Brewers' Fielder not worried about deal
On the field, nothing will change with Prince Fielder. He'll play
first base, bat fourth and is still considered the key of the
Milwaukee Brewers' offense.
Off the field, Fielder says there's nothing to worry about
right now, either. He wants to stay in Milwaukee as long as he can
and there's no urgency in negotiating for a new contract.
"I came up here and I love it here, so I want to stay here as
long as possible," Fielder said Sunday at the Brewers' annual
offseason fan event. "I'm here for two more years anyway, so I'm
just trying to see what happens then and all the other stuff
hopefully will work out."
Fielder hit .299 with 46 homers and tied for the major-league
lead with 141 RBIs last season. He has a year left on an $18.5
million, two-year deal signed last season and the Brewers still
hold his rights through the 2011 season.
"The guy is a definite force now," Brewers manager Ken Macha
said. "I think his contributions are greater than the numbers that
he's put up."
After next season, Fielder could join a crowded class of
free-agent first basemen that may include St. Louis' Albert Pujols,
Philadelphia's Ryan Howard and San Diego's Adrian Gonzalez. Fielder
said he hasn't done a lot of thinking about what's in the distant
future, but realizes he'll be the youngest of that group who could
be available.
"I've never been a free agent. I'm just thinking on things
I've been told," the 25-year-old Fielder said on his priorities.
"The money's great, but in the end, if you have money and you're
not happy; say, if the team doesn't think they're going anywhere,
you have to make sure everything is order when you sign that kind
of long-term (contract)."
The slugger has had a busy offseason back home in Florida,
moving into a new house in Windermere and taking his children to
school daily. His home has a workout facility and a batting cage,
and he said he started conditioning immediately after the season
ended to keep his weight down.
"So I don't turn into an obese person, because I can," said
Fielder, who weighed 268 pounds last season.
Fielder, who is represented by Scott Boras, says his only
concern right now is playing out his first contract, even though he
realizes he'll be asked about his plans more and more as he moves
closer to free agency.
"In the end, it's my decision. But as my agent, he's going to
make sure I have the most information possible about what's going
to benefit me and my family first. That's what it's about first,"
Fielder said. "My family has to be happy and then we go from
there."
General manager Doug Melvin said he won't discuss any
negotiations because it can hinder the process, but the
organization recognizes Fielder's value.
"I don't think there's any secrets to what kind of player he
is. You just have to look at his numbers and his performance and
how he's been here in the organization the entire time," Melvin
said. "(He) grew up here, developed here, came on the scene quick."
Melvin said he had no specific time to discuss Fielder's
future with Boras.
"It'll all be done behind closed doors at a certain time and
a certain place and I don't even know where that place is and I
don't know where that time is," he said. "There's really not a
story to it from my standpoint."
In the meantime, Fielder will be right back where he's
comfortable this season - hitting cleanup for the Brewers, who
scored the third-most runs in the NL last season. After making the
postseason in 2008 and fading to 80-82 last season, Fielder has a
simple goal for this year's club.
"My thing is just to get better," he said. "Worry about our
division first, worry about our own stuff first. When your team is
crisp, taking care of their business, then all that other stuff
falls into place."