Attended Harvard-Westlake High School in Studio City, Calif., for his senior year, where he was teammates with Lucas Giolito…Was named a 2012 Rawlings-Perfect Game First Team All-American his senior year…Attended Montclair College Preparatory School in Van Nuys, Calif., for three years before the school cut all athletics...Committed to UCLA before signing with San Diego...Was ranked by Baseball America as the No. 12 overall prospect in the 2012 First-Year Player Draft and the top left-handed pitcher.
2025
Went 19-5 with a 2.86 ERA (195.1 IP, 62 ER) in 32 starts in his first season with the Yankees...Set career highs in wins, starts, innings pitched, strikeouts and pickoffs (eight)...Was named to his third career All-Star team…Opponents batted .223/.281/.334 (164-for-737, 14 HR); LH .209/.282/.393 (34-for-163, eight HR); RH .226/.281/.317 (130-for-574, six HR)…Finished fourth in AL Cy Young Award voting...Led the Majors in wins (19), ranked second in winning percentage (.792, first in AL) and pickoffs (eight, first in AL), sixth in HR/9 IP ratio (0.65, second in AL), eighth in ERA (2.86, fourth in AL), ninth in groundball/flyball ratio (1.97, third in AL), ground-ball percentage (52.7%, third in AL) and opponents’ SLG (.334, fourth in AL), and tied for ninth in starts (32, tied for fourth in AL)…Also ranked sixth in the AL in opponents’ OPS (.615) and ninth in opponents’ OBP (.281) and WHIP (1.10)...Won his fourth career Gold Glove Award (also 2020-22 with Atlanta), becoming the fourth pitcher in franchise history to win the award (13th time by a pitcher), joining Ron Guidry (five times: 1982-86), Bobby Shantz (four times: 1957-60) and Mike Mussina (three times: 2001, ‘03 and ‘08)…Won his second career Fielding Bible Award (also 2020 with Atlanta)...Allowed two earned runs or fewer in 22 of his 32 starts and one earned run or fewer in 15 of those starts…His 22 starts of two earned runs or fewer were tied for the fourth-most in the AL and tied for the seventh-most in the Majors…His 15 starts of one earned run or fewer were tied for the sixth-most in the AL…Was the first pitcher in franchise history (excluding openers) to allow two earned runs or fewer in each of his first 11 starts of a season (since ER became an official stat in 1913)…Chad Green did so in his first 11 starts as an opener in 2019...Made six scoreless starts: no runs in 7 IP on 4/9 at Detroit, no runs in 7.2 IP on 4/20 at Tampa Bay, no runs in 7 IP on 5/2 vs. Tampa Bay, no runs in 6.0 IP on 6/5 vs. Cleveland, no runs in 6 IP on 8/22 vs. Boston and no runs in 7.0 IP on 9/18 at Baltimore…His six scoreless starts of at least 6 IP were tied for the fourth-most in the AL and tied for the seventh-most in the Majors...The Yankees went 22-10 in Fried’s starts…His 22 team wins were the second-most in the AL and tied with San Francisco’s Robbie Ray (22-10) for the third-most in the Majors, trailing only Boston’s Garrett Crochet (23-9) and Philadelphia’s Cristopher Sánchez (23-9)…Were also the most by a Yankee since the club went 23-10 in Gerrit Cole’s starts in 2023…The Yankees went 8-0 in Fried’s first eight starts (3/29-5/7), marking just the fourth time in franchise history the Yankees won a pitcher’s first eight starts with the team…The Yankees also won Whitey Ford’s first 22 starts with the club from 1950-53 (won first 23 GS when including postseason), Joe Cowley’s first 11 starts with the Yankees in 1984 and Russ Ford’s first eight starts with the club in 1910...His career-high 19 wins matched the most by a Yankee in a single season in the last 15 years since 2011 (also CC Sabathia in 2011 and Luis Severino in 2018)…His 19 wins were tied with CC Sabathia (19-8 in 2009) and Ed Figueroa (19-10 in 1976) for the third-most by a Yankees pitcher in his first season with the club in the Expansion Era (since 1961), trailing only Catfish Hunter (23-14 in 1975) and Tommy John (21-9 in 1979)...His 2.86 ERA was the fourth-lowest by a Yankee in the last 44 years (since 1982), trailing only Gerrit Cole’s 2.63 ERA in 2023 and 2.84 ERA in 2020, and David Cone’s 2.82 ERA in 1997...Tossed at least six innings in 21 of his 32 games started, tied for the sixth-most in the AL and tied for the eighth-most in the Majors...Tossed at least seven innings in 13 of his starts, tied with Detroit’s Tarik Skubal (13) and Philadelphia’s Cristopher Sánchez (13) for the second-most in the Majors, trailing only Boston’s Garrett Crochet (14)…Were the most by a Yankee since 2017 when Luis Severino recorded 14 games started and Masahiro Tanaka recorded 13 games started...Allowed two walks or fewer in 27 of his 32 starts and three walks or fewer in each of his 32 starts…Was one of only eight pitchers in franchise history to allow two walks or fewer in each of his first 19 starts of a season, joining Michael Pineda (each of his 27 GS in 2015), Mike Mussina (each of his 34 GS in 2008), Jon Lieber (each of his 27 GS in 2004), Jeff Johnson (each of his first 20 GS in 1991), Scott Sanderson (each of his first 22 GS in 1991), John Candelaria (each of his 24 GS in 1988) and Tommy John (each of his first 22 GS in 1988)...Made 16 starts after a Yankees loss and went 11-1 with a 1.82 ERA (103.2 IP, 21 ER) in those starts…Tossed at least six IP in 14 of those starts and did not allow an earned run in seven of them…The Yankees went 12-4 when Fried started after a loss...Left only five of his 32 starts trailing...His eight pickoffs were the most by a Yankee in a single season in the last 17 years (since 2009) and the most since Andy Pettitte recorded 10 in 2008...Allowed only 14 home runs to 801 batters faced, posting a 0.65 HR/9 IP ratio...Went 8-2 with a 2.37 ERA (91 IP, 24 ER) in 15 home starts…Allowed two earned runs or fewer in 11 of those 15 starts…Tossed at least 6.0 IP in 12 of those starts…The Yankees went 11-4 in his 15 home starts...In 17 road starts, went 11-3 with a 3.28 ERA (104.1 IP, 38 ER)…Allowed two earned runs or fewer in 11 of his 17 road starts and one earned run or fewer in eight of those starts…Allowed one run or fewer in five straight road starts from 4/4-5/24, becoming only the sixth pitcher in franchise history to accomplish the feat in a single season (excluding openers), joining Al Downing (seven GS in 1968), Luis Severino (six GS in 2017), Jordan Montgomery (five GS in 2021), Hideki Irabu (five GS in 1998) and Whitey Ford (five GS in 1964)...Went 13-3 with a 2.37 ERA (132.2 IP, 35 ER) in 21 starts vs. AL opponents…Allowed three earned runs or fewer in 17 of his 21 starts, two earned runs or fewer in 15 of his starts and one earned run or fewer in 10 starts...Tossed at least 6.0 IP in 16 of those 21 starts...In 12 starts against AL East opponents, went 7-2 with a 2.34 ERA (77.0 IP, 20 ER), including 4-0 with a 1.97 ERA (32.0 IP, seven ER) and 39 K over his final five starts against the AL East (7/29-9/18)…Allowed three earned runs or fewer in 10 of his 12 starts against AL East opponents, two earned runs or fewer in eight of those starts and one earned run or fewer in five starts…Tossed at least 6.0 IP in 10 of those 12 starts and at least 7 IP in five starts...Made his Yankees debut on 3/29 vs. Milwaukee and did not record a decision (4.2 IP, seven H, six R/two ER, two BB, four K, 0 HR, two HP)…Four of his six runs allowed were unearned after Yankees fielders made five errors...Was named the AL Pitcher of the Month for March/April after going 5-0 with a 1.19 ERA (37.2 IP, 30 H, 10 R/five ER, nine BB, 33 K, two HR) in six starts…Allowed two earned runs or fewer in each of his six starts and one earned run or fewer in four of those starts…The Yankees went 6-0 in his starts…Among Major League pitchers in March/April, was tied for first in wins (first in AL) and ranked third in ERA (second in AL, min. 25 IP)…Marked his second Pitcher of the Month award (also Sept./Oct. 2021 with Atlanta)…Became just the fourth Yankees pitcher (since the award was established in the AL in 1979) to win the AL Pitcher of the Month award in his first month with the team, joining Tommy John (April 1979), Jimmy Key (April 1993) and Kevin Brown (April 2004)…His 1.19 ERA in March/April was tied with Phil Niekro (1.19 ERA in five GS in 1984) for the fourth-lowest ERA by a Yankees starting pitcher who made at least five starts in March/April in franchise history (since ER became an official stat in 1913), trailing only Jimmy Key’s 0.93 ERA in five games started in 1993, Gerrit Cole’s 1.11 ERA in six games started in 2023 and Tommy John’s 1.13 ERA in five games started in 1979…Along with Aaron Judge winning the AL Player of the Month for March/April, marked just the fourth time since 1979 (when the AL Pitcher of the Month Award was established) that the Yankees had the AL Pitcher of the Month and Player of the Month in the same month (also Judge and Luis Gil in May 2024, Bernie Williams and Hideki Irabu in May 1998 and Don Mattingly and Dave Righetti in August 1985)...Was the first pitcher in Yankees history (since ER became an official stat in 1913) to record at least five wins and a sub-1.50 ERA in his first six starts with the club (confirmed by Elias)...Among pitchers to debut with a team since 1913 (when ER became an official stat in both leagues), was just the second pitcher to go 6-0 or better and post an ERA of 1.11 or lower in his first nine starts with a franchise, joining Los Angeles-NL’s Max Scherzer (7-0 and 0.78 ERA in 2021) - confirmed by Elias…His 1.11 ERA was the lowest ERA by any Yankee through his first nine starts with the club in franchise history...Earned his first win as a Yankee on 4/4 at Pittsburgh after allowing only one run/earned run in 5.2 innings in the Yankees’ 9-4 win (six H, one BB, six K, one HR)...Posted a season-opening seven-game winning streak, going 7-0 with a 1.29 ERA (70.0 IP, 10 ER) over his first 11 starts of the season, matching the longest season-opening streak by a Yankee in the last 20 years (since 2006): Gerrit Cole’s season-opening seven-game winning streak to begin the 2023 season…His 1.29 ERA was the lowest by a Yankee through his first 11 starts of a season (since 1913 when ER became an official stat)…Was part of a career-high-tying nine-game winning streak from 9/21/24-5/24/25 (also had a nine-game winning streak from 4/19-7/6/22)…Posted a 1.17 ERA (84.2 IP, 11 ER) in 13 starts over that span...Among pitchers to debut with a team since 1913 (when ER became an official stat in both leagues), was just the third pitcher to go 7-0 or better and post an ERA of 1.29 or lower in his first 11 starts with a franchise, joining Houston’s Justin Verlander (9-0 and 1.22 ERA from 2017-18) and Atlanta’s Buzz Capra (8-0 and 1.19 ERA in 1974) - confirmed by Elias...Won six straight starts for the first time in his career from 4/4-5/2, posting a 0.68 ERA (40.0 IP, three ER) over that span...Earned the win in the Yankees’ 4-3 victory on 4/9 at Detroit after tossing seven scoreless innings and recording his sixth career double-digit strikeout game (five H, 0 BB, 11 K)…Marked the first time in his career that he recorded at least 10 strikeouts without walking a batter...Was the first Yankee to do so since Michael King recorded 13 strikeouts and no walks on 9/20/23 vs. Toronto…Retired 11 of his final 13 batters faced (two hits)...Did not allow an earned run in 27.1 IP from 4/15-5/7…At the time, was the longest single-season streak by a Yankees starting pitcher in the last 51 years (since 1975) and the longest since Rudy May’s 30.2 inning streak from 7/10- 8/18/74…Clarke Schmidt recorded a 28.1 IP scoreless streak later in the season from 6/4-28...Posted a season-high 15 scoreless inning streak from 4/27-5/7...Went 7-0 with a 1.29 ERA over his first 11 starts, becoming the third pitcher in the Expansion Era (since 1961) to go 7-0 or better with an ERA below 1.50 before Memorial Day, joining Montreal’s Pedro Martínez (8-0 and 1.17 ERA in 1997) and San Francisco’s Juan Marichal (9-0 and 0.59 ERA in 1966)...Suffered his first loss of the season on 5/30 at Los Angeles-NL after allowing six runs/earned runs in five IP (eight H, 0 BB, three K, two HR, one BK)…Marked his most earned runs since allowing a career-high-tying seven earned runs on 4/6/24 vs. Arizona with Atlanta…Allowed multiple home runs for the first time in 2025 and for the first time since 8/31/24 at Philadelphia with Atlanta (also two HR)...Earned his 10th win of the season on 6/25 at Cincinnati after allowing only one run/0 earned runs over seven IP (four H, one BB, seven K)…Was the first pitcher in the Majors to reach 10 wins, becoming only the third Yankees pitcher in the last 64 years (since 1962) to be the first pitcher in the Majors to 10 wins in a season (tied or outright), joining CC Sabathia in 2011 and Tommy John in 1979 (Elias)...Suffered back-to-back losses for the only time in 2025 on 7/12 vs. the Cubs (3.0 IP, six H, four R/three ER, three BB, two K, 0 HR) and 7/23 at Toronto (5.1 IP, six H, six R/four ER, three BB, three K, 0 HR, two WP)…Exited his start on 7/12 with a blister on his left index finger...With his 11-3 record and 2.43 ERA, was only the third Yankee in the last 41 years (since 1985) to record at least 10 wins and an ERA below 2.50 prior to the All-Star break, joining Luis Severino (14-2 and a 2.31 ERA in 2018) and Jimmy Key (11-2 with a 2.31 ERA in 1993)...Was named to his third career All-Star team (also 2022 and ‘24 with Atlanta)…Did not pitch in the AL’s 7-6, Home Run Derby swing-off loss...Tossed a career-high 111 pitches and recorded his 12th win of the year in the Yankees’ 7-5 victory on 7/29 vs. Tampa Bay…Marked the most pitches by a Yankees starter in 2025 and the most since Gerrit Cole threw 118 pitches on 9/7/22 vs. Minnesota-Game 2...Earned his 13th win of the year in the Yankees’ 12-8 victory on 8/16 at St. Louis (5.0 IP, eight H, seven R/ER, one BB, six K, two HR)…Struck out Alec Burleson swinging in the second inning for his 1,000th career strikeout…His seven earned runs tied his career high (third time: also seven ER on 4/13/21 vs. Miami and 4/6/24 vs. Arizona)...Went 6-0 with a 1.55 ERA (46.1 IP, eight ER) over his final seven starts (8/22-9/24) after going 3-3 with a 6.80 ERA (41.0 IP, 31 ER) over his previous eight starts from 7/1-8/16…Allowed two runs or fewer in six of his final seven starts and one run or fewer in five of those starts...Was named the AL Pitcher of the Month for September after going 5-0 with a 1.89 ERA (33.1 IP, 26 H, seven R/ER, nine BB, 35 K, one HR) in five starts…Among Major League pitchers in September, ranked first in wins, was tied for first in innings pitched (first in AL), and sixth in ERA (1.89, third in AL) and opponents’ SLG (.279, sixth in AL)…Marked his third career Pitcher of the Month award and second in 2025 (also Sept./Oct. in 2021 with Atlanta and March/April in 2025 with the Yankees)…Was the first Yankee to win the award multiple times in a single season...Won a career-high-tying six straight starts to finish the regular season (8/27-9/24)…Marked the second time in 2025 he won six straight starts (also won six straight starts from 4/4-5/2)…Was the only pitcher in the Majors in 2025 to win at least six straight starts multiple times…Was only the second Yankee in the last 62 years (since 1964) and 10th pitcher in franchise history to win at least six straight starts twice in a season, joining CC Sabathia (2010), Whitey Ford (1963), Vic Raschi (1948), Ernie Bonham (1942), Red Ruffing (1939), Sad Sam Jones (1923), Joe Bush (1922), Russ Ford (1910 - won 12 straight starts) and Jack Chesbro (1904)...Tossed at least 7.0 IP in a career-high-tying three straight starts from 8/27-9/7 (also three GS from 9/19-29/21 and 5/22- 6/4/24 with Atlanta)…Was only the third Yankee (fourth time) to do so over the last seven seasons (since 2019), joining Gerrit Cole (twice: three GS from 9/11[G1]-22/20 and 7/28-8/7/23) and Jameson Taillon (three GS from 5/22[G1]-6/2[G2]/22)...Earned his 18th win of the season on 9/18 at Baltimore after recording a career-high-tying 13 strikeouts over seven scoreless innings (three H, one BB)…Surpassed his previous career high in wins (17 wins in 2019 with Atlanta)...His 13 strikeouts marked the most strikeouts by a Yankee in 2025 and the most since Luis Gil’s 14 on 5/18/24 vs. Chicago-AL…Was only the third Yankees left-hander (fifth time) in the last 37 years (since 1989) to record at least 13 strikeouts in a game, joining CC Sabathia (twice: 13 K on 6/30/11 vs. Milwaukee and 14 K on 7/26/11 vs. Seattle) and David Wells (twice: 16 K on 7/30/97 vs. Oakland and 13 K on 9/1/98 vs. Oakland)…Was only the fourth Yankee in the last 51 years (since 1975) to strike out 13 batters on the road, joining Gerrit Cole (15 K on 9/1/21 at Los Angeles-AL), Mike Mussina (13 K on 9/2/01 at Boston) and David Cone (16 K on 6/23/97 at Detroit)...Made his 200th career appearance and earned his 19th win of the season in his final regular season start on 9/24 vs. Chicago-AL (7.0 IP, four H, one R/ER, two BB, seven K, 0 HR)...Made two postseason starts, going 0-1 with a 6.75 ERA (9.1 IP, seven ER)…Made his Yankees postseason debut in ALWCS Game 1 and tossed 6.1 scoreless innings in a no-decision (four H, three BB, six K)…Became the seventh player in franchise history to toss at least six scoreless innings in their first postseason appearance with the Yankees, joining Mike Mussina (7 scoreless innings in 2001 ALDS Game 3 at Oakland), Roger Clemens (7 scoreless innings in 1999 ALDS Game 3 at Texas), Orlando Hernández (7 scoreless innings in 1998 ALCS Game 4 at Cleveland), Dave Righetti (6.0 scoreless innings in 1981 ALDS Game 2 at Milwaukee), Waite Hoyt (tossed a shutout in 1921 World Series Game 2 vs. the New York Giants) and Carl Mays (tossed a shutout in 1921 World Series Game 1 at the New York Giants)…Marked his fourth career scoreless postseason start.
2024
Went 11-10 with two complete games (one shutout) and a 3.25 ERA (174.1IP, 146H, 71R/63ER, 57BB, 166K, 13HR) over 29 starts with the Atlanta Braves...opponents batted .226/.295/.315 (146-for-645, 13HR); LH .321/.395/.464 (45-for-140, 5HR); RH .200/.266/.273 (101-for-505, 8HR)...made his second career All-Star team...Was tied for first in the Majors in complete games (tied for first in NL), ranked second in groundball percentage (59%, first in NL) and opponents’ SLG (.315, first in NL), third in groundball to flyball ratio (3.00, second in NL), sixth in HR/9.0IP (0.67, fourth in NL) and seventh in opponents’ OPS (.609, fourth in NL)...also ranked seventh in the NL in H/9.0IP (7.54), and eighth in opponents’ BA, opponents’ OBP and WHIP (1.16)...Went 5-1 with a 1.96 ERA (55.0IP, 12ER) and 59K in nine Interleague starts...Recorded double-digit wins for the fourth time in his career...Atlanta went 17-12 in his starts, winning 12 of his first 14 starts from 3/30-6/29...Allowed 3R-or-fewer in 22 of his 29 starts...made five scoreless starts: SHO on 4/23 vs. Miami, 0R in 6.0IP on 4/29 at Seattle, 0R in 7.0IP on 5/11 at the Mets, 0R in 8.0IP on 5/28 vs. Washington and 0R in 8.2IP on 9/27 vs. Kansas City...In his final 27 starts of the season (4/12-9/27), posted a 2.82 ERA (169.1IP, 53ER), the third-lowest ERA in the National League and the fourth-lowest in the Majors during that stretch (min. 140.0IP from 4/12 -end of regular season)...Earned his first win of the season on 4/12 at Miami (6.1IP, 4H, 1R/ER, 1BB, 4K, 0HR, 1HP)...Recorded his second win of the year with his third career nine-inning shutout on 4/23 vs. Miami (3H, 0BB, 6K)...Allowed just 2HR over nine starts from 5/11-6/29...Won three straight starts from 5/22-6/4...tossed 7.0IP and allowed 2ER-or-fewer in each of those starts, matching the longest streak of his career (also three starts from 9/19-29/21)...Tossed his sixth career complete game on 5/22 at Chicago-NL (9.0IP, 3H, 2R/1ER, 0BB, 9K, 0HR)...Recorded a career-high 13K on 6/4 at Boston...was tied for the second-most strikeouts by a Braves lefthanded pitcher since the franchise moved to Atlanta in 1966, trailing only Denny Lemaster’s 14K on 8/14/66 vs. Philadelphia (Charlie Leibrandt also recorded 13K on 8/27/91 vs. Montreal)...Made his first career start at Yankee Stadium on 6/23 and earned the win after allowing only 1R/ER in 6.0IP (6H, 0BB, 4K, 0HR)...Was named to his second career All-Star team and tossed a scoreless second inning in the NL’s 5-3 loss at Globe Life Field (1BB)...Was placed on the 15-day injured list on 7/21 (retro. to 7/18) with left forearm neuritis...missed 15 team games...was reinstated on 8/4...Struck out Elias Díaz swinging in the first inning on 8/10 at Colorado for his 800th career strikeout...reached 800K in his 159th career game, tied with John Smoltz for the second-fastest in franchise history, trailing only Julio Teheran, who reached the mark in his 154th career game...became the sixth left-handed pitcher in franchise history to record at least 800K...Tossed at least six innings in each of his final six starts from 8/31-9/27, posting a 2.43 ERA (40.2IP, 11ER) and 40K in that span...Started NLWCS Game 2 at San Diego and took the loss (2.0IP, 8H, 5R/ER, 0BB, 2K, 1HR)...Signed by the Yankees to an eight-year Major League contract extending through the 2032 season on 12/17.
2023
Completed his fifth full Major League season and went 8-1 with a 2.55 ERA (22 ER/77.2 IP) in 14 games, all starts...His 60 wins over the past five seasons are most in the National League, and most by any left-hander in baseball...Only one pitcher, the Yankees' Gerrit Cole, has more wins than Fried since the start of 2019...Cole has 71 wins...Additionally, the Braves have 81 wins in games started by Fried since the beginning of 2019, the most such wins by a pitcher in the National League... Only Cole again, whose teams have won 71 of his starts, has more in the Majors...He was placed on the 15-day injured list with a left forearm strain after his only loss of the season...Missed 73 games after being placed on the 15-day IL...Fried's 2.55 ERA this season was the second lowest in the majors among pitchers with at least 14 starts...His 2.84 FIP is the third lowest in the National League (min. 10 starts)...Trailed teammate Spencer Strider and Chicago's Justin Steele...Fried went 6-0 with a 2.79 ERA in nine starts after being reinstated from the injured list on Aug. 4...Became just the fifth pitcher since 1901 to only allow one run through March and April with at least four games started...Joined Hall-of-Famer Walter Johnson, Roger Clemens, Fernando Valenzuela and Minnesota's Pablo Lopez as the only other pitchers to do so (since 1901)...Fried's 25 successful pickoffs since debuting in 2017 are the most in baseball and five more than the next closest pitcher, Washington's Patrick Corbin...Corbin has attempted 434 pickoffs in that time, compared to Fried's 172...Fried has successfully nabbed a runner on 14.5 percent of his career pickoff attempts, drastically higher than the MLB average since his debut (1.7 percent)...Since 2017, 1.6 percent of MLB's successful pick attempts have been executed by Fried...Made his third career Opening Day start after he also started the opener in each of the last two seasons...Fried was the first Braves lefty to make consecutive Opening Day starts since Hall-of-Famer Warren Spahn started six straight, 1957-1962...Prior to Fried, the last Braves lefty to start Opening Day was Tom Glavine in 2002...POSTSEASON: Won Atlanta's lone game in the 2023 NLDS against Philadelphia after allowing three earned runs in 4.0 innings pitched in Game 2...Fried is 2-4 with a 4.30 ERA in 11 postseason starts.
2022
NL Ranks: BB/9.0 IP (second, 1.55), bWAR (third, 5.9), ERA (third, 2.48), HR/9.0 IP (third, 0.583), WHIP (eighth, 1.014), Innings (ninth, 185.1) Completed his fourth full major league season and went 14-7 with a 2.48 ERA (51 ER/185.1 IP) in 30 games, all starts. His 185.1 innings stood as a new career-high total. He finished second in National League Cy Young voting, trailing just the Marlin’s Sandy Alcantara. His 52 wins over the past four seasons are most in the National League, and most by any left hander in baseball. Only one pitcher, the Yankees’ Gerrit Cole, has more wins than Fried since the start of 2019...Cole has 56 wins. Additionally, the Braves have 70 wins in games started by Fried since the beginning of 2019, the most such wins by a pitcher in the National League... Only Cole again, whose teams have won 71 of his starts, has more in the majors. Fried’s 2.48 ERA on the season was the 10th lowest in Atlanta franchise history (since 1966), and the lowest by any Braves pitcher to qualify for the ERA title since Tom Glavine (2.47) and Greg Maddux (2.22) each had a lower mark in 1998. Allowed more than three earned runs in a start three times, and allowed two earned runs or fewer in 24 of his 30 total starts (80%). Was named to his first career All-Star Game after being selected to the N.L. pitching staff …Joined teammates Ronald Acuna Jr., William Contreras, Travis d’Arnaud, Austin Riley and Dansby Swanson as All-Star selections...He was not active for the game. He was the first Braves pitcher to be selected to the game since Mike Soroka in 2019, and the first left-hander from Atlanta to go since Jonny Venters in 2011. Went undefeated in the month of June, posting a 2-0 record and 2.16 ERA (8 ER/33.1 IP), while Atlanta won all five of his starts. His ERA ranked 12th in baseball, but his 1.91 FIP led the National League and was second lowest in the majors. Made the 100th appearance of his career, May 2 at NYM, his 83rd as a starter…He pitched to a 43- 20 record and a 3.32 ERA (176 ER/477.0 IP) over his first 100 career games. Since the Braves moved to Atlanta in 1966, just three pitchers earned more wins in their first 100 appearances than Fried…Kevin Millwood went 47-26 and pitched to a 3.75 ERA, Pat Jarvis compiled a 46-31 record and a 3.39 ERA, and Tommy Hanson tallied a 44-27 mark with a 3.51 ERA. Millwood started 94 of his first 100 appearances, Jarvis made 95 starts and all of Hanson’s first 100 games came as a starter…Fried started just 83 games. Pitched against the Marlins, Sept. 4 at Truist Park, and went 5.0 hitless innings with one walk and six strikeouts before a rain delay forced his exit...Got the win after Atlanta beat Miami, 7-1. The start marked the third time in his career he has carried a no-hitter through 5.0 innings...He also did so on April 19 at the Dodgers earlier this season, and went a career-best 5.2 hitless innings on April 4, 2019 vs. the Cubs. On July 16th in Washington, went 7.0 innings and earned the victory in a 6-3 win. The victory was the 50th of his career, and his 10th of the season...Marked the third time the lefty has reached double digit wins in his career. Since the Braves moved to Atlanta in 1966, just two pitchers have reached at least 50 wins in as few appearances as Fried...Pat Jarvis won 51 of his first 114 games, while Kevin Millwood won exactly 50...They both started over 105 of their first 114 career games. Started on June 3 at Coors Field and pitched 8.0 scoreless innings, allowed two hits and a walk while striking out four...Took a no-decision in Atlanta’s win, 3-1, in extra innings. Fried became just the second pitcher in franchise history to pitch at least 8.0 scoreless innings in Colorado...Hall-of-Famer Tom Glavine did so twice, pitching shutouts against the Rockies in 1995 and 1997. Make his second consecutive Opening Day start, facing the Reds on April 7...Fried was also the winning pitcher in Game 6 of the 2021 World Series, firing 6.0 scoreless innings with just four hits and six strikeouts to clinch the title for Atlanta. He became the first pitcher to win the clinching game of the World Series and start the next season on Opening Day since San Francisco’s Tim Lincecum did so in 2010 and 2011. Started Game 1 on the NLDS vs. Philadelphia and allowed eight hits and six runs, four earned, in just 3.1 innings…Took the loss in Atlanta’s defeat, 7-6.
2021
Completed his third full major league season and went 14-7 with a 3.04 ERA (56 ER/165.2 IP) in 28 games, all starts....NL Ranks: Shutouts (T1st, 2), Complete Games (T4th, 2), Wins (T5th, 14), ERA (9th, 3.04), Winning Percentage (T9th, .667)....Awards: Gold Glove (P), Silver Slugger (P)...His 38 wins over the past three seasons are most in the National League, and most by any lefthander in baseball...Only one pitcher, the Yankees’ Gerrit Cole, has more wins than Fried since the start of 2018...Cole has 43 wins...Combined to allow 23 hits and 14 earned runs in just 11.0 innings over his first three starts of the season, going 0-1...Fried was placed on the Injured List with a right hamstring strain on April 14 and missed the next 18 games...Following his return, Fried went 14-6 and pitched to a 2.44 ERA (42 ER/154.2 IP)...From May 5 through the end of the season, Fried’s 2.44 ERA was third best in the majors...Ended the season with 12 consecutive quality starts, the longest such run in baseball on the season...The Brewers’ Brandon Woodruff and the Dodgers’ Walker Buehler each had 10-game runs, the only other pitchers in the majors with a double-digit streak...His run is the longest by a Braves starter since 2011, when Tim Hudson made 12 straight quality starts from June 20 to Aug. 21...No Braves pitcher has made 13 straight quality starts since Greg Maddux had a 19-game run in 1998...Pitched a pair of shutouts, first Aug. 20 at Baltimore, and again Sept. 24 at San Diego...The outings were the first two shutouts of his career...Fried became the first Atlanta starter with two shutouts in a single season since Shelby Miller pitched two in 2015, and the first Braves left-hander with two since Tom Glavine in 2000. Fried blanked the Orioles on just 90 pitches and shut out the Padres on 98...Since 2000, just Greg Maddux (2000), Miller (‘15) and Fried have two shutouts on fewer than 100 pitches for the Braves in a single season...Was named NL Pitcher of the Month for September after going 3-0 with a 1.54 ERA (7 ER/41.0 IP) across six starts...It was the first monthly award of his career, and he was Atlanta’s first recipient since Kris Medlen in September of 2013...He fashioned a 17.0-inning scoreless streak during the month, the longest such run of his career, while Atlanta went 5-1 in his six starts...Came off the bench and drove a 3-1 pitch into center field to plate the winning run, on July 4, giving Atlanta its fifth walk-off win of the season and second of the homestand...Since RBI became an official statistic in 1920, no Braves pinch hitter who was primarily a pitcher has had a walk-off RBI…Research courtesy of the Elias Sports Bureau...Fried batted .273/.322/.327 on the season, and his 15 hits led all pitchers in baseball...Missed 11 games on the IL with a blister on his left index finger, 6/19-30. ...Was his second stint on the IL this season after also missing time from 4/14 to 5/5 with a right hamstring strain...Was his third career stint on the IL with a blister on his pitching hand...Also missed time in both 2018 and 2019...Started on May 12 vs. Toronto and allowed just two hits and one run over 6.0 innings, but was left with a no-decision in Atlanta’s loss, 4-1...Was his first career interleague start that he did not win...Started his career a perfect 7-0 in seven career interleague starts, pitching to just a 2.18 ERA (10 ER/41.1 IP) and striking out 47 against the American League...Fried is one of just two pitchers since the advent of interleague play in 1997 to win each of his first seven games against the opposing league...Justin Verlander also won his first seven games, pitching to a 1.99 ERA....Made his first career Opening Day start on April 1, holding the Phillies to six hits and two runs over 5.0 innings in Atlanta’s extra-inning defeat.Made five starts during the postseason and went 2-2 with a 4.23 ERA (13 ER/27.2 IP) and 29 strikeouts…Was the winning pitcher in Game 6 of the World Series, in which Atlanta claimed the title...Has made nine career playoff starts, the fifth most in franchise history…Only Tom Glavine (32), John Smoltz (27), Greg Maddux (27) and Steve Avery (12) have more...Pitched 6.0 scoreless innings in Game 2 of the NLDS at Milwaukee, striking out a career-high nine...Also pitched 6.0 scoreless innings in Game 6 of the World Series at Houston, allowing four hits and zero walks with six strikeouts to earn the win and clinch the series for Atlanta...Prior to this start, had pitched in three career postseason games in which Atlanta could clinch a series, including two starts, and was 0-2 with an 8.31 ERA (12 ER/13.0 IP)...Atlanta was winless in his three appearances before winning the World Series.
2020
Awards: Gold Glove (P), All-MLB First Team (SP)...N.L. Ranks: Wins (7, T2nd)...Played his second full major league season and went 7-0 with a 2.25 ERA (14 ER/56.0 IP) in 11 games, all starts...Finished the season with 56.0 innings, 4.0 innings short of qualifying for the ERA title...His 2.25 ERA would have ranked fourth lowest in the N.L. with enough innings...His 24 wins over the past two seasons are most in the majors by a left-hander, one more than Seattle’s Marco Gonzalez...Only one pitcher, the Yankees Gerrit Cole, has more wins than Fried since the start of last year...Cole has 27 wins...Fried did not allow a home run in any of his first 10 starts of the season and retired the first two batters he faced in his final appearance before allowing back-to-back home runs to Miami’s Jesús Aguilar and Brian Anderson...The homers snapped a 68.1-inning homerless run...His 68.1-inning homerless streak entering play was the longest in the majors at the time, 19.1 innings longer than any other pitcher…Fried was vying to become just the third qualifying pitcher in the live ball era to complete a season without allowing a home run, and the first since Slim Harris in 1926... He opened the season with 10 straight homerless starts, the longest stretch for an Atlanta pitcher since Zane Smith in 1986, who opened the year with 13 straight homerless starts... Won each of his first seven decisions, becoming the first Braves starter to do so since Denny Neagle in 1997...Neagle also started 7-0...No Braves pitcher has started 8-0 since the club moved to Atlanta in 1966, and just three have done so since 1900 (Ed Brandt in 1931, Warren Spahn in 1947 and and Jim Wilson in 1954)...Was placed on the injured list on September 8, backdated to September 6, and missed 11 games with a left-side muscle spasm in his lumbar spine...Picked off four runners on the season, tied with SF’s Tyler Anderson for most in the majors...Fried needed just 12 pickoff attempts to do so...Since his major league debut on August 8, 2017, Fried’s 14 pickoffs are tied for most in the majors, and he has been successful on 19% (14-for-74) of his attempts…In that same span, all of baseball has picked off 720 runners on 43,006 attempts (0.017%)...Atlanta won each of Fried’s first eight starts this season before losing September 5 vs. Washington...He was the only pitcher in the majors to make at least eight starts this season and have his team win each of them...Fried’s run of team wins was the longest to open a season for a Braves starter since Atlanta won all 12 of Kris Medlen’s starts in 2012, and was tied for the fifth-longest such streak since the team moved to Atlanta in 1966...Beat Boston, 6-3, on August 31...Fried has never lost an Interleague game in his career, going 7-0 with a 2.18 ERA (10 ER/41.1 IP) in seven starts against the American League…He beat Tampa Bay, Toronto, New York and Boston this season...He is one of just two pitchers since the advent of Interleague Play in 1997 to open their career with at least seven straight victories against the opposing league, joining just Justin Verlander (7 straight).
2020 POSTSEASON
Made four starts in the 2020 postseason, starting Game 1 of the Wild Card Series vs. Cincinnati, Game 1 of the NLDS vs. Miami, and Games 1 and 6 of the NLCS vs. Los Angeles...Went 0-1 with a 3.04 ERA (8 ER/23.2 IP) while Atlanta won three of the four games...Pitched 7.0 scoreless innings in his Wild Card start against the Reds...Became the first Braves pitcher to throw at least 7.0 scoreless innings in the playoffs since Mike Foltynewicz in Game 2 of the 2019 NLDS vs. St. Louis, and the first lefthander to do so since Tom Glavine in Game 2 of the 2001 NLDS vs. Houston...Fried threw his 7.0 scoreless innings in just 78 pitches against Cincinnati, becoming just the second Braves pitcher to go as many scoreless innings on as few of pitches in the postseason…Glavine also pitched 7.0 scoreless on just 72 pitches in Game 7 of the 1996 NLCS...Fried’s 7.0 scoreless in Game 1 of the Wild Card Series were followed by Ian Anderson’s 6.0 scoreless innings in Game 2... They are the first Braves teammates with back-to-back scoreless starts in the playoffs since Steve Avery and John Smoltz in Game 6 and Game 7 of the 1991 NLCS versus Pittsburgh... Started Game 1 of the NLCS and held the Dodgers to four hits and one run over 6.0 innings... He struck out a postseason career-high nine, tying the most by a Braves left-hander in playoff history…Mike Hampton fanned nine in Game 2 of the 2003 NLDS, and Steve Avery struck out nine twice (Game 2 of the 1991 NLCS, Game 3 of the 1992 World Series)...Also started Game 6 of the series and pitched 6.2 innings and threw a career-most 109 pitches…Was just the sixth 100-pitch game of his career…Fried is the first Braves starter to pitch at least 6.2 innings in a potential clincher since Mike Hampton in Game 5 of the 2003 NLDS.
2019
Played his first full major league season and went 17-6 with a 4.02 ERA (74 ER/165.2 IP) in 33 games, including 30 starts. ... N.L. Ranks: Wins (2nd, 17) ... His 17 wins were most in the National League by a left-hander, and second most in the majors among lefties...Boston's Eduardo Rodríguez won 19 games. ... Fried's 17 wins were most by an Atlanta left-hander since 2002, when Hall-ofFamer Tom Glavine won 18 games. ... Opened the season with 16.2 innings without allowing an earned run, before Arizona scored twice in the fourth inning of his start on April 16... It was the longest streak without an earned run to open the season by a Braves pitcher since 2013 (Paul Maholm, 25.1 IP). ... Appeared in 20 games before the All-Star break and set full-season career highs in wins (9), games (20), starts (18), innings (98.2) and strikeouts (97). ... Went 9-4 with a 4.29 ERA (47 ER/98.2 IP) before the break...His nine wins were the most by a Braves lefty before the All-Star break since 2013, when both Paul Maholm and Mike Minor had nine...No Braves lefthander has won more since Tom Glavine had 11 wins at the break in 2002. ... Missed nine games with a blister on his left index finger, 7/16-7/27. ... Won five consecutive starts from 6/15-8/13, becoming the first Atlanta pitcher to win five consecutive starts since Mike Minor won five in a row between the 2012 and 2013 seasons. ... Won a career-most seven straight decisions, 7/15 to 9/5. ... Went 7-0 with a 3.02 ERA (17 ER/50.2 IP) during the run, with wins over Milwaukee, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Minnesota, the Mets, the White Sox and Washington. ... The stretch spanned nine total starts, and Atlanta won all nine...Atlanta had not won more consecutive starts by a left-hander since 1993, when the Braves won 13 straight games started by Steve Avery.The Braves won 12 straight starts by Mike Foltynewicz from 6/11 to 9/20, nine consecutive starts by Fried from 7/15 to 8/5, and eight straight starts by Mike Soroka from 6/1 to 7/14. ... Atlanta was the only team in the National League to have three different win streaks of at least eight games in a pitcher's starts this season, and one of just two teams in the majors to do so. ... The Yankees won 11 straight started by James Paxton, nine straight by Chad Green and eight consecutive by Domingo German. ... Carried a perfect game through 5.2 innings in his first start of the season, 4/4 vs. CHI...Lost the bid on Mark Zagunis' sixth-inning single. ... According to research by the Elias Sports Bureau, Fried's perfect game bid was the longest by a Braves pitcher since Julio Teheran went 6.0 innings without allowing a baserunner on 9/20/15 2019 postseason ... Appeared in four of Atlanta's five games in the NLDS vs. St. Louis, posting a 9.00 ERA (4 ER/4.0 IP) but a 2.42 FIP…All four runs scored in 1.2 innings of relief in Game 5.
2018
Split his season between Atlanta, Triple-A Gwinnett and Double-A Mississippi, going 1-4 with a 2.94 ERA (11 ER/33.2 IP) and 44 strikeouts in 14 games, five starts, at the big league level… Was 3-6 with a 3.94 ERA (34 ER/77.2 IP) in 15 combined games, all starts, in the minors ... Also missed 14 games on the 10-day disabled list with a left middle finger blister from 7/6-7/28 and 21 games with a left groin strain, 8/7-27 ... Began the season with Mississippi before joining Gwinnett on 4/12…Recalled to Atlanta for the first time on 4/24 and returned to Triple-A on 5/5… Had four more stints with Atlanta (5/17, 5/28, 6/30-8/27, 9/6-end of the season) ... Set career highs in innings pitched and strikeouts, 6/30 at STL, fanning 11 over 6.2 innings...Allowed just four hits and three walks to earn his lone win of the season ... Became the seventh pitcher in Atlanta franchise history to record double-digit strikeouts within his first 15 career games, and the first to do so since Aaron Blair fanned 10 on 10/1/16 vs. DET ... Made his first start with Atlanta, 5/28 vs. NYM in the first game of a doubleheader...Was added to the roster as the 26th man, and allowed two runs, one earned, over 5.0 innings ... Became the first Braves pitcher since Kevin Millwood in 1999 to pick off two runners in the same inning…Millwood did it on 7/18 at TOR…Between Millwood's two pickoffs and Fried's game, only six other major league pitchers accomplished the feat, with MIN's Kyle Gibson doing it last on 9/7/16 vs. KC ... Compiled a 2.49 ERA (6 ER/21.2 IP) and a 1-2 record in his five starts…Was 0-2 with a 3.75 ERA (5 ER/12.0 IP) all three of his home runs allowed in nine relief outings ... Allowed one hit over 30 at-bats (.033) with runners in scoring position…In these situations with two outs, opposing hitters were 0-for-14 with eight strikeouts ... Appeared in all four games of the NLDS vs. LAD, tossing 2.1 combined innings and allowing one hit and one run, earned.
2017
Made his major league debut while also spending time with Double-A Mississippi and Triple-A Gwinnett...The Braves recalled him from Mississippi on 8/5 and he made his MLB debut on 8/8 vs. PHI...Tossed 2.0 scoreless innings out of the bullpen…Had made two career relief appearances in the minors prior to his outing...Appeared in three more games, all in relief, for the Braves and allowed four runs in 4.2 innings (7.71 ERA) with no decisions before the club optioned him to Triple-A Gwinnett on 8/23...Returned to the Braves for the remainder of the season on 9/1. ..Made his first career start on 9/3 at CHI and earned the 5-1 victory after going 5.0 innings and allowing one run and four hits…Of the four Braves to make their first career start in 2017, Fried was the only one to win...Joined with Luiz Gohara and Sean Newcomb to become the first trio of rookie left-handers to start for the Braves since 1945, when Bob Logan, Lefty Wallace and Bob Whitcher did it. ..Started four of his final five games with Atlanta...Compiled a 3.44 ERA (7 ER/18.1 IP) as a starter at the MLB level...Spent the majority of the season pitching in Double-A Mississippi's rotation...Started the year with the M-Braves and went 2-11 with a 5.92 ERA (57 ER/86.2 IP) over 19 starts...Did not allow an earned run over his final three outings with Mississippi, 7/21-8/1...Did not allow a run across two starts with the G-Braves, while not recording a decision in 6.0 combined innings...Went 1-1 with a 3.44 ERA (7 ER/18.1 IP) in four starts with the Braves…Compiled a 4.70 ERA (4 ER/7.2 IP) in five games of relief for Atlanta...Limited lefties to a .258 (8-for-31) average, while righties hit .297 (22-for-74) with all three of the home runs he allowed...Pitched for Peoria in the Arizona Fall League and went 3-1 with a 1.73 ERA (5 ER/26.0 IP), 32 strikeouts and eight walks in six games, all starts.
2016
Spent the season with Single-A Rome after entering the season as the club's ninth-best prospect…Struck out 112 for a K/9 ratio of 9.79... Made his Atlanta organizational debut on 4/9 vs. Augusta…Tossed 5.0 innings and allowed three hits and three runs, two earned, to take a no-decision…The start was his fi rst action since 7/21/14 after he missed all of 2015 recovering from "Tommy John" surgery...Helped the R-Braves to the South Atlantic title after winning both his playoff starts while compiling a 1.23 ERA (2 ER/14.2 IP) with 24 strikeouts…Beat Charleston, 4-1, in the deciding game of the series on 9/10 with 7.2 innings and 11 strikeouts…Then tossed 7.0 innings with a careerbest 13 strikeouts to close out Lakewood on 9/16... Ended the season in the Top 10 among Atlanta's pitching farmhands in wins (T7th, 8) and strikeouts (T9th, 112), and his eight victories established a new career high... Made two trips to the disabled list due to a blister, fi rst from 7/5-15 and again from 7/16-8/14...Went 9-5 with a 2.74 ERA (26 ER/85.1 IP) over his fi nal 16 games, 15 starts…Started the season 1-2 with a 5.85 ERA (21 ER/32.1 IP) in his fi rst seven starts through 5/14... Fanned 44 batters in 25.1 innings over his fi nal four starts of the season (including playoff s)… Collected consecutive 10-strikeout games before fanning 11 and 13 in his two playoff starts. Opponents hit .236 (87-for-369) on the season, including a .233 (24-for-103) mark by lefties... Allowed just four earned runs over a seven-start stretch from 6/3[2]-7/15, going 5-1 with a 1.06 ERA (4 ER/34.0 IP) in that span... Finished the season as the sixth-best prospect in the SAL according to Baseball America... Added to the 40-man roster on 11/18.