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With an underwhelming haul this year, does Milwaukee have the manpower to hold onto their divisional lead and succeed in October?

Image courtesy of © Michael McLoone-USA TODAY Sports

While other teams scrambled to find new bats and arms in July, the Brewers were like a Prius at a muscle car meet: relatively quiet. They added no new position players, and instead picked up two project starters, an intriguing reliever, and a 30-year-old rookie. Here is the list of all of the deals they made:

It was well understood that Milwaukee would be vying for starting pitching, but Civale and Montas don’t seem like the difference-makers fans were hoping for. Both have clear weaknesses and are pitching to ERAs around 5.00 this year. They may be serviceable back-of-the-rotation guys, at least, but neither one will likely end up being 2008 CC Sabathia.

Even more concerning is how dormant the team was compared to its closest rivals. The Cardinals are six games behind the Brewers in the NL Central and were a participant in this year’s sole three-team trade, involving the White Sox and the Dodgers. They added Erick Fedde to improve their rotation and reunited with Tommy Pham to help stabilize their outfield and bring a platoon advantage against lefties.

The Pirates, also six games behind, also had a slight retooling by adding Bryan De La Cruz and Jalen Beeks while getting rid of a struggling Martín Pérez and a similarly below-replacement pitcher in Quinn Priester. Their roster still doesn’t seem to be as concerning as that of St. Louis, but with one more head-to-head series in September, they could take a few crucial wins away from the Brewers at the 11th hour.

Looking at the broader competitive set of the National League as a whole, the Phillies and Dodgers did their best to make moves that would secure their postseason byes. The Phillies snagged lefty reliever Tanner Banks, Angels closer Carlos Estévez, and veteran outfielder Austin Hays. The Dodgers were arguably the most active, acquiring Jack Flaherty, Kevin Kiermaier, Amed Rosario, Tommy Edman, and Michael Kopech. Even the Padres managed to win the services of the highly sought-after Tanner Scott. All of these teams are potential postseason opponents for the Crew. Even if the Brewers hang onto the top spot in the NL Central, will their roster be enough to get past the Wild Card or Division Series? 

On one hand, it may not be entirely their fault. This is the organization’s typical MO, and it’s not like there were a ton of great rental arms up for sale. The Astros, neck-and-neck with the Mariners for the lead in the AL West, gave up a whole bunch just for Yusei Kikuchi, a guy with a 4.75 ERA and 1.34 WHIP. Other starters that got sold off include Paul Blackburn (4.41 ERA), Zach Eflin (4.11 ERA), and Trevor Rogers (4.53), players with numbers in line with the pieces that Milwaukee did manage to add.

They were in on Flaherty, though more so a day or two before the deadline than as the final hours ticked away. They checked in on Fedde, but those talks didn't progress. Were they simply unwilling to compete with the Dodgers and Cardinals on price, or were they outmaneuvered in trade talks? Do they know something about Montas and Civale (or about Flaherty) that we don’t? Will they somehow find a way to sign the 1986 version of Teddy Higuera? Who knows. But with no new bats, no flashy arms, and the same crushing injury problems, things seem a little less rosy after watching playoff-bound rivals improve a bit more than the Crew did.


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Yeah, I'm leaning toward they laid an egg here. Look, Weimer was extraneous, but to put all that potential and control together with Junis (who arguably has better numbers anyway) in a package for a rental is basically throwing good money after bad. A complete roll of the dice, albeit an expensive one, which isn't likely to move the needle. Flaherty clearly could've been gotten for that package - so what if he ends up hurt? At least you tried for the clear upgrade.

Trading Blalock for Mears seems like a reach too. Civale I can live with. Yandy Diaz should've been a target. Time will tell, but this doesn't have the feel of an improved team for a playoff run against the Phillies nor the Dodgers. Nobody else in the division got much better either, but this is shaping up to be another very short October for Brewers fans...

Posted

The team is too young and inexperienced positionally this year to upgrade the offense in a meaningful way. The team is at least a year away from Ortiz-Turang-Mitchell-Chourio-Frelick breaking-out offensively. They just need to play them and expect the growing pains of big-league development that will eventually pay-off, just not this year.

Hopefully they can hold on to this lead thru a bullpen that has the potential to become dominant over the next 2-3 weeks with Hudson & Megill coming back and possibly Yoho and Misiorowski getting added later in the year if needed.

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Posted

Look at their lineup without Yelich. They definitely didn’t do enough since they didn’t get a bat. And now their 4 best hitters are all RHB

Posted
6 minutes ago, SF70 said:

The team is too young and inexperienced positionally this year to upgrade the offense in a meaningful way. The team is at least a year away from Ortiz-Turang-Mitchell-Chourio-Frelick breaking-out offensively. They just need to play them and expect the growing pains of big-league development that will eventually pay-off, just not this year.

Hopefully they can hold on to this lead thru a bullpen that has the potential to become dominant over the next 2-3 weeks with Hudson & Megill coming back and possibly Yoho and Misiorowski getting added later in the year if needed.

But they could have added veterans to take AB's from the young hitters that are struggling.  They did that last year when they added Canha, Santana and gave Taylor additional starts.  It's not uncommon for young hitters to struggle in the heat of a race.  Replacing Monasterio on the roster with a quality veteran would allow Murphy to sit Ortiz and Turang more as both have tailed off considerably.  With Yelich out, they certainly have room to add a veteran OF to the mix who's better than Bauers.

Posted
1 hour ago, JohnBriggs12 said:

But they could have added veterans to take AB's from the young hitters that are struggling.  They did that last year when they added Canha, Santana and gave Taylor additional starts.  It's not uncommon for young hitters to struggle in the heat of a race.  Replacing Monasterio on the roster with a quality veteran would allow Murphy to sit Ortiz and Turang more as both have tailed off considerably.  With Yelich out, they certainly have room to add a veteran OF to the mix who's better than Bauers.

We have 3 OF’s that need to play everyday with a 4th that can play vs LHP.

I would have liked to see a IKF added.

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