Milwaukee Brewers
- Date:
- 1969 - present
- Headquarters:
- Milwaukee
- Areas Of Involvement:
- baseball
- Related People:
- Bud Selig
- Paul Molitor
- Rollie Fingers
News •
Milwaukee Brewers, American professional baseball team based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The Brewers play in the National League (NL), but they spent their first 29 seasons (1969–97) in the American League (AL).
The team that would become the Brewers was founded in 1969 in Seattle as the Pilots. After an inaugural season that was unsuccessful both financially and on the baseball diamond, the franchise was moved to Milwaukee (which had been home to the Braves baseball franchise from 1953 to 1965), where it took on the name of a long-standing local minor league team, the Brewers. The Brewers struggled initially, posting a losing record in each of their first eight seasons in Milwaukee.
The arrival of future Hall of Fame shortstop Robin Yount in 1974 heralded the beginning of a slow turnaround for the Brewers, which was further bolstered in 1978 by the debut of another future Hall of Famer, infielder–designated hitter Paul Molitor. The Brewers ran off three consecutive winning seasons before claiming their first division title in 1981. They won their only AL pennant the following year, advancing to the World Series, where they lost to the St. Louis Cardinals in seven games.
After their World Series appearance, the Brewers entered a period of sustained mediocrity, during which they finished no higher than third in their division for nine straight seasons. In 1992 the Brewers won 92 games and finished second to the eventual-champion Toronto Blue Jays in the AL East division, but 12 consecutive losing seasons followed. With the addition of two expansion teams in 1998, Major League Baseball asked the Brewers to switch from the AL to the NL, and Milwaukee became the first team in the 20th century to change leagues. The team began playing in a new stadium, Miller Park (later called American Family Field), in 2001.
In 2008 the Brewers—led by sluggers Prince Fielder and Ryan Braun—won 90 games and qualified for the postseason as the NL Wild Card (as owner of the best record for a team that did not win its division title), the team’s first playoff appearance since 1982. The Brewers set a new team record by winning 96 games in 2011. The team then advanced to the NL Championship Series (NLCS), where it was eliminated by the Cardinals in six games. Following the team’s appearance in the NLCS, Fielder departed via free agency, and Braun became embroiled in a steroid scandal, helping the Brewers to fall from contention until the team unexpectedly rallied to a near miss of playoff qualification in 2017.
season | record | playoffs | |
---|---|---|---|
2020 | 29–31 | lost Wild Card Series | |
2021 | 95–67 | lost NL Division Series | |
2022 | 86–76 | missed playoffs | |
2023 | 92–70 | lost Wild Card Series | |
2024 | 93–69 | lost Wild Card Series |
Milwaukee built on that momentum in 2018, winning an NL-best 96 games and advancing to the third league championship series in franchise history, where they lost in a seven-game series to the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Brewers returned to the playoffs the following year but were eliminated in the Wild Card Game. In the 2020 season, which was shortened due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the team lost the Wild Card Series. Milwaukee finished first in its division the following season, and the team advanced to the NL Division Series in the playoffs. However, it lost to the eventual champion Atlanta Braves.
The Brewers fell out of playoff contention in 2022 before recovering in 2023, when they finished first in their division. In the playoffs they lost to the Arizona Diamondbacks in the Wild Card Series. Though they lost longtime manager Craig Counsell before the season began, the Brewers repeated as winners of their division in 2024. In the postseason, the team was upset by the New York Mets in the Wild Card Series.