Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Brewers’ payroll ranks middle of division

- Todd Rosiak

When the Milwaukee Brewers headed to Citi Field in their season-opening series against the New York Mets, just under one-fifth of their opening-day payroll was committed to players unable to even suit up.

Left-hander Wade Miley ($7 million salary for 2024), right-hander Devin Williams ($7 million), right-hander Brandon Woodruff ($2.25 million), right-hander Taylor Clarke ($1.25 million) and outfielder Garrett Mitchell ($770,000) were all slated to start on the injured list.

Together, they accounted for $18,520,000 of Milwaukee’s $96,705,000 payroll, according to the salary tracking website Spotrac. That figure, barring any major additions or subtractio­ns, is nearly $12 million lower than the Brewers’ 2023 opening-day payroll and almost $24 million below 2022’s.

Woodruff will miss the entire 2024 season after undergoing shoulder surgery, a fact that was known when the two sides agreed to a two-year deal during spring training.

Miley’s and Clarke’s absences are expected to be short-term. But Williams (back) and Mitchell (hand) – both expected to be key cogs on a team pushing for another postseason berth – are going to be out for the foreseeabl­e future, already forcing the Brewers to lean on their depth.

Miley and Williams are tied as the team’s highest-paid pitchers for 2024 payroll purposes.

But with Miley on the IL, Milwaukee’s projected starting five of Freddy Peralta ($5,735,000), Jakob Junis ($4 million), Colin Rea ($3.5 million), Joe Ross ($1.75 million) and DL Hall ($770,000) adds up to $11,755,000 – just under $4 million less than Corbin Burnes alone was to be paid this season before he was traded to the Baltimore Orioles.

Elsewhere on the roster, outfielder Christian Yelich once again repeats as the team’s highest-paid player with a $22 million payroll number (he’s deferring $4 million per season through 2028), followed by shortstop Willy Adames at $12,250,000 and offseason free-agent acquisitio­n Rhys Hoskins at $12 million.

The eighth-highest paid player on the roster? That will be 20-year-old outfielder Jackson Chourio, who accounts for a $2.25 million figure ($2 million salary, $250,000 signing bonus) after signing a record-setting eight-year, $82 million contract in December.

The biggest bargain on the roster? That’s easily catcher William Contreras, who as a pre-arbitratio­n player is only pulling in around $770,000. It will be worth watching to see if team and player can work out a long-term extension moving forward that is amenable to both sides.

Positional­ly speaking, Milwaukee’s outlay of $3,770,000 for both Contreras and Gary Sánchez behind the plate should be an absolute bonus.

If catcher Eric Haase ($1 million salary) winds up making the opening-day roster in the wake of Mitchell’s injury, 14 of the Brewers’ 26 active players will be making at least $1 million.

Left-hander Aaron Ashby, who will begin the season at Class AAA Nashville, accounts for $1.45 million and is the 15th player to hit the $1 million mark.

Aside from Yelich, the Brewers are also paying out deferred salaries to three former players this season: Kolten Wong ($2.5 million), Ryan Braun ($1.8 million) and Lorenzo Cain. Those figures aren’t being counted against the 2024 payroll.

Miley ($1 million) and Andrew Chafin ($750,000) do total $1.75 million against the payroll for buyouts due following the 2023 season.

How do the Brewers stack up against the rest of the National League Central? Once again, right in the middle. The Chicago Cubs, with five players making at least $18 million in 2024, lead the way with a payroll of $222,610,000. Next come the St. Louis Cardinals with an outlay of $166,847,000, the Cincinnati Reds at $93,493,000 and finally the Pittsburgh Pirates at $76,634,000.

 ?? MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Brewers outfielder Christian Yelich repeats as the team’s highest-paid player this season with a $22 million payroll number, and $4 million deferred.
MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Brewers outfielder Christian Yelich repeats as the team’s highest-paid player this season with a $22 million payroll number, and $4 million deferred.

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