Milwaukee, WI
Brewers 2024 top 20 prospects: Jackson Chourio leads deep system
The Milwaukee Brewers’ system is loaded with star power and depth, setting the team up to keep their run of contention rolling for another five years or more. They had a hugely promising 2023 draft class and have continued to add prospects with the trades of Corbin Burnes and Luis Urías, while their international scouting department keeps hitting on big-bonus players and their player development staff has become one of the best in the industry at making material changes to help players move up.
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Top 100 MLB prospects 2024: Keith Law’s rankings, with Jackson Holliday at No. 1
Brewers 2024 top 20 prospects
(Note: Seasonal ages as of July 1, 2024. Scouting grades are on the traditional 20-80 or 2-8 scouting scale.)
1. Jackson Chourio, OF (2024 top 100 ranking: 2)
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 5-11 | Weight: 165 | Seasonal age in 2024: 20
Chourio came into the year as my No. 3 prospect, behind the two eventual Rookie of the Year winners, but then got off to a slow start when the Brewers started him in Double-A Biloxi despite just 31 games in High A and six in Double A the year before. Whether he was pressing or just adjusting to the tougher level, when the sun rose on June 1st, Chourio was hitting .254/.308/.418 and had punched out in a quarter of his plate appearances. The rest of the season, he hit .297/.353/.492 with a 15 percent strikeout rate and spent the final week with Triple-A Nashville. That week went pretty well, as Chourio put 21 balls in play, eight of them with exit velocities of 100 mph or better, peaking at 107.2 mph, and just five below 91 mph. Chourio still finished fifth in the Double-A Southern League in steals and tied for fourth in homers, and has barely begun to fill out physically, getting to that power and hard contact with strong wrists and incredible bat speed.
It’s a simple swing with just enough loft in that follow-through for line-drive power, and he projects to hit for high averages as well. He’s a plus runner and at least a 60 defender in center already, likely to end up more. You can make a case for him over Jackson Holliday, as Chourio also plays a position up the middle, offers plus defense, has more speed, and is overall a twitchier, more athletic player. I think Holliday has the higher floor, between his position and better feel right now for the strike zone, but, as with the top-two prospects Gunnar Henderson and Corbin Carroll last year, I think both of these guys are superstars.
2. Jeferson Quero, C (2024 top 100 ranking: 12)
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 5-11 | Weight: 215 | Seasonal age in 2024: 21
Quero spent the entire 2023 season in Double A at age 20, the youngest catcher to get even 300 PA at either of the top two levels of the minors. He showed big progress across the board, including a massive improvement in his conditioning from 2022 to 2023. He’s in way better shape now to handle a full season of work behind the plate, so while he always had the hands and arm for the position, he’s a lot more consistent and could end up a 60 defender there all around. At the plate, he’s got great feel for the barrel, with a swing that’s short to the ball and long through contact, with future 20-homer seasons a possibility when he’s in his mid-20s. He can swing too hard at times but gets away with it because he has such good barrel control within the zone.
He did have a reverse platoon split last year, struggling especially when lefties threw him changeups, while right-handers would attack him with spin down and away that he’s still learning to lay off. Other than running, he’s got the potential for above-average or better tools across the board, and he’s already advanced as a catcher for his age. The Brewers don’t need a catcher now, just like they don’t need a center fielder, but they have a future two-way star here in Quero.
3. Tyler Black, IF (2024 top 100 ranking: 44)
Bats: L | Throws: R | Height: 5-10 | Weight: 205 | Seasonal age in 2024: 23
Black is the sort of player you love if he’s on your team and hate if he’s in the other dugout, as he plays hard all the time, and will fight for every out and every ball or strike until the game ends. Drafted 33rd overall in 2021 out of Wright State, Black has real plate discipline and great feel for the barrel, with a .400+ OBP at High A, Double A, and Triple A over the last two seasons. His hands are quick and he’s short to the ball and through contact, so the swing is more conducive to low line drives and some groundballs than to power. He’s a 70 runner who should be able to play center and is adequate at second, although since shoulder surgery his arm hasn’t been great and the left side of the infield might be out of reach. It’s an unusual profile for first base, but I think he can produce a .400 OBP with 10-15 homers and a ton of value on the bases, which would be enough offense for the position even without huge power, and then the only real question would be if his height holds him back. His floor is a super-utility guy who still gets 400-500 PA a year playing all over the diamond, but I’m in the camp that says he’s a starter at second, in left or — if he’s not with Milwaukee — in center, and he’ll be a favorite of hometown fans once they see how he plays.
4. Joey Ortiz, SS (2024 top 100 ranking: 58)
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 5-9 | Weight: 190 | Seasonal age in 2024: 25
Before he was traded to the Brewers in the Corbin Burnes deal, I wrote that Ortiz should be someone’s starting shortstop now, but he has the misfortune to play in an organization that has shortstops coming out of its ears — which should make him a very valuable player for hot stove purposes, as he can step into a big-league role right away. He’s a plus defender at short with a strong and accurate arm, while he remade his swing and his body during the pandemic, returning much stronger and with a swing that drives the ball effectively to the gaps and gives him a chance for 15-20 homers a year. His exit velocity peaked around 115 mph in Triple A last year, and he makes contact at consistently high rates, under 20 percent strikeout rates everywhere he’s played except for his 34 scattered PA in the majors. A .280/.340/.450-ish hitter who adds 5 or so runs of value on defense is a pretty valuable player, I think, and while there’s no further ceiling or projection here, that ought to be enough to get him a starting job.
5. Brock Wilken, 3B (2024 top 100 ranking: 71)
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-4 | Weight: 220 | Seasonal age in 2024: 22
Wilken was the Brewers’ 2023 first-round pick from a loaded Wake Forest team that had two first-rounders and three more guys taken in the second/third rounds last year, and that might have as many as five first-rounders this upcoming year. Even with a big slump in the middle of last spring, Wilken still hit 31 homers for the Deacons — whose home park is homer-friendly — and shows 55 power right now, with excellent balance and hip rotation that point to the potential for more down the road. He’s a hitter first with very high barrel rates in college and solid ball/strike recognition, so he’s comfortable running deep counts. I’m not saying he’s Jeff Bagwell, but that’s the archetype of the young hitter who hits the ball pretty hard, knows the strike zone, and has to grow into more power, so I could see Wilken becoming a 25-homer guy who still posts high OBPs. He’s a solid-average defender at third with a 55 arm, capable of making some difficult plays but needing more consistency on routine ones, with some concern that as the game speeds up he might have trouble maintaining the glove. Even at first base, where the Brewers do have a long-term need anyway, his bat should still make him a solid regular or more.
6. Jacob Misiorowski, RHP (2024 top 100 ranking: 90)
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-7 | Weight: 190 | Seasonal age in 2024: 22
I don’t typically put pure relief prospects on my top 100; the exceptions have been, well, exceptional, most recently Josh Hader, who has produced over 11 WAR in six-plus seasons in the majors. Misiorowski is working as a starter now and should continue to do so, but the delivery screams reliever, as he can’t repeat it and won’t get close to average command the way it all works now. He also boasts one of the best two-pitch combinations in baseball, with his fastball and slider at least 7s and you could make an argument either or both is an 8. He can touch 100 mph and regularly works in the upper 90s with high spin and excellent carry on the pitch. The slider has tilt, angle, depth, and tight rotation, running 84-90 when I saw him in a start in May. He doesn’t have a viable pitch for lefties yet, and the delivery, with visible effort, a high elbow, and a head-whack at release, is not conducive to strike-throwing or durability; he walked over 13 percent of batters on the whole in 2023, including 15 percent in his final stop in Double A. The Brewers are handling him carefully, as he didn’t face more than 20 batters or throw more than 97 pitches in any outing last year, which is the right approach even if you think his future is in the bullpen, as he still needs to work on throwing strikes, figuring out the right weapon for lefties, and maybe not throwing 100 percent on every pitch because his stuff moves so well. Multi-inning relief work is coming back into fashion, finally, and Misiorowski certainly has the potential to be a very good reliever in that role, and I could see him posting a couple of 3 WAR seasons that way if his control improves.
Robert Gasser spent all of last season in Triple A for Milwaukee. (Brad Krause / Four Seam Images via Associated Press)
7. Robert Gasser, LHP
Bats: L | Throws: L | Height: 6-0 | Weight: 192 | Seasonal age in 2024: 25
Gasser had a rough start to 2023, his first full year in the Brewers’ organization after they acquired him in the Josh Hader trade, but he came on strong in the second half and looks once again like a solid fourth starter. He dominates lefties but continues to have a platoon split, with all 12 homers he allowed last year coming to right-handed batters. He has an average or even above-average changeup, but he doesn’t use it enough, preferring his cutter in those situations even though that pitch only seems to get chase swing rather than swings in the zone. His fastball has average velocity with good arm-side run and his sweeper actually sweeps, hard and down away from lefties, generating a lot of swings right over the top. He does have to change his pitching plan against righties to get to that starter ceiling.
8. Luis Lara, OF
Bats: B | Throws: R | Height: 5-7 | Weight: 155 | Seasonal age in 2024: 19
It’s hard to know when to believe listed heights and weights, but Lara’s 5-7, 155 looks right — he is one of the smallest players I saw all year in the minors, maybe the smallest, and I definitely thought I was looking at a bat boy when I first saw him. (I could also pass for the bat boy, other than the grey hair.) Lara hits, though, rarely whiffing, striking out just 14.4 percent of the time in Low A and 19 percent of the time in High A, and only had a little trouble with changeups last year. He hits a lot of line drives and the contact quality is good enough to support a projection of a plus hit tool. He could also be plus defense in center with a solid walk rate — you might need an electron microscope to see his strike zone — and that would add up to an above-average regular.
9. Carlos Rodriguez, RHP
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-0 | Weight: 206 | Seasonal age in 2024: 22
Rodriguez was born in Nicaragua and went to junior college in Florida, from which the Brewers drafted him in the sixth round in 2021. He works with a bunch of 50-55 pitches, lacking a real out pitch (even though he was second in the Double-A Southern League with 152 strikeouts), competing well and working deep into games. His changeup is his most effective pitch, as he keeps his arm speed on it, although he can leave it up too often for hitters to square up. He has the stuff and delivery to be a fourth or fifth starter if he throws more strikes, especially with his 90-94 mph fastball.
10. Eric Brown, Jr., SS
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 5-10 | Weight: 190 | Seasonal age in 2024: 23
Brown was the Brewers’ 2022 first-round pick out of Coastal Carolina. His full-season debut was underwhelming, as he hit .265/.362/.347 in 63 games in High A, stealing 37 bags in 42 attempts, before a right thumb injury and fractured scapula curtailed his season. He’s a 70 runner and should stay at shortstop, but the swing’s kind of a mess, with all sorts of extra hand movements and a big leg kick and balloons and fireworks, any of which is fine if there’s consistent quality contact. Brown doesn’t whiff much, especially against fastballs, but he doesn’t make much hard contact at all and when the pitchers’ stuff got better his timing issues killed him, whether with velocity or quality sliders. He also put the ball on the ground or popped it up too often. I love the underlying athlete here, but I think it’s time to clean up the swing so he can square up the ball enough to be a regular.
11. Cooper Pratt, SS/2B
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-4 | Weight: 195 | Seasonal age in 2024: 19
Pratt may have been a victim of the obsession with present exit velocity in the sport, as he slipped to the sixth round, where the Brewers took him and gave him a well over-slot bonus to sign him. He’s a very instinctive player with a great internal clock, plus arm, and quick transfer. At the plate he’s got a smooth, simple swing that produces a ton of contact. The dispute before the draft was whether he’d ever get to power, as he doesn’t hit for power now and his batted-ball data doesn’t point to big future power. I see a 6-4, 195-pound kid with a lot of room to gain strength and hit the ball harder, enough to continue to hit for high averages given his contact rate and get him to 15-20 homers. He’s a shortstop and a capable one now, but he could outgrow it and end up at third or second.
12. Yophery Rodriguez, OF
Bats: L | Throws: L | Height: 6-1 | Weight: 185 | Seasonal age in 2024: 18
Rodriguez mashed in the Dominican Summer League and showed plus power already, with plus speed and the pure athleticism to stick in center field, although he’s more tools than baseball skills or instincts right now. His routes in center need work and the speed hasn’t translated into value on the bases yet (such as with his 63 percent success rate as a base-stealer last year). He was stronger than the average 17-year-old in the DSL and that may have covered up some of his deficiencies at the plate, as he could make very hard contact when he did square something up. He’s years away but also the furthest along of Milwaukee’s DSL group and could see Low A this year.
13. Josh Knoth, RHP
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-1 | Weight: 190 | Seasonal age in 2024: 18
Knoth was Milwaukee’s second pick in the 2023 draft, a high school righty from Long Island, N.Y., who was up to 95 mph with good carry at the top of the zone and a potentially plus curveball with high spin and hard two-plane break. His delivery has effort to it with a head-snap at release and so far he hasn’t shown much of a third pitch. Health will be the biggest factor for him in the next year or two.
14. Daniel Guilarte, SS/2B
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 5-11 | Weight: 160 | Seasonal age in 2024: 20
Guilarte is a disciplined hitter who hit .269/.377/.314 in his full-season debut last year while fighting nagging wrist and hamstring injuries that particularly affected his ability to drive anything, which was already something of a question after 2022. He still hasn’t homered yet in pro ball and needed to add strength even before the weak showing in 2023. He is good enough to potentially stick at short if the injuries don’t hold him back. He’s missed time in each of his two years in the system with some kind of injury, so adding strength may also be critical to keeping him on the field. He has the feel to hit and middle infield potential to be an everyday guy.
15. Bradley Blalock, RHP
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-2 | Weight: 200 | Seasonal age in 2024: 23
Blalock returned last year after missing 2022 while recovering from Tommy John surgery, then went from Boston to the Brewers at the trade deadline for infielder Luis Urías. He’s 90-94 mph, touching 96, with a slider that pushes plus and a solid-average changeup, coming right over the top to drive the fastball down in the zone. He throws a ton of strikes and has the three pitches to start if he can handle a full season’s workload.
Eric Bitonti was one of the youngest players in last year’s draft. (Mark J. Rebilas / USA Today)
16. Eric Bitonti, 3B
Bats: L | Throws: R | Height: 6-4 | Weight: 218 | Seasonal age in 2024: 18
Bitonti was one of the youngest players in the 2023 draft class, turning 18 in November. He came to pro ball showing a short swing that produces plus power already. He was a shortstop and pitcher in high school, with a 65 arm in the field, although Milwaukee’s already moving him to third, which was always going to be his ultimate position. He’s more power than hit right now, swinging and missing too often for a high school hitter on the showcase circuit, but with big upside from the power and the possibility of plus defense at third.
17. Logan Henderson, RHP
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 5-11 | Weight: 194 | Seasonal age in 2024: 22
Henderson got healthy and had a fantastic year in Low A, striking out 35 percent of batters he faced and walking just 8.6 percent. He’s mostly fastball/changeup, 90-94 mph on the heater without much movement, while the changeup is plus, and he doesn’t have a clear third pitch. The slider is a 45 if you love it, and he has a cutter that might be the better option. It’s a reliever-ish delivery but he pounds the zone and I wouldn’t move him unless he suddenly gets homer-prone because the fastball is kind of flat. The command and control are too good to give up on him as a back-end starter even if it’s still fastball or changeup 90 percent of the time.
18. Mike Boeve, 3B
Bats: L | Throws: R | Height: 6-2 | Weight: 210 | Seasonal age in 2024: 22
Boeve struck out just 4.3 percent of the time last spring for Nebraska-Omaha, with a short, slappy swing that produces a ton of groundballs, which continued even into Low A after he signed. He’s big enough to hit the ball harder, and he is clearly sacrificing contact quality just to avoid striking out. He looks like a great candidate for a swing change, even just to get him to put the ball in the air a little more.
19. Dylan O’Rae, SS/2B/OF
Bats: L | Throws: R | Height: 5-7 | Weight: 160 | Seasonal age in 2024: 20
O’Rae just turned 20 this week, and he may rival Lara for the title of Smallest Brewers Prospect, as he’s listed at 5-7, 160. He’s a plus runner who can play center or second base, probably moving off shortstop in the near future. At the plate he doesn’t whiff and doesn’t chase, hitting the ball on the ground with no power (just eight doubles and one triple in 68 pro games so far). It’s an unusual profile, as guys with this little power have a hard time becoming regulars without elite defense or positional value, but his speed might make him one of those in center.
20. Luke Adams, 3B/1B
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-4 | Weight: 210 | Seasonal age in 2024: 20
Adams has easy plus power and will take his walks, probably taking too many of them and failing to go after pitches he could hit. On defense, did I mention he’s got easy plus power and will take his walks? He’s at third base now, but even first is going to be a stretch. He could end up a low-average, three true outcomes type of hitter who bounces around the majors because of the power, although it’s hard to see him becoming more than a bench guy.
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MLB 2024 farm system rankings: Keith Law ranks all 30 teams, Orioles are new No. 1
Others of note
• The Brewers picked up right-hander Coleman Crow this winter from the Mets for Tyrone Taylor and Adrian Houser, even as Crow continues to recover from Tommy John surgery. He’s got a high-spin slider and two-seamer along with enough changeup to be a swingman or long reliever but probably not a full-time starter.
• Shortstop Filippo Di Turi is from Venezuela, not Italy, che peccato, but he’s a solid or better defender and has a simple swing from each side of the plate, potentially a high-contact OBP guy who provides value up the middle.
• Infielder Jadher Areinamo is a plus defender at second with a complicated swing and a leak over his front side, projecting maybe as a utility infielder.
• Shortstop Gregory Barrios was overmatched by Low-A pitching last year, but the 19-year-old Venezuelan can really pick it at short and his defense will buy him a lot of time for the bat to catch up.
• Second baseman Oliver Dunn is 26, but he may have a major-league roster spot waiting for him after the Brewers acquired him as a Rule 5 pick (via trade with the Phillies). Dunn can run, he can hit a little, has some sneaky pop, and he’s fine at second base with experience at third and in the outfield. He seems like a great last-guy-on-the-bench player given his speed and versatility.
2024 impact
Chourio’s going to give the Brewers an interesting dilemma, as he’ll probably be ready for the majors by midseason, but Milwaukee might have more center fielders than breweries at this point, so someone’s going to have to move and they may still look to deal from their surplus. Ortiz should be their starting shortstop on Opening Day. Gasser could be their fifth starter. Black should get MLB at-bats this year, but right now I don’t see a regular spot for him as his arm is short for third base. If they want to move Misiorowski to relief, he could pitch in their bullpen right now and probably strike out a third of the guys he faces. Let the kids play!
The fallen
Freddy Zamora was the Brewers’ 2020 second-round pick out of the University of Miami, but he hasn’t shown any ability to make hard contact in three injury-plagued years in the minors, slugging just .361 as a 24-year-old last year in Biloxi.
Sleeper
This system is loaded in every way, including with players who look like they’re about to take a big step forward. I’ll go with Lara, and not just because he’s about my size.
(Top photo of Jackson Chourio: David Durochik / Diamond Images via Getty Images)
Milwaukee, WI
Former ‘Most Wanted’ Milwaukee man sentenced for killing cousin in 2020
MILWAUKEE – A Milwaukee man, previously named one of Wisconsin’s Most Wanted, has been sentenced to prison for shooting and killing his cousin in 2020.
In court
What we know:
A Milwaukee County jury found 39-year-old Brandon Gladney guilty of first-degree reckless homicide and possession of a firm by a felon earlier this year.
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Judge Michelle Havas sentenced Gladney to 29 years in prison on Friday, April 17. He was granted credit for more than a year’s time served and further sentenced to 14 years of extended supervision.
Arrested in Arizona after years on the run, court records show Gladney has also been ordered to pay the Milwaukee County District Attorney’s Office more than $1,800 for extradition costs.
Homicide investigation
The backstory:
The shooting happened in May 2020. Investigators said Gladney was captured on video apparently arguing with the victim, his cousin, outside a Milwaukee convenience store near 21st and Meinecke.
“It’s all on video, and it’s devastating for that family,” the marshal on the case told FOX6 when Gladney was profiled on Wisconsin’s Most Wanted. “You have a family member that shot and killed another family member.”
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Prosecutors said Gladney walked away but then returned with a gun pointed directly at the victim and shot him. The victim died from his gunshot wounds at a nearby hospital. Multiple bullet casings were found at the scene.
Gladney went on the run for years. He was arrested in Arizona in January 2023, years after he was charged.
The Source: FOX6 News referenced information from the U.S. Marshals Service, Wisconsin Circuit Court and prior coverage.
Milwaukee, WI
Brewers beat Marlins in extras, Mitchell’s double the difference
Brice Turang slides to home plate to score during a game between the Miami Marlins and the Milwaukee Brewers on April 17. (Photo by Chris Arjoon/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
MIAMI – Garrett Mitchell went 2 for 4 with three RBIs including a two-run double in the 10th inning and the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Miami Marlins 7-5 on Friday night.
By the numbers:
Miami’s Calvin Faucher (1-2) entered a 4-all game in the 10th and walked Gary Sánchez with Brice Turang on second. Jake Bauers hit a single to load the bases.
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Luis Rengifo reached first on a throwing error by second baseman Xavier Edwards, allowing Turang to score. Mitchell followed with his double.
The Marlins scored one run in the bottom of the 10th when Jakob Marsee came home on Trevor Megill’s wild pitch. Megill settled in for his fourth save.
Coleman Crow, who made his debut on the mound for the Brewers, threw 77 pitches over 5 1/3 innings. He threw four strikeouts, gave up two earned runs and a walk.
The right-hander was 2-0 with a 4.07 ERA in two starts with the Brewers’ Triple-A affiliate in Nashville. He missed part of the 2023 season and all of 2024 after undergoing Tommy John surgery.
The Brewers scored three runs in the fourth inning. With the bases loaded, Mitchell hit an RBI single, Bauers scored on a forceout at first and Rengifo scored on a throwing error by catcher Agustín Ramírez.
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Miami’s Otto Lopez hit a triple to center field in the fourth and scored on a sacrifice fly by Owen Caissie. Lopez hit a two-run homer in the sixth to pull Miami within 4-3 and Ramírez doubled in the eighth to tie the game at four.
Abner Uribe (1-0) earned his first win of the season, coming on in the ninth inning.
Marlins third baseman Graham Pauley left the game in the seventh inning with right oblique discomfort after spinning out of the way of a pitch.
What’s next:
The Brewers and Marlins continue their 3-game series on Saturday, with Brandon Woodruff (1-0, 4.36 ERA) taking the mound for Milwaukee and Sandy Alcantara (2-1, 2.67) for Miami.
The Source: The Associated Press provided this report.
Milwaukee, WI
Beloit Memorial star Amare Hereford remains loyal, signs with Milwaukee Panthers
Michigan wins the national championship over UConn
Michigan beats UConn to win the national championship and we break down how they did it and where both programs go from here.
Loyalty is a word you rarely hear anymore when it comes to college sports.
Amare Hereford is an exception.
The night before he was able to put pen to paper and make his commitment to the UW-Milwaukee men’s basketball team official earlier this week, the Beloit Memorial standout was invited for an on-campus visit with the Wisconsin Badgers.
Hereford did his due diligence. What player wouldn’t have in his position?
“Me being an 18-year-old kid, my first high major [visit], I just decided to go check it out,” Hereford said.
UW put on the full-court press in an attempt to lock down the Wisconsin “Mr. Basketball” finalist.
“They offered me a scholarship,” Hereford said. “It all happened so fast. It was all within a day.”
Hereford went home, processed the situation with his family and came to a decision.
He would honor his commitment to the Panthers, with his signature cementing the deal and UWM announcing the news Thursday, April 16.
“No, it wasn’t really hard to turn down,” Hereford said, referring to UW’s offer. “I love every school and I appreciate every school that reaches out to me. But I’m going to choose a school that I have a great relationship with, with all the coaching staff, and that’s been thinking highly of me and recruited me for the longest time. And that was the Panthers.
“Wisconsin is a great school, of course. But I’m going to the school that has been with me for the longest time.”
The 6-foot-2, 175-pound Hereford is a huge addition for a Panthers squad that, like so many other programs due to transfer portal madness, is in the midst of rebuilding its roster for the 2026-2027 season almost from scratch.
“Amare will be a star here at Milwaukee,” coach Bart Lundy said. “He will be a fan favorite from the beginning. He is a complete basketball player but probably has as good of an ability to score as I’ve seen in any high school player. He is a great student and a great worker and completely fits our culture.
“We are so excited that he will represent the city of Milwaukee and the state and especially his hometown of Beloit.”
Indeed, Hereford put the ball through the net for Beloit Memorial at a prodigious rate, averaging 37.5 points per game – tops in the state – as a senior. He finished as the school’s all-time leading scorer with 2,493 points in four years.
Hereford also poured in 49 points in his final high school game, a WIAA sectional semifinal loss to Verona last month.
Hereford was tough to guard going to the basket as his 60.7% shooting this past season indicates, but he also shot a terrific 45% from from 3-point range (81 for 180) and capitalized on all the contact he drew to the tune of 83% accuracy at the free-throw line.
More than just a scorer, though, Hereford also finished with team-leading averages of 8.5 rebounds, 5.3 assists and 3.9 steals per game.
“My playing style fits the way [the Panthers] play – they get up and down, play fast,” Hereford said. “Coach Lundy said he definitely sees me running [point guard], having the ball in my hands, playing the same way I did in high school, finding teammates, getting to the rim and scoring at all three levels.”
Defense is typically where newcomers experience the biggest growing pains, learning the all-out effort it takes to guard at a high level on every possession.
Hereford, however, indicates he’s more than just a scorer.
“I love playing defense,” he said. “Hitting the gaps, getting steals and different things like that, being active with my hands a lot. I’m definitely looking forward to getting pushed defensively and picking up the ball full court, on-ball pressure in the half court.”
Hereford took his visit to UWM in mid-March, after the season had been completed, but saw enough games on TV to cement his opinion of the challenge ahead.
“The Horizon League is amazing,” he said. “There’s a lot of guards who play the same way I play, like to get up and down, play fast. That’s why I love Coach Lundy and the Panthers and the rest of the staff. They let guys be themselves. They play fast, get up and down, play together as one.
“They let everybody touch the ball and be themselves.”
Before Wisconsin entered the picture, Hereford said he’d narrowed his school choices to UWM and San Diego, where Whitefish Bay Dominican product and former Iowa State assistant JR Blount has taken over as head coach.
Now, Hereford projects as an important piece in the Panthers’ rebuilding process.
“Coach Lundy and the staff, they believe in me heavy. And I just want to prove them right,” Hereford said. “I want them to see that I can come in and make a huge impact right away for the team and in the Horizon League.
“I’m definitely going to come in and compete for my minutes. And obviously, I want to stay there.
“So, definitely looking forward to coming in and earning my spot.”
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