.500 Brewing

Young talent, veteran bats helping Milwaukee near its first winning season since Yount/Molitor days

? Hall of Famers Paul Molitor and Robin Yount still were playing the last time the Milwaukee Brewers had a winning season.

President Bush was in the White House – that’s George Herbert Walker Bush – and his son still was running the Texas Rangers when Milwaukee went 92-70 under Phil Garner in 1992. The Brewers followed that up by losing 93 times in ’93 and haven’t been the same since.

Now the Brewers, whose 12-year run of losing seasons is tied with the Pittsburgh Pirates for the longest current drought in major professional sports, are on the cusp of ending their ignominious streak.

Entering a two-game set against the Pirates tonight, the Brewers are 64-67 and will play 19 of their final 31 games at Miller Park, where they are 34-28 so far.

General manager Doug Melvin received a requisite letter from the commissioner’s office last week listing the rules for submitting postseason rosters by Wednesday. He can’t recall getting the same letter last season, when the Brewers went through a 22-53 tailspin after the break.

“If I did, it went into the garbage pail,” he said.

This time, he’s allowing himself to flirt with the notion of an improbable run at the wild-card even though ace Ben Sheets was lost for the season last week because of a torn back muscle.

Brewers rookie second baseman Rickie Weeks slaps a single against Florida. Weeks, shown Wednesday in Milwaukee, is part of a core of young players helping the Brewers improve.

Sheets missed much of the first half because of an inner ear infection, but the Brewers managed to stay around .500 even with rookies J.J. Hardy and Rickie Weeks going through growing pains at the same time. Also, their much-hyped hitting duo of Carlos Lee and Geoff Jenkins has sputtered all summer, never able to get going at the same time.

Lee drove in a franchise record 76 runs before the All-Star break while Jenkins was mired in a prolonged slump. Jenkins has been on a tear since the break, but Lee has cooled off considerably.

Manager Ned Yost isn’t wondering what might have been, though. He’s happy to have had at least one hot bat in his lineup the whole season.

“They’ve each carried us for a half,” Yost said. “If we get them both hot for the last month, we’d be in pretty good shape. Guys get into funks. You just don’t want two guys getting into one at the same time because then that creates huge problems.”

And the Brewers are intimately familiar with those.

Milwaukee's Bill Hall, right, is congratulated after his two-run home run by teammate J.J. Hardy. Hall, shown Saturday in Milwaukee, has had a breakout season in 2005 and is one reason the Brewers are hoping to finish with a winning record for the first time in 12 seasons.

Jenkins is the Brewers’ longest tenured player after arriving in 1998 in Milwaukee, which followed close calls in ’96 (80-82) and ’97 (78-83). He’s spent his whole career wondering what it would be like to play for a winning club. He’d like to find out this year.

Finally finishing above .500 “would be big,” he said.

“Obviously, we want to see it as much as the fans do. We’ve got a tough schedule the rest of the way. We’ve got a lot of home games, which bodes well for us; we’ve played well at home all year. We just keep pushing along.”

New owner Mark Attanasio increased player payroll from a league-low $27.5 million last year to more than $40 million this season and says that as part of his commitment to fielding a competitive club within the next year or two, he’ll bump payroll another 20 percent.

Whether they end their skid this year or not, infielder Bill Hall, whose breakout season this year has helped the Brewers forget about their two 94-loss seasons under Yost, said the team already had an attitude of a winner.

“We’re not expected to be losers anymore, not in this clubhouse anyway,” he said.

Revenue sharing. The wild-card. A new stadium. None has helped the Brewers field a winning club. They’ve never had the deep pockets to buy up ready-made talent, and they’ve even lacked luck, unable to play above their heads for an extended period.

“It’s rare a team has a Cinderella year where they have a lot of losing seasons and then all of a sudden make it to the playoffs, unless you can go out and buy a bunch of talent,” Hall said. “For us, that’s one of our stepping stones. We want to get to .500 and keep moving from there.”

So, in with the new.

Hardy was the only member of the club’s well-stocked farm system to break camp with the big club this spring, but Weeks, Prince Fielder and Corey Hart, along with pitching prospect Jose Capellan, figure to make the 25-man roster next season.

A fan at Miller Park held up a sign last week that read, “.500 or bust!”

Elsewhere, you don’t see such enthusiasm for the ordinary. But in Brew Town, attendance is up about 2,000 from last year to 28,500 a game – middle of the pack, yet not bad for a market that’s dominated by the Green Bay Packers once July rolls around.

“We’ve been talking about turning the corner for years,” Jenkins said. “And we’re starting to see that.”