Tribe gets Steve Karsay again, as well as Scott Erickson (as coaches).
Steve Karsay, Scott Erickson provide big-league savvy to Tribe's minor-league coaching staff:
Winter Meetings Insider
Updated: Tuesday, December 06, 2011, 9:32 PM
"I'll be there for spring training, extended spring training and the season," said former Indians pitcher Steve Karsay, who has been hired as a minor-league pitching coach at the franchise's Arizona complex. "I'm excited because I'm starting out at the bottom and working my way through the organization."
DALLAS, Texas -- Steve Karsay pitched in every role in 11 years in the big leagues. It's one of the reasons he believes he can be a good coach and one of the reasons the Indians hired him.
Karsay, 39, was at the winter meetings Tuesday to meet with the Indians following his hiring as their Arizona Rookie League pitching coach.
"I'm really excited," said Karsay, who pitched for the Indians from 1998-2001. "I was ready to get back in the game and I wanted to do it with one of the teams I'd pitched for."
Karsay has a home in Scottsdale, Ariz., which means he's just a 40-minute drive from the Indians' training site in Goodyear, where the Arizona Rookie League Indians play.
"I'll be there for spring training, extended spring training and the season," said Karsay. "I'm excited because I'm starting out at the bottom and working my way through the organization."
The Indians hired Karsay and former 20-game winner Scott Erickson as pitching coaches. Erickson will be at Class A Carolina.
"Karsay and Scott Erickson immediately stood out to us," said farm director Ross Atkins. "Steve has had a lot of different experience from being a closer, late-inning reliever, middle reliever. He's gone through trades, free agency and playoff experience."
Winter Meetings chatter
Here’s one item you can’t do without from the winter meetings at the Anatole Hilton Hotel in Dallas:
Derrek Lee. The Indians like him, but the Pirates have offered him arbitration and he has until Wednesday to accept or reject it.
If Lee accepts, he’d be guaranteed a one-year deal with a raise over the $7.5 million he made last season. Lee, 36, opened the year with Baltimore and was traded to the Pirates. Lee fractured his wrist with the Pirates, but still managed to hit .349 (29-for-83) with five homers and 15 RBI in September.
Lee, a right-handed hitter, batted .267 (116-for-435) with 19 homers and 59 RBI overall. He hit .287 (29-for-101) with two homers and nine RBI against lefties.
If the Indians did sign Lee, they may have to create salary space. They may have to trade someone or non-tender a player. Players must be tendered contracts by Monday.
— Paul Hoynes