Kolten Wong, Brewers have a two-year deal

MILWAUKEE – Kolten Wong and the Brewers have agreed to sign terms for a multi-year contract, a source told Jon Paul Morosi, MLB.com. A deal that, if finalized, could have significant consequences for young second baseman Keston Hiura. The Brewers have not confirmed the deal with Wong, who is still pending.

MILWAUKEE – Kolten Wong and the Brewers have agreed to sign the terms of a multi-year contract, a source told Jon Paul Morosi, MLB.com. Keston Hiura.

The Brewers did not confirm the agreement with Wong, which is pending a physical investigation.

Ken Rosenthal, an insider from MLB Network, said it was a two-year, $ 18 million deal with a club option that could increase its value to $ 26 million over three years.

Wong, 30, is known to Brewers fans after eight seasons with the St. Louis Cardinals. He cut .261 / .333 / .384 in a Cardinals uniform, with 108 weighted runs created in 2017 and ’19, and has been a Rawlings Gold Glove Award winner in each of the past two seasons.

Some of Wong’s best work was against the Brewers. His .781 OPS against Milwaukee was the best against an opponent of the National League Central, and Wong’s .855 OPS at American Family Field (formerly Miller Park) is his best figure in any Major League stadium in which he has recorded at least 50 recordings has.

The addition of offense was a priority for David Stearns, president of Brewers’ baseball operations, as they passed last year’s extended postseason with a record 29-31 in the regular season, despite being set dubious franchise records for the lowest batting average (0.223) and the highest rate. (26.6 percent) while occupying 27th place out of 30 Major League teams at 4.12 runs per game. But finding the right fit took time; Stearns works on a tight budget in the wake of a season with no fans in the stands.

Stearns has found a solution with creative thinking. Assuming Wong stays at second base (700 of his 710 Major League starts are in that position; the other ten were outfield), the Brewers Hiura, entering its third Major League season, could move to first . Hiura is a promising attacking player who has followed up 19 times in 314 overs after a call to the Majors in 2019, but a defender below average.

Last year, when the Brewers struggled on the first base to find production, they briefly considered giving Hiura there. But that never materialized in games, in part because Jedd Gyorko and Daniel Vogelbach jointly handled the position late in the season.

With Wong, the Brewers can bring an interior in line with Hiura and Vogelbach getting innings at first base, Wong at second, Orlando Arcia or Luis Urías at shortstop and a question mark still at third. Urias can play there, though he did not strike much force. The Brewers also signed Daniel Robertson, a former prospect who has yet to break through at Major League level but is just 26.

Adam McCalvy has been covering the Brewers for MLB.com since 2001. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram and like him on Facebook.

.Source