The Atlanta Braves are quickly proving why they remain one of the most dangerous teams in Major League Baseball during the 2026 season.
Despite injuries, lineup changes, and constant pressure inside the National League playoff race, Atlanta continues finding ways to dominate opponents night after night. Their latest statement came Thursday evening at loanDepot park, where the Braves overwhelmed the Miami Marlins in a convincing 9-3 victory, securing yet another series win and continuing one of the hottest stretches in baseball.
With the win, Atlanta has now captured an astonishing 14 out of its first 16 series of the season, further cementing its reputation as one of MLB’s most complete and consistent teams entering the summer months.
The Braves have now improved to 35 wins on the year, with their only true series loss coming earlier this month against the Seattle Mariners, while splitting another series against the Los Angeles Angels back in April.
What makes Atlanta’s run even more impressive is the way the organization has continued winning despite facing key injuries to important contributors.
Just days ago, rookie standout Drake Baldwin was placed on the injured list with a Grade 1 oblique strain, creating immediate concerns about how the lineup would respond without one of its most productive young hitters.
At the same time, superstar Ronald Acuña Jr. had only recently returned from a two-week absence before exiting Thursday’s game early as a precaution because of left thumb discomfort.
Yet none of it slowed Atlanta’s offense.
Instead, the Braves exploded offensively throughout the series, outscoring Miami 26-7 across the final three games while showcasing the type of lineup depth that separates championship contenders from ordinary playoff teams.
One of the biggest stars of Thursday’s victory was veteran outfielder Mike Yastrzemski, who delivered arguably his best performance since joining Atlanta.
Yastrzemski finished the night going 3-for-3, falling just a triple short of the cycle while blasting a home run, adding a double, and driving in two RBIs. His breakout performance continued what has quietly become an excellent month of May for the veteran slugger.
The highlight came in the second inning when Yastrzemski launched a towering solo homer off former Cy Young winner Sandy Alcantara. The blast traveled a Statcast-projected 398 feet into right-center field and marked only the fifth home run allowed by Alcantara all season.
The impressive swing came against a 90.8 mph changeup that Alcantara left hanging over the plate — a rare mistake against one of baseball’s nastiest pitchers.
“I was just ready for fastballs,” Yastrzemski explained after the game. “That’s usually his best pitch. In the first inning he just hung a changeup, probably not where he wanted to throw it.”
Yastrzemski later added a single in the fifth inning before eventually scoring on an RBI base hit from Acuña. He followed that up with another extra-base hit in the sixth inning, capping off a near-perfect offensive night.
Meanwhile, young Braves star Michael Harris II continued his own surge by smashing two home runs in the victory, giving Atlanta yet another explosive offensive weapon capable of changing games instantly.
After the game, Braves manager Walt Weiss praised the collective approach of Atlanta’s lineup and emphasized how every player has contributed during the team’s dominant start.
“It’s been everybody,” Weiss said. “[Yastrzemski] is swinging the bat really well. He’s worked hard, and it’s paying off. He hit some rockets tonight.”
According to Weiss, one of the biggest reasons behind Atlanta’s consistency is the lineup’s willingness to “pass the baton” offensively rather than relying on one superstar to carry the team every night.
That mentality has become a defining identity for this Braves roster in 2026.
Yastrzemski also credited the organization’s roster construction, noting how Atlanta’s front office has prioritized experienced major league talent rather than forcing younger players into difficult bench roles too early in their careers.
“[Our guys] are talented, track-record big leaguers,” Yastrzemski said. “When veteran guys are on the bench and given opportunities to make an impact, they’ve been there before. I think that goes a long way.”
The veteran outfielder’s resurgence has become one of Atlanta’s most underrated storylines this month.
During April, Yastrzemski struggled badly at the plate, posting a disappointing .179 batting average with minimal power production. However, everything has changed in May.
So far this month, he is slashing an impressive .283/.353/.543 while collecting 13 hits and all three of his home runs on the season.
According to Yastrzemski, the turnaround has come from simplifying his approach at the plate and spending additional time working alongside Atlanta’s hitting coaches in the batting cages.
“Part of it is just patience too,” Yastrzemski admitted. “I tried to do too much early in the year, trying to impact games maybe when I didn’t need to. Just play my own game.”
That mental adjustment has allowed the veteran hitter to settle into his role naturally instead of pressing to prove himself immediately with his new organization.
“Sometimes the harder you try, the harder it gets,” Yastrzemski added. “You just have to let the game come to you.”
Right now, that philosophy appears to be working perfectly for both Yastrzemski and the Braves.
As the 2026 MLB season continues, Atlanta is not only winning consistently — they are beginning to look like one of the most balanced and complete teams in baseball. Even with injuries and roster adversity, the Braves continue proving they possess the depth, experience, leadership, and offensive firepower necessary to remain serious World Series contenders.