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NORTH PORT, Fla. — When the Braves landed Chris Sale in a surprising trade this winter, many people assumed Reynaldo Lopez was ticketed for the bullpen. The Braves had four starters, which would allow them to use Lopez, a hard-throwing righty, in the late innings.

Well, on Monday the Braves announced Lopez as their fifth starter. He won the job after the team stuck to its plan of giving him an opportunity to start because they believed he might be the best choice.

The Braves on Monday optioned Bryce Elder and Huascar Ynoa. Elder was Lopez’s main competition this spring, especially after the Braves optioned AJ Smith-Shawver on March 11.

“We gotta start somewhere and we gotta be really aware of our starter depth, too,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said Monday morning. “We talked a long time last night going over this. It’s about the self-preservation of the season and all, and not have to worry about putting one guy in the ‘pen and, at some point, need them to start, and then worrying about stretching them back out. That’s exactly what it’s all about.”

Lopez, a full-time starter earlier in his career, successfully made the transition back to starting this spring. The Braves are cognizant of their depth, and starting Lopez is one way to preserve it — especially because his performance gave the front office and coaching staff no serious concerns about his ability to start.

Elder was an All-Star last season but he struggled down the stretch in 2023, his first full season in the majors.

Here’s something to remember: The Braves, Snitker said, expect to use around 11 different starting pitchers during a season. So if Elder stays healthy, we’ll likely see him in Atlanta this year.

“I told Bryce, too: A year ago today we did this same thing and then you got called back up within the first week and made the All-Star team,” Snitker said. “I don’t know that that won’t happen again, quite honestly.”

The Braves also must be aware of depth because of their rotation situation. Chris Sale, who turns 35 this month, hasn’t pitched over the last few years because of injuries. Since the end of 2019, Lopez hasn’t thrown more than 66 innings in a season. And the Braves will be careful with 40-year-old Charlie Morton, just as they’ve been in past seasons.

Lopez logged 188⅔ innings in 2018 and 184 in 2019, a testament to his durability as a full-time starter. But the Braves, at this point, haven’t charted out his workload for this season.

“Nah, we’ll just go,” Snitker said. “He’s a big, strong kid. That’s one of those things that we’ll use common sense as we navigate the next seven months with him.”

Lopez’s body seems to be adjusting well. Two outings ago, his legs felt heavy. On Sunday, after he threw five innings, he told Snitker he felt great.

“Our focus with Reynaldo is just figuring out his mix and figuring out what he likes from us, and whether that’s different out of the bullpen or as a starter,” catcher Sean Murphy said. “We still have some communicating to do and things to iron out, but Reynaldo seems game for anything. In any spot they put him, I think he’ll compete and thrive.”

Entering spring training, it seemed Lopez might’ve been the better fit as a fifth starter — at least to start the season. Had he opened in the bullpen, along with the other projected relievers, the Braves would’ve had only one optionable reliever: Dylan Lee. And they wouldn’t have room for a long man.

This way, Lopez begins in the rotation and the Braves have more flexibility with their depth.

Across five spring outings, he has a 2.16 ERA over 16⅔ innings. Elder allowed 11 earned runs over 12 innings in spring games.

Ynoa, who underwent Tommy John surgery in 2022, threw a scoreless inning Saturday in his return to the mound. But he experienced shoulder soreness earlier in camp and never had enough time to ramp up and truly compete for the fifth rotation spot.