Milwaukee Brewers Reportedly Considering Signing Third Baseman Josh Donaldson

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The Milwaukee Brewers are considering signing free agent third baseman Josh Donaldson, according to a report from The Athletic's Ken Rosenthal on Thursday.
The New York Yankees released Donaldson on Tuesday. Donaldson was in the final season of the four-year, $92 million contract he signed with the Minnesota Twins in 2020.
Donaldson, now 37 years old, hit .142 with a .649 OPS and -0.1 WAR in 33 games with the Yankees this season. He had been on the injured list with a calf strain since July 16, but was gearing up for a rehab stint in the minors before New York cut him loose.
Brewers considering free-agent 3B Josh Donaldson, sources tell me and @WillSammon. Team would only owe Donaldson pro-rated share of minimum salary. Third baseman Andruw Monasterio has regressed in August, with a .590 OPS for the month.
— Ken Rosenthal (@Ken_Rosenthal) August 31, 2023
The Brewers are clinging onto a 3.0 game lead atop the NL Central with a month left in the season, looking to clinch their fifth postseason berth in six years.
Veteran third baseman Brian Anderson already lost his starting job to 26-year-old rookie Andruw Monasterio coming out of the All-Star break, but Monasterio is batting .200 with a .560 OPS since Aug. 4. Donaldson's numbers the past few seasons aren't much better, but he was one of the top batters in baseball only a few years back.
Donaldson broke out with the Oakland Athletics in 2013, then took his game to another level when he got traded to the Toronto Blue Jays in 2015. That season, Donaldson beat out Mike Trout for AL MVP.
From 2013 to 2017, Donaldson averaged 33 home runs and 98 RBI a year while posting a .282 batting average and .901 OPS.
Donaldson was traded to the Cleveland Guardians in the midst of an injury-plagued 2018 campaign, then he signed a one-year "prove it" deal with the Atlanta Braves in 2019. The third baseman spun that into a massive contract with the Twins, and he was still averaging 34 home runs and 88 RBI per 162 games while hitting .250 with an .856 OPS as he entered his mid-30s.
Once he joined the Yankees, though, his production fell off a cliff.
Even though he still recorded 25 home runs and 76 RBI across 165 games in New York, Donaldson hit .207 with a .678 OPS in pinstripes.
The Brewers already rank No. 26 in batting average, No. 25 in OPS and No. 22 in home runs, so it isn't as if Donaldson could make their offense that much worse. Milwaukee has also used five different designated hitters in the last seven games, so Donaldson could provide stability in the lineup if he is healthy.
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Sam Connon is a staff writer covering baseball for “Fastball on SI.’’ He previously covered UCLA Athletics for On SI’s All Bruins site, and is a UCLA graduate, with his work there as a sports columnist receiving awards from the College Media Association and Society of Professional Journalists. Connon also wrote for On SI’s New England Patriots site, Patriots Country, and he was on the Patriots and Boston Red Sox beats at Prime Time Sports Talk. Sam lives in Boston.
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