This afternoon, the Atlanta Braves surprised – or maybe shocked – the fan base by naming former bench coach Walt Weiss the team’s new manager. Weiss, 61, will now look to get the Braves back in the playoffs in 2026 after the team missed the post-season for the first time since 2017 this past season.
There is a segment of fans, especially those perpetually online, who are quite unhappy with the decision to stay in-house for their manager. The news was a jolt given several weeks of speculation that a younger, first-time manager from outside the organization could infuse new life into the ball-club and shift away from some of the shadows of “The Braves Way” to the light (or darker shadows) of all-in analytics.
Atlanta opted to go the same route they have taken since 1976 and hire a manager who has had past or current ties to the organization. Will the Weiss hire work out for the organization? That is a question no one will be able to answer for several years.
In the immediate aftermath of the announcement, rather than fan the flames of discontentment, here are a few reasons why the commonly referenced tropes cited as reasons for change could well be why Weiss might be the right hire for the Braves.
After former manager Brian Snitker announced he was retiring, there seemed to be two prevailing opinions – maintain the continuity for a team who will be on only their fourth manager since 1991 or shake up the foundational core with an outside hire.
Most of the names bandied about for the Braves’ managerial search all had at least some ties to the organization. Los Angeles Dodgers bench coach Danny Lehmann and former big league skipper Bud Black were two speculative names with no prior employment in the organization, which would have made them the first since Dave Bristol to take the helm without a history of being a Brave.
Other popular names, who were not on the team’s coaching staff with Snikter – like David Ross and George Lombard – had all been part of the organization in the past, and offered a bit of a compromise by being both an outsider and an insider.
This current Braves team still has a strong core with a farm system that, despite not being ranked highly, continues to product high-level prospects with major league value. This team isn’t in a rebuilding mode. Thus, bringing in a first-time manager was often an argument for what not to do – and one of the appealing factors for Ross as an option from the outside over a first-time option like Lombard or Ryan Flaherty.
With Weiss, who managed the Colorado Rockies for four seasons a decade ago, Atlanta not only went with the man who has been the team’s bench coach for eight seasons, but one with almost 650 games of big league managerial experience.
Weiss is also a former big league shortstop – the 1988 American League Rookie of the Year with the Oakland A’s and an All-Star with Atlanta in 1998. During his 14 seasons, he played for Tony La Russa, Renee Lachemann Don Baylor and Bobby Cox, who combined to managed 12,199 regular season big league games, not to mentioned the close to 1,200 games Weiss had on the bench with Atlanta. Weiss has a tremendous amount of experience and exposure to baseball at its highest level, a virtue in the eyes of the organization, it would seem.
While experience and familiarly isn’t the end-all-be-all, having a manager who has a preexisting relationship with the team’s players likely was a significant consideration. If Atlanta was known to need a positive cultural reset or was expected to turnover its foundational core, having a manager whose presence in-and-off-the-field extended beyond the tenure of most of its players might not be key, but that is part of what Weiss offers that only fellow coach Eddie Perez could have also bestowed. Atlanta is often been lauded by players for its clubhouse culture, and this move seems aimed to continue that as an asset.
How impactful the change from Snitker to Weiss may be from an analytical perspective can’t yet be judged. There likely won’t be a radical change in how decision-making is made with Weiss at the helm, although that will be one of the more curious items to monitor next season. For many, that’s a massive red flag, and in fairness a justifiable concern when it comes to how the bullpen is leveraged, how the line-up is set, and other ways to maximize the team’s players with data to set them up for the best chance of success. The weight of those considerations are tough to discern from outside the metaphorical four walls of the organization’s power brokers.
There was some trepidation that a drastic change in leadership could also mean a complete turnover in its major league coaching staff. That’s especially true of well-regarded pitching coach Rick Kranitz and bullpen coach Erick Abreu, who filled in admirably for Kranitz for much of the 2024 season. There is at least one open spot on the team’s bench, and Weiss could opt to make additional changes on his staff, but his hiring likely bodes well if the organization wants to keep its field staff intact. Who becomes the bench coach is a real curiosity, as that position could be one where Atlanta opts to bring in a coach with a heavier analytics slant to help steward in-game decision making.
In the end, even as a number of organizations filled managerial openings earlier with youth and inexperience with their hires, the Braves opted to go with the traditional route of experience with theirs.
Yes, “The Braves Way” is a joke that is easily made, but as many other organizations try to re-invent the wheel trying to find a modicum of success, Atlanta opted for “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” approach to extend it’s decades-long track-record of success.