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  • Three Bad Decisions Sunk the Brewers' Playoff Run


    Tim Muma

    Countless decisions go into a Major League offseason, and even more occur once Opening Day commences. For the Milwaukee Brewers, three costly decisions played the most significant role in their failure to reach the playoffs in 2022.

    Image courtesy of © Benny Sieu-USA TODAY Sports

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    Sometimes sound judgments are made, but things don't work out. It happens on a small scale game during games (such as when to bring in a certain reliever) and on a larger scale with personnel decisions. Other times, people make foolish choices. It appears both types consistently burned the 2022 Brewers throughout the season.

    Regardless, MLB is a results-oriented business, so no moral victories exist. Three of the calls and outcomes that didn't go the Brewers' way had the greatest impact on a disappointing season that ended short of the playoffs.

    ANDREW MCCUTCHEN FREE AGENT SIGNING

    It has often been said that a one-year contract carries no risk. That isn't entirely true, especially when a team like the Brewers apparently have a limited budget. Signing Andrew McCutchen to a one-year, $8.5 million didn't break the bank, but it did burn Milwaukee. 

    As the one major free agent move, the Brewers made, relying on a 35-year-old to repeat his 2021 performance was fool's gold. Therein laid the risk, counting on an aging veteran with no complementary move to cover a potential slide - which is what happened. McCutchen murdered lefties in 2021, then fell flat on his face against southpaws with the Brewers.

    McCutchen vs LHP.JPG

    You can see why David Stearns was intrigued, but it turned out to be a harmful move. It's almost hard to believe how far McCutchen's numbers dipped against left-handers. Was it bad luck? Was it predictable that Cutch wouldn't come close to matching his huge season versus lefties at age 35? Perhaps the problem was manager Craig Counsell using McCutchen too often against righties. While McCutchen's numbers improved slightly versus righties, Counsell gave him 35 more plate appearances (and counting) this year after two sub-.700 OPS in the past couple of years. That may have worn him down unnecessarily and hurt his performance against lefties.

    Technically, the Brewers' offense was statistically better this season, but they were frustratingly inconsistent and benefited from a DH in 2022. With McCutchen in the DH role for more than 60% of his plate appearances, he wasn't close to good enough. Maybe it was telling no other MLB clubs went after him - at least at that price. Perhaps if the Brewers paid McCutchen only $5 million, they would have had some leftover funds for another player to impact the team positively.

    PLANNING TO RELY ON ETHAN SMALL

    Now the 12th-rated prospect in Milwaukee's system, the Brewers thought Small was ready to contribute to the big league club in 2022. Counsell expressed in Spring Training that the 25-year-old hurler earned time with the Brewers.

     

     

    Small made exactly two starts with Milwaukee: 6.1 IP, five earned runs (7.11 ERA), seven strikeouts, eight walks, and a 2.526 WHIP. In a season that saw 18 fewer starts from Brandon Woodruff, Freddy Peralta, and Adrian Houser due to injuries, Milwaukee needed another quality arm to step up. Small was supposed to be that guy.

    One problem was that Stearns and company didn't plan a fail-safe. In past seasons, they signed guys like Brett Anderson, who could at least offer a reliable amount of average outings to keep the team in games. Instead, unknown Jason Alexander took the hill for 11 starts. He owned a 4.82 ERA in those starts but had a fair amount of blowup games that not only put the Brewers behind but caused them to burn through bullpen arms.

    It was a double whammy. On the one hand, the Brewers misevaluated Small, whose lack of command grew worse in 2022 (5.1 walks per nine innings). On the other hand, Milwaukee had no other young pitchers or veteran hurlers ready to take the ball when injuries predictably struck. That significantly impacted Milwaukee's decline in run prevention and the tax on the bullpen that imploded in the second half.

    TRADE DEADLINE DEALS AND NO DEALS

    I'm not here to blame all things on the trading of Josh Hader. It certainly took an emotional and mental toll on the club for a while after the move, but it was not the only problem with the Brewers' trade deadline. Milwaukee also struggled before August 2, but they had won six of eight games leading up to the trade to hold a three-game lead in the NL Central. The events at the trade deadline move them backward instead.

    Hader was a hot mess before the shocking deal with the San Diego Padres and struggled initially in his new threads, but lately, his luck has turned. In his last 10 outings (9.1 innings), Hader has 13 strikeouts and one walk while giving up zero earned runs on four hits. Whatever he was going through, he has figured it out just in time to push San Diego to the playoffs and give them confidence in his arm in October.

    Meanwhile, Stearns' three acquisitions to "replace" Hader went in the wrong direction. Trevor Rosenthal got hurt (after recovering from another injury) and never pitched for the Brewers. Matt Bush came from the Texas Rangers with a 2.95 ERA and 1.2 HR/9, only to post a 4.30 ERA and 2.3 HR/9 in Milwaukee. The third piece, who came over in the Hader deal, was lefty Taylor Rogers. He had some issues in San Diego, but things got worse with the Brewers, producing a 5.73 ERA and 2.5 HR/9 (0.2 HR/9 with the Padres). Bush and Rogers were at the heart of Milwaukee's bullpen issues and homer-happy problems that gutted the Crew on far too many occasions during the season's final two months.

    As for the offense at the deadline, not one move was made. Despite an offense with positions needing an upgrade and a lineup that continued to struggle against left-handed pitching, Stearns failed to acquire even one bat. Yes, it takes two teams to tango, and the price for certain players may have been too high in Stearns' mind. That doesn't excuse failing to improve the lineup or depth, especially with an offense that relies on matchups. Plus, trading for a bat may have counteracted the Hader trade and showed the remaining players, "we're still going for it this season." We'll never know what another option in the lineup could have meant for the club, physically and mentally.

    And considering the decline in the starting rotation's overall performance - as well as the injuries that hampered them - it was negligent to fail to acquire some type of help there, either. There are always veteran pitchers with expiring contracts that could be had, including someone like the Brewers' favorite nemesis, Jose Quintana, who went to the St. Louis Cardinals instead. It was an overall failure to replace the club's lost production from 2021.

    It took a total team effort to miss out on one of six playoff spots in the NL. However, these three decisions had the most immense impact on the first non-playoff season since 2017 for the Milwaukee Brewers.

     

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    21 hours ago, UpandIn said:

     

     

    This isn't a multiple choice. The Brewer are an all or nothing team. That may produce a decent OPS, but it doesn't produce consistency. Is this NOT the main cause for excitement about hitters like Frelick, Mitchell, Ruiz...because they can actually help us score different ways? Their athleticism, Ruiz's ability to get down a bunt, Frelick making contact, Mitchell...we've already seen what his speed can do to teams in games. 

     

    Oh...and they should DEFINITELY give Ruiz some games at 2B next year in ST'ing or AAA...

    Ah, consistency. It's a word I've brought up from time to time this season. There's been a lot of talk in this thread about hitting with RISP and rightfully so. But there were also many times this year there was a runner on 2B with no outs, and the inning ended with him still spot-welded there. Also the runner on 3B with less than two outs thing. Those might not have anything directly to do with RISP stats since you don't necessarily need a base hit to score the run, but I think an offense can run much more effectively when contact is made, when situations are respected. and when you have the type of skill set where it isn't out of your element to do so. That's where I become intrigued with a Frelick, a Turang, A Mitchell or Ruiz. No one knows what or how long the growing pains will be given the youth. But I get intrigued at the potential for more consistency.

    Gotta say though, I'm really dubious about Ruiz getting reps at 2B.

     

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    21 hours ago, UpandIn said:

     

     

    This isn't a multiple choice. The Brewer are an all or nothing team. That may produce a decent OPS, but it doesn't produce consistency. Is this NOT the main cause for excitement about hitters like Frelick, Mitchell, Ruiz...because they can actually help us score different ways? Their athleticism, Ruiz's ability to get down a bunt, Frelick making contact, Mitchell...we've already seen what his speed can do to teams in games. 

     

    Oh...and they should DEFINITELY give Ruiz some games at 2B next year in ST'ing or AAA...

    Ah, consistency. It's a word I've brought up from time to time this season. There's been a lot of talk in this thread about hitting with RISP and rightfully so. But there were also many times this year there was a runner on 2B with no outs, and the inning ended with him still spot-welded there. Also the runner on 3B with less than two outs thing. Those might not have anything directly to do with RISP stats since you don't necessarily need a base hit to score the run, but I think an offense can run much more effectively when contact is made, when situations are respected. and when you have the type of skill set where it isn't out of your element to do so. That's where I become intrigued with a Frelick, a Turang, A Mitchell or Ruiz. No one knows what or how long the growing pains will be given the youth. But I get intrigued at the potential for more consistency.

    Gotta say though, I'm really dubious about Ruiz getting reps at 2B.

     

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    55 minutes ago, Jim French Stepstool said:

    Ah, consistency. It's a word I've brought up from time to time this season. There's been a lot of talk in this thread about hitting with RISP and rightfully so. But there were also many times this year there was a runner on 2B with no outs, and the inning ended with him still spot-welded there. Also the runner on 3B with less than two outs thing. Those might not have anything directly to do with RISP stats since you don't necessarily need a base hit to score the run, but I think an offense can run much more effectively when contact is made, when situations are respected. and when you have the type of skill set where it isn't out of your element to do so. That's where I become intrigued with a Frelick, a Turang, A Mitchell or Ruiz. No one knows what or how long the growing pains will be given the youth. But I get intrigued at the potential for more consistency.

    Gotta say though, I'm really dubious about Ruiz getting reps at 2B.

     

    Need a stat for % of time a runner at 2nd with no outs or a runner at 3rd with one out end up scoring.

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    55 minutes ago, Jim French Stepstool said:

    Ah, consistency. It's a word I've brought up from time to time this season. There's been a lot of talk in this thread about hitting with RISP and rightfully so. But there were also many times this year there was a runner on 2B with no outs, and the inning ended with him still spot-welded there. Also the runner on 3B with less than two outs thing. Those might not have anything directly to do with RISP stats since you don't necessarily need a base hit to score the run, but I think an offense can run much more effectively when contact is made, when situations are respected. and when you have the type of skill set where it isn't out of your element to do so. That's where I become intrigued with a Frelick, a Turang, A Mitchell or Ruiz. No one knows what or how long the growing pains will be given the youth. But I get intrigued at the potential for more consistency.

    Gotta say though, I'm really dubious about Ruiz getting reps at 2B.

     

    Need a stat for % of time a runner at 2nd with no outs or a runner at 3rd with one out end up scoring.

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    55 minutes ago, yourout said:

    Need a stat for % of time a runner at 2nd with no outs or a runner at 3rd with one out end up scoring.

    Not sure if any place tracks % of times a run scored in each split, but with a runner on 2nd and no outs the Brewers 867 OPS ranked 5th. Only NYM, STL, PHI and HOU posted a higher OPS in the split. The Dodgers ranked 28th with a 571 OPS in this split.

    Runner on 3rd and one out the Brewers 834 OPS ranked 20th, so they didn’t fare as well in that split, but it was also only 46 PAs, about 2% of the Brewers season total.

    RE24 tracks how many runs a team “should have” scored if they had average performance in each of the 24 unique base/out states. Both BRef (+5.1) and FanGraphs (+8.6) had the Brewers offense slightly positive on the season.

    We can try to parse different ways the offense could have done better to get those two extra wins needed to make the playoffs, but ultimately the position players improved their WAR from 18.9 in 2021 to 24.1 this year.

    The pitching staff was a lot leakier, dropping from 26.3 rWAR in 2021 to 15.6 rWAR in 2022. 

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    55 minutes ago, yourout said:

    Need a stat for % of time a runner at 2nd with no outs or a runner at 3rd with one out end up scoring.

    Not sure if any place tracks % of times a run scored in each split, but with a runner on 2nd and no outs the Brewers 867 OPS ranked 5th. Only NYM, STL, PHI and HOU posted a higher OPS in the split. The Dodgers ranked 28th with a 571 OPS in this split.

    Runner on 3rd and one out the Brewers 834 OPS ranked 20th, so they didn’t fare as well in that split, but it was also only 46 PAs, about 2% of the Brewers season total.

    RE24 tracks how many runs a team “should have” scored if they had average performance in each of the 24 unique base/out states. Both BRef (+5.1) and FanGraphs (+8.6) had the Brewers offense slightly positive on the season.

    We can try to parse different ways the offense could have done better to get those two extra wins needed to make the playoffs, but ultimately the position players improved their WAR from 18.9 in 2021 to 24.1 this year.

    The pitching staff was a lot leakier, dropping from 26.3 rWAR in 2021 to 15.6 rWAR in 2022. 

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    7 hours ago, UpandIn said:

    Really? Trying to make contact with RISP and shortening up leads to worse results for "most hitters?"

    I'd like to see anything that supports that. 

    BABIP with RISP is higher than BA overall. 

    So...seems like a difficult argument to make that making contact with runners in scoring position vs striking out would lead to worse results. 

    You have a choice. Either batters and hitting coaches have gotten more stupid or more stubborn by eschewing "shortening up" and other such things over the last 20-50 years, or they came to realize that it's not conducive to positive results. They can bunt more to move runners, but most batters suck at it (Mitchell and Ruiz are exceptions, and I hope they continue to do so when they play in the majors). They can steal more bases, though you have to be a pretty good base stealer to make it worth the risk. With so much swing and miss, I think hit-an-runs are rightfully avoided.

    What your little league coach told you doesn't apply in MLB.

     

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    7 hours ago, UpandIn said:

    Really? Trying to make contact with RISP and shortening up leads to worse results for "most hitters?"

    I'd like to see anything that supports that. 

    BABIP with RISP is higher than BA overall. 

    So...seems like a difficult argument to make that making contact with runners in scoring position vs striking out would lead to worse results. 

    You have a choice. Either batters and hitting coaches have gotten more stupid or more stubborn by eschewing "shortening up" and other such things over the last 20-50 years, or they came to realize that it's not conducive to positive results. They can bunt more to move runners, but most batters suck at it (Mitchell and Ruiz are exceptions, and I hope they continue to do so when they play in the majors). They can steal more bases, though you have to be a pretty good base stealer to make it worth the risk. With so much swing and miss, I think hit-an-runs are rightfully avoided.

    What your little league coach told you doesn't apply in MLB.

     

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    5 hours ago, Jim French Stepstool said:

    Gotta say though, I'm really dubious about Ruiz getting reps at 2B.

    I think it's ludicrous. OTOH, the decision to move him off 2B was a S.D. decision; I suppose it's conceivable that the Brewers have a different assessment, but if they did, they should have played him some at 2B after they acquired him.

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    5 hours ago, Jim French Stepstool said:

    Gotta say though, I'm really dubious about Ruiz getting reps at 2B.

    I think it's ludicrous. OTOH, the decision to move him off 2B was a S.D. decision; I suppose it's conceivable that the Brewers have a different assessment, but if they did, they should have played him some at 2B after they acquired him.

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    1 hour ago, Robocaller said:

    You have a choice. Either batters and hitting coaches have gotten more stupid or more stubborn by eschewing "shortening up" and other such things over the last 20-50 years, or they came to realize that it's not conducive to positive results. They can bunt more to move runners, but most batters suck at it (Mitchell and Ruiz are exceptions, and I hope they continue to do so when they play in the majors). They can steal more bases, though you have to be a pretty good base stealer to make it worth the risk. With so much swing and miss, I think hit-an-runs are rightfully avoided.

    What your little league coach told you doesn't apply in MLB.

     

    The past 50 years, huh? LOL...no, I don't have a choice. Batters and hitting coaches haven't gotten "more stupid," and eschewed "shortening," and putting the  ball in place with less than 2 outs. 

    Where are you getting that from? You realize not every team is all or nothing like the Brewers, right?

    That guys like Boggs, Gwynn, Altuve, Ichiro, Jeter...I mean, countless others, they all played in this time period as well?

    The same time period when pitching has improved with deeper bullpen, more platoon matchup's, and a dozen other reasons, but when exactly was this conscious decision made that we're going to swing for the fences with 2 strikes, lets than 2 out and RISP? I missed that Memo?

     

    But thank you for telling me what my little league coach told me in Little League doesn't apply?

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    1 hour ago, Robocaller said:

    You have a choice. Either batters and hitting coaches have gotten more stupid or more stubborn by eschewing "shortening up" and other such things over the last 20-50 years, or they came to realize that it's not conducive to positive results. They can bunt more to move runners, but most batters suck at it (Mitchell and Ruiz are exceptions, and I hope they continue to do so when they play in the majors). They can steal more bases, though you have to be a pretty good base stealer to make it worth the risk. With so much swing and miss, I think hit-an-runs are rightfully avoided.

    What your little league coach told you doesn't apply in MLB.

     

    The past 50 years, huh? LOL...no, I don't have a choice. Batters and hitting coaches haven't gotten "more stupid," and eschewed "shortening," and putting the  ball in place with less than 2 outs. 

    Where are you getting that from? You realize not every team is all or nothing like the Brewers, right?

    That guys like Boggs, Gwynn, Altuve, Ichiro, Jeter...I mean, countless others, they all played in this time period as well?

    The same time period when pitching has improved with deeper bullpen, more platoon matchup's, and a dozen other reasons, but when exactly was this conscious decision made that we're going to swing for the fences with 2 strikes, lets than 2 out and RISP? I missed that Memo?

     

    But thank you for telling me what my little league coach told me in Little League doesn't apply?

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    1 hour ago, Robocaller said:

    I think it's ludicrous. OTOH, the decision to move him off 2B was a S.D. decision; I suppose it's conceivable that the Brewers have a different assessment, but if they did, they should have played him some at 2B after they acquired him.

    Kiiinda the point. You think it's ludicrous or based on a cursory reading of scouting reports from 2019, you think he probably can't play 2B? Do YOU think that based on anything you've seen or are you just telling everyone what readily available scouting reports have said about him not having soft hands. 

    SD played him at 2B up until 2020 when they were planning on playing Abrams at SS and Rosario at 2B on the same AA team while also having Tatis Jr and Crowenworth at the MLB level. 

    They had the ROY runner up and a generational talent they paid 340M to playing up the middle with two elite prospects on the same team as Ruiz. 

    So your observations that people can't talk about seeing if Ruiz can play 2B come from...scouting reports that are a couple years old that pretty much sound like Chase Utley or Jeff Kent's?

    And he probably can't/won't play 2B, but it ain't just "Ryan Braun to SS, Sal Frelick to 3B." 

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    7 hours ago, Jim French Stepstool said:

    Ah, consistency. It's a word I've brought up from time to time this season. There's been a lot of talk in this thread about hitting with RISP and rightfully so. But there were also many times this year there was a runner on 2B with no outs, and the inning ended with him still spot-welded there. Also the runner on 3B with less than two outs thing. Those might not have anything directly to do with RISP stats since you don't necessarily need a base hit to score the run, but I think an offense can run much more effectively when contact is made, when situations are respected. and when you have the type of skill set where it isn't out of your element to do so. That's where I become intrigued with a Frelick, a Turang, A Mitchell or Ruiz. No one knows what or how long the growing pains will be given the youth. But I get intrigued at the potential for more consistency.

    Gotta say though, I'm really dubious about Ruiz getting reps at 2B.

     

    This is exactly it. It's as much situational awareness, baseball intelligence, call it what you want, as anything else. A HR in the 2nd inning with a man on 2nd base is great, a strikeout...it's just an out at that point.

    Not being able to get a runner in from 2nd with 0 outs and your season on the line in back to back innings...kinda summed up our season.

    It wasn't just one problem, it was several problems.

    As for Ruiz at 2B, I have no idea what he looks like there. I haven't watched him. But I do know he's pretty clearly our 5th rated OF prospect and we've have pretty successful teams with Ricky Weeks and Keston Hiura at 2B.
     

    I don't think it's a crazy idea to get Ruiz some games at 2B if he's in Nashville to start the year. But again, I'm not pretending to know definitively if he can be a viable option to occasionally at 2B or not. Tough to do without...again, actually seeing him play it, but it'd be nice if it was at least an option.

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    11 hours ago, Robocaller said:

     Either batters and hitting coaches have gotten more stupid or more stubborn by eschewing "shortening up" and other such things over the last 20-50 years, or they came to realize that it's not conducive to positive results. 

     

    Or maybe, just maybe, batters have come to the mindset in recent decades that hitting for more power, more OPS leads to securing a bigger contract. And that's the priority.

    That doesn't mean a many of them wouldn't suck at it either way, I'll admit that. 

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    11 hours ago, Robocaller said:

     Either batters and hitting coaches have gotten more stupid or more stubborn by eschewing "shortening up" and other such things over the last 20-50 years, or they came to realize that it's not conducive to positive results. 

     

    Or maybe, just maybe, batters have come to the mindset in recent decades that hitting for more power, more OPS leads to securing a bigger contract. And that's the priority.

    That doesn't mean a many of them wouldn't suck at it either way, I'll admit that. 

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    9 hours ago, UpandIn said:

     

    but when exactly was this conscious decision made that we're going to swing for the fences with 2 strikes, lets than 2 out and RISP? I missed that Memo?

     

     

    Can't say exactly when it was made, but the train probably started to leave the station in the '70s when free agency became a bigger thing. $$$$$$$$.

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    9 hours ago, UpandIn said:

     

    but when exactly was this conscious decision made that we're going to swing for the fences with 2 strikes, lets than 2 out and RISP? I missed that Memo?

     

     

    Can't say exactly when it was made, but the train probably started to leave the station in the '70s when free agency became a bigger thing. $$$$$$$$.

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    1)Regression from hitters       Narvaez, Taylor, Cain, even Rowdy and Adames hit like 40 points lower than last year.

    2)Starting pitching injuries          Not only did this hurt the starting rotation but then it hurts the bullpen as the pen is needing to pitch more innings from shorter starts.

    3)Pig-headed front office/manager towards the offense    I am going to lump not trading for a bat at the deadline and refusing to alter the lineup together. One quality middle of the order bat probably would have been enough to get the playoffs and I hated that Adames and Rowdy hit 2/3 most of the year despite low average and obp. numbers. Counsil should have road a more hot hand approach with the top/middle of the order while try to find a consistent 2/3/4/5 bat(s).

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