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Article: Friction Between Brewers and Corbin Burnes Could Endanger Team's Contention Window


Milwaukee Brewers fans were greeted with some grim, but honest comments from their best pitcher Thursday morning, as 2021 National League Cy Young Winner, Corbin Burnes, spoke to the media about his arbitration negotiations. 

Image courtesy of © Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports

“There’s no denying that the relationship is definitely hurt from what [transpired],” Burnes told reporters.

The Brewers won their arbitration case against Corbin Burnes a day earlier, on Wednesday, February 15, giving the two-time All-Star a $10.01 million salary for 2023, not the $10.75 million that Burnes and his agent requested. 

With an apparent rift in the relationship between Burnes and Brewers’ front office, the team’s current window of playoff contention that started back in 2017 may be over sooner than fans would like. 

What many people are taking away from this is that Burnes will be more likely to enter free agency when his service time allows him to after the 2024 season. However, he could be leaving the Brewers much sooner, if their 2023 battle plans to win the National League Central over the St. Louis Cardinals come up short. 

FanGraphs’s pre-season playoff odds currently have the Brewers projected with an 86-76 record, with a 57% chance to make the postseason. These odds have them finishing second in the division behind the Cardinals, who are projected with an 88-74 record and a 72.4% chance to make the postseason.

While projections do look favorable for the Brewers to contend and not consider shopping Burnes at the trade deadline, the realities of baseball may tell a different story around the All-Star break in July. If the Brewers are far enough behind the Cardinals halfway through the season and Burnes is pitching at the level he’s established over the last three seasons, the front office will likely not hesitate to trade Burnes away at his highest value and ask for a heavy return, close to the price tag of Juan Soto. 

The front office may not be the team that pushes for this trade though. If the Brewers season continues to sour from this point forward, Burnes may not hesitate on asking for a trade request. If Burnes has already shared there is a rift in their relationship because the team is not willing to pay him the amount he’s worth, then the Brewers won’t be a team he will expect a massive contract from when it’s time for his biggest payday. 

Obviously, unlike players in salary-capped leagues like the NFL and NBA, players who request a trade in MLB have very little leverage. Burnes could hold out at some point, refusing to pitch until he’s dealt, but the unthinkablity of that is reflected by the fact that he reported immediately to spring training even after the embittering experience of the arbitration hearing. Short of such a withholding of performance, a trade request becomes toothless, as Bryan Reynolds of the Pirates found out this winter.

It is a grim reality for Brewers fans to think about just as Spring Training opens, but the comments from the team’s best pitcher show it’s a reality that needs to be considered going into the 2023 season. 


 


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Nice article. Burnes was never coming back regardless. The discount required is too extreme to even be a consideration. The biggest issues could be Burnes not being willing to pitch on short rest ever, which i frankly wouldn't blame him considering. That could be problematic in the playoffs and/or if we have injuries down the stretch and he's healthy/able.

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I've felt that the obvious choice all along was to trade Burnes prior to free agency. Same holds true with Woodruff and Adames. That one went through the arbitration process and got upset with what he heard, while the other two signed deals so they didn't have to go through arbitration doesn't change anything in that regard.

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"The most successful (people) know that performance over the long haul is what counts. If you can seize the day, great. But never forget that there are days yet to come."

 

~Bill Walsh

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What window? The Brewers are already in Do or Die mode. They fall off the pace by July they’ll break up the team. Moreover, if they keep the team intact through 2023, they will break it up there after,  because they’re not gonna lose all those players for nothing to free agency and never were going to resign them to market rate deals. 

Burnes whining about not getting a big enough raise doesn’t change anything with the teams plans. 

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