How Acquired
Luke was drafted by the Braves in the fifth round of the 2021 MLB draft out of THE Georgia Institute of Technology.
What Were Expectations?
Entering his fifth year as a professional, Luke did
not have too many expectations, especially following his 2024 season where he hit just .235/.317/.322 in 111 games for the Gwinnett Stripers. He was thought of as a straight depth piece that provides some versatility with his ability to play both second and shortstop. 2025 Results
While Luke did struggle with an injury that force him to miss a good chunk of time, 2025 was a strong year for him. On the season Luke appeared in 91 games for the Stripers and hit a very respectable .272/.364/.340 in those games good for a 98 wRC+. With offense not really being his calling card, being able to tune in with a solid line while providing solid defense up the middle, Luke gave the Braves organization really good value despite the injury struggles. He rarely struck out (12% K%), walked at a good rate (12%), and found his MaxEV all the way up to 109 MPH. Luke knows what he is, a gap to gap hitter without much power, but good contact skills and a better approach at the plate and he seemingly put it all together in what was quite the successful season.
What Went Right?
Most everything went right for Luke. He provided pretty much exactly the level of play you expected, heck even outperformed expectations at the position, and provided real depth for the Braves. He opened up the conversation about him potentially finding himself on a major league team because of his approach and ability to provide decent defense at both middle infield positions.
What Went Wrong?
Injury forced Luke to miss a chunk of the season – allowing him to play in just 100 total all season, including rehab appearances.
2026 Outlook
Think more of the same is on tap for Luke in 2026 as he enters his age 27 season. He’s not a significant piece for major league team, however he does provide value up the middle, and gives you quality at bats day in and day out. While he is Rule 5 eligible, it’s unlikely the Braves will have to protect him in the draft, allowing him to start his third season with Triple-A Gwinnett where he hopefully avoids injury and makes a bigger name for himself, with potential on finding some playing time on a major league team in the future.











