The Mercury News

Brewers may need lineup upgrade to end their misery

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The Milwaukee Brewers made a franchise-record fourth straight playoff appearance this fall and have the type of starting rotation that could enable them to keep that streak going in future years.

But their loss to the Atlanta Braves in the NL Division Series revealed they may need to upgrade their lineup if they’re ever going to get back to the World Series for the first time since 1982.

A lineup that struggled to score runs at various points in the sea- son produced a total of six runs in the four-game series. The Brewers went scoreless in 33 of 36 postseason innings.

“We’ve got the best pitching in baseball, I think,” first baseman Rowdy Tellez said Tuesday after the Brewers were eliminated with a 5-4 Game 4 loss in Atlanta. “And I think just after this loss, it’s tough. It’s kind of devastatin­g. We didn’t think it would be like this.”

The Brewers won 95 games and took over sole possession of the NL Central lead for good in June, but postseason frustratio­n continued for a franchise that has never won the World Series.

Milwaukee was a game away from getting to the World Series in 2018 before losing Game 7 of the NL Championsh­ip Series at home to the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Brewers haven’t won a playoff series since.

The Brewers had reason to believe they could make a long postseason run this year because of a rotation featuring three All-Stars in Cy Young Award candidate Corbin Burnes (11-5, 2.43 ERA), Brandon Woodruff (9-10, 2.56) and Freddy Peralta (10-5, 2.81).

“Those guys all took big steps forward,” manager Craig Counsell said. “And they want that label, I think, of what they’ve earned this year, and they deserve it. And I think they’re not going to stop trying to go to the next place.”

That pitching was good enough to help the Brewers roll to a division title without much hitting.

The Brewers ranked 27th out of 30 MLB teams in batting average (.233), though they were 12th in runs scored (738).

Atlanta exposed the shortcomin­gs of Milwaukee’s lineup and left the pitching staff with little margin for error. When Atlanta’s Freddie Freeman hit a tiebreakin­g homer off All-Star closer Josh Hader in the eighth inning of Game 4, the Brewers couldn’t respond.

But they accomplish­ed enough to believe they can put themselves back in contention next season.

“We’re going to focus on next year and come back,” Tellez said. “We’re always going to be a force here.”

The most obvious way for the Brewers to boost their lineup is for 2018 NL MVP Christian Yelich to regain the form he showed his first two years in Milwaukee.

Yelich led the NL in OPS in 2018 and 2019 but has slumped the last two seasons. He batted .248 with just nine homers and 51 RBIs in 117 games this year. The Brewers’ season ended Tuesday when Yelich struck out looking with the tying run on first.

The 29-year-old Yelich is set to make $26 million each of the next seven seasons, though $4 million of that will be deferred each year.

Outfielder Avisaíl García had a team-high 29 homers this season and now faces a decision on his future. His contract includes a $12 million mutual option for the 2022 season.

Another outfielder with a choice to make is Jackie Bradley Jr., who has a $9.5 million player option for 2022 with a $6.5 million buyout. Bradley batted just .163 with a .497 OPS in 134 games.

Milwaukee boosted its roster by trading for shortstop Willy Adames, Tellez and third baseman Eduardo Escobar during the season. Adames posted an .886 OPS after arriving in Milwaukee, while Tellez hit two homers in the NLDS.

While Escobar is now a free agent, Adames and Tellez are under team control through the 2024 season.

PHILLIES HIRE NEW HITTING COACH >> The Philadelph­ia Phillies hired Kevin Long as their hitting coach, reuniting him with both manager Joe Girardi and star slugger Bryce Harper.

Long spent the past four seasons as the hitting coach for the Washington Nationals, where he worked with Harper, and was part of the staff in 2019 when they won the World Series.

Before joining Washington, the 54-year-old Long spent three seasons as hitting coach with the New York Mets and he served as hitting coach for eight seasons with the New York Yankees. He worked under Phillies manager Joe Girardi for seven years (200814) when they were with the Yankees and won the World Series in 2009.

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