The Brewers are trying to keep the pedal down after a rough little stretch, and Monday night’s 5-3 win over the Reds was the kind of response they needed.
Milwaukee had dropped its previous two games to the Cubs and had lost five of its last 10, which had manager Pat Murphy sounding plenty frustrated before the first pitch. He said the club was "pretty pissed" even after reaching 50 wins, and he also said he had a "get-together" with the position players before the game to address the recent slump.
The message seemed to land. Joey Ortiz broke a 3-3 tie with an eighth-inning two-run homer, and the Brewers finished the job from there. The win pushed Milwaukee to 51-31 and kept it 5 1/2 games ahead of the second-place Cubs.
Even with the division cushion, the next move matters. The Brewers have a team that can do something special this season, but the trade deadline should be about finding more impact, especially a big bat. A high-leverage reliever would help, and a veteran starter would be useful too, but the lineup upgrade is the priority.
With that in mind, three names stand out as possible targets: Isaac Paredes, Aroldis Chapman and Tarik Skubal.
Paredes would be the kind of fit that jumps out immediately if the Astros were willing to discuss him. Houston does not look like a team headed for a major sell-off, but if it listens on Paredes the way it did this past offseason, he would be a dream target for Milwaukee. He can move around the infield and is under team control for one more season, which makes him especially appealing as a power option.
Chapman is a different kind of swing, but an enticing one. He has long been one of the best closers in baseball, and this year he has a 2.19 ERA in 26 appearances. If the Brewers could land an arm like that, the back end of the bullpen would be a problem for everyone else.
Skubal would be the biggest-name ask of the group. The Tigers have struggled all season, and even with his return they have not flipped their year around. He is set to hit free agency after the season, and he’s the kind of pitcher worth checking on if Milwaukee wants to raise the ceiling of an already strong rotation.
One name on the other side of the ledger is Frankie Peralta. He was excellent in Milwaukee, but his current season in New York has not gone well, with a 4.53 ERA in 17 starts. The Brewers already got strong value back from the Mets in Brandon Sproat and Jett Williams, and the idea of sending more talent to New York for a few months of Peralta before he reaches free agency in a down year simply does not make sense.
In Other News...
Astros Suddenly Face Another Jeremy Pea Problem At The Worst Time
Jeremy Peas latest setback arrived at an inconvenient moment for the Astros, who have leaned on his steadiness at shortstop all season and now have to manage another stretch without him. Pea felt discomfort and sat out against the Twins before the club moved him to the injured list, with Joe Espada saying the issue appears to be minor. In the meantime, Houston made the corresponding roster shuffle, bringing Nick Allen back and sending Raynel Delgado down to clear space.
The bigger concern for the Astros is the pattern. Pea has already dealt with a handful of physical interruptions this year, and every time hes out, Houston is forced to juggle an infield it would much rather keep settled. Allen gives them a short-term answer, but the real question is how long Pea will be sidelined and whether the club can get him back before this turns into another lingering problem. [Read more 🡒]
Miguel Vargas Is Suddenly Changing What White Sox Fans Believe
As the league moves into Week 15, the third-base conversation around baseball has started to sharpen, and one familiar name for Astros fans is still showing up in the mix. Isaac Paredes, now with Houston after his stint in Tampa Bay, has been good enough to land in the top 10 at the position, a reminder that the Astros did not just add depth when they brought him in, they added a bat that has been relevant in a crowded field of productive third basemen.
Paredes has also been trending at the right time, which matters for a Houston team trying to keep pace in a wide-open AL West. With so many clubs still believing they have a path in the division, the Astros are getting the kind of steady production they need from the left side of the infield, even as the bigger question around the standings remains very much unsettled. [Read more 🡒]
