The Brewers are in buyer mode, and that changes the conversation fast.
With Milwaukee sitting atop the NL Central and in position for a first-round bye, the front office has a real chance to attack the deadline from a place of strength. The biggest areas of need are easy to spot: the left side of the infield, the bullpen, and the starting rotation. Even with Jacob Misiorowski and Kyle Harrison in the mix, the rotation still looks like it could use another arm.
That’s where Kerry Miller of Bleacher Report comes in with a trade idea that would send Washington Nationals left-hander Foster Griffin to Milwaukee.
“Realist Trade: Milwaukee Brewers acquire LHP Foster Griffin from Washington Nationals for 1B/3B Luke Adams,” Miller writes.
Griffin has put together a strong season for Washington, posting a 2.77 ERA with a 10-2 record. He’s also struck out 109 batters in 110.1 innings, and his 154 ERA+ and 1.015 WHIP make him look like a pitcher who can help right away.
There are a few layers to the profile, though. He’s 30 years old, under contract for $5.5 million for just the 2025 season, and he spent the last three seasons playing overseas in Japan.
The price in Miller’s proposal is Luke Adams, a 22-year-old Brewers infielder and a 12th-round pick in 2022. Adams has been one of the more intriguing bats in the system this year, putting up a 1.015 OPS in 43 games. He’s hit .255 with 13 home runs, seven doubles, one triple and 33 RBIs, while also drawing 23 walks, striking out 33 times and stealing six bases.
His Triple-A numbers add another layer to the discussion. Adams has a .948 OPS there this season in 39 games, enough production to suggest the bat is for real and not just a hot stretch. Miller notes that Adams may simply be a good hitting prospect, even if he’s not in the same class as Jesus Made, Luis Lara, Cooper Pratt and Jett Williams.
That’s what makes this kind of deal so tricky. Griffin would give Milwaukee a rotation boost right now, but moving a 1.015 OPS prospect for a rental arm is the sort of move that can look brilliant in July and painful later if Adams develops into something bigger.
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Jared Simpson got the ball for Harrisburg in a short-opening role, expected to cover roughly an inning before handing things over to the next arm, while the SeaWolves countered with Jake Miller in his first appearance of the season for Erie after being called up from High-A West Michigan. With the Senators already assured of at least a split, the matchup had the feel of a first-place test that could say plenty about how real this recent run is. [Read more 🡒]
