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Showing posts with label Milwaukee Brewers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Milwaukee Brewers. Show all posts

Tapping The Keg Episode 78



Mitch and Charlie doing their usual podcast thing today where many topics are discussed. It begins withCharlie's review of the Krewella concert at The Rave on Saturday evening. The sports talk begins with Milwaukee Bucks with all of the old players coming back, and why Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is selfishly looking at this team. We also discuss the Bucks strong play of late. Topic stays with NBA where LeBron James v. Kevin Durant, and everything else going on in the NBA. It continues to Major League Baseball about why Spring Training should not be taken that seriously. We finish up with Packers free agency talk along with March Madness and a little bit of NHL trade deadline talk.

Mitch and Charlie.

Tapping The Keg Podcast Episode 77



Tapping The Keg podcast is back for another edition as Charlie and Mitch discuss all sorts of things in a nice 45 minute podcast.  We start off talking about the distinctive music tastes around the United States of America, Milwaukee Bucks talk ranging from Caron Butler's buyout to Jeff Adrien being a part of the long-term plan for the team. We move on to discuss about Johnny Manziel and the criticism around him. Mitch and Charlie do a non-Hank The Dog edition of talking about Milwaukee Brewers ranging from their over/under number, Spring Training get started and Yankees interested Rickie Weeks. Our discussion carries us to James Jones and his future with Green Bay. Mitch rants quickly about U.S. Hockey. We finish up talking Jason Collins and the culture of sports.

Charlie & Mitchell.

10 Interesting Thoughts on 2014 Brewers' ZIPs

I am starting to get the baseball itch. No it is not like an STD so do not worry about becoming infected, but it is time to wade my toes back in the water of baseball writing. This is probably the time when people wonder 'Why doesn't Charlie just pick a lane?' and I say 'Well sorry for being an equal opportunity sports lover, gosh.'  Anyways, this is my first of many Milwaukee Brewers posts of the season and then we will be getting to MLB previews either starting Saturday or Monday pending if I go out after work on Friday night.

Projections are a cool thing to look at as a starting point to the season. ZIPs is one of the most trusted projection tools out there and released how 2014 will look for all Major League Baseball teams. They are not guarantees by any shape of the imagination, but it is still fascinating to see what the season might become for this player or maybe let's not expect as big of a season from that player. If anything, projections can make most expectations reasonable allowing for pleasant surprises and saddening disappointments along the way. Let's hope for the former with the Milwaukee Brewers this season.  Here were some of the more intriguing numbers. These are in some order but not an exact order if that makes any sense at all.***** 

*****Disclaimer... I keep up with FanGraphs and saw they had ZIPs projections for the Brewers out in late January, but they all became official yesterday as FanGraphs announced via Twitter these were out for the 2014 season.  If I made a mistake and this is all old information, my apologies. If not, let's get this ball rolling.  If it is somewhere in-between, then I have no answers.   

1. Ryan Braun will likely make everyone love him again - The numbers for the new Brewers right fielder come in at 33 home runs which would be fourth in the league, hitting .300, swiping 22 bases, scoring 99 times as well driving in 116 runs. For all intents and purposes, this makes Braun an All-Star again and makes a case for being a fringe MVP candidate. The only thing concerning about Milwaukee's superstar is his OBP is at .367 which would be his lowest since 2010. 

2. Four of the five starters find themselves with ERA's under four - Found this interesting as Matt Garza, Kyle Lohse, Marco Estrada and Yovani Gallardo all slide under the four ERA's looking all have strong seasons. The thing worth mentioning is other than Garza, most of the ERAs are close enough to four meaning it could be a fluctuating year for all of them. Looking at those four pitchers, there are reasons to have some encouraging thoughts about them if the play to their potential. 

3. Carlos Gomez on pace to avoid the regression monster - Another strong year for the All-Star centerfielder is projected by ZIPs.  Gomez's highlights him missing his second straight 20-20 season by one home run as he predicted to have 19 dingers with 32 stolen bases. Gomez's fielding percentage (FLD) would be top ten in the major leagues for the season at 11.8. For those wondering about his average, he would slide in at .260. This would  be another ideal season for Gomez. He would have more than 100 strikeouts, but we can build on this! 

4. Bullpen could be an issue... Again - Jim Henderson has the lowest projected ERA at 3.50 meaning there is not one bullpen pitcher projected to have a sub-three ERA this season. Francisco Rodriguez is the next one at 3.68. Although the one bright spot is two of the better possible relievers this season, Will Smith and Tyler Thornburg, both have projections as pitchers whom will get to start multiple games versus looking at them as just relievers. I know this might sound crazy, but I have a weird feeling Alfredo Figaro could be a strong sixth-seventh inning pitcher, I also might have down three bourbons before writing. Basically, the jury is still out but there are a ton of questions. 

5. Another season of missing out on Aramis Ramirez? - The guess is Ramirez would only play about 111 games this season meaning he would miss about 50 games of the season or better known as six to eight weeks in the season. I do not think Brewers fans want to be realistic on what might happen with A-Ram this season. He could definitely be a trade piece if Milwaukee struggles in the first half. He could be a liability. He could also put together a kick ass season. I really do believe Ramirez could be all over the place this year.

6. Regression could hit Tyler Thornburg hard - Nothing about the numbers says this will be a strong year for Thornburg. But once again, we need to possibly look past all the statistics right now given it is a blend of mostly starting games. Personally, Wily Peralta will get the first opportunity and that opportunity will last for awhile unless the shit really hits the fan with him early on. I am all about Thorny as a reliever, but it is evident the Brewers see him as much more than just a middle reliever. If that were the case, Ike Davis would be at first base. 

7. Do not tempt me with Mark Reynolds's home run numbers - People seem to be focused on how much Mark Reynolds strikes out even though he will not play every game nor will be hitting in a spot needing clutch hits on the regular (If Reynolds hits above five, fire Ron Roenicke on the spot) so yes Reynolds's strikeout number is 160 which is ugly. But they are also projecting Reynolds to hit 29 home runs which is a beautiful swan. Yes, he will not be flashy but dammit he can still put together a good year as a basher at first. 

8. As always, Yovani Gallardo's numbers are a bit polarizing - I tried to make sense of this one. Gallardo's WAR will be the highest among Brewers pitcher. But he also has the highest BB/9 by a long shot with the established four starters we discussed earlier. Gallardo also gives up a good amount of home runs meaning there is not much to '2014.. THE YEAR OF ACE YOVANI!!!!' (No one is talking about this, but if he stars hot, someone will, just you watch (Actually it will probably me, so don't watch.)).  

9. If Hunter Morris gets a chance... Could he be pretty decent? - For those whom do not know or care, ZIPs is a projection base system if minor leaguers got a 'chance' at a full season, what might happen. Morris is projected to hit 21 home runs, be second to Braun in doubles with 29, hit .241 and have 136 strikeouts which comes along with a mediocre OBP. I will be curious to see how the first base situation plays out this Spring and these projections get brought to light.  

10. Wily Peralta does not improve, likely stays inconsistent - This is the one that disappointed me the most because I do really think the future is bright for Peralta. I have no doubts he could be a solid starer for the entire season, but these numbers do not really say he will be the best on the star. Peralta has a 4.40 ERA projection with a BB/9 of 4.18 and a K/9 of 7.08. These are not numbers that make you sell the idea of having Peralta being the fifth starter at this point. 

In the end, these are all projections. No one really knows until the games are being played on the field, but at least, we have an idea of what to expect from the 2014 Milwaukee Brewers.

Charlie.  

Closing Time: Hank The Brewers Dog is the Best

H/T @Brewers 
There are a couple things I am certain about in life and one of those is if you have a stray dog wandered to your spring training facility, it at least guarantees a playoff spot. I mean I almost expect St. Louis Cardinals to have a dog at their Spring Training facility just to compete right now because clearly, Milwaukee is ahead of everyone in unofficial dog mascots. It sounds like Hank will be staying with the team full-time in Spring Training and then I am willing to bet he will find a way back to Milwaukee. There is no reason why Hank could not hang out every day at Miller Park. 




Garza Signing Gives Brewers Hope for October

When Milwaukee Brewers signed Mark Reynolds, this very blog made mention how the team had been very quiet this offseason, and it almost felt like they were too quiet. The latter proved to be accurate as Milwaukee signed Matt Garza to a four-deal worth 50 million dollars, but he could earn up to 67 million dollars over five years if things go really well. Garza helps the Brewers in not only adding an high-quality pitcher to their rotation but he also brings a fiery nature Milwaukee has missed since 2011. Brewers are getting closer to make a run at the 2014 MLB Playoffs. 

Throughout the Doug Melvin era, pitching is usually the problem. 2013 might have been the first time in a long time where the hitters were not picking up the slack for the pitching rotation and the bullpen. With Ryan Braun back and the addition of Reynolds plus the emergence of Carlos Gomez and Jean Segura, the offense will be fine, but questions remained about their pitching staff. The addition of Garza gives this team an added element with three number two starters leading their rotation this season. Something Milwaukee has not had since 2011, and that will always be the year people point to until the Brewers can find themselves back into the playoffs. 

Before we look at what Garza's statistics could mean for the Brewers, Melvin did a great job getting Garza at this value given the current market. Additionally, he did not have to give up a draft pick which he would have done if Milwaukee signed Ervin Santana or Ubaldo Jiminez. From a management standpoint, this is a good signing for Milwaukee to make if they believe this team has what it takes to make a run to the playoffs. In the National League, it is not out of the question. The combination of Kyle Lohse, Garza and Yovani Gallardo could be pretty special, and if Wily Peralta takes another step as a pitcher, this rotation might be something to be feared this season. 

Unfortunately when the deal was first announced people were quick to their #HOTSPORTSTAKES and made a comparison to Jeff Suppan because he is the last pitcher to get this kind of money from Milwaukee. Now this is flawed and inaccurate. Disregard Garza's .500 record as pitcher as win/loss really does not matter no matter if the pitcher is Sandy Koufax or Bronswell Patrick. Garza is not perfect nor a true ace, but he is only the ripe age of 29 meaning Milwaukee will get him in his essential prime versus when the Brewers inked Suppan he was 32 years heading for the decline. The comparison with Suppan is baseless, and not worth a discussion. 

The one thing to love about Garza is his fiery nature as a competitor. While we cannot excuse his attitude and behavior towards women, Garza's 'f--- the free world' attitude is something Milwaukee lacked since 2011. I made mention of this in October when Boston was on their way to a World Series appearance. This team did not have any badasses. The 2011 team pissed a lot of baseball pursuits off, and it was stellar. But the last two years, this team played without an edge. Carlos Gomez fits what Garza brings as well as a couple others yet this edge, this chip on the shoulder nature was not present. Hopefully with Garza that returns even if we might get a few outbursts at inopportune times. Once again, let's pray he does not make any more comments about women. 

Things to like about Garza is his ERA steadley stays under four. The last time Garza's ERA was over four for an entire season was at age 22 when he broke into the league with Minnesota. Since 2011, Garza's strikeout to walk ratio has been over three, an improvement from the first couple years in the league although his strikeouts per nine innings has been down in the last couple years. This could be a sign that he is pitching more to contact versus trying to strike every player out.  In 2010, Garza walked 79 batters but since then those numbers went down rapidly with in 2012, he went down by more than 50 percent. Whatever issue Garza had with control during his last year at Tampa Bay are over. 

If there is one thing to raise an eyebrow like you were The Rock, it would be Garza's issue with giving up home runs. Garza averages about a home run per nine innings. With the way balls tend to fly out of Miller Park, this could be a problem. It is the same issue with Marco Estrada. This is okay if there are no runners are on or one at the very most. It gets troublesome when there are multiple runners on. The other issue is Garza struggles fielding bunts at time. It is a weird quirk, but he is not a good fielding pitcher. Hopefully, Brewers fans will do some research on Garza therefore they can expect this rather than make wild assumptions... Oh wait they crossed out Ryan Braun's name on shirt jerseys to make a statement. Nevermind, my bad. Garza is a good pitcher, but he does come with some negatives as all players do in any sport. 

Can the Brewers make a serious run at the playoffs?  By March 15th, I will probably be talked into it, but the team has its best chance since 2011. They have as dangerous as a two through six in baseball along with a competent pitching staff with a bullpen that could be improved yet it is not the worst in the Major Leagues. This team might be on the cusp of something big, and Garza is a big reason why, now to see if it all comes together like the Brewers hope it does in the 2014 season. 

Charlie.  

Tapping The Keg Podcast Episode 72:



Tapping The Keg returns again with Mitch Pratt and Charlie Tritschler discussing all things sports related and then some. We led off with talking about the young Oklahoma State freshman whom went as Lisa Ann's date to the AVN Awards. We move on to tread lightly in a little bit of Super Bowl talk with Seattle and Denver before moving on to discussing the prospect of the Milwaukee Bucks new arena and new owner. From there, we talk about Kevin Durant's hot couple of weeks. The program finishes with Milwaukee Brewers talk ranging from Ryan Braun's appearance at Brewers On-Deck to a HEATED discussion about Lyle Overbay and Juan Francisco.

Reynolds Solves Brewers First Base Problem

Milwaukee Brewers have not done much this offseason. In fact, they are basically the definition of a church mouse with no real moves being made minus dealing Norichika Aoki getting traded to Kansas City and Ryan Braun heading into right field. Other than that, not many moves have been made and it feels like we as Wisconsin sports fans have two Ted Thompson's in Wisconsin.

With their quiet winter nature, people started to get concern who would play first base. It really felt like they were going all in on Juan Francisco which gave some people nightmares and probably something Rickie Weeks pulled for as he would be second-most booed by casual fans and Francisco would take his crown. Francisco will finally get some competition as Brewers signed Mark Reynolds to a minor league deal with an invitation to Major League Baseball training camp. Reynolds could provide yet another power bat as well as relief for Aramis Ramirez and if fans do not expect too much, this will work out for Milwaukee better than last year.

Reynolds is a version of Russell Branyan where you get a home run, a strikeout or a walk and that's about it. He is not going to provide you with many singles or doubles, but Reynolds will add some pop from the first baseman position something Milwaukee lacked last year. The lowest home run total for Reynolds is 17 in his rookie year and only had 21 last season. Reynolds has not played in the National League since 2010 season. I know we can look into that too much sometimes, it is proven getting to face NL pitching tends to make a player better than their years in the American League. It is also worth noting Reynolds lowest strikeout total is 154 meaning he is going to piss my dad off a ton which entertains me more than it should, but this is something he can do...





Even though he really does not play a good third base, Reynolds at least provides relief for Ramirez if he needs it on a Sunday afternoon. They do not really have a backup third base option, and now Milwaukee have the corners cover. The fact Reynolds is not 'just a first baseman' makes him more valuable for the team more so than what Milwaukee has at first base. If you disagree with Reynolds' value, I would point you to Jack Moore's tweet about Reynolds fWAR compared to what Milwaukee had last season.




My plea to fans is please know Reynolds does not immediately bring a championship here. Rather know he makes sure if Weeks is in the lineup, the Brewers have eight guys who can hit home runs regularly. This will be another 'Boom/Bust Brewers team.' I have no idea if this will work out for the team, but I am pretty excited to see how the 2014 Milwaukee Brewers come together.

Charlie.

2013: A Sucky Wisconsin Sports Year

The year 2013 was a pretty good year personally but sports-wise, it was pretty rough. Granted, this is all sort of relative as the Badgers and Packers saw a pretty good deal of success for the season but ultimately fell short of their 2013 goals. The "WINsconsin" moniker had officially lost its luster and hopefully should be on a hiatus for the time being.

It all started on January 1, 2013 as the Badgers lost 20-14 to the Stanford Cardinal in the Rose Bowl. This marked the third straight Rose Bowl defeat for Bucky and they've all were pretty crushing defeats. This, of course, came after Bret Bielema abruptly departed for the apparently greener SEC pastures of Arkansas about a month before that last Rose Bowl. The Badgers were left looking for a head coach for the Rose Bowl. Former head coach and current Wisconsin athletic director, Barry Alvarez, took the reigns for just the Rose Bowl game. While it was a cute story, the game obviously didn't go as Barry or the rest of Badger Nation had planned.

The Badgers went 8-6 on the year but the Rose Bowl loss and the sudden departure of Bielema left a really sour taste in the mouths of Badger fans. Bielema's 2013 at Arkansas would end up being an even bigger disaster, especially after his wife tweeted "#karma" after the Badgers got screwed by the refs at the end of the Arizona State game. Ironically, the Razorbacks didn't win a game for the rest of the season after that tweet. I guess she got what she asked for.

Then, later in January, the Green Bay Packers were doing their usual thing and cruising right along until they met Colin Kaepernick and the San Francisco 49ers in the Divisional Round of the NFC Playoffs. That day, the defense absolutely fell apart, letting Kaepernick run and pass all over them to the tune of 444 total yards and four touchdowns en route to a somewhat embarrassing 45-31 loss.

Many fans thought the Packers would cut ties with defensive coordinator Dom Capers but he's still hanging on by a thread.

Fast forward to April as the Brewers began got their season-to-forget underway. 2013 was a disaster essentially from start to finish for Milwaukee and it all really culminated in the suspension of star OF Ryan Braun for alleged performance enhancing drug use. The witch hunt for Braun boiled over in July and he was suspended for the rest of season. This was most likely a deal worked out between MLB and Braun's camp so that he could come back immediately in 2014 in hopes of moving on. You knew that Bud Selig, a Milwaukee native, would not be denied in his thirst for suspending Braun after he let a suspension slip through his fingers at the beginning of the 2012 season.

The Brewers as a team finished with a 74-88 record in 2013. There really wasn't a whole lot to hang their hats on either. However, we saw a true breakout year from CF Carlos Gomez who hit .284 with 24 home runs and took home a National League gold glove. Also, Brewers fans got their first taste of Scooter Gennett, who hit .324 in 69 games with the Brewers last year.

While Green Bay may have made the playoffs in 2013, they spent half of their season feeling like the Jacksonville Jaguars of the world as Aaron Rodgers missed seven games with injuries. People talked about  hair-brained conspiracies about why Rodgers was practicing yet not playing plus Packers fans having to watch the likes of Seneca Wallace, Matt Flynn and Scott Tolzien. Just when you think Green Bay's fanbase could get some perspective about how lucky and fortunate they are to have two rock solid quarterbacks, they somehow snake into the playoffs and fans still live the privileged lifestyle.

Finally, the Milwaukee Bucks. The Bucks season was probably considered a great success internally as they achieved their coveted goal of the eighth seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs. Now, to most fans with a brain, this season was anything but a success. The embarrassment of getting destroyed in four straight games against the Miami Heat after backing hard into the playoffs at the end of the season was truly rock bottom of the mediocrity treadmill, that the Bucks have been stuck in. Gone are the medicrity $wag twins (Brandon Jennings and Monta Ellis) and the Bucks are moving in another direction and are hopefully getting off the treadmill.

Hopefully, 2014 ends up working out better for the major sports teams in the state of Wisconsin. It's off to a similar start with the Badgers dropping their New Year's Day bowl game yesterday once again. I'll wait to jump to conclusions though as there are still 363 for the rest of the teams to pick up the slack.

-Big Money


The Tap Ten: 2013 MLB Stories

This is the beginning of our 2013 end of the year lists for sports.  I know we will do one for MLB, CFB, CBB, NBA, PGA and NFL. I probably will do a top 20 list of overall moments and if we get real frisky, maybe top 20 figures in sports giving away our first annual Tapper of the Year or something dumb like that. Also as always, these are my lists and I can imagine you have a different one, cool story.  



We lead off with this video of David Ortiz saying  "This is our fucking city" -  Easily, the most memorable quote of the Major League Baseball season. David Ortiz said this in Boston's first game after the marathon bombing. Further, they had a '617 Boston Strong' jersey hung in the dugout for the entire baseball season. I have always said sports is a great healer for people and it will always be that way. Sports allows a person to escape from all of the negativity that's going on with your life. Ortiz rallied a city with that quote, and it is one I will never forget. It missed the top ten, but it deserved a mention before we get into the list.

10.) Yovani Gallardo's DUI - This was the start of Milwaukee Brewers bad season when Gallardo got busted with a DUI in April. He did not miss any time, but it still was a significant thing in the organization to begin the year. It coupled with Gallardo getting off to a bad start to the season. He finished strong and while he put people's lives in danger, I am willing to give him a second chance. Big year for Gallardo. Everyone is waiting on him to become an ace, and it just has not happen yet.

9.) Quick rise of Matt Harvey and his injury - The young New York Mets pitcher burst onto the scene in the early part of the season with some dominating outings.  I actually was disappointed when he did not face Milwaukee at Miller Park in July because I wanted to watch him pitch, he was that good to begin the year. As a young pitcher, he rarely walked anyone and did not have a ton of blowup starts which we see with some fresh face pitches in the league. Harvey ended up needing Tommy John surgery meaning we will not see him in 2014, but he should be more than ready for the 2015 season.

8.)Pittsburgh Pirates shedding the young brother label - After a couple years of coming close, Pittsburgh finally played a full season and made the playoffs for the first time in 20 years. It seems like the future is never brighter with MVP Andrew McCutchen along with some talented young pitching and a solid bullpen. Pittsburgh figures to contend for the upcoming five years. Pittsburgh's baseball is back, and it is great. I loved seeing PNC Park filled up, and I expect them to have full crowds all season next year. It is weird, but if Milwaukee is not succeeding, I hope for success with Pittsburgh in the National League Central.

7.) Milwaukee's dismal May - Everyone saw the beginning of the end for Milwaukee in May when they went 6-20 for the month. Ryan Braun battled through a thumb injury, Brewers found all different ways to lose baseball games and it made it the most depressing month of watching a sports team in a long time. Although this month made me more at peace when Braun got suspended. If the Brewers were hanging around in sort of contention where one hot streak would put them in the playoff hunt when MLB went with their mafia hit, I would have been much more bummed. The season was lost by June, and hopefully, history will not repeat itself this year.



6.) Senor October's Game 2 Slam - A story on this one.... I flipped back and forth between Game 2, Bar Rescue and the Sunday Night Football game. The SNF game was a wrap as was Bar Rescue so I moved back to baseball when Detroit ended up walking a few guys leading to bases loaded situation for David Ortiz. It seemed like a situation we were all too familiar with when it comes to Ortiz. Sometimes when this happens, they do not live up to the narrative, but not with Ortiz as he blasted a grand slam tying up the game for Boston in the eighth inning. This game seemed lost as well as Detroit taking a 2-0 lead, but Boston came back to win as well as propelling them to win the series.

5.) The A-Rod frenzy - I cannot believe I am rating A-Rod this low, but to be honest, everyone is not surprising from Alex Rodriguez. I think Major League Baseball tried to screw him in the worst way possible, but none of this is really surprising, is it? Rodriguez kept himself in the media, and more that comes out, it seems like people might on A-Rod side of things. This story will not end in 2013, and it will probably be a major story in 2014 as well. I cannot wait to see Rodriguez goes balls to the walls again this year.

4.)  Mariano Rivera retires - Yes I have this lower than Yasiel Puig. I mean the impact of Rivera leaving will hurt the game of baseball, but we all knew this was coming at some point. I think Rivera retires last season if he does not get hurt. Mo did not want to go out being injured rather leave under his own terms. It was truly great to see, but a top moment of the MLB season? I would say no but then again, I am not a New York Yankee fan. If I am a Yankee fan, this is my top moment of the year. It all breaks down with who you follow in sports.

3. Puigmania -  This guy was an absolute revelation this year. I assume ESPN and FOX will trip over themselves to put Los Angeles Dodgers on television as much as possible this year. Puig is another breath of fresh air to baseball as he brings a new attitude to the game.  Honestly, I feel like baseball is WWE in the late 90's when they had all these new badass wrestlers whom were breaking the mold of the common culture which is fantastic. People hate some of his antics, but Puig could not be greater for the game of baseball. What I am not looking forward to this year is people overtly criticizing him all year because you know that's coming as it already started this year.

2.) Boston goes from worst to first and wins the World Series - Baseball can prove to be unpredictable, but at the surface, it seemed like Boston-St. Louis would meet in the World Series when October baseball began this year. This World Series was a bit different than the last time these two teams met in 2004. They had a crazy finish where St. Louis ended up being up two games to one. Boston would battle back to regain the advantage when they returned to Fenway for Game 6 where the Red Sox were victorious.  It is their third title in 10 years meaning there is no such thing as a curse anymore.

1.) MLB Suspends Ryan Braun and Milwaukee freaks out - This might take home the top story of theyear for me. This became a huge part of my life in July. I remember going nuts about it as well as having to defend Braun to people whom wanted an apology from him. There are still people out there that will cheer for Milwaukee but not Braun at the beginning of the year. It is terrible, but this is a culture of people acting like children with their athletes. If Braun gets booed at Miller Park on March 31st, 2014, I will be embarrassed to be a Brewer fan. I hope it does not happen. Also stay tuned for a potential 'Rally for Ryan' tailgate on March 31st at Miller Park, I think this is called a tease.

Any of them I miss here? Let me know in the comments section.

Charlie.
 
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