Which is "competitive" - and about where they need to be.
An interesting note for those who are so against trading for an "Ace". Bowman was on XM earlier this morning talking about the Garcia deal, and I was a little surprised by his comment that he's hearing that payroll could be pushed into the $150 million range relatively soon. Take that for what it's worth, but that could at least support the theory that they're willing to spend soon to surround the core - Julio, Freeman, Swanson, Albies, etc. with pieces needed to contend. Committed salaries for 2018 stand at ~$79,750,000 as of today. If you replace Colon and Garcia from within at the minimum, that's still a boatload of money available - especially if you hang onto Swanson.
Obviously nobody KNOWS with any certainty if the number Bowman floated is in the ballpark or not, but it does begin to line up with the brass' statements that they expect to be in the Top 10 range (The Gnats were 10th last season at $163+ million). One of the reasons for the "optimism" from some is that free-agents that fit our long-term holes are available next winter - Lucroy and Moustakas to name a couple. If you give Lucroy the Mac contract without the option ($17 million per) and give Moustakas four years at the same number you're then still only sitting at ~$113,750,000.
CF- Inciarte, SS- Swanson, 1B- Freeman, LF- Kemp, 3B- Moustakas, C- Lucroy, RF- Markakis, 2B- TBD
Rotation - Julio, Folty, internal option, internal option, ???
The point is that the Braves are at least finally in a position to add one of those huge contracts - in the unlikely event they ever do. Assuming they did trade for a Sale or Archer type, there is plenty of money available to extend them at market value. Does that make it likely? Of course not. However, dismissing the possibility out of hand is just as short-sighted as expecting Kemp to become an MVP candidate again or expecting Markakis to hit 20 bombs.