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Image courtesy of © Mark Hoffman / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

With nearly the entire roster that won a franchise-record 97 games in the regular season still under club control for 2026, the Brewers need not pursue much turnover this winter. If there’s any area that could use reshuffling, it’s a portion of the bullpen.

In an era where many bullpens are tasked with covering more than 40% of a team’s regular-season innings with a 13-pitcher limit, front offices need the flexibility to shuttle a handful of relievers between Triple-A and the big leagues throughout the season to pace workloads. The current makeup of the Brewers’ projected 2026 relief corps leaves little room to do so.

Six of Milwaukee’s best eight relievers will carry at least one minor-league option into next season, but four of them – Abner Uribe, Trevor Megill, Jared Koenig, and Aaron Ashby – are valuable high-leverage arms who must remain on the roster if healthy. In practicality, that leaves Grant Anderson and DL Hall as the Brewers’ lone optionable arms, and even those two boast unique strengths that could keep them on the roster nearly full-time. The rubber-armed Anderson appeared no worse for wear after logging 69 2/3 innings, while Hall was a useful long reliever who occasionally opened for right-handed starters with pronounced platoon splits.

Perhaps the Brewers feel those two spots offer enough flexibility as they are, but they could benefit from adding another optionable slot to their bullpen. At minimum, the casualty would have to be one of Nick Mears or Rob Zastryzny, the two relievers on the 40-man roster who cannot be optioned.

Mears’s importance to next year’s team is debatable after an up-and-down 2025. After an illness in spring training delayed his debut, a diminished fastball upon his return proved much easier to barrel and led to fewer strikeouts. However, mechanical changes unlocked nearly pinpoint control, allowing him to post a 0.51 ERA and 1.89 FIP over his first 19 appearances and emerge as Pat Murphy’s preferred fireman.

The relative lack of strikeouts and the heaviest workload of his big-league career seemingly caught up to Mears in the second half. His walk rate nearly tripled from 3.6% before the All-Star break to 9.9% after, and he limped to a 5.59 ERA and 6.34 FIP. Interestingly, though, his fastball qualities improved. While it was still hit hard when put in play, Mears rediscovered that extra tick of velocity, raising its stuff grades to just above average and reintroducing more whiffs.

Split FB Velo FB Stuff+ FB StuffPro FB Whiff% FB xwOBA
1st Half 95.1 95 0.1 12.1% .376
2nd Half 96.1 102 -0.2 21.5% .369

Through one lens, Mears flamed out after an unsustainable workload and could be in for regression in 2026. Through another, he’s due for a better year because his stuff is trending in the right direction. While the Brewers tendered him a contract for next season, his unclear outlook and lack of roster flexibility could make trading him for a lottery ticket a tempting option.

Zastrynzy, meanwhile, has dealt with injuries in both of his seasons in Milwaukee but has pitched to a 2.12 ERA, 4.09 FIP, and 4.27 SIERA over 29 2/3 innings when healthy. His strikeout and walk rates have been below average, but he has generated whiffs and weak contact at outstanding rates. The greatest knock against Zastrynzy may be that he’s redundant at times in a bullpen that already features Koenig, Ashby, and Hall as left-handed options.

Mears and Zastrynzy profile as useful middle relievers in the right bullpens, but Milwaukee may not be the best fit for both at once. The Brewers could use another flex spot for shuttle arms like Craig Yoho, Easton McGee, and Sammy Peralta, to say nothing of the stable of minor-league starters they could deploy out of the bullpen throughout the season. The offseason is still in its infancy, but at this moment, moving one of their non-optionable veterans is the easiest way to create more breathing room on the depth chart.


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Posted

Does Grant Anderson actually have an option left? Going through his transactions, he was optioned at least 20 days in 2023, 2024, and 2025. 
 

I see that roster resource/fangraphs still shows 1 option remaining but I wonder if that’s a mistake. (Or maybe I made a mistake)

Brewer Fanatic Contributor
Posted
1 hour ago, long ball said:

Does Grant Anderson actually have an option left? Going through his transactions, he was optioned at least 20 days in 2023, 2024, and 2025. 
 

I see that roster resource/fangraphs still shows 1 option remaining but I wonder if that’s a mistake. (Or maybe I made a mistake)

He wasn't optioned for 20 days in 2025, so he retains one option year.

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Posted
13 minutes ago, Ro Mueller said:

He wasn't optioned for 20 days in 2025, so he retains one option year.

I know what I did… I saw that he was optioned March 10th and recalled March 31st. (Plus optioned and recalled a couple other times). 
 

I wasn’t even paying attention to the fact that the season didn’t started till 3/27 and presumably the time spent in the minors during spring training doesnt count toward that 20 days. 
 

thanks. 

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Posted

I’ve been thinking the same thing ever since we got the 2026 schedule release. Those 3 long stretches are daunting. I thought Mears would get non-tendered or traded. 
 

however, now that Woodruff has accepted the QO and Mears was tendered a contract I’ve sorta looked at this a different way. 
 

We are going to deal with injuries and inevitably some guys will end up disappointing in 2026 (see Hudson, payamps, and Peguero last year.)

A Peralta trade or a Woodruff injury also put a big hit in the rotation depth.

i think we need to lean into it and if that means hall or anderson spends some time in aaa so Yoho or McGee can come up for a week to eat some innings that’s fine with me. I know this is easy for me to say Fri  my couch, but if Murphy is the 2 time manager of the year I hope he can get the buy in from all the guys who still have options to accept the role and be a performer in it  

 

 

 

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Posted

IF they keep Peralta I don't see any problems. Go forward w/o Mears and Zastrynzy. Starting staff:  Peralta - Woodruff -  Miz - Priester - Henderson/Patrick.                           Pen: Longmen-- Henderson or Patrick (whomever doesn't start) - Gasser - Hall - Anderson ---- Late innings--- Ashby - Koenig - Megill - Uribe                                                  4 lefties and 4 righties.... Henderson, Patrick, and Gasser can fill in as starters. 

 

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