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MILWAUKEE -- The Brewers sent two Minor League affiliates to the postseason (the rookie-level Arizona Complex League club and Low-A Carolina), had three league pitchers of the year (Gerson Calzadilla in the ACL, Carlos RodrΓ­guez in the Southern League and Robert Gasser in the International League) and moved up to No. 3 in MLB Pipeline’s farm system rankings, with top prospect Jackson Chourio ranked second in the Top 100.

In other words, it was a good year down on the farm.

Here are six players who stood out.

3 players who forced their way onto the radar this year

3B Luke Adams: The 2022 Draft netted six of MLB Pipeline’s current Top 30 Brewers prospects: First-round pick Eric Brown Jr. (No. 10), second-rounders Jacob Misiorowski (No. 3) and Robert Moore (No. 15), third-rounder Dylan O’Rae (No. 19), fourth-rounder Matthew Wood (No. 23) and 12th-round pick Adams (No. 22), who signed for $282,500 out of Hinsdale Central High School in suburban Chicago. Adams broke out in β€˜23 after an aggressive assignment to Single-A Carolina, where he reached base at a .400 clip while hitting 11 home runs and stealing 30 bases in 99 games. He also impressed at third base.

β€œFor a high school draft pick to do what he did at a full-season club was impressive,” Brewers farm director Tom Flanagan said.

RHP Logan Henderson: Five years after the Brewers drafted Corbin Burnes in the fourth round out of St. Mary’s College in California, they drafted Henderson in the fourth round in 2021 out of McLennan Community College in Waco, Tex. Henderson (Brewers No. 18) was a breakout candidate going into β€˜22, but an elbow injury that required surgery -- though not Tommy John surgery -- delayed his ascent until 2023, when he spent the full season at Carolina, posted a league-leading 2.75 ERA and 106 strikeouts in 78 2/3 innings. Henderson’s 35.2 percent strikeout rate was fourth-highest across Minor League Baseball for pitchers who logged at least 70 innings (Misiorowski was fifth at 35 percent).

β€œHe’s set up in a really good spot heading into 2024,” Flanagan said in September. β€œDo you start him at Appleton, maybe [Double-A] Biloxi? Who knows. We’ll see in Spring Training. But he’s in a really good spot the way he’s throwing the ball -- and he’s 100 percent healthy.”

CF Luis Lara: The Brewers’ handling of Chourio shows they aren’t afraid to challenge a top prospect if the player shows he can handle it. That’s been the case with Lara (Brewers No. 8), who signed for $1.1 million in 2002 from Venezuela and made it all the way to High-A Wisconsin as an 18-year-old in 2023. Lara rose to the challenge by posting similar numbers at the higher level, and he finished the year with a .286 average, a .373 on-base percentage and 30 stolen bases in 87 games. He won’t turn 19 until next month.

Luis Lara

2 possible breakout players to watch in 2022

CF Yophery RodrΓ­guez: Hailing from the Dominican Republic and regarded for an advanced hitting approach, RodrΓ­guez (Brewers No. 13) earned a $1.5 million bonus last January -- the largest for any player in Milwaukee’s 2023 international signing class. The 17-year-old flashed all the tools in the Dominican Summer League, with an .842 OPS and 12 steals in 52 games. The Brewers plan to bring RodrΓ­guez stateside in 2024 and could push him to Carolina at some point.

INF Juan Baez: β€œHigh energy, exciting player that can play some defense and has some pop in the bat,” is how Flanagan described Baez (Brewers No. 24), who reached Carolina as an 18-year-old at the end of this season. Baez has played second base, third and shortstop and it appears he fits best on the middle of the infield.

Jackson Chourio

1 big question for next season

When will Chourio make it to Milwaukee?

It does seem like a matter of β€œwhen” instead of β€œif” at this point, after Chourio followed his breakthrough age-18 season in 2022 with an impressive showing as a 19-year-old at Double-A Biloxi in β€˜23, with a late-season cameo at Triple-A Nashville. The benefit of that final week at Milwaukee’s top affiliate was to allow Chourio to learn his way around in advance of a season-opening assignment there in 2024, but he made it worth the time by going 7-for-21 with a trio of hard-hit doubles.

Chourio will need to log at-bats in Nashville next year, and then it will require an opportunity. The Brewers have a crowded outfield picture with Christian Yelich in left on most days -- the Brewers like to spread around DH at-bats among multiple players -- and former top prospects Sal Frelick, Garrett Mitchell and Joey Wiemer now squarely in the Major League mix with Blake Perkins and Tyrone Taylor.

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I was 13 years old when this happened. I was so sure they were going to win the World Series after this game I would have bet every cent I had.

They've won two playoff series since.

I was 17 and was also sure they were going all the way. I remember an interview with Mike Caldwell after that game and he said something like "I'm gonna sit here and get as drunk as I want to".

Found this article with the exact quote:

https://vault.si.com/vault/198...-hopping-good-series

I've heard this is what Counsel really wants to do because he thinks managers are underpaid. And it's hard to disagree when the cash strapped Brewers have made him about the highest paid manager in baseball. Speculation is the Mets will offer him double what he is making and blow the lid off.

<He does have the ability this off-season to help raise the market for all managers as the most desired manager on the market in recent memory.>

I was 13 years old when this happened. I was so sure they were going to win the World Series after this game I would have bet every cent I had.

They've won two playoff series since.

I was a junior in high school and I can remember watching one of the games while a bunch of us were at our homecoming dinner and they lost to the Cards.  I remember my date was really pleased with me when I paid more attention to the game and not to her.

Anyhow, I do remember thinking that they would be back because they had such a great team.  yeah not so much.

@The Heckler posted:

I was a junior in high school and I can remember watching one of the games while a bunch of us were at our homecoming dinner and they lost to the Cards.  I remember my date was really pleased with me when I paid more attention to the game and not to her.

Anyhow, I do remember thinking that they would be back because they had such a great team.  yeah not so much.

I was in middle school and skipped the middle school dance to watch one the games. You actually went on a date the night of a Brewer playoff game?

@Pikes Peak posted:

Actually you had no date πŸ˜‰

Fair point.

I did stay home from a high school dance where I could have had a date because I was excited to see John Lucas play his first game as a point guard for the Bucks. I really thought that the Bucks were going to make the Finals that year (86-87) and had the Celtics on the ropes in conference semifinals in Game 7 until the officials decided to call about 4 fouls in 3 minutes (some very questionable) on Paul Pressey who had been really giving Bird some problems.

Yes, I'm lucky I found my wife (college sweetheart - married for 32 years).

Who are the Brewers' free agents?

C Victor Caratini, 3B Josh Donaldson, 1B Darin Ruf, 1B Carlos Santana, OF Jesse Winker, LHP Eric Lauer and RHP Colin Rea

Will any of them get a qualifying offer?

No. This year’s figure reportedly is $20.5 million, the average of the top 125 salaries in MLB. It’s the first time the qualifying offer has topped $20 million.

What about contract options?

OF Mark Canha ($11.5 million club option, $2 million buyout)

LHP Wade Miley ($10 million mutual option, $1 million buyout)

LHP Andrew Chafin ($7.25 million club option, $750,000 buyout

LHP Justin Wilson ($2.5 million club option, $150,000 buyout)

Canha and Miley are interesting calls -- both productive veterans who brought something important to Milwaukee on and off the field. The Brewers do have an abundance of other outfielders, including their crop of just-graduated prospects like Garrett Mitchell, Sal Frelick and Joey Wiemer. All deserve big league at-bats next year, but Canha could still fit if the Brewers see him as an option at first base.

As for Miley, mutual options are rarely picked up by both sides. But it does happen sometimes -- Aramis Ramirez and the Brewers agreed on a reunion in 2014, for example -- and Miley loves pitching in Milwaukee. The Brewers have a need, with so many question marks in their starting rotation.

Mark Canha

Who is arbitration eligible?

Milwaukee’s arbitration-eligible players are pitchers Corbin Burnes, Adrian Houser, Hoby Milner, Joel Payamps, Devin Williams, Bryse Wilson and Brandon Woodruff; infielders Willy Adames, Rowdy Tellez and Abraham Toro and outfielder Tyrone Taylor.

Are any of those players non-tender candidates?

Yes, including some notable names. Woodruff is coming off a $10.8 million salary in 2023 and will miss most or all of β€˜24 with a shoulder injury. Because he has only one arbitration year remaining before free agency, that makes him a likely non-tender unless the Brewers and agent Bo McKinnis can work out a multi-year deal that makes sense for both sides.

Burnes ($10.01 million salary last season), Adames ($8.7 million), Tellez ($4.95 million) and Houser ($3.6 million) are all entering their final year of arbitration, making Burnes and Adames potential trade candidates, and Houser and Tellez non-tender candidates if the club thinks it can put those payroll dollars to use elsewhere. Toro won’t cost as much, but he will be out of Minor League options next year.

Brandon Woodruff

What's the payroll situation?

Like always, it depends on your accounting method. FanGraphs and Spotrac pegged the Brewers’ end-of-season payroll at $125-$126 million, including deferments and other hidden costs. Both sites had Milwaukee ranked 19th of MLB’s 30 teams in end-of-season payroll. Those calculations reflected a rise from an Opening Day payroll somewhere in the neighborhood of $109 million (Spotrac) to $119 million (USA Today), depending on your source of choice.

That’s probably the range in which the club wants to stay for 2024. At the moment, only three players have set salaries: Christian Yelich ($26 million), Freddy Peralta ($5,734,960) and Aaron Ashby ($1.45 million), but that group will grow as arbitration decisions come down and the Brewers eventually sign their pre-arbitration players. At the moment, FanGraphs estimates Milwaukee’s 2024 payroll at about $109 million, a figure that will change as players come and go.

The bottom line is that the Brewers have left themselves some flexibility to make offseason additions. At the moment, the primary needs appear to be first and third base and perhaps starting pitching, depending on decisions with Miley and Houser and the health of Ashby’s shoulder.

Jeferson Quero

Who needs to be added to the 40-man roster this offseason?

Generally speaking, players who signed with their current club at age 18 or younger and have five years of experience or signed with their current club at age 19 or older and have four years of experience, and are not protected on 40-man rosters, are eligible to be plucked away in December’s Rule 5 Draft. The catch is that the claiming team must keep the player on its Major League roster for the entirety of next year.

With my annual tip of the cap to Jim Goulart of the indispensable Brewer Fanatic forum, there are only three members of MLB Pipeline’s Brewers Top 30 prospects list who would be Rule 5 Draft-eligible if not added to the 40-man (with their Pipeline rank in parentheses):

C Jeferson Quero (No. 2)

RHP Bradley Blalock (No. 17)

INF Freddy Zamora (No. 26)

Quero is one of Milwaukee’s most exciting prospects, a catcher who commands the field and is coming off a season in which he slashed .262/.339/.441 as a 20-year-old at Double-A. He’s a lock to be added to the 40-man roster. The Brewers will have to decide on Blalock, who was acquired from the Red Sox for Luis UrΓ­as, since he’s 22 and has yet to pitch north of the High-A level. Likewise with Zamora, Milwaukee’s second-round Draft pick in 2020 who had a nice bounce-back season at Double-A Biloxi in 2023 after missing much of β€˜22 with a shoulder injury.

Other notable players who would be Rule 5 eligible include left-hander Adam Seminaris and right-handers Justin Yeager and Joseph Hernandez (three of Milwaukee’s prospects in this year’s Arizona Fall League), plus right-hander Evan McKendry, who was acquired at the Trade Deadline from the Rays. McKendry, 25, was 12-6 with a 4.55 ERA in 142 1/3 innings at the Triple-A level between Tampa Bay and Milwaukee in 2023.

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If you put Canha at 1st base Santana is probably gone.  If you want Canha to be a mostly DH and fill in outfielder than make a good offer to Santana and be prepared to go higher if he gives you the option to do that.   Good bye  Donaldson, Ruf and Winker!!   If they are sure Quero is ready maybe Caratini is let go.  That would be a loss but the money and roster spot may be more important.  Work out a long term deal with Woody and offer all the others arby except Brandon Woodruff; Willy Adames, Rowdy Tellez , Abraham Toro

@PackerRick posted:

What to do with Woodie is going to be a tough call for both sides. I thought Santana made about $9 mil last season and I doubt the Brewers will pay close to that. I really like what he brings to the team but not at 38 years old. Canha plays so many positions and has all the intangibles it would be hard to pay him $2 mil to leave.

They will have to buy him out for 2 million, but the question is whether it makes sense to pay him 11.5 million (or as you point out, 9.5 million to stay) is worth it. He's a good veteran presence, but he's basically a 15 HR, 60 RBI, 750 OPS guy at his best and he's about to be 35 years old. He would be a great bottom of the order guy on a good team, but he's not really the guy to hit 3rd or cleanup. Small market teams can struggle to justify paying 11.5 million to guys that are just average to slightly above average players who are on the back ends of their careers.

https://www.baseball-reference...rs/c/canhama01.shtml

I know Cahna looked better than he really is in his short stint with the Brewers. He's basically a journeyman and will only take ABs from a younger players. Tyler Black is a 3B that they were working into 1B last season. Unfortunately the Brewers need an upgrade at both positions.

It will be an interesting offseason because Adames and Burnes could both be traded. The Brewers might go into a full rebuild, especially with Woodie being unavailable.

@ammo posted:

Wade Miley declines his $10 million option.  He is now a free agent.

I don't understand what Miley is thinking turning down that number. I don't see him getting it elsewhere. He gets $1 mill to walk but he's 37, always on a limited pitch count, and he still misses starts. The only thing I can think of is the Brewers wanted to negotiate for a lower number and would have opted out themselves.

Maybe Attanasio should just β€œlean into the cheap” (other than the perpetual Yelich contract), and do a full rebuild with minimum salaries across the board. The excitement of youth can buy him a couple more years of penny pinching while still getting decent attendance. Then he can sell or move the team, as the stadium is getting near the end of its usefulness (per modern standards of 25 year stadium lifecycles). None of this is what I want, but seems far more likely than buying players to stay competitive.

Attanasio is a complete pussy.  He flipped out when the team tanked after the Hader trade which I’m sure he had input in.  So they can Stearns.  Then they pile on Burnes in the arby nonsense.  

Now it’s Counsell and let’s go ahead and demonize him for their shortcomings.   As you won’t pay him either.

My annoyance with Mark A is if you are a cheap ass then own it.  Quit deflecting and playing passive aggressive.  Blow this fucker up and be honest with the fans.  Or just sell the goddamn team.  I don’t care.  Just don’t try to be everyone’s friend.

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