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by J.R.
Corey Kluber: Cy Young Award winner and role model for any pitcher who feels frustrated and forgotten -- Terry Pluto
on November 12, 2014 at 10:18 PM, updated November 12, 2014 at 10:19 PM
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- If you have a drop of underdog blood running through your veins, you should be happy for the Cleveland Indians' Corey Kluber.
Kluber edged Seattle's Felix Hernandez for the Cy Young Award. Hernandez had an excellent season, 15-6 with a 2.14 ERA. Baseball has become a swamp of stats, from basic to advanced to obscure to utterly irrelevant.
Had Hernandez won the voting, it would not have been an outrageous injustice.
I love how Kluber said, "I would've been in no position to have any kind of argument if he would've won. He had such a great year."
He meant every word. Kluber takes his pitching very seriously, but not the fame that is a part of the game. He didn't even make the All-Star team in 2014 despite a solid 9-6 record with a 3.01 ERA.
He never complained. That's part of the reason he has emerged as the American League's best pitcher at the age of 28. He never, ever takes anything for granted -- nor does he expect much public attention.
He knows the game is hard. He knows as much about failure as success. He knows that a pitcher has to keep learning, keep working -- and most of all, keep his mind on what happens on the mound in order stay in the big leagues.
"I know it's harder to stay in the big leagues than it is to just get here," Kluber told me when spring training opened in 2014.
He meant every word.
THE VOTING
There were 30 members of the Baseball Writers Association of America who voted on the Cy Young Award. There were 17 with Kluber rated No. 1, 13 had Hernandez.
Good for them, especially the 17 who looked closely at Kluber's 18-9 record and 2.44 ERA for the worst defensive team in baseball. They knew that all of those victories were earned, and several of the losses were not his fault.
They saw past the hype around the pitcher with the nickname of King Felix ... and beyond the seven-year, $175 million contract that Hernandez signed in 2013.
They voted for a guy in only his second full big league season, a pitcher whose career record was 13-10 with a 4.32 ERA when he took the mound for his first start of 2014.
Does anyone remember what happened on that day in Oakland? It was April 2, and Kluber was shelled for five earned runs and eight hits in 3 1/3 innings. That's how his season began.
And it ended with Kluber winning his last five starts -- a 5-0 record with a 1.12 ERA, 54 strikeouts with only five walks in 40 1/3 innings. Those starts came with the Tribe desperately trying to grab a wild-card playoff berth. So he was at his best when it meant the most.
THE LITTLE BIG DEAL
When the Indians traded for Kluber on July 31, 2010, it was one of those summer deadline deals. The Indians were limping to a 69-93 finish in the final season of manager Eric Wedge. They traded Jake Westbrook to the Cardinals, in what mostly appeared to be a salary dump. It was a three-way deal, Kluber coming to Cleveland via San Diego.
At the time, Kluber was 24 years old. He had a 6-6 record with a 3.45 ERA at Class AA San Antonio. The Tribe scouts liked the fact that he was leading the Texas League in strikeouts.
San Diego made Kluber the 134th pick in the 2007 draft. He was pitching for Stetson University. In a long story near the end of the season, I wrote about how scouts were very lukewarm about Kluber. Many thought he'd be a bullpen guy, or perhaps a fifth starter.
Kluber never, ever takes anything for granted.
Hey, in 2011, he was 7-11 with a 5.56 ERA for the Tribe's Class AAA Columbus team.
So no one saw this coming. At that point, he had to feel frustrated and a bit forgotten. Would he ever figure it out and make the majors?
His career minor league record? Try 44-50, a 4.42 ERA. Even in 2012, he was 11-7 with a 3.59 ERA at Columbus, 2-5 with a 5.14 ERA for the Tribe.
When the 2013 season opened, Kluber was in the minors -- again. But he received a quick promotion when Brett Myers had a bad elbow, and the Tribe was looking for another starter.
THE CURVEBALL
So what happened?
In 2013, Kluber began to listen to Mickey Callaway, the pitching coach who preached the gospel of Strike One. Callaway talked about walks as being the root of evil for pitchers with flaming fastballs such as Kluber. He also convinced the right-hander that his curveball was more than a pretty good second pitch.
His curveball was big time. His curveball was a killer, especially to right-handed hitters. His curveball could make Kluber special.
On the MLB awards show, there was a stat showing that opposing batters had a .095 batting average against Kluber's curve. That was in more than 200 plate appearances.
Kluber just stopped walking people. And he kept striking out people ... more and more hitters. Only two pitchers in Tribe history -- Bob Feller and Sam McDowell -- had more than the 269 strikeouts in a season that Kluber piled up in 2014.
On the mound, Kluber seems to glare at the world with a face that looked chiseled in stone, a beard that hides any emotion. His voice often in a monotone, as if he doesn't want anyone to know what he is feeling.
That led to the nickname, "Klubot." I never liked that very much. It implies that Kluber is a machine, a robot.
At the age of 28, Kluber is pure flesh and blood who needed four shots at the Majors before finally sticking. He's a determined man who learned from rejection and losing and can tell any pitcher about the value of paying your dues at every level of the minors.
What Kluber has become is more than a Cy Young Award, he's a study in persistence -- and that may be the best compliment of all.