Since the start of 2007, the Braves have had exactly one player hit 30 HRs in a season. That was Dan Uggla in 2011. He hit 36 HRs but slashed .233/.311/.453. Our only 30 HR hitter since the start of 2007 couldn't even break .800 with his OPS.
Right now, Freddie Freeman leads the team with 13 HRs. He's currently pacing 27 HRs this year. If he doesn't hit 30 we'll have gone a decade with only one player cracking 30 HRs.
For context, here are the number of players to hit at least 30 HRs by year:
2015- 20
2014- 11
2013- 14
2012- 27
2011- 24
2010- 18
2009- 30
2008- 28
2007- 26
Over those nine year, players have hit 30 HRs in a season 198 times. Only one of those 198 times was a Brave.
There are currently about 40 players on pace to hit 30 HRs this year, none of them Braves.
I knew we hadn't had many guys hit 30 in recent years but I never expected it to be this bad. Going a decade and only having one guy break 30 one time? I wonder how often that's happened in the modern era.
I've been saying this for a while but you've put it in a different light. My point has been that GOOD teams, contending teams, typically have league average HR power or better.
The Braves teams have been poorly constructed over the last ten years when it comes to offense.
In 2010, the Braves had 4 starting hitters with an OPS of .800 or better, had 139 total Team HR (league average was 150HR), and finished 2nd behind Philly. The other playoff teams that year were SFG (162HR), Philly(166HR) and Cincy(188HR). The Braves finished 6 games back in the Division and lost to the Giants in the Division series 3-1.
In 2012, the next time the Braves went to the playoffs, the Braves had 2 starting hitters with an OPS of .800 or better with one of those being Chipper who missed a ton of time, and had 149 team HR (league average was 152) and finished 4 games back of Washington. The other NL playoff Teams that year were Washington with 194HR, Cincy 172HR, STL 159HR, SFG
103HR
. The Braves finished 4 games back and lost to STL in the one game WC playoff. Everybody points to SFG as the team that won without power and that is certainly true. However, they play in a pitchers park, in a pitching division and made a move to bring in Hunter Pence at the deadline that year.
In 2013, The Braves had 181 Team HR, 4 starting hitters with an OPS of .800 or better and 2 others at .775 or better with the white bull playing about 50% of the time and contributing 21HR (league average HR was 144), they won the Division by 10 games over Washington and lost to the Dodgers in the LDS. Other NL playoff Teams were the Dodgers (138HR), STL(125HR), Pirates(161HR), Reds (155HR).
Power, specifically HR power, is a must. Can you win without HR power? Sure. If everything aligns just right, the right teams stumble and a team gets hot at the right time. But, mostly, teams without League average power don't make it to the playoffs.
So, 30 HR by one player as part of the total can be a pretty big deal. The traditional place to get a 30 HR guy is 1B, then LF/RF, then 3B and the Braves haven't come close to having that in years. Freddie isn't that guy at 1B. He's a mid 20HR guy who's going to get on base and play good defense. He's a very good 1B, but not a Great one. Heyward in RF wasn't that guy either.
Essentially, outside of the few home grown attempts that haven't really succeeded as well as desired (Freeman, Heyward), the Braves have been pretty horrible in getting power at traditional power positions - 1B, RF, LF, 3B. The one time where they made an attempt led to a fleetingly good offense (2013) that collapsed as marginal offensive players came back to earth (Simmons, Melvin, Uggla, Johnson).
Instead of fixing the traditional power positions, Wren tried to find his power elsewhere with Uggla at 2B and Melvin in CF.