The Milwaukee Brewers are calling Danny Jansen home, and it’s about time his baseball passport earned a new stamp back in Wisconsin. Jansen, the pride of Appleton West High School, is headed to Milwaukee in a deal that has fans both intrigued and scratching their heads. How will this deal work out?
The 30-year-old catcher, who’s bounced around from Toronto to Boston to Tampa Bay since his debut in 2018, has a .703 OPS this season with 11 home runs across 73 games for the Rays. This isn’t exactly tearing up the leaderboard, but Milwaukee isn’t bringing him in to compete for MVP status.
They need depth, and Jansen is the insurance policy they’ve been looking for. With starter William Contreras patching together innings despite a fractured middle finger and backup Eric Haase holding his own, adding Jansen to the mix bolsters their catching roster. Or at least that’s what they’re banking on.
But wait, why not stick with hot prospect Jeferson Quero instead? Quero’s recent shoulder injury has sidelined Milwaukee’s top catching prospect for another three to four weeks, following a hamstring injury earlier this season. It is almost like the Brewers’ catching lineup is cursed, and Jansen is the hope they will break it.
Milwaukee didn’t snag Jansen without some sacrifices. To lock in Jansen, the team sent prospect Jadher Areinamo (currently batting .297 with 11 homers and 15 stolen bases in High-A Wisconsin) to Tampa Bay. Word has it, the Brewers also snagged a nice wad of cash to sweeten the deal.
And for the Rays? The team flipped Jansen, trading him to make room for Nick Fortes from Miami. Fortes, a younger catcher still under control until 2028, has batted .240 this season with two homers. The Rays are essentially trading in their used sedan for a compact with better gas mileage.
Contreras has been the Iron Man of Milwaukee’s catching corps (catching 87 games out of 105), but durability is not unlimited, especially when you’re playing through injury. Adding Jansen, who’s seen plenty of MLB action and knows his way around a staff, gives the Brewers a veteran who can handle the mental side of the game. But the real question is whether Jansen’s bat will step up to match Contreras’s offense or if this will be nothing more than a defensive upgrade.
Sure, Jansen’s bat has not exactly been lighting things up for Tampa Bay this year, but sometimes a change of scenery can reignite a player’s confidence. For Jansen, playing in Wisconsin, just a short drive from where his baseball dreams started, might provide the emotional boost needed to hit his stride. Or, he becomes a reliable backup with a sentimental story arc.
The Brewers sit atop the NL Central, so the pressure is on to improve spots ahead of the postseason grind. This isn’t a blockbuster trade. It is more of a calculated move. Fans might not be flocking to American Family Field with “Jansen” jerseys just yet, but his story is undeniably tied to the heart of Wisconsin baseball.
If the catcher finds his rhythm and contributes behind the plate, the Brewers might just cruise into October breathing a little easier. And if not? Well, blame it on the injury bug that seems to have Milwaukee’s catching department in a chokehold. Does this move make the Brewers a surefire contender, or is it just another front office experiment? We’ll find out soon enough.
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