Before I go on, I'm going to make it perfectly, perfeclty, perfectly clear that I do not want Ryan Braun. However, if there's a team in desperate need of a rebuild, and has the assets to get the ball rolling, it's the Brewers. Braun has a .269/.344/.521/.865 with 12 HR on the year. And it's realistic to expect him to sustain that pace over the next few years. His contract gets very ugly after this year: between 2016-2020, it goes 20/20/20/19/17.) Clearly, the Brewers didn't expect him to age at a slightly less alarming rate than Walter Donovan. Nevertheless, It's not unrealistic to see a free spending AL team pick up a sizable chunk of that and offer a decent prospect package to go with it. The Yankees, Angels, Mariners, Tigers, and Jays are all fits. And in the NL, the Dodgers, Mets, and Nats could potentially take a chance on him, despite being 2-3 years away from DH-hood. Now I get why The Brewers are reluctant to go in all out fire sale mode. Big market teams can tank a few years and continue to generate revenue. But small market guys aren't always so lucky. If the fans turn away in mass, that's bad. And there's already talk of the Bucks skipping town in the near future, and that's following their best season in years. On one hand, it's easy to say that a team should not make decisions to appease meatball fans. But a baseball team is first and foremost a business, and every business must keep its customers happy. But their best course of action would be to move Braun and Gomez for some blue chip help, and agressively shop Ramirez, Lohse, Garza, K-Rod, and Lind for what they can get sooner than later.