Milwaukee, WI
Milwaukee Brewers 2022 Mock Draft Roundup 1.0: All Over The Board
Mock Draft season is at all times a enjoyable time. With the MLB Draft approaching, increasingly more mock drafts are popping up throughout the web. Who do the specialists have the Brewers choosing? Let’s have a look.
Making a mock draft is an inexact science, particularly within the MLB Draft. The Draft is a crapshoot and it doesn’t go in line with “staff wants” and even essentially a “greatest participant accessible” method both. BPA is mostly the prevailing technique, however it’s not at all times the case. Some groups will take a lesser participant to avoid wasting on their bonus pool to signal a participant they actually like afterward within the draft.
With groups not having the ability to commerce up or down and the manipulation of bonus pool cash, mocking the MLB Draft is extraordinarily tough. It’s much more tough the later within the first spherical you go. With the Brewers choosing twenty seventh total, there’s going to be numerous selection.
Who do the Draft specialists have the Milwaukee Brewers choosing within the first spherical on this MLB Mock Draft Roundup?
MLB Pipeline – Sterlin Thompson, OF, Florida
Pipeline has the Brewers going with a university outfielder for the third yr in a row. This was their write up on the choice:
The Brewers are a very good guess to take an completed hitter, resembling DeLauter, Graham, Thompson, Gilbert or Melton from the faculty ranks, or Toman.
They provide a stable checklist of choices, most of whom are faculty outfielders.
The Athletic – Justin Crawford, OF, Bishop Gorman HS (NV)
Crawford was projected to go a dozen or so picks earlier. Typically, the cash and highschool picks later within the first spherical can get tough. However Crawford has elite velocity and is an effective defender. The choose might take a look at the outdated cliche of “greatest accessible,” which is one thing the Brewers say so much; the outfield, significantly middle area, is just not a weak point of their farm system after devoting early picks to the place over the past couple of years. I’ve heard a handful of scouts level to the highschool expertise on this draft being particularly sturdy, and Crawford has the pure instruments which can be more durable to develop. — Will Sammon
Brewers beat author Will Sammon made this collection of a highschool hitter, a demographic the Brewers have drafted simply as soon as within the first spherical within the David Stearns Period. However as he factors out, Crawford is projected a lot greater and if he falls thus far, the Brewers might bounce on him like what they did with Brice Turang in 2018.
Prospects Dwell – 27. Gabriel Hughes, RHP, Gonzaga
The Brewers will probably be smitten to see one other power-righty fall into their lap right here with Hughes nonetheless on the board. Most see them going with one among Beavers, Delauter, Jones or Thompson. Hughes is just too gifted to move up this late.
You’ll be able to by no means have sufficient pitching and a Friday evening ace like Hughes can be an amazing addition to the Brewers pitching improvement program. He’s a giant man with a giant fastball and a wipeout slider to go together with nice management of the strike zone.
Baseball Prospect Journal – Chase DeLauter, OF, James Madison
DeLauter’s season ended early attributable to an damage. When wholesome, DeLauter is a 6-foot-4 and 235-pound outfielder with five-tool potential. He has a simple left-handed swing and hits for common and energy. Scouts mission him as an above-average hitter with above-average energy in professional ball.
DeLauter has some small college questions and struggled in opposition to greater degree competitors this spring. He was thought to be a Prime 10 expertise earlier within the yr however has been dropping down boards significantly because the season has gone on and might be accessible nonetheless on the twenty seventh choose.
Bleacher Report – Blade Tidwell, RHP, Tennessee
Tidwell missed the primary six weeks of the 2021 season with shoulder soreness, becoming a member of a protracted checklist of top-tier faculty arms who handled damage points this spring. With a fastball that touches 99 mph and a 60-grade slider, his pure stuff stacks as much as any pitcher’s within the class, and the Brewers have performed an amazing job creating high-octane arms lately.
The distinction between Tidwell and the opposite prime tier faculty arms with accidents this spring is that Tidwell got here again from his this season and carried out nicely down the stretch whereas others had important sufficient accidents to overlook the entire season. Tidwell additionally would seemingly thrive within the Brewers pitching improvement system.
Baseball America – Cooper Hjerpe, LHP, Oregon State
A knowledge-oriented pitcher like Hjerpe simply makes an excessive amount of sense with a staff just like the Brewers to not make this connection. At this level on the board there are gamers from each demographic who might make sense, although we have now principally tagged them with faculty gamers this spring.
There’s so much to love with Hjerpe and if he’s on the board for Milwaukee, he makes numerous sense, as BA factors out.
Clearly there isn’t a lot consensus as to who the Brewers will choose at 27 total. With choosing so late within the first spherical, so many gamers might go off the board by then that it’s unattainable to actually know who will probably be accessible for them. Nevertheless, most of those mocks point out that Brewers are seemingly to return to the faculty ranks for the primary spherical and there are some frequent names that come up as choices.
We’re per week away from the primary evening of the MLB Draft, and the one factor that’s clear about who the Brewers will choose is that it’s fully up within the air.
Milwaukee, WI
4 people have died from cold weather this winter in Milwaukee County, more below-zero temps on the way
Four people have died from cold-related causes in the last three months in Milwaukee County, according to the medical examiner’s office, as homeless shelters and others brace for a weekend of brutal below-zero temperatures.
Temperatures are expected to be between 15 to 25 below zero with windchill from Sunday to Wednesday, raising concerns for advocates for people without housing and those who must find ways to stay warm.
“People go wherever they can to stay warm,” said Darlene Roots, who has lived in a tent in an encampment near King Park for roughly the last year, after being evicted from her apartment.
Roots has a homeless shelter to stay at during the upcoming cold, beginning at 7 p.m., but must be elsewhere in the afternoon, she said. During that time, she’ll find ways to stay warm back at her tent.
Roots intends to use hand warmers, blankets and potentially burn hand sanitizer to keep warm, she said.
The Milwaukee County Medical Examiner’s Office said four people have died from hypothermia or complications from hypothermia so far this winter.
An 82-year-old man was found dead in his home by police with temperatures between 26 to 50 degrees in late November. The home’s thermostat and many light switches were not working, according to medical examiner reports.
Three others, who were all homeless, died in December, including a 69-year-old found dead outdoors in a chair behind a business on Dec. 2, when temperatures ranged between 14 to 32 degrees.
Eleven days later, a 64-year-old woman was found outside on a sidewalk unresponsive and later died at the hospital. Temperatures ranged between 4 to 32 degrees that day, according to National Weather Service records.
That same day, a Milwaukee firefighter found a 56-year-old man dead in a vacant house.
“It’s a profound grief, especially under circumstances like that,” said Pat Vanderburgh, president at Milwaukee Rescue Mission, a homeless shelter. “First thought that people have is, ‘That didn’t have to happen.’”
The Milwaukee Rescue Mission operates an overflow shelter for men and another for single women or single women with children.
“If we’re at capacity, we will try to make room,” Vanderburgh said.
As the executive director of the homelessness organization Repairers of the Breach, James West has seen the daily struggles of people who experience homelessness: cold weather, limited shelter resources, among others.
Although there are resources for people experiencing homelessness, West said there should always be improvements, and community support is essential.
“It’s horrible,” he said of people dying in the cold. “The only way we can continue to do this is if the community decides to take care of the community.”
The Milwaukee Health Department advises people looking for shelter to call 211 or visit the website www.impactinc.org/impact-211/.
Where are the warming shelters in Milwaukee?
Here’s where you can find the warming centers in Milwaukee. Note that some centers are only open to certain groups, such as single men or single women.
- Guest House of Milwaukee, at 1216 N. 13th St. Open to single men.
- Unity Lutheran Church, at 1025 E. Oklahoma Ave. Open to singles and families.
- Tippecanoe Church, at 125 W. Saveland Ave. Does not accept walk-ins.
- Repairers of the Breach, at 1335 W. Vliet St. Open to singles.
- Milwaukee Rescue Mission Joy House, at 830 N. 19th St. Open to single woman and families.
- Milwaukee Rescue Mission Safe Harbor, at 830 N. 19th St. Open to single men after 10 p.m
- St. Benedict the Moor Parish, at 930 W. State St. Open to singles.
Eva Wen is a reporter at the Journal Sentinel. She can be reached at qwen@gannett.com
David Clarey is a public safety reporter at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. He can be reached at dclarey@gannett.com.
Milwaukee, WI
Milwaukee mayor nominates civic group leader to city’s police and fire oversight board
Milwaukee’s mayor nominated a leader of the city’s oldest civic group to the citizen oversight board for the police and fire departments this week.
Mayor Cavalier Johnson nominated Krissie Fung to the city’s Fire and Police Commission on Wednesday, a press release announced. Fung, the associate director of the civic organization the Milwaukee Turners, would fill the last open seat on the nine-person committee.
“I’m honored by the nomination and looking forward to getting to work, if confirmed,” Fung said on Friday.
Fung’s appointment, which would fill an opening left by Fred Crouther, requires Milwaukee Common Council approval.
Fung is also a board member of the Japanese American Citizen League of Wisconsin and has worked as an election inspector in Waukesha, New Berlin and Milwaukee, according to the release. Fung’s work with the Turner’s has involved the Zero Youth Corrections, a program that funds groups working on advocacy and policy issues that prevent the impact of the criminal and legal system on young people.
Before the common council’s decision, the city is holding a community meeting for the public to offer input on Fung’s nomination.
Residents interested in providing input can attend a Jan. 28 community meeting at Mitchell Street Library, 906 W. Historic Mitchell St., from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Virtual attendance is available as well, along with the option to email questions to fpc@milwaukee.gov.
The Fire and Police Commission is one of the oldest police oversight boards in the country and handles things like recruitment for the two departments and employee discipline appeals hearings. However, in 2023 its power to develop policies for the departments was stripped due to a state funding law, Wisconsin Act 12.
David Clarey is a public safety reporter at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. He can be reached at dclarey@gannett.com.
Milwaukee, WI
Longtime Brewers Announcer Bob Uecker Dies At Age 90
Summertime in Milwaukee will never be the same.
For the last 54 years, Bob Uecker’s voice let Milwaukeeans know that another long, cold winter had come to an end, that spring had finally arrived and with it, Milwaukee Brewers baseball and another summer of sunshine and warmer weather.
Uecker provided the soundtrack for those months, bringing Brewers games to fans as they made their way to summer cottages, enjoyed days on the lake or just relaxing in their own backyards.
This summer, though, will be different after Uecker passed away Thursday at the age of 90, following a brief and private battle with cancer.
“He’s really the heart of Milwaukee baseball,” Brewers owner Mark Attanasio said.
That might be an understatement because in many ways, Uecker epitomizes Milwaukee baseball.
Long before he called his first Brewers came in 1971, the Milwaukee native was a standout prep baseball player for Boys Tech High School. After graduating in 1956, he became the first local player signed by the hometown Milwaukee Braves, who brought him to the big leagues in 1961.
Uecker would spend six seasons in the majors and was part of a St. Louis Cardinals team that won the World Series in 1964. After closing out the 1967 season in Atlanta, where the Braves moved following the 1965 season, Uecker retired and started his broadcast career with WSB-TV.
Milwaukee, though, was always home and Uecker return to the city where he became a scout for the fledgling Brewers franchise, which Bud Selig had brought to town after a one-year run as an expansion team in Seattle.
While scouting wasn’t Uecker’s forte, Selig knew where his friend would shine and sent him up to the broadcast booth where he joined Merle Harmon and Tom Collins, a spot he’d never relinquish.
Along the way, Uecker’s natural gift for entertaining and comedy led to more than 100 appearances on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, who gave Uecker the nickname “Mr. Baseball,” syndicated shows like “Bob Uecker’s Wacky World of Sports,” a starring role in the ABC sitcom “Mr. Belvedere” and starring roles in classic films like “Major League.”
Oh, and enshrinement in baseball’s Hall of Fame.
But no matter where Uecker’s fame led him, he never strayed too far from his hometown and never considered giving up his “real job” with the Brewers, so much so that up until recently, he never worked under a contract.
“Every year we asked,” said president of business operations Rick Schlesinger. “And every year he said, ‘No, a handshake is good enough for me.’”
Uecker called some of the franchise’s greatest moments, including it’s first — and to this date, only — trip to the World Series in 1982 but was also behind the mic during a lot of forgettable years, during which his humor kept fans tuning in every night.
When the franchise’s fortunes started to turn for the better, Uecker was still there helping teach a new generation of players what it meant to play in Milwaukee and brining their successes to a new generation of fans.
“He had the unique ability to relate to all of us,” former Brewers outfielder Ryan Braun said. “He’d lived the game through our eyes. He understood how challenging a season could be at different times. And so to be able to go to him just to talk about life more so than baseball, was something that I think we all looked forward to. The season can get challenging. It can feel stressful at times. I think he was just a source of consistency and calm for all of us, and we valued his opinion, right? He just always had a unique ability to say the right thing, to give good advice, to make you laugh, to not take things as seriously and to just bring joy to our lives.”
The Brewers never made it back to the World Series before Uecker passed away and it will be somewhat bittersweet if they get there without him making the call, but time marches on and as different as it will be, so will the Brewers, who are planning ways to honor their franchise icon this season.
“Bob Uecker is not replaceable,” Attanasio said. “He was a true man of the people, without saying he was a man of people.”
-
Technology1 week ago
Meta is highlighting a splintering global approach to online speech
-
Science6 days ago
Metro will offer free rides in L.A. through Sunday due to fires
-
Technology1 week ago
Las Vegas police release ChatGPT logs from the suspect in the Cybertruck explosion
-
News1 week ago
Photos: Pacific Palisades Wildfire Engulfs Homes in an L.A. Neighborhood
-
Education1 week ago
Four Fraternity Members Charged After a Pledge Is Set on Fire
-
Politics1 week ago
Trump trolls Canada again, shares map with country as part of US: 'Oh Canada!'
-
Technology6 days ago
Amazon Prime will shut down its clothing try-on program
-
News1 week ago
Mapping the Damage From the Palisades Fire