Ronald Acuña Jr. publicly criticized Braves manager Brian Snitker for a perceived double standard in handling lack-of-hustle incidents, specifically comparing his own past benching to the leniency shown towards Jarred Kelenic. Acuña later deleted the post.
The article details instances where Snitker benched players, including Acuña and others of Latin descent, for similar offenses, while not doing the same for Kelenic, a white player.
The central argument focuses on Snitker's inconsistent disciplinary approach, potentially revealing racial bias and undermining team unity. The article notes the team's significant Latin American representation and suggests the controversy could widen existing internal tensions.
Snitker defended his actions by stating each situation is unique, claiming previous benchings involved repeated instances of lack of hustle. The article highlights Acuña's growth and maturity since his past incident.
The article concludes with the potential for future conversations between Snitker and Acuña. It emphasizes that while the incident might be short-lived, the underlying issue of consistency in management remains.
They all should have known better. Jarred Kelenic should have run hard. Brian Snitker should have benched him. And Ronald Acuña Jr. should have addressed the double standard internally rather than taking to X to say, “If it were me, they would take me out of the game.”
Acuña, who is not with the Atlanta Braves while recovering from a torn left ACL, later deleted his post. The problem for Snitker, a highly successful manager and Braves lifer, is that his star right fielder essentially stated a fact.
Snitker removed Acuña from a game in August 2019 for the same offense Kelenic committed Saturday night — failing to run hard on a fly ball out of the batter’s box he thought would be a home run. He also pulled Ender Inciarte for lack of hustle in July 2018 and Marcell Ozuna for a similar misstep in June 2023.
All three of those players are Latin. Kelenic is White, as is Snitker, who is 69. Inevitably, some will view this matter solely through the lens of race. We can’t know for sure how much of a role that played. Within the game, Snitker is held in high esteem, in part because of his feel for players, as both Acuña and Ozuna can attest.
Snitker vociferously defended Acuña when the Miami Marlins repeatedly drilled him in 2018. He continued playing Ozuna when many Braves fans booed him and wanted him released during his slow start to the 2023 season. And those are just two examples.
Still, just as players make mistakes, so do managers. And Snitker hardly distinguished himself with his failure to bench Kelenic and his feeble responses to reporters’ questions about the incident the past two days.
Consider what Snitker said after benching Acuña, then the reigning NL Rookie of the Year, in 2019:
“He didn’t run. You’ve got to run. It’s not going to be acceptable here. As a teammate, you’re responsible for 24 other guys. That name on the front is a lot more important than the name on the back of that jersey.
“You can’t do that. We’re trying to accomplish and do something special here, and personal things have to be put on the back burner. You just can’t let your team down like that.”
Snitker should have taken the same stance with Kelenic, a struggling player who presented a much easier target than Acuña, a future MVP, did in 2019. Kelenic, batting .180, has been a subject of fan frustration. He very well could be the player sent to Triple A when Acuña rejoins the Braves, possibly in early May.
Instead, Snitker created an opening for the team’s franchise player to question him. This controversy, like most fueled by social media, might very well have a short shelf life. But the issue raised by Acuña is the kind that might expose a rift in a team that is almost one-third Latin.
Most teams, the Braves included, are remarkably successful at blending different cultures. Most teams also experience occasional tensions. Striking the proper balance over a six-month, 162-game season can challenge even the most well-intentioned.
Snitker routinely draws praise for his even demeanor and stable leadership. Coming from the Bobby Cox school, he generally prefers to handle sensitive matters behind closed doors. This time, though, he looked out of touch. And short-term, the timing could not be worse.
The talk around the Braves should be about how they won back-to-back games for the first time this season Friday and Saturday, and completed their sweep of the Minnesota Twins on Sunday. The talk around Snitker, until now, was about whether he would retire at the end of the season, his 49th in the Atlanta organization.
Snitker has said he will consider it. The Braves are unlikely to fire him, nor should they, because he blew it on Kelenic. Snitker led the Braves to six straight NL division crowns from 2018 to ‘23, seven straight postseason appearances and the 2021 World Series title. You just don’t cast him aside.
As Snitker correctly pointed out Sunday, no two lack-of-hustle situations are the same. Though Snitker didn’t say it explicitly, some if not all of his previous benchings resulted from an accumulation of base running lapses. Of Kelenic, who joined the Braves last season, Snitker said, “I don’t look for him to not (run hard) because he plays with his hair on fire all the time.”
Snitker, in fact, said he wasn’t even watching the play, which seems difficult to believe, considering Kelenic crossed directly in front of the Braves’ dugout while running to first. The replay was shown on the video board at Truist Park. Did no one in the Braves’ dugout bring it to Snitker’s attention? Or was the entire team oblivious?
What Kelenic did actually was not all that unusual. Virtually every night, players fail to run hard on batted balls. Singles that should be doubles do not always get noticed. When they are, teams often address the matter internally. The difference with Kelenic is that he got thrown out in a game that was tied in the sixth inning. Can’t happen.
Snitker, asked after the game if he had spoken to Kelenic, replied, “Was I supposed to?” He said after Sunday’s game he did not see the play until that morning and talked about it with Kelenic then. Kelenic, interestingly enough, said he was the one who initiated the discussion, explaining, “It’s my action, so I don’t need him to call me in.”
“I gotta be on second base,” Kelenic said. “There’s no excuse for it.”
Presumably, a conversation between Snitker and Acuña is forthcoming, if it hasn’t happened already. Acuña, rehabilitating in Florida, will rejoin the team soon enough. Snitker said he was aware of Acuña’s post and that it had been taken down.
Acuña, after his benching in 2019, made the same mistake two months later in Game 1 of the Division Series against the St. Louis Cardinals, admiring a fly ball and failing to advance to second. Snitker didn’t dare pull him from a playoff game, one in which Acuña went 3-for-4 with a double, two-run homer and run-saving catch. But after the Braves fell, 7-6, Freddie Freeman, Ozzie Albies and Brian McCann were openly critical of their teammate. The Braves wound up losing the series, three games to two.
Acuña was 21 then. He is 27 now, married with two sons. The general consensus around the Braves in recent seasons was that he has matured, in the way most young players do.
His post on X, like many reactions on social media, was made in the heat of the moment. But if there’s one thing players detest in managers, it’s inconsistency. Snitker was inconsistent with Kelenic. Acuña can be forgiven for lodging an objection.
(Top photo of Acuña and Snitker in March 2024: Bill Streicher / Imagn Images)
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