Pat Murphy's Cooper Pratt Decision Will Have Brewers Fans Talking

In a strategic move, Brewers manager Pat Murphy underscores the importance of patience and development as he benches top prospect Cooper Pratt to help him refocus amid his Major League growing pains.

The Milwaukee Brewers made a notable lineup change for Game 2 against the Cincinnati Reds on Saturday, and Cooper Pratt was the player left out.

Pratt, who signed an eight-year deal worth close to $51 million earlier this year, has only been in the big leagues for a couple of weeks after getting the call many young players wait years to hear. Milwaukee clearly believes in what he can become, but the early returns at the plate have been uneven.

Through his first stretch in the majors, Pratt is hitting .211/.295/.237 with two RBI and five stolen bases. He has drawn five walks and struck out 10 times, a reflection of how the transition from the minors has gone so far.

In Triple-A, Pratt was known for walking nearly as often as he struck out. That hasn’t carried over yet in Milwaukee.

The rough edges showed up again Monday night in the opener of the four-game set with Cincinnati. Pratt went 0-for-2 and chased a pitch well above the strike zone before Pat Murphy lifted him for David Hamilton in his next plate appearance.

When the Brewers released their lineup for the second game, Pratt was nowhere to be found. Milwaukee rolled out Christian Yelich as the DH, Jackson Chourio in left, Brice Turang at second, William Contreras behind the plate, Jake Bauers at first, Garrett Mitchell in center, Sal Frelick in right, Joey Ortiz at short, David Hamilton at third and Brandon Sproat on the mound.

Murphy made it clear before the game that this was not a punishment. “It’s not a discipline thing,” he said.

“It’s like, I know he’s not in a great frame of mind. … You know, it’s perspective.”

In other words, the Brewers are giving Pratt a breather, not sending a message. The goal is to help him reset.

That fits with what Triple-A Nashville manager Rick Sweet recently said about Pratt’s long-term outlook. Sweet drew a comparison to Brice Turang, pointing out that Pratt is ahead of where Turang was at the same age.

“When Turang played for me (in 2022), he was 22, and I look at Cooper Pratt at 21 and he’s ahead of where Turang was,” Sweet said. “He’s going to hit, and he’s starting to hit now.

We just had to get him focused on competing in the game. You get to that level where all of a sudden pitchers are pretty good, and for the first month he’s barely hitting .100.

So he had to learn how you compete at this level, but Cooper Pratt’s going to be a major-league shortstop.”

Brewers fans know that story well. Turang had his own struggles as a rookie, even getting sent down mid-season, before developing into one of the most productive offensive second basemen in the majors and a strong All-Star candidate this year.

Pratt is only 21, and Milwaukee is treating this as part of the process. There’s still plenty of development ahead, and this kind of reset may end up being one of those moments that helps him down the line.

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