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	<title>Milwaukee &#187; Curtis Granderson</title>
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		<title>Curtis Granderson and the All-Time Rent-A-Brewers</title>
		<link>http://milwaukee.locals.baseballprospectus.com/2018/10/15/curtis-granderson-and-the-all-time-rent-a-brewers/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Oct 2018 12:39:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Noah Nofz]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2018 Brewers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2018 Brewers analysis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CC Sabathia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Curtis Granderson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jim Edmonds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Julio Franco]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ray Durham]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Willie Randolph]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://milwaukee.locals.baseballprospectus.com/?p=12734</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When Curtis Granderson pulled on his uniform before a steamy game at Nationals Park on September 1, he immediately became one of the more talented players to ever wear Brewers blue. On its face, that may sound a bit extreme. Hank Aaron wore Brewers blue, after all, as did Robin Yount and Paul Molitor. But [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When Curtis Granderson pulled on his uniform before a steamy game at Nationals Park on September 1, he immediately became one of the more talented players to ever wear Brewers blue.</p>
<p>On its face, that may sound a bit extreme. Hank Aaron wore Brewers blue, after all, as did Robin Yount and Paul Molitor. But rattle off a list of all-time Brewers greats, and you’ll pretty soon get to names like Ben Oglivie or Cecil Cooper. Great players, both, but not demonstrably better than Grandyman, who has two key traits working in his favor.</p>
<p>The first is his longevity. At 37 years old, Granderson is in his fifteenth major league season. The second is that he’s really, <em>really</em> good at baseball. Better perhaps, than many casual fans realize. Granderson has four seasons of 5+ WARP to his name, including one as recently as 2015. The only other current Brewer for whom that’s true is Ryan Braun, whose last such season came in 2012. (Cecil Cooper had two; Ben Oglivie had none.) For his career, the lanky lefty has racked up 44.4 WARP, most of that on the strength of his powerful bat (332 career home runs, .286 career True Average [TAv]).</p>
<p>That’s a superlative career by any definition. It’s also one that is coming to an end. Barring an incredible surge in the next year or two, Granderson doesn’t have any more 5 WARP campaigns in the tank. He may not play next year at all; he spent last offseason waiting for an offer to come his way before signing with Toronto weeks before Spring Training. If that offer hadn’t come along, he was prepared to hang up his cleats. The same is true for this offseason.</p>
<p>That all puts Granderson in a different class of Brewers: those whom most people will forget ever suited up for the Milwaukee nine.</p>
<p>He’s in good company there. Over the years, Milwaukee has hosted a number of good-to-great players for half a season here or a season there, often just in time for a run at the playoffs or as the last stop before the beckoning, sunny pasture of retirement. That Granderson has had a positive, if small, impact on the team places him among the best of these players, too, with room to move up the list in the event of any October heroics.</p>
<p>In no particular order, here’s a look at some of Granderson’s peers on the all-time Brewers cameo list.</p>
<hr />
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Willie Randolph, 1991</h3>
<p>Second baseman Willie Randolph burst into the majors in 1975 at the age of 21, playing for the Pittsburgh Pirates. He was traded to the Yankees that offseason, along with Ken Brett (brother of George) and Dock Ellis (fan of hallucinogins), for Doc Medich (who finished his own fine career with a Brewers cameo). Randolph spent 13 of his 18 big league years in the Bronx, where he made five of his six career All Star teams and won a World Series in 1977. He was a patient hitter with a good hit tool but not much power, and a terrific defender at the keystone.</p>
<p>In 1991, Randolph was 36 years old and nearing the end of his playing career. He signed a one-year deal with the Brewers and produced a fine season, although his defense had begun to erode. Randolph batted .327/.424/.474 over 512 plate appearances, accumulating 3.1 WARP and striking out just 38 times. In 2011, FanGraphs named Randolph’s ’91 campaign as the <a href="https://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/the-best-of-the-no-homers-club/">second-best</a> by a hitter who went the whole season without hitting a home run. He hung around the league for one more year before calling it quits, finishing with 2,210 hits and 51.8 WARP.</p>
<p>An addendum: Randolph was named manager of the New York Mets prior to the 2004 season and guided them to the NLCS in 2006, where he lost in seven games to the Cardinals (once a Brewer, always a Brewer). He joined Milwaukee’s coaching staff in 2009 as a bench coach, after losing out on the vacant managerial position to Ken Macha. He remained a Brewers coach for two years, before closing out his coaching career with a stint in Baltimore.</p>
<hr />
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Julio Franco, 1997</h3>
<p>Franco is remembered well for his agelessness; he spent parts of 23 seasons in the big leagues, finally retiring after 2007 at the age of 48. By that point, he had mustered 42.3 WARP and a .298 career batting average, though his days of swiping 30+ bags were some sixteen years in the rearview mirror.</p>
<p>Impatient with the 1994 strike, Franco took his bat and glove overseas and played the 1995 season in Japan. In 1996, at the tender age of 37, Franco returned to the MLB with Cleveland, where he had spent six seasons in his prime. He hit well in ’96, riding a .290 TAv to 1.7 WARP in 112 games. 1997 wasn’t quite as kind, and Cleveland released him in the midst of a mediocre campaign propped up by a good batting average.</p>
<p>Milwaukee swooped in, signed him, and sent him out to the field for 42 games. Franco was a first baseman and DH by this point in his career, after starting out as a shortstop. He hit .241/.373/.348 for the Crew, good for 0.4 WARP. He managed 1.1 total WARP between Cleveland and Milwaukee; it stood as his finest season between that year and his eventual retirement. Franco made the playoffs seven times, all coming after he had turned 37. He never won a World Series.</p>
<p>Franco Fun-Fact: He never struck out more than 83 times in a season.</p>
<hr />
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Jim Edmonds, 2010</h3>
<p>With 72.9 career WARP, Jimmy Baseball may deserve a spot in Cooperstown. At the very least, he deserves to still be on the ballot. Life isn’t always fair, though, so Edmonds is stuck waiting around for the Veterans Committee.</p>
<p>A great defensive center fielder, Edmonds could swing quite a bit, as well. He finished his career with a fantastic .303 TAv, though he fell just shy of two big milestones; Edmonds is forever stuck on 1,949 hits and 393 homers.</p>
<p>Bearing those numbers in mind, it’s a shame that he didn’t find an offer to his liking before the 2009 season. Dissatisfied with his suitors, Edmonds opted to sit out the whole year. At age 40, the Brewers gave him another shot at the majors, and Edmonds delivered. He spent 73 games in Milwaukee in 2010, batting .286/.350/.493, and tallying an astonishing 8.6 Fielding Runs Above Average (FRAA). That effort netted Edmonds 2.6 WARP in just 240 plate appearances; Milwaukee shipped the veteran out in a waiver trade to the contending Cincinnati Reds, who were swept out of the NLDS by the Phillies</p>
<p>It’s not all tears for Jim though; Edmonds won a ring, with the Cards, regrettably, in 2006. (Sorry, Willie Randolph-managed Mets!)</p>
<hr />
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>CC Sabathia, 2008</h3>
<p>Everybody knows how this one went down. The Brewers traded a suite of talented prospects for half a season of CC Sabathia, easily the greatest Rent-A-Brewer in team history. Sabathia started 17 games for the Crew down the stretch, many of them on short rest, and tallied a staggering 4.6 WARP in that time. Taken as a whole, the 2008 season (all 253 innings of it) stands alone as the best of a storied career.</p>
<p>The veteran lefty has a decent shot at Cooperstown, particularly if the voting block comes to their senses concerning pitcher performances. He’s sitting on 68.3 career WARP thanks to a neat late-career resurgence, with a tidy 3.71 career DRA. Sabathia turned 38 this season, but if he comes back in 2019, he’ll probably lock down his 250th win; he’s just shy now, at 246.</p>
<p>Sabathia has spent the last ten years playing for the Yankees, so it will not surprise you to learn that he won a World Series in 2009. Pity he didn’t come closer in 2008; he was gassed after carrying the team for three months.</p>
<hr />
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Ray Durham, 2008</h3>
<p>Ray Durham is the closest historical analogue to Curtis Granderson’s situation. Durham was acquired to shore up the infield and bench through the 2008 Wild Card chase. Like Granderson in ’18, Durham wasn’t the Brewers’ flashiest mid-season addition that year. (See above.) Also like Granderson, Durham performed well in Brewers blue, to the tune of a .280 TAv, solid defense, and 0.9 WARP over 122 plate appearances. (Granderson, a late August waiver addition, hasn’t played as much for the Crew, but he’s still managed 0.3 WARP and a .311 TAv in 54 plate appearances.)</p>
<p>Durham finished with an even 36.0 WARP and 2,054 hits. Had he been a better defender, his value would be even higher; still, few players would say no to a career slash line of .277/.352/.436.</p>
<p>One more similarity to Curtis Granderson: Durham was in his fourteenth big league season when he became a Brewer, and had never won a World Series. Granderson is in his fifteenth, still searching for a ring. He’s come close on numerous occasions; Granderson played for the Tigers when the Tigers were good (World Series appearance in 2006), the Yankees when the Yankees were good (ALCS in 2010 and 2012), the Mets when the Mets were good (World Series appearance in 2015), and was traded to the Dodgers in time for their run to the Fall Classic last year.</p>
<p>He’s an easy player to like, with a laidback personality and a <a href="http://grandkids.org/">devotion to charity</a>. There are indications that, if given the keys to the league tomorrow, he’d <a href="http://www.latimes.com/sports/mlb/la-sp-granderson-brewers-shaikin-20181010-story.html">make a better commissioner</a> than one Mr. Manfred, or at least a better marketing director than the one Mr. Manfred employs. He’s a <a href="https://www.mlb.com/news/curtis-granderson-mentoring-prospect-corey-ray/c-230178642">mentor to prospect Corey Ray</a>; here’s hoping his career numbers wear off on the youngster. By all accounts, Granderson is one of the finest people to play the game, let alone a tremendous player. Let’s hope his 2018 ends on a happier note than Durham’s 2008.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Weekend Recap: Gonzalez and Granderson</title>
		<link>http://milwaukee.locals.baseballprospectus.com/2018/09/04/weekend-recap-gonzalez-and-granderson/</link>
		<comments>http://milwaukee.locals.baseballprospectus.com/2018/09/04/weekend-recap-gonzalez-and-granderson/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 2018 12:15:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Andrew Salzman]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2018 Brewers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2018 Brewers analysis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brewers analysis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Curtis Granderson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gio Gonzalez]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://milwaukee.locals.baseballprospectus.com/?p=12458</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The last eight days for the Brewers have seen the team’s playoff odds increase as they’ve overtaken St. Louis for the first Wild Card spot. Milwaukee took care of business against the Reds and Nationals, taking four out of six games which featured some great hitting and pitching performances. Perhaps most importantly, Milwaukee took the [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The last eight days for the Brewers have seen the team’s playoff odds increase as they’ve overtaken St. Louis for the first Wild Card spot. Milwaukee took care of business against the Reds and Nationals, taking four out of six games which featured some great hitting and pitching performances. Perhaps most importantly, Milwaukee took the series opener against the Cubs on Labor Day. The teams still have five head to head games over the next ten days, which will be key if the Brewers hope to make a push for the division.</p>
<hr />
<p>LHP Gio González was the most buzzworthy name acquired by the Brewers prior to the August 31 waiver trade deadline. The aftermath of the trade surprised some because out of his 308 career MLB appearances, only six have been in relief, yet the Brewers did not commit a rotation spot to the new acquisition. Before looking into his potential role in September and potentially beyond, I want to review his season to see what the team can expect.</p>
<p>Throughout his career, González has been a <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/outcome.php?player=461829&amp;b_hand=-1&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=inning&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=slg&amp;s_type=2&amp;startDate=01/01/2018&amp;endDate=01/01/2019">four pitch</a> pitcher. At the time of his debut, the fourseam fastball was his primary pitch and he threw that pitch as well as his curveball on three-fourths of his selections. He rounded out his arsenal with a sinker and a changeup. As his career has progressed, that specific mix has changed, in particular as his average fourseam fastball <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/velo.php?player=461829&amp;b_hand=-1&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=year&amp;startDate=03/30/2007&amp;endDate=09/03/2018&amp;s_type=2">velocity</a> dipped from a high of 94.2 mph in 2012 to 90.8 in 2018. Now González throws the sinker most frequently, but his usage of all of his pitches has converged between twenty and thirty percent, as this year he is throwing a career low percentage for fourseam fastballs and a career high for changeups.</p>
<p>However, González’s new pitch mix has not produced good results. This season he has a 4.48 Deserved Run Average (DRA), which is his <a href="https://legacy.baseballprospectus.com/card/45529/gio-gonzalez">highest</a> number since his late season debut in 2008. National League pitchers are striking out 8.5 batters per nine innings in <a href="https://legacy.baseballprospectus.com/sortable/index.php?cid=2579244">2018</a>, up from 8.2 in <a href="https://legacy.baseballprospectus.com/sortable/index.php?cid=2094940">2017</a>, yet González’s strikeouts per nine innings have dropped from the league average in 2017 to 7.8 this season. Among all MLB pitchers with at least 140 innings, González <a href="https://legacy.baseballprospectus.com/sortable/index.php?cid=2733303">ranks</a> forty-third out of sixty-eight pitchers in this ratio.</p>
<p>Naturally, whiffs are the first place to look to see if the veteran is not fooling batters anymore, but González’s swinging strike rate this season is 23.2 percent, slightly up from 2017 and only .6 percent off his career average. The lefty is getting a <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/outcome.php?player=461829&amp;b_hand=-1&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=year&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=whiff&amp;s_type=2&amp;startDate=03/30/2007&amp;endDate=09/03/2018">career low</a> whiff rate on his curveball and his changeup whiff rate has declined for the fourth straight season, but his fastballs are in line with his career numbers. Maybe he should be throwing a few less curveballs when he has two strikes, but nothing in this <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/tabs.php?player=461829&amp;p_hand=-1&amp;ppos=-1&amp;cn=200&amp;gFilt=&amp;time=inning&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=usage&amp;s_type=16&amp;startDate=01/01/2018&amp;endDate=01/01/2019&amp;balls=-1&amp;strikes=-1&amp;b_hand=-1">pitch mix</a> looks like it needs to be immediately corrected.</p>
<p>The usual indicators don’t show anything terribly off with González, yet batters are hitting him harder than before. Compared with 2017, his Statcast numbers have exponentially jumped. He was a top eight percent pitcher according to exit velocity and hard hit percentage <a href="https://baseballsavant.mlb.com/savant-player/gio-gonzalez-461829?stats=career-r-pitching-mlb">last year</a>. In 2018 he’s barely in the top seventy percent in both <a href="https://baseballsavant.mlb.com/statcast_leaderboard?year=2018&amp;abs=150&amp;player_type=pitcher">metrics</a>.</p>
<p>His True Average (TAv)-against is .277, well above his career average of .253 and the highest full season number of his career. His Batting Average on Balls In Play (BABIP) is .319, which is twenty-four points above his career average but not a career high and he’s run much better DRAs in his other season above .300. He’s also right around his career average home run rate, so he isn’t encountering bad luck.</p>
<p>This is not the portrait of a savior for the pitching staff that is in desperate need of a course correction from a terrible August. However, there’s been some speculation that the plan is to use González as more of a long man, turning over a lineup once as a bridge between the brigade of five inning starters and the back end of the bullpen. This season, González has consistently allowed a lower batting average against and isolated slugging earlier in his appearances when compared with hitters’ second and third looks at him, and he gets more swings and misses.</p>
<p>2018 Batting Average Against <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/outcome.php?player=461829&amp;b_hand=-1&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=Times%20Through%20The%20Order&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=baa&amp;s_type=2&amp;startDate=01/01/2018&amp;endDate=01/01/2019">Times through the Order</a> vs. <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/outcome.php?player=461829&amp;b_hand=-1&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=year&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=baa&amp;s_type=2&amp;startDate=01/01/2018&amp;endDate=01/01/2019">Overall</a></p>
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td width="125"></td>
<td width="125">Fourseam</td>
<td width="125">Sinker</td>
<td width="125">Change</td>
<td width="125">Curveball</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="125">First Time through the Order</td>
<td width="125">.180</td>
<td width="125">.325</td>
<td width="125">.313</td>
<td width="125">.130</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="125">Second Time through the Order</td>
<td width="125">.157</td>
<td width="125">.268</td>
<td width="125">.298</td>
<td width="125">.286</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="125">Three + Times through the Order</td>
<td width="125">.242</td>
<td width="125">.350</td>
<td width="125">.273</td>
<td width="125">.333</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="125">Overall</td>
<td width="125">.187</td>
<td width="125">.313</td>
<td width="125">.295</td>
<td width="125">.256</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>2018 Isolated Power Against <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/outcome.php?player=461829&amp;b_hand=-1&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=Times%20Through%20The%20Order&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=iso&amp;s_type=2&amp;startDate=01/01/2018&amp;endDate=01/01/2019">Times through the Order</a> vs. <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/outcome.php?player=461829&amp;b_hand=-1&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=year&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=iso&amp;s_type=2&amp;startDate=01/01/2018&amp;endDate=01/01/2019">Overall</a></p>
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td width="125"></td>
<td width="125">Fourseam</td>
<td width="125">Sinker</td>
<td width="125">Change</td>
<td width="125">Curveball</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="125">First Time through the Order</td>
<td width="125">.080</td>
<td width="125">.113</td>
<td width="125">.083</td>
<td width="125">.174</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="125">Second Time through the Order</td>
<td width="125">.039</td>
<td width="125">.286</td>
<td width="125">.246</td>
<td width="125">.171</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="125">Three + Times through the Order</td>
<td width="125">.121</td>
<td width="125">.125</td>
<td width="125">.136</td>
<td width="125">.083</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="125">Overall</td>
<td width="125">.075</td>
<td width="125">.171</td>
<td width="125">.161</td>
<td width="125">.146</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>2018 Whiff Percentage <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/outcome.php?player=461829&amp;b_hand=-1&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=Times%20Through%20The%20Order&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=whiff&amp;s_type=2&amp;startDate=01/01/2018&amp;endDate=01/01/2019">Times through the Order</a> vs. <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/outcome.php?player=461829&amp;b_hand=-1&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=year&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=whiff&amp;s_type=2&amp;startDate=01/01/2018&amp;endDate=01/01/2019">Overall</a></p>
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td width="125"></td>
<td width="125">Fourseam</td>
<td width="125">Sinker</td>
<td width="125">Change</td>
<td width="125">Curveball</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="125">First Time through the Order</td>
<td width="125">10.62</td>
<td width="125">4.85</td>
<td width="125">16.11</td>
<td width="125">10.67</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="125">Second Time through the Order</td>
<td width="125">15.13</td>
<td width="125">3.48</td>
<td width="125">12.84</td>
<td width="125">9.41</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="125">Three + Times through the Order</td>
<td width="125">10.27</td>
<td width="125">6.02</td>
<td width="125">13.14</td>
<td width="125">6.99</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="125">Overall</td>
<td width="125">12.32</td>
<td width="125">4.68</td>
<td width="125">14.13</td>
<td width="125">9.18</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>González doesn’t vary his <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/outcome.php?player=461829&amp;b_hand=-1&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=Times%20Through%20The%20Order&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=pcount&amp;s_type=2&amp;startDate=01/01/2018&amp;endDate=01/01/2019">pitch mix</a> throughout his starts, which may hurt him as the outing goes on because he isn’t holding any pitch back and hitters are getting looks at everything the first time through the order. If he’s going to pitch this way, the numbers show that he is outperforming his seasonal stats in that first look at the order. González has not relieved since 2009, so asking him to come out of the bullpen is uncharted territory. However, he could be deployed effectively as an opener or as the first option out of the bullpen who can go for two plus innings, depending on where the batting order sits when he enters the game. This usage would make him a non-traditional acquisition, but it fits within the team’s overall strategy and pattern in looking outside the organization for help. The team needed innings, and there’s no reason why González can’t give them four to six effective innings a week, which would be better than ten mediocre innings in a traditional starter’s role.</p>
<hr />
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Curtis Granderson was the lone bat acquired by the team last week, and he fills a narrow niche for the roster as well: lefty masher off the bench who can also spot start in each corner outfield position. As a team, the <a href="https://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/split.cgi?t=b&amp;team=MIL&amp;year=2018">Brewers</a> are slashing .253/.320/.425 against right handed pitchers, which is slightly above <a href="https://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/split.cgi?t=b&amp;lg=MLB&amp;year=2018">MLB-wide numbers</a> against righties. Granderson’s unimpressive <a href="https://legacy.baseballprospectus.com/card/36252/curtis-granderson">slash line</a> of .245/.342/.430 <a href="https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/split.fcgi?id=grandcu01&amp;year=2018&amp;t=b">improves</a> around ten percentage points in each category when his twenty six plate appearances against left handed hitters are removed from his numbers.</p>
<p>Right handed pitchers are looking to locate <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/h_profile.php?player=434158&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=month&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=count&amp;s_type=2&amp;startDate=01/01/2018&amp;endDate=01/01/2019&amp;balls=-1&amp;strikes=-1&amp;b_hand=R">low and away</a> against Granderson, and a good amount of his five season high swing and miss rate of  27.6 percent is coming on <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/h_profile.php?player=434158&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=month&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=whiff&amp;s_type=2&amp;startDate=01/01/2018&amp;endDate=01/01/2019&amp;balls=-1&amp;strikes=-1&amp;b_hand=R">low pitches</a> out of the strike zone. Throughout his <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/h_profile.php?player=434158&amp;balls=-1&amp;strikes=-1&amp;b_hand=R&amp;time=month&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=iso&amp;s_type=2&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;startDate=&amp;endDate=">career</a>, he’s generated the most power when he’s hitting higher pitches, and that pattern has continued in <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/h_profile.php?player=434158&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=month&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=iso&amp;s_type=2&amp;startDate=01/01/2018&amp;endDate=01/01/2019&amp;balls=-1&amp;strikes=-1&amp;b_hand=R">2018</a>.</p>
<p>The veteran is showing some age related decline as it appears his bat has gotten a little slower. Granderson has always performed well against fastballs, posting career Isolated Slugging Percentage (ISO) of .313, .250 and .282 against four seamers, sinkers and cutters from right handers, which are his best numbers against all pitches. Those numbers have <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/h_tabs.php?player=434158&amp;gFilt=&amp;time=month&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=ra&amp;s_type=2&amp;startDate=01/01/2018&amp;endDate=01/01/2019&amp;balls=-1&amp;strikes=-1&amp;b_hand=R">fallen off</a> this season, and his production has been buoyed by an uncharacteristic performance against split finger fastballs. In addition to catching up to fewer fastballs, Granderson is also <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/h_outcome.php?player=434158&amp;gFilt=&amp;&amp;time=year&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=whiff&amp;s_type=16&amp;startDate=03/30/2007&amp;endDate=09/03/2018">whiffing</a> more on breaking balls and offspeed pitches, which could be a sign that he’s cheating to try and catch up to velocity.</p>
<p>In Granderson&#8217;s limited role, the Brewers can hide his weaknesses and hopefully coax out a performance even higher than his current numbers against right handed hitters. He’s appeared in three games so far as a Brewer, with one start in between two pinch hitting appearances. That one start was against a pitcher who throws <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/velo.php?player=622446&amp;b_hand=-1&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=month&amp;startDate=03/30/2007&amp;endDate=09/03/2018&amp;s_type=2">hard</a> and mainly uses <a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/outcome.php?player=622446&amp;b_hand=-1&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA|SI|FC|CU|SL|CS|KN|CH|FS|SB&amp;time=month&amp;startDate=03/30/2007&amp;endDate=09/03/2018&amp;s_type=2">fastballs</a>. He has one single and three walks in his six plate appearances. Hopefully his batting eye can be supplemented with some pop over the next month as he provides a breather for the outfield regulars.</p>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The three-game series against the Cubs continues today, then the Brewers will host the San Francisco Giants over the weekend. Before yesterday’s game, the Cubs still had a <a href="https://legacy.baseballprospectus.com/odds/">ninety percent</a> chance of winning the division, with the Brewers taking the crown in two thirds of the other scenarios. The two series against the Cubs and one against the Cardinals are the only head-to-head chances for Milwaukee to increase their odds the rest of the season. The Brewers have the best projected <a href="https://legacy.baseballprospectus.com/team_audit.php?team=MIL">rest of the season</a> performance out of Central division teams, but right now that’s not projected to overtake Chicago. San Francisco has had a disappointing season, which has seen them <a href="https://legacy.baseballprospectus.com/team_audit.php?team=SFN">overperform</a> their Pythagorean Record (estimated from Runs Scored and Runs Allowed) by 5.9 games, which is first in the National League and third in MLB. However, the team will play out September without two of their top three regular position players by TAv as Andrew McCutchen has been traded and Buster Posey is now on the sixty-day disabled list.</p>
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td width="208"></td>
<td width="208">Cubs</td>
<td width="208">Brewers</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="208">Tuesday September 4</td>
<td width="208">Mike Montgomery (4.49 DRA)</td>
<td width="208">Wade Miley (4.26 DRA)</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="208">Wednesday September 5</td>
<td width="208">Carlos Quintana (5.06 DRA)</td>
<td width="208">Jhoulys Chacin (4.65 DRA)</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
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