GM Alex Anthopoulos on the Braves: “We Can Go All the Way”
There are declarations made quietly in boardrooms, muttered behind closed doors where no one can hear them. Then there are the declarations made boldly, confidently — the kind that echo across a fanbase and settle into the heart of a franchise. When Braves general manager Alex Anthopoulos looked into a camera this week and said, “We can go all the way,” it wasn’t bluster. It wasn’t bravado. It was conviction, plain and unfiltered.
And if you’ve watched this Braves team long enough, you know exactly why those five words carried so much weight.
Anthopoulos has never been one to talk just to hear his own voice. He’s methodical, deliberate, even secretive when he needs to be. In an era when some executives talk louder than they act, he has always preferred to build quietly and let the results speak. But every so often, he pulls back the curtain just enough to let fans glimpse his belief in what he’s assembled — and this time, that belief felt louder than any trade deadline or winter signing.

The Braves are built differently now. Not just talented, not just deep, but hardened — forged by the heartbreak of October exits and the exhilaration of championship highs. Anthopoulos has spent years layering this roster, brick by brick, resisting the temptation to overhaul or panic, understanding that the right team isn’t built in a frenzy but shaped over time like a craftsman chiseling at stone.
When he says “we can go all the way,” he’s not talking about theoretical ceilings. He’s talking about a team with lightning in its lineup, with pitching that can humble even the cockiest slugger, with a clubhouse that refuses to splinter when things get uncomfortable. He’s talking about a franchise that once tasted the mountaintop and has been clawing its way back with calculated patience ever since.
You can picture the moment — Anthopoulos sitting in his office, surrounded by scouting reports and video feeds, thinking about the months he has poured into perfecting this roster. He knows the flaws. He knows the risks. He knows the weight of October is heavier than any analytic can measure. And still, he chooses belief.

Because belief matters.
It inspires.
It signals to the players, the fans, the organization: We are built for something bigger than a playoff berth.
In the clubhouse, those words must have landed with a spark. Players don’t always admit it publicly, but hearing the GM speak with that level of confidence can change the energy of a room. It reinforces what they already feel pulsing beneath the surface — that they are standing on the edge of something special.
And for the fans, the message carried an even deeper resonance. Braves Country has lived through roller coasters of seasons, through injuries, losing streaks, improbable comebacks, and unexpected heroes. They’ve seen their team rise and fall and rise again. They’ve seen how thin the line can be between disappointment and destiny. When Anthopoulos promises they can go all the way, fans don’t hear arrogance. They hear hope. They hear ambition. They hear a leader throwing his heart behind the team they’ve loved for decades.

Of course, belief alone doesn’t win championships. Baseball is cruel enough to remind us of that every year. There will be slumps, there will be injuries, there will be nights where nothing clicks. But there will also be explosions of offense, dominant pitching stretches, electric crowds at Truist Park, and a roster loaded with players who thrive in moments that ask for guts over guarantees.
Anthopoulos isn’t promising a trophy.
He’s promising a fight.
He’s promising a team capable of walking through the fire.
He’s promising that the window isn’t just open — it’s wide and welcoming.
And maybe, just maybe, this will become the moment fans look back on months from now — the moment the GM didn’t hold back, the moment he let the truth slip out from behind the cautious executive exterior:
The Braves aren’t hoping to contend.
They’re expecting to.
Because in the mind of Alex Anthopoulos,
they can go all the way.