Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Pitching coach leaves Brewers

- Tom Haudricour­t

As it turns out, the Milwaukee Brewers’ biggest moves this off-season might be replacing departed coaches.

The Brewers suffered their second defection in a week on Wednesday when general manager David Stearns announced pitching coach Derek Johnson was leaving to pursue another opportunit­y. Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic reported that Johnson was leaving to become pitching coach of the Cincinnati Reds under new manager David Bell.

Hitting coach Darnell Coles also left the staff of his own volition and was named to that same position with the Arizona Diamondbac­ks earlier Wednesday. The Brewers previously announced the contract of bullpen coach Lee Tunnell was not being renewed.

So, the Brewers now find themselves looking to replace three coaches, and Johnson’s exodus particular­ly hurts because of his success in grooming a pitching staff shy of recognized stars. Despite having only one 10-game winner, Jhoulys Chacín, in the rotation and relying more heavily on relievers than starters down the stretch and into the postseason, the Brewers ranked fourth in the National League with a 3.73 team ERA in 2018.

“Obviously, we value D.J.,” Stearns said. “D.J. did a tremendous job with us and helped us a lot over the last three years. Sometimes, this happens as an organizati­on has success. Other clubs take notice and when they get an opportunit­y, they go after some of your people.

“While you never like losing good people, you also recognize that coaches, front office people, everyone needs to do

what’s right for them to move their careers forward.”

In forming the first coaching staff under manager Craig Counsell, the Brewers plucked Johnson out of the farm system of the Chicago Cubs, where he was minor-league pitching coordinato­r. Prior to that, he received high praise for his work as pitching coach at Vanderbilt University.

Known as a teacher as well as “fixer” of problems for those struggling, Johnson helped many young pitchers develop into successes with the Brewers, including Josh Hader, Corey Knebel, Zach Davies, Freddy Peralta and Brandon Woodruff. But he also worked with veterans such as Jeremy Jeffress, Wade Miley and Chacín to make them the best they could be.

Stearns did not reveal details of the negotiatio­n but said he tried to work out a deal to keep Johnson without success. He also said there was “a solid culture” among the coaching staff and that “they enjoyed working together.”

Asked if he considered this a setback to the team’s progress, Stearns said, “Anytime you lose a person who has contribute­d to your success, you recognize there’s going to be a challenge to replace those contributi­ons. We also have an opportunit­y to explore what’s out there from a pitching coach perspectiv­e,

Brewers pitcher Jhoulys Chacín talks to pitching coach Derek Johnson and catcher Erik Kratz.

to explore our ability to bring in another talented coach.”

Jeffress stays; Lyles is out

In perhaps their easiest personnel decision of the off-season, the Brewers exercised their club option on reliever Jeremy Jeffress for $3.175 million for the 2019 season.

The Brewers did not, however, exercise their $3.5 million option on starter/ reliever Jordan Lyles, who was acquired during the season from San Diego. Instead, the club paid a $250,000 buyout, making Lyles a free agent and leaving 34 players on the 40-man roster.

Jeffress, 31, put together the best season of his career in 2018, earning his first all-star berth. In a team-high 73 appearance­s, he posted an 8-1 record and 1.29 earned run average with 89 strikeouts in 762⁄3 innings and 0.991 WHIP. Opponents batted .182 against him.

Jeffress proved to be a master at escaping jams, allowing only eight of 38 inherited runners to score. His 1.29 ERA was best among qualifying NL relievers, and he went 23 consecutiv­e outings without allowing a run from April 7 to May 27, establishi­ng a team record.

Jeffress struggled in the postseason, going 0-1 with a 6.75 ERA and one save over eight outings, with 16 hits allowed in eight innings.

A first-round draft pick of the Brewers in 2006 who is in his third stint with the club, Jeffress signed a non-guaranteed deal last winter for $1.7 million that included club options for 2019 and 2020 ($4.3 million). He earned an additional $550,000 this year in incentives for games finished and innings pitched.

Jeffress had good reason to want to stay with the Brewers and the team had good reason to want to keep him.

In 253 career outings with Milwaukee, Jeffress is 21-4 with a 2.17 ERA and 42 saves. In 91 appearance­s with three other clubs, he is 4-3, 4.76 with one save.

Lyles, 28, was acquired Aug. 5 from the Padres on a waiver claim to provide another multi-inning reliever in the bullpen. He made 11 appearance­s for the Brewers, going 1-0 with a 3.31 ERA, with 22 strikeouts in 161⁄3 innings.

Lyles was not included on the playoff rosters for the NLDS or NLCS.

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BENNY SIEU / USA TODAY SPORTS

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