The Chicken Littles are upset because the Brewers failed to resign either catcher Yasmani Grandal or thirdbaseman Mike Moustakas to a free agent contract.
Those guys pretty much put on a ski-mask and the Chicago White Sox and Cincinnati Reds ponied up -- Grandal got $73 million for four years while Moose bagged $64 million for four years. Both will be 32 in 2020, but they were WAY overpaid. Just proves that there's one (foolish franchise) born every minute...
People, it's not like the Brewers will play with seven on the field each game instead of nine. General Manager David Stearns knows what he's doing and how to manage the payroll.
The club declined to offer contracts to infielder Travis Shaw, right-hander Jimmy Nelson, infielder Tyler Saladino, Eric Thames, plus relief pitchers Alex Claudio and Junior Guerra. I look for Shaw to resign (club was avoiding arbitration). As for the pitchers...well, Nelson is damaged goods and has never come back from that freak shoulder injury while Claudio and Guerra aren't worth the roster spots.
Stearns addressed the catcher position via trade with Seattle, getting a left-handed power hitter in Omar Narvaez. The club will have three years of control on the 27-year-old Narvaez. The one big drawback with Omar is defense -- he only threw out 18% of runners last season, and had a plethora of errors/passed balls behind the plate. But defense can be improved -- Grandal is example of that.
Milwaukee recently swung a trade with San Diego, shipping off pitcher Zach Davies, outfielder Trent Grisham and either the popular Player To Be Named Later or cash. All this for left-handed pitcher Eric Lauer and infielder Luis Urias. I think the Brewers had gotten as much out of Davies as was possible, and Urias may light a fire under the up-and-down Orlando Arcia. Love his defense, but his offense runs hot and cold. This is not the case for Urias. Good trade for Stearns.
Stearns must still look at the corner positions to fill -- doesn't look like there's much in the free agent market other than OLDER players, and those might fill the gap for a season, but long-term? Probably not. Still, the club might re-sign Shaw and Thames at bargain prices and still work to develop within the farm system.
Stay tuned....baseball's winter meetings are going on in sunny San Diego.
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