Willy Adames is eligible for free agency after the 2024 season, but he has been vocal about wanting to keep playing with the Brewers. To that end, Adames told MLB.com’s Adam McCalvy that the two sides have “had conversations” about a possible longer-term deal, and that “I let them know that obviously I want to stay” in Milwaukee.
“I’m always open to listen to what they’re thinking, and if it’s something that’s good for both sides, I’m open to it,” Adames said. “I let my agent handle that. I love it here, I feel good here, I feel comfortable here and I wish I could stay here the rest of my career.”
The exact timing of these talks isn’t known, though they did take place at some point before David Stearns stepped down as the Brewers’ president of baseball operations in late October. The nature or extent of the negotiations also isn’t known, such as whether the front office and Adames’ agents at CAA Sports had only some broad discussions of Adames’ future, or if they actually exchanged some numbers or floated contract scenarios.
The fact that Stearns is no longer running baseball operations could also be a factor in any future negotiations, though Stearns remains with the Brewers as an advisor, and it isn’t yet clear how things might change in Milwaukee now that GM Matt Arnold has the reins in the front office. While the Brew Crew has opened up some payroll space in declining Brad Boxberger’s club option, waiving Brent Suter, and trading Hunter Renfroe to the Angels, these moves aren’t necessarily indicative of a rebuild. The Brewers have routinely looked to maintain a modest payroll while also making less-heralded and less-expensive moves to keep the team competitive.
Extensions have also been part of the strategy, with Christian Yelich’s seven-year, $188.5MM deal standing out as far and away the biggest contract in franchise history. More recent deals for Freddy Peralta and Aaron Ashby were much more modest, and looked to lock up some cost certainty on both pitchers earlier in their careers, whereas Yelich already had an NL MVP Award and an MVP runner-up on his resume at the time of his extension. Yelich was also playing on a previous extension signed back during his days as a member of the Marlins.
Adames represents something of a middle ground between Yelich and Peralta/Ashby, even if a contract extension would certainly be closer to Yelich’s numbers. The shortstop turned 27 last September, so Adames will be entering his age-29 season if he does hit the open market following the 2024 campaign. Adames earned $4.6MM in 2022 (his first year of arbitration eligibility), and is projected to exactly double that figure to a $9.2MM salary in 2023.
Trying to pick a comp for Adames is a little difficult at this point, since such free agent shortstops as Carlos Correa, Trea Turner (also a CAA client), Xander Bogaerts, and Dansby Swanson are all likely to reset the market with their new contracts. Since most extension talks don’t take place until Spring Training anyway, Adames’ representatives will likely wait and see how the “big four” shortstops fare before exploring what Adames could earn on a long-term deal.
Adames has delivered plenty of pop throughout his career, especially after being traded from the Rays to the Brewers early in the 2021 season. The shortstop has hit .256/.325/.483 with 51 homers over 1030 plate appearances in a Brewers uniform, and over his career as a whole, Adames has a 111 wRC+ — a solid number for any player, but particularly from the shortstop position. Adames has also performed well in the field since the start of the 2019 season, at least in the view of the Defensive Runs Saved (+20) and UZR/150 (+2.9) metrics. The Outs Above Average metric was much more down on Adames before 2022, when he suddenly posted a +10 OAA.
There is some sense that Adames might yet have more offensive potential in him, especially if he can translate his hard contract into more hits. Adames had elite barrel-rate metrics in 2022 and an above-average hard-hit ball rate, though he hit only .238 with a .298 on-base percentage. As he told McCalvy, “I don’t even know how to feel about my numbers. It’s weird. Obviously, I want to be more consistent next year and just try to eliminate those long slumps and just be better.”
Adames’ walk rate has fluctuated over the years, dipping to a below-average 7.9% in 2022. But, the biggest fix for Adames would be to correct some of the swing-and-miss in his game. Since making his MLB debut in 2018, only 31 qualified players in all of baseball have a higher strikeout rate than Adames’ 28.2% career number. This is the kind of stat that could give the Brewers some pause in deciding whether or not to extend Adames, if the team’s payroll situation wasn’t already an obstacle.
Yelich’s salary will alone take up a significant chunk of Milwaukee’s future expenditures, and the Brewers also have to consider whether Corbin Burnes or Brandon Woodruff might be extension candidates. Both All-Star pitchers are also set for free agency after the 2024 season, though recent reports suggest that the Brewers aren’t looking to trade either Burnes or Woodruff for salary relief just yet. It could be that the Brew Crew keeps Burnes, Woodruff, and Adames all in the fold through 2023 to take another shot at contention, and then some tougher decisions could be saved until next winter.
Waiting would also give the Brewers more time to evaluate whether or not they have a successor on hand for Adames at shortstop. 2022 first-round pick Eric Brown just completed his first year of pro ball, and Brice Turang (a first-round in the 2018 draft) is expected to make his MLB debut sometime next season. Turang is considered to be a capable shortstop, but he might break into the Show as a second baseman or perhaps an outfielder, depending on the Brewers’ needs at either position.
StupendousYappi
I was saying to myself who would actually want to stay with the Brewers but the guy is probably just looking to get a lot of money. I understand but if I was an MLB player the Brewers would be on my blacklist. I would tell my agent don’t even bother me with any of their offers I could care less.
Hello, Newman
Why?
HBan22
They don’t seem overly committed to winning. Especially after this off-season. They need to decide what direction they are trying to go quickly.
DonOsbourne
What is your opinion based on? The Hader trade? Take all the feelings out of it and it was a completely defensible, rational move. I am a Cardinals fan, but I will gladly defend the Brewers desire to win. They could have given up after the Yelich extension blew up in their face. But they stayed the course, made smart moves, and remained competitive. So the second half of last year was disappointing. Big deal. On paper, they are ready to compete in the Central right now. And I’ll bet they have a couple of moves left to make.
kirkydu
that’s silly, they just made the playoffs 4 years in a row & missed by 2 games this year.
kirkydu
You must not get around. I driven all over America and Milwaukee is a top half MLB city for living easy. Lots of lakes, 9 months of good weather, great schools, tons to do…that’s why it’s gentrifying.
JoeBrady
it was a completely defensible, rational move.
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At the time of the trade, they almost had to make Williams the closer. Williams had a 1.59/1.30 ERA/FIP. Hader had a July ERA/FIP of 12.54/8.15.
At that point, the Williams/Hader decision drives everything. If you were going to demote Hader, then the decision to trade him was a slam dunk, imho.
MannyPineappleExpress9
Every team to some extent cuts costs by letting free agents walk and trading more expensive guys. I suspect you’d be lucky..if you actually had the talent to play pro ball..if the lower spending clubs like MKE, Pitt and the Rays would offer you league minimum.
Curly Was The Smart Stooge
Braves interested in case Dansby wanders?
.
Curly, They want Swanson Morton!
Curly Was The Smart Stooge
TBJ, Sanson can flirt, Adames is a serious replacement.
Swanson is a home boy, but sadly money talks, people walk.
Curly Was The Smart Stooge
Ooops, I mean Swanson, what a dork…
.
What a stooge!!!
Curly Was The Smart Stooge
Nyuck, nyuck, I resemble that remark!
Curly Was The Smart Stooge
Seriously TBJ who could replace Swanson at short?
Curly Was The Smart Stooge
I’m thinking Adames…
Curly Was The Smart Stooge
I can see it being Adames…
bronyaur1
Pretty weak comment for all the reasons indicated above.
bronyaur1
Anyone who follows baseball seriously understands why Hader was traded. It was a very good move. Does anyone really believe that Hader’s ERA of nearly 5 would have better for the Brewers than Williams’ sub-2.00 ERA?
Hader was irrecoverable for,the Brewers, and they made their team better with that trade.
roote14
It was a good move, because we weren’t going to resign him. But to say we’re a better team without him is ridiculous to say the least.
roote14
Yelich Brauned us I believe.
Does Yelich have any trade value?
Trade Yelich and Wong. Extend Woody and Adames.
MannyPineappleExpress9
I’d still take Braun’s contract and contribution over Yelich. If pitchers didn’t inexplicably pitch around Yelich so much his obp would have been 5 points higher than his average.
It’s irrelevant really if he has any trade value because he has a no trade clause. That said, I doubt anyone would take him, unless he’s a throw in with Burnes or Woodruff and MKE eats 75% of the money left on his deal.
Kruk's Beer League
Gotta extend that zero WAR player.
rememberthecoop
What are you talking about Kruk? Last year, Adames had a 4.7 fWAR.
JeffreyChungus
Baseball reference is showing 0.0 WAR for him for some reason. Clicking on the Brewers team page has him at 4.4
rct
I think B Ref has an error right now for him because he has 4.7 on fangraphs. If you look at the value tab on his B Ref page, there’s a bunch of blank fields.
JoeBrady
I think B Ref has an error right now for him because he has 4.7
=======================================
But that still doesn’t excuse Kruk. There should be some instinctual stuff going on that says 31 HRs and good defense at SS is worth more than 0.0.
egrossen
Lol that’s a big mistake by baseball reference. Adames was a 4+ WAR
YourDreamGM
Well the potential replacement players Bogaerts Turner Swanson Correa are pretty good.
bradthebluefish
If you look under Player Value within Baseball References, there is no data related to WAR, oWAR, dWAR, WAA, etc.
Chris Koch
Looks about 4.5WAR taking BRef’s 4.4(on Adames page) and 4.7FWar.
Bref shows his WAR on his page right below(or above) his career WAR.
rememberthecoop
My thoughts are that I really like him as a player. He plays solid defense and has power. He obviously has flaws, as described in the article. He kind of reminds me of Javy Baez, who also had power, but struck out a lot and didn’t walk much. And after seeing what Javy did with the Tigers, I don’t know that I’d give a long-term, big money deal to Wily. But I do think Adames has value in the clubhouse; his enthusiasm rubs off on teammates.
abc123baseball
Huge personality. Brought a spark to the team and is great with fans. Talks to kids while on deck. New face of the franchise. Lock him up.
Hello, Newman
Yes send Detroit, Turang.
Vanilla Good
See what you have in Turang next year. Then make the decision next off-season. Honestly I’d like to see them trade Wong and sign someone like Drury who can play anywhere in the infield. Turang can do the same.
MLB Top 100 Commenter
If I am the owner, I will extend Burnes and Woodruff. I will plan on Turang, Frelick and Chourio bolstering the offense over the next few years. Mitchell and Weimer as backups to Chourio, Grelick and Ruiz. A healthy Peralta will sure help.
I would have traded Hader now rather than at the last trade deadline so I hope Ruiz is worth it.
There are worse destinations than Milwaukee both as a team and as a place to live. But if it your first choice, you probably have family or friends there.
augold5
What makes you say Ruiz would win any position over Mitchell? Mitchell batted .320 in his brief stint last year
YourDreamGM
For that return I would have done the Hader trade. What if he continued to struggle and had no post season to boost his value back up? They should have added more at deadline maybe but it would have been hard to pass on that trade return.
MLB Top 100 Commenter
I agree that Mitchell could end up ahead of Ruiz. Both have speed as an asset. I like Chourio and Frelick more but neither have proven themselves enough to be a sure thing either. My point is that there are a lot of options so the Brewers are better trading Renfroe (done), not extending Adames but keeping him for a year and a half and using the money to extend Burnes and Woodruff.
Diggydugler
Is it just me or does WAR seem broken for the SS position? (and CF to a lessor extent). Like are there negative WAR everyday SS? Who are the “replacement level” players”? Other positions seem to have a more reasonable spread of -/+ and 0 war.. CF WAR also seems to be inflated. I know WAR isnt an exact science, but we treat it like it is.
YourDreamGM
I don’t treat it as science at all. Pay zero attention to it. I have methods and formulas I find much better. It has it’s flaws but more than good enough for what it is used for and the people who use it.
amk1920
His defense must have been horrific to put up good offensive numbers and have a WAR of 0.0
YourDreamGM
Have you not seen the replacement players? Bogaerts Turner Swanson Correa!
PS
I am so sorry. I liked it so much I had to use it twice .
bpskelly
As a Cards fan, I can’t envision the Brewers NOT envisioning Adames as one of their core players. If that results in an extension of some kind, it shouldn’t surprise anyone.
He’s in his prime, and while he can do well in arbitration, if the Brewers can give him a realistic extension — for both sides — have at it.
The only “pause’ is the Yelich extension I’d guess. And while Yelich isn’t gawd awful, he’s likely not worth it to a team like the Brewers if he’s a league average player. And there’s a lot of years left on that one.
I’ll be curious as to if Wong gets dealt. They’ve got so many arbitration cases. And they just shipped off Renfroe.
JayRyder
He’s definitely not going to get the extension he wants right now. Maybe midway thru this next season if he’s having a monster year he can leverage. But if I’m Milwaukee, I wait on him.
pmollan
Brice Turang is a utility player, at best.
Hello, Newman
We’re not “talking”, we’re just.. talking.
Robertguyette
Due to the flaws in his game, I think he is someone the Brewers can afford to extend. If you take the $30 mil a year spent on Wong, McCutcheon, and Renfroe and divide that between Tellez, Adames, and Woodruff you can extend all 3 to 5 year deals. That way you don’t have to go through the arbitration process… never like a team telling a player why they are terrible to win an arbitration hearing, then expect them to not have hurt feelings. The first few times, the numbers usually aren’t too far apart to really get down and dirty. But those last 2 can mean a lot of money for both sides. As an organization, I would never want to go through that process with a player.
colonel flagg
Woodruff will cost them quite a bit. Wing is still with them, so you must be assuming a trade there. I don’t think they can extend all three with what they saved or might save.
Chris Koch
Of the 3 Burnes, Woodruff, and Adames, he’s the most likely the team can afford. It’s tough though with that k-rate and weak On base, to dream he’ll produce long term in to an extension. They have Turang ready for a promotion. Team has numerous 2b/SS prospects 2-3years away. Just seems an extension isn’t the best idea. Then again we traded Jean Segura away and didn’t have a good SS til Adames in 21. Segura improved above expectations. Torn I am. As a Brewer fan, I’m sure whatever they do will be wrong. Extend him-career fizzles another bad contract on the books. Let him walk when becomes FA or trade him before- He spends next 8seasons producing over 40WAR total.
The Yelich contract really hinders making any kind of $$$ move for the Brewers. A mistake signing til Yelich’s contract is finished, leaves the team completely helpless. They have to be right with whom they dish big $$ to next.
Luckybrew
I think the best thing for the Brewers would be if Yelich would find his stroke from 3 or 4 year’s ago before his knee injury and back problems. And trade him at the deadline and use the to extend Burnes and Woodruff. But if you can’t find a buyer use one of the pitcher’s for a huge haul of prospects who are MLB ready with one at least ready catching candidate or outstanding 1st or 3rd baseman.