The Milwaukee Brewers signed outfield prospect Luis Lara to a seven-year contract extension worth $24 million before he has played a single major league game. The deal includes a club option for an eighth year. Lara, 20, spent last season at Double-A Biloxi, hitting .271 with 15 home runs across 119 games.
Milwaukee acquired Lara from Minnesota in January 2024 for cash considerations—the baseball equivalent of a Venmo request. The Twins had signed him out of the Dominican Republic in 2021 for a $100,000 bonus. Brewers president of baseball operations Matt Arnold is now paying 240 times that amount to eliminate risk on a player who has never faced major league pitching. The contract structure resembles the Julio Rodríguez and Spencer Torkelson extensions: buy out arbitration, bet on upside, keep payroll predictable through 2031.
The move matters because it exposes how Milwaukee is using its farm system as a substitute for payroll. The Brewers rank 28th in Opening Day payroll at $110 million. They traded Corbin Burnes to Baltimore last February rather than pay him through arbitration. They non-tendered closer Devin Williams rather than risk a $8 million arbitration award. Now they are locking up a Double-A outfielder with a combined $42 million committed to Lara and shortstop Jackson Chourio, another pre-debut extension signed in December 2023. The franchise is converting draft capital and international scouting into controlled assets at below-market rates, then flipping veterans before arbitration clocks become expensive. It works if the prospects hit. If they do not, Milwaukee has a $24 million sunk cost and a hole in right field.
The structure also signals where MLB labor economics are heading. Teams are identifying players with high ceilings and low floors—Lara struck out 140 times last season and has questions about pitch recognition—and offering life-changing money before those players have leverage. For a 20-year-old from the Dominican Republic, $24 million guaranteed is generational wealth. For the Brewers, it is the cost of two relievers in free agency. The delta is the edge. Milwaukee avoids paying Lara $8 million per year in arbitration if he turns into a 4-WAR outfielder. Lara avoids becoming Keston Hiura, who flamed out before reaching arbitration and is now playing in Korea.
Sponsors watching the Brewers should note the franchise is doubling down on a development model that keeps payroll low and content creation opportunities narrow. Big contracts attract big endorsements. Lara is not getting local billboard money until he proves he can hit major league breaking balls. Family offices considering minority stakes in small-market clubs should study this approach—Milwaukee is manufacturing surplus value on rookie deals, which means ownership extracts profit without investing in free agents. That is attractive if you want cash flow. It is less attractive if you want a Shohei Ohtani autograph session at your corporate hospitality tent.
Lara is expected to start the 2025 season at Triple-A Nashville. Milwaukee's outfield currently features Jackson Chourio, Sal Frelick, and Christian Yelich. Yelich is owed $26 million per season through 2028 with a 2029 option. If Lara forces his way to the majors by June, Milwaukee will have an arbitration-free outfield earning a combined $35 million in 2026—roughly what the Yankees will pay Aaron Judge that year alone. The Brewers have also extended pitching prospect Jacob Misiorowski, another pre-debut deal signed this winter. The pattern is now a system.
The eighth-year club option vests if Lara reaches specific plate appearance thresholds in year seven. That option year would cover his age-27 season, traditionally the peak earning window in arbitration. Milwaukee is buying certainty. Lara is selling risk. The market will decide in Nashville whether Arnold bought early or just bought trouble.