MILWAUKEE (AP) -If the Brewers are considered a front-runner in the C.C. Sabathia sweepstakes, manager Ned Yost wanted nothing to do with it on Friday.
“A rumor’s a rumor,” Yost said before Milwaukee’s game with Pittsburgh. “We don’t pay attention to it too much.”
According to recent reports, Milwaukee’s surplus of minor league talent has given the organization an upper hand in the competition to acquire Sabathia. The reigning AL Cy Young winner is 6-8 with a 3.83 ERA in Cleveland.
Milwaukee scouts have watched Sabathia pitch several times this season and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that director of pro scouting Dick Groch saw the lefty throw again on Wednesday night against the Chicago White Sox.
Asked where Sabathia could be slotted in the rotation, Yost was quick to reply.
“Sabathia’s not on our team,” he said.
But maybe soon.
The Brewers are extremely deep, especially at the Double-A level, with 10 prospects named to the All-Star team in the Southern League alone from Double-A Huntsville. None of those players comes with more buzz than Matt LaPorta.
LaPorta, the former slugger at Florida selected with the seventh overall pick last season, is hitting .291 with 20 homers and 66 RBIs in 82 games coming into Friday. Other top teammates in Huntsville include slick fielding shortstop Alcides Escobar (.331 average in 84 games) and third baseman Mat Gamel (.381, 15 homers, 75 RBIs in 84 games).
It’s unlikely that the Brewers would let two of those three go in any deal, and it’s unclear whether the organization would have a legitimate shot at signing Sabathia, a free agent after the season.
The Brewers brass had a long meeting in Phoenix on Thursday, but declined to reveal what was discussed.
Sabathia, one of the premier power pitchers in the game, went 19-7 with a 3.21 ERA last year. He rejected a $72 million, four-year extension from the Indians during spring training and announced he wouldn’t negotiate any deal until after the season.
The Brewers starting pitching has been thin ever since Yovani Gallardo went on the disabled list with a torn knee ligament that required surgery. Brewers ace Ben Sheets is easily off to the best start of his career, but the righty is in the final year of a $38.5 million, four-year contract and hasn’t wanted to talk about his upcoming free agency.
The Brewers’ experience on the trade market last year burned them, too. General manager Doug Melvin acquired setup man Scott Linebrink for three pitching prospects, including highly touted Will Inman.
Linebrink went 2-3 with a 3.55 ERA in 27 games, never solidifying the bullpen situation as much as hoped for. He bolted to the White Sox in free agency, giving the Brewers two first-round draft picks as compensation.
Milwaukee, which last made the playoffs in 1982, has the fourth-best record in the NL right now, but are looking up in the NL Central at St. Louis and Chicago.
Yost, who spent 12 years in Atlanta during its string of division titles, said that the Braves made deadline deals that paid off, including when they acquired Fred McGriff in 1993. McGriff hit 19 homers in the final 68 games as the Braves went 104-58 to make the playoffs.
Yost cautioned that any trade would have to make sense.
“You don’t make it just to make it, you make it to improve your club. If it improved our club, we did it. We got Fred McGriff one year and it just made a tremendous difference,” Yost said. “If we needed pitching, we tried to go out and get pitching, whatever you needed to get to help your team.”
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