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Ron Robinsons Beard

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Everything posted by Ron Robinsons Beard

  1. I was very excited when the Brewers signed Sean Berry in December of 1998. Berry was fresh off a stellar .895 OPS season with the Astros, and at only 33 years of age, I thought he had several years of middle-of-the-order tread left on his tires. Unfortunately Berry turned out to be one of the least effective free agent signings in the team's history.
  2. Oh, I don't think Cruz will actually make the HOF, but he still stands a better shot than Braun, even if that shot is .0001%.
  3. Wow ... no. Even if the Brewers finished the year 0-17 (which would be an astronomical collapse), the Cubs would still need to finish 9-7 to pass them. Even if the Brewers tanked and went something like 3-14, the Cubs would need to finish 12-4. Going 9-8 would be enough to seal the division, even if the Cubs win out (also astronomically unlikely).
  4. I know I've used this one before, but considering Ryan Braun's controversial late career, this man likely stands a better shot of being the first Brewers' #8 in the Hall of Fame ... Nellie Cruz
  5. The best correct answer to this query is Chris Archer.
  6. I can't really explain why, but I loved Tony Graffanino as a Brewer. Gotta appreciate the scrappers :)
  7. Marc Newfield (of dreams)
  8. I consider myself an avid baseball fan, and I thought I had a pretty good knowledge of Brewers' history. But for the life of me, I cannot recall anything about Adam Stern's time as a Brewer.
  9. For #12, it's hard to say no to the mid-90s look and the sweet 'stache Brian Harper brought to the party.
  10. Being a naive teenager in the '90s, I truly thought that the Brewers had the makings of an Atlanta Braves-type rotation with Cal Eldred, Scott Karl, free agent signee Ben McDonald, and "Big Daddy", #13, the huge flame-throwing 6'7" righty, Jeff D'Amico. Unfortunately, despite glimmers of ace-type stuff (including a whole season of great work in 2000), injuries and inconsistency caught up, and it wasn't meant to be for the once Brewers' future ace.
  11. Russell the Muscle's second appearance in this thread with #14!
  12. My pick for #15 wasn't here long, but made one heck of an impact after coming over in a 2018 deadline deal. A former starter, Drew Pomeranz was identified by David Stearns as a guy who could potentially pitch in a middle relief role down the stretch. Big Smooth was much more than that, coming in and immediately performing as a dominant relief arm in a variety of roles.
  13. I thought you were limited to a certain number of pitchers on the MLB roster.
  14. That is pretty much MLB average. Certainly not a great excuse to move the guy who has been the most consistent starter in your rotation to the pen.
  15. 2.67 ERA in August says otherwise
  16. Did not expect Chourio to become Christian Yelich so soon, but here we are.
  17. #16 is 2018 Jewish Sports Hall of Fame inductee Jesse Levis. Levis was a reserve catcher for the Brewers from 1996-98.
  18. Ken McMullen was once a slick-fielding 3B, but he ended his career as a DH with the 1977 Brewers. Of course, a different #17 also made his debut that season following McMulllen's release.
  19. One time Brewer fandom's favorite whipping boy, #18 ... Wes Helms!
  20. I know I love the obscure Brewers, but #19 can be no other than this man.
  21. #20 features "Stormy" Weathers' 2nd go-round with the 2009 Brewers to finish off his career. Weathers was a solid middle-to-back-end relief option for a few teams over his long run.
  22. Do you remember that Logan Morrison was a Milwaukee Brewer? Because I sure didn't! I think I may have a little selective amnesia and PTSD regarding that 2020 season. Actually regarding that year as a whole.
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