There’s a juxtaposition that some fans go through when their favorite players are traded, released or sign as free agents with other teams and end up on the opposite side of the field to face their former team for the first time.
Most people have an opinion on this - no one is right or wrong, it’s just an opinion - but this weekend’s series with the Milwaukee Brewers brings the topic back to light.
For parts of nine seasons, Julio Teheran was a constant in Atlanta’s starting rotation. For seven of those seasons, he started 30 or more games, made two All-Star squads and pitched well enough to lead a re-building Braves pitching staff.