
The Braves don’t build in a vacuum. Truist Park’s run-scoring profile, home-run carry, and alley depth nudge Atlanta toward certain player types. As the front office turns to 2026 and already have pointed out their needs, the data offers a clear blueprint.
Truist Park’s Park Factors at a Glance
By recent park factors, Truist muted over-the-fence damage — the home-run factor landed below league average — while overall run scoring hovered near neutral and singles/doubles held steady. Dimensions trace a classic shape with deeper gaps than many parks, which helps explain the way contact plays here.
What the Park Rewards: Line Drives, Gap Power, All-Fields Contact

Lower home-run carry doesn’t eliminate offense; it reallocates it. Gap hitters who keep the ball on a line see more outcomes survive heavy air. That pushes personnel choices toward bats with consistent barrel quality and all-fields contact instead of loft-only profiles. One small tiebreaker: right-center’s depth favors hitters who can use the middle of the field rather than living purely pull-side.
What It Punishes: Fly-Ball Reliance Without Impact
When carry is suppressed, fly-ball reliance without loud contact gets volatile. Power still matters — it just needs impact. Atlanta can chase damage hitters, but the safer fits pair exit-velocity baseline with line-drive rates that travel in this yard. On the margins, athletic baserunning gains value because more singles and doubles sustain first-to-third chances.
Pitching Lens: Contact Management and Outfield Range
The deeper alleys reward pitchers who work ahead and keep the ball in the big part of the park. That leans toward strike-throwers who limit barrels plus outfielders whose routes and closing speed convert extra playable balls into outs. In the bullpen, one true bat-misser remains essential to short-circuit cluster innings that park size alone can’t solve.
Scouting the Market Through a Truist Filter
For right-handed bats this winter, contact quality and all-fields power become useful tie-breakers. For left-handed hitters, pulled loft alone may not carry; on-plane contact helps. On the mound, the park can support contact managers — so long as the defense is built to fly — while high-leverage relief still benefits from swing-and-miss.