Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Brewers promote Stearns, Schlesinge­r

Success on and off field yields extensions, raises

- Tom Haudricour­t

Milwaukee Brewers principal owner Mark Attanasio knows a good thing when he sees it.

Actually, two good things.

Attanasio announced Wednesday that he rewarded David Stearns and Rick Schlesinge­r for their success, on and off the field, respective­ly, with promotions, raises and contract extensions.

Stearns, 34, who led the club from a largescale rebuild to within one victory of the World

Series in a mere three years, was promoted from general manager to president of baseball operations and general manager.

Schlesinge­r, who completed a new 15-year ballpark naming rights deal with American Family Insurance that was announced Tuesday, was promoted from chief operating officer to president of business operations.

The Brewers never revealed the length of Stearns' deal when he was

hired in 2015 but a source indicated it was a five-year contract, with two years remaining.

Attanasio's promotion of Stearns was both reward and smart business move. Teams were showing interest in hiring him to lead their baseball operations, including the San Francisco Giants, who were denied permission by Attanasio to interview Stearns earlier in the off-season. The Giants later hired Dodgers general manager Farhan Zaidi to fill that role.

Stearns became a hot commodity by leading the Brewers through their rebuilding process in a mere three years. After falling one game short of a wildcard berth in 2017, the Brewers roared to the NL Central crown last season, winning a Game 163 showdown with the Cubs at Wrigley Field, then swept Colorado in the NLDS and took Los Angeles to Game 7 of the NLCS before bowing out.

Stearns set the stage for that last breakthrou­gh last Jan. 25 by acquiring outfielder­s Christian Yelich and Lorenzo Cain on the same day. Yelich went on to win National League most valuable player honors.

“David and Rick have developed processes and standards of excellence that are embraced by everyone in our organizati­on,” Attanasio said in a statement.

“David’s approach to acquiring, developing and retaining talent has been instrument­al in our success, both on the field and in the front office, and we believe it has created a strong foundation that will continue to pay dividends in future years."

While flattered by any interest from other clubs, Stearns said he eagerly and enthusiast­ically agreed to an extension after talks with Attanasio.

"Mark was very upfront that he and our ownership group wanted me to stay and I was very upfront that I wanted to stay," Stearns said. "Once we got that on the table, it was an ongoing conversa- tion and I think we're both very pleased we were able to work this out.

"I can't overstate the impact that the postseason run had on me, and experienci­ng it in Milwaukee, as well as the aftermath. There was genuine enthusiasm and excitement from our fan base. It had an impact on me. I want to experience that again. I'm glad this gives me the chance to do so.

"I don't know if there are a whole lot of markets and cities that respond to their teams the way this market and city did to this team."

Schlesinge­r is entering his 17th season with the Brewers and has spent the last eight years as COO. He oversees the club’s business affairs, including finance, human resources, informatio­n technology, legal, sponsorshi­ps, marketing, ticketing, communicat­ions, broadcasti­ng and non-baseball special events.

In 2018, more than 2.85 million fans attended games at Miller Park, representi­ng the 11th time in the last 12 seasons that the organizati­on has exceeded the 2.5 million attendance mark. The team has sold in excess of 2.3 million tickets for 13 consecutiv­e seasons, making the Brewers one of just eight majorleagu­e teams to reach that level each year since 2006.

“The foundation of our business operation is the quality of the fan and partner experience, and I’m grateful to Mark for giving us the resources to enhance those areas every year," Schlesinge­r said.

“I also have the highest appreciati­on for the work that David and his baseball operations team does to put a high-performing team on the field. David and I both understand the importance of our two discipline­s working together as one, cohesive unit, and we embrace that approach throughout the organizati­on.”

The most significan­t investment for the team in 2019 is the renovation and complete rebuild of the Arizona-based training facility, Brewers Fields of Phoenix. The $60-plus million project includes a new clubhouse building with locker rooms and vastly improved facilities for all of the baseball operations functions.

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