure that it all just moves.’

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And the show certainly moves, hitting on a number of topics with each segment while maintaining the trademark banter. 

Even competitors, such as ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt, appreciate the dynamic interplay between the four co-hosts. 

‘You, me, everyone consuming this, we all love Inside The NBA,’ Van Pelt told Jimmy Traina on the Sports Illustrated Media Podcast in June of 2022. ‘So I get when that show ends, that it’s a bummer for everybody. Because it’s a blast. It’s just the rarest of things. The combination of personalities and truly not giving a s*** that Charles and that whole group has, with Ernie just the maestro making it all work, when it ends, I’m sad.’

Van Pelt wasn’t predicting the end of Inside The NBA, but the show will need to evolve at some point as Barkley & Co. head for retirement. 

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Barkley did sign a 10-year, $100 million before the season, so he’s not expected to call it quits anytime soon. But when speaking to Traina in August, he admitted that he can’t see himself finishing the contract. 

‘There’s no chance in hell I’m gonna be working when I’m 70,’ Barkley said. ‘Zero.’ 

Barry admitted that TNT Sports is already preparing for Barkley’s eventual retirement, and although he declined to name any candidates, he’s well aware that Chuck’s ultimate successor will be a major departure. 

Charles Barkley kisses the back side of a donkey after losing a bet to Kenny Smith in which he promised to 'kiss his ass'

Charles Barkley kisses the back side of a donkey after losing a bet to Kenny Smith in which he promised to ‘kiss his ass’ 

‘We want [Barkley] to be here, but we also want him to be happy and to live his life, and when he feels like he’s had enough, it’ll be time to move on,’ Barry said. ‘We have people in mind that we think would be interesting.

‘It’s not gonna be Charles, it’s not gonna be Shaq, it’s not gonna be Kenny, it’s not gonna be Ernie, and it’s certainly not gonna be them together,’ Barry continued, addressing the show’s future. ‘But we wouldn’t be doing our job if we didn’t have ideas of ways we thought we could keep a show – if not this show – interesting and progressive.’ 

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For now, though, Barkley’s continued presence on the panel is significant for TNT Sports, both internationally and domestically. 

As one of sports media’s most recognizable faces, Barkley has the power to entertain millions of NBA fans on both sides of the Atlantic, while attracting new viewers as well. And with the NBA’s $24 billion US media rights deal expiring at the end of next season, that’s no small thing. 

NBC, Amazon, and Netlix are all rumored to be eyeing NBA rights, but what those platforms lack is Barkley, who only seems to be getting more popular with age. 

And to some degree, the same can be said about all four co-hosts.

Whereas Inside The NBA’s post-game show was once used to fill scheduling gaps before a late-night movie on TNT, the program has become appointment viewing for many, necessitating longer and longer broadcasts.    

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‘Where before, when I first come on, it was like the post-game show would end on the hour,’ Smith said. ‘So if the game ended at 9:40, post-game show would only be 20 minutes.

‘Now it’s like: ”We’re gonna be on an hour, but if it ends at 9:40, that means you’re gonna be at an hour [and 20 minutes].” So we have so much more time.’

And with new audiences in Britain and Ireland, Ernie, Chuck, Shaq and Jet will have even more folks to entertain. 

‘Two years from now,’ Smith concluded, ‘there’s gonna be a high appreciation [in the UK], kind of like when European football came [to the US].’

Watch all the latest action from around the NBA live on TNT Sports. TNT Sports is available through its streaming destination discovery+ and across all major TV platforms. This isn’t Just Sport, This is Everything. For more info visit: www.tntsports.co.uk/basketball/nba/ 

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Atlanta, GA

Severe storms on leave damage, many without power in metro Atlanta

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Severe storms on leave damage, many without power in metro Atlanta


ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – Severe storms rolled through north Georgia on Thursday afternoon, leaving some residents in a Dunwoody neighborhood stunned.

“How did this happen,” asked Alex Delgado. “How terrible was this storm?”

On his way home, riding his scooter on Happy Hollow Road, his turn onto Dunwoody Club Drive was stopped by cones, trucks and crews of people assessing the damage.

Someone with Georgia Power told Atlanta News First that it was unclear how long it would take crews to clean up the affected area safely.

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Atlanta News First observed two power poles that sustained considerable damage and appeared to have snapped, with power lines tangled in trees or lying on the ground and trees knocked over.

Another resident provided video from late in the afternoon as the storm rolled through, showing a vast amount of hail falling from the sky. Youthful excitement could be heard from the video, exclaiming, “That’s all hail!”

But not everyone was as excited as the kids were in the video.

“I see all these lights,” said Delgado. “I see the cameraman. All this, I’m like, ‘What happened?’ ‘What the [heck] happened?’ Yeah. I was surprised to see this today.”

He said his house did not lose power. At least, he believed that was the case.

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A short drive from this blocked-off road, another cleanup effort is underway. Less than a two-minute drive away, a portion of Dunwoody Club Way was blocked by another fallen tree on power lines, causing traffic to be blocked.

One neighbor in that area reported being without power for about an hour.

In a Sandy Springs neighborhood, Atlanta News First encountered a live downed power line. It left a visible hole in the road at the intersection of Jett Road and Mt. Paran Road NW. A neighbor told Atlanta News First that the smoke and the storm were so powerful that she said her dogs were terrified.

The storms also caused power outages in different parts of the metro, according to Georgia Power’s website. As of the last check, fewer than 3,500 customers were affected by the storms.

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Atlanta, GA

Busy Fourth of July travel period takes off at Atlanta airport

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Busy Fourth of July travel period takes off at Atlanta airport


The busy Fourth of July travel period is already taking off, and officials at the world’s busiest airport in Atlanta say they’re prepared for the hundreds of thousands of travelers to hit the skies.

Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International officials expect more than 4 million passengers to pass through from Thursday until July 7.

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What we know:

 Friday is expected to be the busiest day of the season with airport officials estimating that nearly 400,000 passengers will be traveling through Atlanta.

Thursday won’t be far behind. Hartsfield-Jackson officials project that they’ll see about 384,000 passengers.

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Nationwide, the Transportation Security Administration is expecting 18.5 million people to fly during the Fourth of July.

Travelers head off at the start of the busy Fourth of July travel period. (FOX 5)

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In order to ease these summer travel numbers, U.S. Customs and Border Protection is using new technology at the airport to streamline travelers’ arrivals into the country.

The technology captures the passenger’s image on the move, which speeds up the process of getting through customs.

What they’re saying:

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“When you’re looking at an airport as busy as Atlanta where we’ll see upwards of 27,000 passengers on any given summer day, that translates into a 22% efficiency rate where we’re seeing a 40 to 50% decrease in passenger wait times,” said Clay Thomas, the Atlanta-area port director of U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

What you can do:

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To help travelers navigate the crowds, TSA officials are urging people to plan ahead and arrive to the airport early. 

For domestic flights, passengers should arrive 2.5 to 3 hours before departure, and at least 3 hours early for international travel.

Planning on driving? You should also prepare for delays as travelers pack the roads. AAA expects more than 2 million Georgians to head to their vacation destinations by car this year.

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The Source: Information for this story came from a press conference by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, information from Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, and a report from FOX 5’s Brooke Zauner.

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Atlanta, GA

Atlanta Braves still face an uphill battle, but with Ronald Acuña Jr., anything seems possible

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Atlanta Braves still face an uphill battle, but with Ronald Acuña Jr., anything seems possible


NEW YORK — Around Ronald Acuña Jr.’s neck hangs an unavoidable symbol of his own excellence. As if such a reminder were necessary.

Atlanta’s swashbuckling outfielder has never been shy about expressing himself via his jewelry on the diamond. For most of his career, Acuña rocked an enormous, gold, diamond-crusted No. 13 pendant. That trademark piece grew into such a signature that during Acuña’s rip-roaring, record-setting, 41-homer, 73-steal 2023 NL MVP season, one of the Braves’ promotional giveaways was a replica version of their superstar’s ice.

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But this season, the 27-year-old has unveiled something new, something different: a gold, octagonal, jewel-encrusted medallion designed to look exactly like the MVP trophy he won two years ago.

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Ronald Acuña Jr. has been wearing a gold medallion inspired by the MVP trophy this season. (Brandon Sloter/Getty Images)

(Brandon Sloter via Getty Images)

The chain, a gift from Acuña’s wife, is a subtle, shimmering reminder of what this spectacular talent can do. He is one of the few players in baseball capable of bending a game to his will. His electrifying solo homer Monday provided the difference in the Braves’ 3-2 win over the Mets. And even though he went 0-for-3 with two walks Tuesday, Acuña’s presence in the leadoff spot changes the entire complexion of Atlanta’s offense.

“Him in the lineup, it helps everybody,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said. “What he’s doing, how he’s doing it, taking his walks — that’s awesome.”

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Since missing the past four months of 2024 and the first two months of this season while recovering from his second career ACL surgery, Acuña has reemerged like a bat out of hell. He went deep on the very first pitch he saw in May. He is slashing .385/.496/.692 with nine homers in just 29 games. He has swiped four bags on his surgically repaired legs. His arm, which has always been strong, now grades out as the single strongest outfield arm in MLB. But most importantly, he looks explosive, dangerous, formidable — everything his stuck-in-neutral ballclub desperately needs him to be.

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That’s because these Atlanta Braves and their seven consecutive playoff appearances are facing quite the climb. After their 7-4 victory Tuesday, the Braves are 37-41, 9.5 games back in the division and six games out of the last NL wild card. Their postseason odds have plummeted from 92.5% on Opening Day to 33.3% as of Wednesday. That is by far the largest drop in MLB. Atlanta’s offense, which underwhelmed before Acuña’s return, has been just as statistically drab since the outfielder reappeared. In other words: the Braves cannot simply rely on their supernova to save them.

To be fair, some of the underperformance to this point can be pinned on poor luck and batted-ball sequencing. The Braves’ run differential (+29) is that of a team five games over .500, not four games under. Monday’s win over New York moved Atlanta to a still substandard 11-19 in one-run games, largely a byproduct of closer Raisel Iglesias’ shaky performance thus far in 2025.

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[Get more Braves news: Braves team feed]

Injuries have played a part as well. Being without Acuña for eight weeks was a significant impediment. All-Star hurler Reynaldo López has been on the shelf all season. Flame-throwing ace Spencer Strider has taken some time, in his return from Tommy John surgery, to round into form. Not to be forgotten, the team’s biggest free-agent addition, Jurickson Profar, has been serving a PED suspension since spring training. He’s expected to join the Braves when his suspension expires July 2.

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This past weekend brought even more bad news: Reigning Cy Young winner Chris Sale will be out for an undetermined amount of time after suffering a fractured rib cage while making a diving catch during his most recent outing.

Still, Atlanta’s humbling first half has been about more than bad bounces and boo-boos.

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This offense, which set multiple MLB records just two years ago with many of the same characters, has been an utter disappointment. Atlanta ranks 22nd in runs scored, 18th in homers and 19th in wRC+.

There are many culprits. Spectacular as his center-field glove might be, Michael Harris II’s OPS starts with a 5. Meanwhile, the Profar fill-ins in left field have combined for a .540 OPS, the second-lowest mark of any team in baseball. New shortstop Nick Allen is a defensive magician, but he’s also homerless with a .574 OPS in 229 plate appearances. Marcell Ozuna, who finished fourth in MVP voting a year ago, is playing through a hip issue that has sapped his power and limited his output. Austin Riley has been solid but far below his All-Star standards.

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Yet no performance has been more concerning than that of three-time All-Star second baseman Ozzie Albies, who has the ninth-lowest OPS this year among qualified hitters. All the batted ball data further confirms the Curaçaoan’s sharp decline. Albies has always been a free swinger, even at his best, but in the past, he overcame that aggression by impacting the baseball with authority in the air and to the pull side. So far in 2025, those traits are nowhere to be seen.

A startling lack of organizational depth has only amplified the big-league struggles. When Profar got popped for juicing, the Braves were forced to turn to free-agent Band-Aid Alex Verdugo, who has struggled mightily. The upper minors are barren of helpful pieces, on both sides of the ball. Even worse, Atlanta’s farm system is light on impact prospects who could be flipped for reinforcements at the deadline.

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To be fair, this organization — as president of baseball operations Alex Anthopolous is wont to remind you — has been down and out before. The Braves battled back to clinch a spot in the postseason in the final game a year ago. And most famously, the 2021 Braves had 7.7% playoff odds on July 28. Then Anthopolous made lemonade out of nothing at the deadline, and the club rallied to sneak into a wild-card spot. That season ended under a downpour of confetti and a parade through the streets of Atlanta.

But the shining glory of 2021 has little impact on the stark realities of 2025, something Snitker seems to understand.

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“Every one of these seasons has its own identity,” he told reporters before Tuesday’s game. “You can’t just sit back and think it’s going to happen, because it doesn’t work that way.”

As unique as each season might appear — Snitker, for instance, has a frosty, white goatee now — the Braves have a striking amount of continuity on offense. Albies, Acuña, Ozuna, Riley, Harris, Matt Olson and Sean Murphy have all been around for multiple playoff runs. Anthopolous has received much praise for his willingness and ability to secure many of those players on team-friendly, long-term deals. But that strategy works only as well as the players perform.

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Still, this season, nearly half-gone, is also very much alive. There is ample time for the Braves to find their way back to October. Dodging any additional big injuries will be vital; surviving Sale’s absence will be tough as is. Getting more production from the bottom of the order is another must. It’s still too early to say whether this club — winners of five straight against the Mets over the past two weeks — has actually turned a corner, but there’s more than enough runway for optimism.

Having a superstar such as Acuña back in the fold certainly helps.

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