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  • Yelich's Decline and the Brewers' Current Offense


    Tim Muma

    Life (and baseball) happens fast. Christian Yelich's sudden and steep descent from MVP stud hitter to a serviceable leadoff man put the Milwaukee Brewers behind the eight-ball offensively the past few seasons. It's not Yelich's fault; it just happened.

    Image courtesy of © Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports

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    This is not a piece laying blame at the feet of Christian Yelich for the Brewers' inability to reach the World Series or for "hurting" the club with his nine-year, $215 million contract. It's simply a look at how much President of Baseball Operations David Stearns planned to lean on Yelich's incredible production, with a blueprint to surround the (basically) two-time MVP with decent but unspectacular hitters. I recently watched highlights from 2018 and 2019, and it is easy to forget just how insanely amazing Yelich performed in those years.

     

     

     

    What Yelich did in the second half of 2018 was as close to a Barry Bonds type of run as we've seen - albeit for a much shorter time. We know one fantastic hitter doesn't make a lineup potent; however, a truly feared player that delivers every night and can change a game's outcome with one swing makes a world of difference. No matter what statistics you want to use, Yelich of 2018-19 was disgusting in all the right ways.

    Yelich 18-19.JPG

    These are truly incredible numbers. Aside from Mookie Betts and Mike Trout, Yelich was the best hitter in MLB those two seasons. You can see why the Brewers relied so heavily on him when you look at 36 and 44 home runs in those seasons, leading to 110 and 97 RBI, respectively. And keep in mind Yelich's 2019 season was cut short by the fractured kneecap limiting him to only 130 games. Despite the freak injury, nobody thought Yelich would become a shell of himself in the following seasons. Maybe in six or seven years as he hit his mid-30s, but not right now.

    Unfortunately, the fall-off was immediate, and its depth of decline remains staggering. 

    Yelich last 4 yrs.JPG

    Even leaving out 2020 for obvious reasons, the slide from elite power bat to slap hitter with on-base skills is tragic. One number to focus on is Weighted Runs Created Plus (wRC+), the most comprehensive statistic for offensive performance. Let's say Yelich gets up to 110 wRC+ this season (he is currently at 106); that is more than 60 wRC+ "lost" from the 2019 version of Yelich. Even if you expected a slight decline each year, that is a colossal production hole you need to recoup through other players.

    No one has truly figured out why he ended up here, though many believe it started with the knee injury and mental barrier that could have changed his swing and aggressiveness. Being 30 years old doesn't help either, but one can't blame the swift and cavernous valley on age alone.

    As with most things, it's likely a combination of many factors, including the ridiculous improvement by MLB pitchers since 2019. But again, this isn't to say fans should be chastising Yelich. By all accounts, he continues to put in the work, make adjustments to find solutions, and acknowledge that he hasn't lived up to his (or anyone else's) expectations. Frustration with him is understandable, and it's not for me to say how fans should react.

    Yelich has been more productive this season than last, especially after manager Craig Counsell moved him into the leadoff spot where his current skill set better suits him. Despite a recent 0-for-23 cold spell, he's coming out of the St. Louis Cardinals series with a .354 OBP and 107 OPS+. No, it isn't "good enough" for what he was supposed to be and what his contract provides, but it's not an abject failure, either. The problem is that Yelich's current production has prevented the Brewers' offense from reaching stable success like Stearns planned.

    At the same time, Yelich's unforeseen dip doesn't absolve Stearns of the current situation. Milwaukee displayed its true offensive colors in 2021, even after acquiring Willy Adames to spark their production. Whether by choice or lack of options, Milwaukee mostly remained the same type of offense without an elite bat's legitimate, everyday threat in the lineup. And as the offense continued to be Jekyll and Hyde most nights before the trade deadline, no one was brought in to help redistribute Yelich's expected numbers elsewhere.

    Perhaps the Brewers thought Adames would step into that role, but unfortunately, he has had his ups and downs, too. Without a hitter like Yelich at his peak (or someone close), the offense Stearns put together isn't nearly as effective. It was never meant to be a "star and scrubs" lineup, but reliant on that key anchor in the middle that gets help from complementary pieces every game. Unfortunately, without the big bat, the offense finds it more difficult to reach their potential regularly. Sure, Yelich's contract is a hinderance to more spending (in theory). The truth is, the Brewers, like all MLB teams, could easily push their payroll higher without great risk to the bottom line.

    What does it all mean? Baseball, like life, is more unpredictable than we can imagine. Even things that are "guarantees" can quickly fade into disappointment. Stearns clearly had a plan that revolved around Yelich as the nucleus of the offense that would drive everyone else to succeed on a higher level. Yelich lost something, and Stearns lost his preferred offense without enough answers in time to turn things around.

    This doesn't mean the team is terrible, Yelich is trash, and the offense will never do enough. There is talent all around, Yelich included, but the Brewers have to find different ways to make it all work after the grand Yelich plan had to go out the window. I'll still take issue with Stearns' lack of assertiveness on the market for a hitter, grumble when the offense fails to score more than three runs, and long to see the Yelich of a few seasons ago. At the same time, I'll be there every night rooting for my team and hoping that the Brewers discover new ways to land in the win column each night until they are the last ones standing.

     

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    10 minutes ago, UpandIn said:

    Imagine THIS Christian Yelich is a FA. What's he going to get?

    MAYBE 2/20 with a 3rd year option. So 25M guaranteed.

    There's no WAY a team is taking back ~180M in contract obligations for a year and a half of Hader...who himself will cost ~17M next year.

    I really don't even want to think about what it'd cost to unload Yelich contract at this point. I'm pretty sure it'd be part of a Burnes/Woodruff trade and you'd still have to eat a pretty significant chunk and take a whole lot less back in terms of prospects. 

    I think the best way to proceed is just...hope Yelich can figure something out. Maybe try something different with his back and then hope he can get going again in some way or just be happy with what you've got. The horse is out of the barn. Unless he suddenly figures it out, it's a sunken cost we've just got to deal with. It sucks, but the only way forward is to try and keep churning out young, talented, valuable controllable players. We can compete while paying Yelich 26M a year(22 and then deferred money)...it's just gonna be difficult. 

    Yeah, there isn't much you can do other than this. He's also got the full NTC anyway. I suppose somewhere down the line 3 or 4 years from now, if he stays somewhat productive, I could see a deal where he goes to a big market club in a salary dump type situation where we pick up half the tab, if he's receptive to moving. 

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    26 minutes ago, UpandIn said:

    Imagine THIS Christian Yelich is a FA. What's he going to get?

    MAYBE 2/20 with a 3rd year option. So 25M guaranteed.

    There's no WAY a team is taking back ~180M in contract obligations for a year and a half of Hader...who himself will cost ~17M next year.

    I really don't even want to think about what it'd cost to unload Yelich contract at this point. I'm pretty sure it'd be part of a Burnes/Woodruff trade and you'd still have to eat a pretty significant chunk and take a whole lot less back in terms of prospects. 

    I think the best way to proceed is just...hope Yelich can figure something out. Maybe try something different with his back and then hope he can get going again in some way or just be happy with what you've got. The horse is out of the barn. Unless he suddenly figures it out, it's a sunken cost we've just got to deal with. It sucks, but the only way forward is to try and keep churning out young, talented, valuable controllable players. We can compete while paying Yelich 26M a year(22 and then deferred money)...it's just gonna be difficult. 

    Burnes and Yelich would basically cancel one another out, so you could get back some FV 35 prospects as face savings.

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    2 hours ago, Hacksaw Jim Duggan said:

    As for Stearns, he has earned some benefit of the doubt; however, myself and many others have been ALL OVER him for this year's deadline. Not necessarily the Hader move on its own, but the way weaknesses weren't addressed and how it seemed like selling while they were in first place.

    Exactly this. The Hader trade looked like the first step in a multi-part process to improve the overall roster.

    Then the Brewers just closed up shop, much to my dismay. The mistake was closing up shop, not trading Hader.

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    1 hour ago, Jopal78 said:

     

    First of all, the Brewers have access to the doctors treating Yelich and his medical records,  fans don't. Second, the Brewers have access to Yelich in the off-season and could observe how he looks in whatever rehabilitation he had to do, running, hitting, etc., fans don't.  Third, the Brewers coaching staff, doctors, and front office personnel saw him in spring training before he signed the extension, I think its logical to believe they were confident in Yelich's long-term health when he signed his extension and with nearly two hundred million dollars of the owner's money at stake,  were simply not taking a guess that he'd be fully recovered from a knee cap fracture. 

    As to any complaints about the timing of the extension given Yelich had years remaining on his contract when the extension was signed, keep in mind it takes two to tango. For all we know as fans, Yelich told the Brewers "it's now or never" on a contract extension. Who knows? I can tell you if Yelich had continued to crush as a Brewer and walked as a free agent, there would be a percentage of fans calling the GM an idiot for letting him walk that is equal to the percentage that are critical of the extension. Damned if you do, damned if you don't. 

    Sure, but what they failed to do was see how any sort of recovered/healed knee and mindset translated to on-the-field performance in game situations before offering a contract extension they had no urgent need to offer.  

    If Yelich's camp told the Brewers' FO that "it's now or never" in early spring 2020, I'd have simply said, "Ok, guess it's never, or we'll address this again over the next offseason when you still have 2 seasons left on your current contract"

    Yelich is 30 years old this year, which would have been his last under his former contract assuming the Brewers would have picked up his 2022 option (something that would actually be very open to debate given Yelich's 2020-2021 season performance).  I'd have been just fine letting him walk after this season and not thought twice about it even if he maintained MVP-level production, because I just don't want to see the Brewers extending players longterm once they are beyond 30 years old.  

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    A couple of thoughts on the Yelich deal.  I hope Brewer fans stop getting attached to players/individuals, but rather enjoy the team.  If baseball is a business why do team's extend player's who have a history of injuries.  Millions of dollars are at stake that is a pretty risky venture.

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    I can tell you through people in the industry that arguably the biggest problem with Yelich is that he is absolutely not someone that works hard (or at all) both during the season or in the off-season.  Think Ben Sheets.  You'd literally need to walk him to the weight room for him to realize it exists.  That said, the contract he received was extended with MA and DS fully knowing that which is inexcusable, although the entire thing felt like MA's doing given the relationship with Yelich.  

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    40 minutes ago, TigerUppercut said:

    I can tell you through people in the industry that arguably the biggest problem with Yelich is that he is absolutely not someone that works hard (or at all) both during the season or in the off-season.  Think Ben Sheets.  You'd literally need to walk him to the weight room for him to realize it exists.  That said, the contract he received was extended with MA and DS fully knowing that which is inexcusable, although the entire thing felt like MA's doing given the relationship with Yelich.  

    I feel there is still hope, even this year. It is ok to play him 7th in the order against a tough lefty too. 

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    45 minutes ago, TigerUppercut said:

    I can tell you through people in the industry that arguably the biggest problem with Yelich is that he is absolutely not someone that works hard (or at all) both during the season or in the off-season.  Think Ben Sheets.  You'd literally need to walk him to the weight room for him to realize it exists.  That said, the contract he received was extended with MA and DS fully knowing that which is inexcusable, although the entire thing felt like MA's doing given the relationship with Yelich.  

    If that's true, David Stearns is a complete idiot for extending him. I don't know if it's true so I will reserve judgment.

    I do know this though--you cannot give a lazy player a huge/long contract and expect things to turn out well.

     

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    Tim Muma
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    3 hours ago, TigerUppercut said:

    I can tell you through people in the industry that arguably the biggest problem with Yelich is that he is absolutely not someone that works hard (or at all) both during the season or in the off-season.  Think Ben Sheets.  You'd literally need to walk him to the weight room for him to realize it exists.  That said, the contract he received was extended with MA and DS fully knowing that which is inexcusable, although the entire thing felt like MA's doing given the relationship with Yelich.  

    If you have some specific source or examples, I'd love to hear it. I just had a few brief convos with people that I have some connections to and there has been no discussion of that being a concern about Yelich. They acknowledge frustration about results and inability to find solutions, but zero talk about a lack of effort. The same was said about adjustments. It has been a near constant battle to figure this thing out.

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    7 hours ago, UpandIn said:

    Yes. The Dodgers make a ton of money with ~400M in TV money each year. The Yankees make a ton of money with at least that, AND a whole helluva lot more in tickets revenue.

    I don't recall when it's been studied or reported that the Brewers are making a "ton" of money. 

     

     

    This. They may be able to increase their payroll, but by the same token everyone else can too, and most to a greater extent. They'll always be chasing that carrot as long as the financial structure of the game stays as is.

     

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    7 hours ago, Tim Muma said:

     I understand you can't force a trade, but it sounds like there was little push for a bat because of prospect hoarding, IMO.

     

    If you're talking one of the top 8-9 guys in the system for Drury, then I'm all-in on the hoarding philosophy (and I like Drury). A package involving guys in the teens or twenties, sure. Whether we explored that avenue no one knows, but I doubt that would've matched what they got from SD.

    Peralta or Naquin I agree would've come cheaper but I don't think they checked the versatility box the Brewers seem to value. Just a guess, but I also think they would've preferred a RH bat.

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    3 hours ago, rickh150 said:

    I feel there is still hope, even this year. It is ok to play him 7th in the order against a tough lefty too. 

    I agree, there's plenty of hope. He's had stretches where he's been very effective, especially before the recent 7-8 day skid. But the effectiveness is pretty much limited to reaching base only. IMO you have to leave him in the leadoff spot, or else hit him 9th.

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    7 hours ago, Tim Muma said:

    Again, I understand you can't force a trade, but it sounds like there was little push for a bat because of prospect hoarding, IMO.

     

    John Heyman reported that the Brewers made a push for Bell (WAS had to include him to get the prospects they wanted from SD), and Joc Pederson (Giants decided not to sell), and inquired about Gallo and Drury.

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    For sure the knee injury at the end of 2019 into the disaster of what was 2020 hurt. In addition,  the league unjuiced the balls and had the cheating scandals Astros, Red Sox, and whatever the Yankees did that the league seemingly won't unseen evidence (unless they have and I missed it). I say that because the Cubs complained a bunch about our bullpen giving some kind of signals.

    Put a bunch of that together with some natural regression and wa-la.

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    6 hours ago, TigerUppercut said:

    I can tell you through people in the industry that arguably the biggest problem with Yelich is that he is absolutely not someone that works hard (or at all) both during the season or in the off-season.  Think Ben Sheets.  You'd literally need to walk him to the weight room for him to realize it exists.  That said, the contract he received was extended with MA and DS fully knowing that which is inexcusable, although the entire thing felt like MA's doing given the relationship with Yelich.  

    This is a pretty major accusation.  Not saying an untrue one, I have no idea one way or another, but a small market extending a $215M franchise record extension to a player with a known poor work ethic would be egregiously negligent.

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    6 hours ago, TigerUppercut said:

    I can tell you through people in the industry that arguably the biggest problem with Yelich is that he is absolutely not someone that works hard (or at all) both during the season or in the off-season.  Think Ben Sheets.  You'd literally need to walk him to the weight room for him to realize it exists.  That said, the contract he received was extended with MA and DS fully knowing that which is inexcusable, although the entire thing felt like MA's doing given the relationship with Yelich.  

    This is a pretty major accusation.  Not saying an untrue one, I have no idea one way or another, but a small market extending a $215M franchise record extension to a player with a known poor work ethic would be egregiously negligent.

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    Pretty clear on the videos Yelich's swing speed is vastly faster than the Yelich of today.  That would tie in more to back issues disallowing him to swing as fast.  I've believed it was fear on hurting his knee with swinging timidly, but now it's clearly the back nearing 3years later.  If he were a golfer this is like a prime PGA player turned senior the next years. Bat speed must be multiple miles per hour slower. The hard exit velocity is just how well his swing plane and barrel of the ball is.

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    Pretty clear on the videos Yelich's swing speed is vastly faster than the Yelich of today.  That would tie in more to back issues disallowing him to swing as fast.  I've believed it was fear on hurting his knee with swinging timidly, but now it's clearly the back nearing 3years later.  If he were a golfer this is like a prime PGA player turned senior the next years. Bat speed must be multiple miles per hour slower. The hard exit velocity is just how well his swing plane and barrel of the ball is.

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    1 hour ago, adambr2 said:

    This is a pretty major accusation.  Not saying an untrue one, I have no idea one way or another, but a small market extending a $215M franchise record extension to a player with a known poor work ethic would be egregiously negligent.

    I'm inherently skeptical of the un-named sources in the industry when it's a Jeff Passan...

    That seems like too obvious of a thing to first start coming out 3 years after an injury that ended his second straight MVP season in a failed attempt to try and explain why he just feel off a cliff. I also have friends who work in or around the industry. One who works for Bally telling me Khris Middleton was coming back Gm 5 of the Celtics series, then telling me everyone on the team was questioning his toughness. I'm pretty sure that person just wasn't privy to that information at all because their job in no way is related to the health of the players. 

     

    Now...that's not to say Tigeruppercut is wrong or that he doesn't know reputable people in the front offices of Major League Baseball(though it'd really have to be the Brewers or how would they know how hard he is or isn't working right now?)...I'll just say I take these types of insults with a grain of salt. You're really kinda insulting who he is as a man and as a person. So I need more than an anonymous person repeating what other anonymous people say before I'll put any credibility into that. 

    With Sheets, we HEARD people questioning his lack of commitment to his conditioning. We saw a very different personality. I don't see that from Yelich. Again, doesn't mean it's not that...I just don't see it). 

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    1 hour ago, adambr2 said:

    This is a pretty major accusation.  Not saying an untrue one, I have no idea one way or another, but a small market extending a $215M franchise record extension to a player with a known poor work ethic would be egregiously negligent.

    I'm inherently skeptical of the un-named sources in the industry when it's a Jeff Passan...

    That seems like too obvious of a thing to first start coming out 3 years after an injury that ended his second straight MVP season in a failed attempt to try and explain why he just feel off a cliff. I also have friends who work in or around the industry. One who works for Bally telling me Khris Middleton was coming back Gm 5 of the Celtics series, then telling me everyone on the team was questioning his toughness. I'm pretty sure that person just wasn't privy to that information at all because their job in no way is related to the health of the players. 

     

    Now...that's not to say Tigeruppercut is wrong or that he doesn't know reputable people in the front offices of Major League Baseball(though it'd really have to be the Brewers or how would they know how hard he is or isn't working right now?)...I'll just say I take these types of insults with a grain of salt. You're really kinda insulting who he is as a man and as a person. So I need more than an anonymous person repeating what other anonymous people say before I'll put any credibility into that. 

    With Sheets, we HEARD people questioning his lack of commitment to his conditioning. We saw a very different personality. I don't see that from Yelich. Again, doesn't mean it's not that...I just don't see it). 

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    1 hour ago, brewcrewdue80 said:

    Pretty clear on the videos Yelich's swing speed is vastly faster than the Yelich of today.  That would tie in more to back issues disallowing him to swing as fast.  I've believed it was fear on hurting his knee with swinging timidly, but now it's clearly the back nearing 3years later.  If he were a golfer this is like a prime PGA player turned senior the next years. Bat speed must be multiple miles per hour slower. The hard exit velocity is just how well his swing plane and barrel of the ball is.

    I agree, I think it was the back.

    After that shot to right though, I'm also hoping that back has some life left in it!

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    1 hour ago, brewcrewdue80 said:

    Pretty clear on the videos Yelich's swing speed is vastly faster than the Yelich of today.  That would tie in more to back issues disallowing him to swing as fast.  I've believed it was fear on hurting his knee with swinging timidly, but now it's clearly the back nearing 3years later.  If he were a golfer this is like a prime PGA player turned senior the next years. Bat speed must be multiple miles per hour slower. The hard exit velocity is just how well his swing plane and barrel of the ball is.

    I agree, I think it was the back.

    After that shot to right though, I'm also hoping that back has some life left in it!

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