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Mejia has elite arm strength, but he is undersized for a catcher and his receiving and effort behind the plate have drawn increasingly negative reviews
Maybe I missed it, but first time I heard about "effort" being a problem with Mejia

Wipe those teardrops, boys. Out of sight, out of mind.

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Not sure if the video links (from the Athletic - it is subscription) will work but good article in general:

Introducing the Indians new relievers’ funky stuff

Eno Sarris 1h ago 5

The​ Indians, owners​ of the​ league’s third-best starting rotation​ ERA and the league’s​ second-worst bullpen ERA,​ just​ added two​ dominant relievers​​ in San Diego’s Brad Hand and Adam Cimber. Neither has above-average velocity, though. They do it with funk.

Maybe we’re being a little unfair to lefty Brad Hand, whose 93.8 mph average so far this year is only a half tick below the reliever average — impossibly up to 94.3 this year. That doesn’t even tell the whole story, though, since lefties traditionally average a tick less than righties.

But even if Hand is about average, velocity-wise, it’s his slider that makes the whole package go. He’s actually throwing it more often than his fastball right now, which makes sense because it’s a top five slider in the game in the past three years — just a hair more valuable than Andrew Miller’s slider. The pitches are decent comps for each other, as they both go around 10 mph slower than their fastballs, and both have similar drop.

Here’s Miller’s: https://cdn.theathletic.com/app/uploads ... er.mp4?_=1

And now Hand’s: https://cdn.theathletic.com/app/uploads ... er.mp4?_=2

Looks fairly similar. Hand has a couple of wrinkles that Miller doesn’t, though, and they’re both a little weird. For one, he has a curve that doesn’t show up on any classifications, but that he throws every once in a while.

“If I want more of a curveball action, I’ll take my slider grip and lift my index finger off the ball,” Hand told me earlier this year in San Diego, “But then my arm slot climbs, which isn’t good for tunneling. It’s not a strikeout pitch for me, it’s for called strikes.”

This might be a curve, and you can see the big hump on the pitch which would distinguish it immediately from the sinker.

https://cdn.theathletic.com/app/uploads ... ve.mp4?_=3

Hand has another mechanical quirk that’s remarkable.

“Yeah, I throw my sinker and my slider with the same grip, basically,” the reliever told me with a smile. “The only difference is the way I release the ball.”

Look at that slider above. Now look at his sinker.

https://cdn.theathletic.com/app/uploads ... er.mp4?_=4

They come from basically the same grip. And only three sinker and slider combinations in baseball have more of a difference in horizontal difference in baseball. It’s a fun list of frisbees.

Player Velo H Mov Sinker H Diff
Chaz Roe 93.40 -8.2 12.3 20.4
Sergio Romo 86.62 -10.2 9.5 19.7
Chris Sale 93.21 -11.6 8.0 19.6
Brad Hand 93.93 -9.4 9.8 19.2
Steve Cishek 91.23 -9.6 9.5 19.0
Joe Smith 88.17 -10.0 8.9 18.9
Shane Greene 95.17 -8.7 9.3 18.1
Brad Peacock 93.22 -10.1 7.8 17.9
Adam Ottavino 94.72 -7.8 9.8 17.6
Corey Kluber 92.79 -8.7 8.8 17.5
Look closely at those first two lefties on the list. Let’s zoom in there.

Sinker Whiff/Swing Slider Whiff/Swing
Chris Sale 23.6% 43.1%
Brad Hand 19.1% 41.5%
Yeehaw, how does a reliever Chris Sale sound? Or an Andrew Miller with a couple of extra pitches?

That’ll do.

Cimber’s funk is more obvious. I mean look at this dude.

https://cdn.theathletic.com/app/uploads ... er.mp4?_=5

He’s been throwing this way since he was 14, but recently a couple of tweaks allowed him to make the most of his stuff. For one, there’s that strange pigeon-toed setup he uses.

“When I realized I was going to relieve, I wanted to slide step every time, but in order to get that torque I used to get from my windup, I started to set up this way,” Cimber told me in San Diego this year.” This way I don’t get too far over my front foot, too.”

The extension a submariner gets on a pitch is incredibly important. Think about the physics of throwing from down there and you’ll realize that if you release the ball too far along in your delivery, you risk yanking it straight up instead of straight down. Toggling that extension has helped Cimber do something he needed to do in order to get lefties out.

“Last year I really started working on both sides of plate for the first time, especially with the slider,” Cimber said. “Depending on the finish, I can change the break a bit too. If I get up through it a little bit, it goes up, but if I stay with it, it’ll break down. If I throw it up in the zone, it’ll break up a little bit.”

So now Cimber can throw the backfoot slider to lefties down and in:

https://cdn.theathletic.com/app/uploads ... er.mp4?_=6

And also throw what looks like a rising fastball up and in:

https://cdn.theathletic.com/app/uploads ... es.mp4?_=7

That has given him three distinct zones for his fastball to lefties.
Image
This is basically the same path to success that Darren O’Day took. You know, the submariner with a rising fastball and a top 15 ERA since 2012. And, like O’Day, Cimber has watched video of the GOAT submariner, Byung-Hun Kim, who showed his ilk that it was possible to throw rising fastballs high in the zone from their slot.

So, Indians fans, it might look like you ‘just’ got a couple of funky relievers. But once you realize who those two relievers pitch like — a new Darren O’Day and another Andrew Miller with a few wrinkles, if not the same velocity — you might see how exciting this acquisition was for this team right now, and also the next three years.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

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What led to the Indians’ decision to deal their top prospect for an All-Star reliever


By Zack Meisel Jul 19, 2018 30
The​ Indians never​ believed​ their window was going​ to shut at​ the​ end​ of the​ 2018​ season.​​ With the rotation intact and Francisco Lindor and José Ramírez under control, the front office had visions of World Series contention for at least another couple of years.

They knew the task would grow in difficulty, though. With Andrew Miller and Cody Allen headed for free agency this winter, the already-turbulent bullpen was headed for a crash landing.

So, the Indians swung a deal that preserves their World Series contender status this year and keeps them at that level for the foreseeable future. Trading away a top prospect is always difficult to swallow, but Brad Hand is under team control through 2021. Adam Cimber can’t sniff free agency until after the 2023 season.

The Indians have maintained interest in Hand since last summer. They inquired about Cimber during spring training, too. The two teams re-engaged in trade talks last month, following the amateur draft.

How did the Indians arrive at this point? A few things happened…

1. The 2018 Bullpen Project didn’t pan out as the team had hoped

Zach McAllister, Dan Otero and Tyler Olson were handed the keys to the Mercedes. They promptly swerved into a ditch. Nick Goody has been sidelined by an injury for much of the season. These four were supposed to replace Bryan Shaw and Joe Smith. The front office’s confidence in the quartet kept the team from pursuing free-agent relievers over the winter, aside from a few veterans inked to minor-league deals.

2. Yan Gomes’ reawakening made Francisco Mejía somewhat expendable

The Indians weren’t desperate to trade Mejía, but they knew he would fetch them the most talent on the trade market. Gomes’ emergence at the plate — he’s been about league-average offensively, which is far better than league-average among catchers — blocked Mejía’s optimal path to the majors. The Indians weren’t sold on Mejîa defensively in the outfield — and they claimed that Mejîa wasn’t sold on the position shift, either. But the club values defense too much to scrap the Gomes/Roberto Pérez tandem, and Pérez has served as Trevor Bauer’s personal catcher. Bauer is enjoying a career year. The Indians didn’t want to mess with that mojo.

3. The Indians aren’t in the business of signing aging relievers to long-term contracts

Look, if the price tag on Miller or Allen somehow falls into a reasonable range, perhaps the Indians would be interested. But odds have been all along that both hurlers will pitch elsewhere in 2019. So, who was going to be the team’s go-to reliever next year? Danny Salazar? Cody Anderson? Neil Ramírez? There’s a reason the Indians targeted long-term options in their bullpen before anything else.

4. Jonathan Lucroy’s veto heard ‘round the Midwest

Two years ago, the Indians and Brewers had a deal in place that would have landed Lucroy in an Indians uniform and Mejía and three other prospects in Milwaukee’s organization. Lucroy ultimately exercised his right to veto the trade. Had he accepted it, he still could’ve become a free agent last winter, and the Indians’ prospect cupboard might have been too bare to pull off this sort of move.

So, what does this all mean?

Hand’s tale is fascinating, an example of how challenging it is to predict a reliever’s path. The Padres claimed him off waivers from the Marlins in April 2016 — you know, the sort of thing the Indians have excelled at in recent years (Scott Atchison, Jeff Manship, Otero, Neil Ramírez, Oliver Pérez). He signed a three-year extension with San Diego that has him under control through 2021.

2018: $4.1 million
2019: $7.1 million
2020: $7.6 million
2021: $10 million team option or $1 million buyout

Hand, a lefty, has been an All-Star each of the past two seasons. In 2 1/2 years with the Padres, he posted a 2.66 ERA, a 3.07 FIP and 11.9 strikeouts per nine innings. He has tallied 65 strikeouts in 44 1/3 innings this season.

Cimber is a rookie, so the Indians control him through at least 2023. He owns a 3.17 ERA and a 2.32 FIP this season, with 51 strikeouts in 48 1/3 innings.

“We know we have some guys in our bullpen who are approaching the end of their contracts,” Chris Antonetti said, “and we are going to have to remake our bullpen in some fashion for 2019. And this trade gives us two really good options for our bullpen moving forward.”

Hand/Miller/Allen becomes the Indians’ three-headed monster at the back end, with Cimber, Ramírez and Pérez bridging the gap. That’s suddenly a deep, talented group, and Terry Francona can match lefties and righties as much as he prefers.

That’s plenty of ammo for the postseason, especially when including some member(s) of what will be a shortened rotation, whether it’s Shane Bieber or Mike Clevinger or Carlos Carrasco, or some combination.

By only parting with Mejía, the Indians still have assets they can dangle to address the outfield, a position in dire need of some reinforcements.

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Baseball America -- a very neutral source -- was concerned with Mejia's dedication during the second half of 2017. I am certain he'll be a very very good hitter but defense really is primary for a catcher and that may not be his eventual position. I know Perez is hitting nothing this season but he still does walk, hit some long balls and has recovered from long miserable stretches before; I think he is OK as the backup. Eric Haase has resumed hitting in Columbus after a long dry stretch; he's also getting more work behind the plate than in past year behind Mejia so they can [have?] already evaluated his defense. Another good catch/no hit option to backup Gomes is Logan Ice who's in Akron. In the very long run they have Naylor this year's first round pick in Arizona although he's another hit first catcher who may wind up at 3rd or the OF.

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Certainly possible that Mejia knew his way was blocked in the short term by the Indians catchers (ask J. Lucroy) and was frustrated.

Fortunately he picked it up this season and (re-)raised his value enough to get shipped out. Win/win situation. He gets his shot to catch with SD at some point.

PS - ironically Austin Hedges, the SD catcher, is considered a very good defensive backstop however I don't think he is nearly the roadblock Gomes is. He has power but makes Joey Gallo look like a contact hitter.

Besides - the Indians are a contender and really their #1 asset is their starting pitching. Understandably they don't want to mess with what is working there.

Bottom line is that Brad Hand is elite. And to pick up a Joe Smith-ish setup guy too is a great bonus.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

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Bowden: Grading the Brad Hand trade for the Padres and Indians


By Jim Bowden Jul 20, 2018 37

The​ Cleveland Indians​ and San​ Diego Padres made a significant​ trade on Thursday​ that saw the​ Padres​ deal relievers​ Brad Hand​​ and Adam Cimber to the Cleveland Indians in exchange for one of the game’s best catching prospects, Francisco Mejia.

The Indians’ window to win a championship might be limited to just this year and next, but they weren’t going to win in October if they didn’t shore up their bullpen. They did that with one singular transaction. The old baseball cliché “they mortgaged the future” will be debated here; I’m in the camp that they did just that —and I’m okay with it.

This was the prototypical deadline deal where the contender trades away a top prospect and, in return, gets a package that can help them win right now. This is a deal that the Indians should win over the next two to three years, but the Padres eventually will be the winners come 2020 or 2021 and beyond.

Here are my initial grades on how both teams did in the trade:

CLEVELAND INDIANS: B+
The Indians already had a strong duo of relievers in the back end of their bullpen, led by set-up reliever Andrew Miller and closer Cody Allen. However, Miller has been nursing a knee injury which has limited him to just 14 innings pitched with 10 walks and an inflated 4.40 ERA. The good news is he’s expected to be back and healthy in the next two weeks. Meanwhile, closer Cody Allen has converted an impressive 20 of 21 save opportunities, but has done it with a career-high ERA of 4.66.

And that’s actually the good news about the Indians bullpen. The rest of the relief corps has been a disaster all year, as Zack McAlister and Dan Otero have ERAs close to 6.00, Tyler Olsen’s ERA is 7.50, and Josh Tomlin’s is 6.98.

The Indians had to address the bullpen — not to win the American League Central, which they were going to do even without making any moves, but to improve their chances of advancing in October. Those chances were looking very slim against the league’s elite teams like the Boston Red Sox, Houston Astros and New York Yankees, all of which had much stronger bullpen depth and talent. This trade helps the Indians even the playing field.

Brad Hand comes over with the ability to be used in many different ways: pitching multiple innings, being a lefty specialist, setting up the back end and even closing games. Hand, still just 28 and in his prime years, had 24 saves with the Padres with a 3.05 ERA, 3.17 FIP and 1.083 WHIP with 65 strikeouts in only 44.1 innings pitched. Lefties are hitting just .184 against him, which will be important in the playoffs. Also, the Indians will control him through the 2021 season at a club-friendly contract, which is the main reason they were willing to give up their top position player prospect in Francisco Mejia to make this deal.

The Indians did a good job of holding out and getting a second reliever in the trade, securing Adam Cimber in the transaction. Cimber, 27, is having an impressive rookie season thanks to his side-arm angle and his deception, which has resulted in a career-best 9.5 strikeouts per 9 innings with a 3.17 ERA and 1.076 WHIP. Cimber brings a much different look to the Tribe bullpen, another factor in why the Indians targeted him as the second player in the deal.

The key to this trade for the Tribe is that both Miller and Allen are free agents at the end of this season, and the front office is not optimistic they’ll be able to bring either one of them back. With the price of relievers skyrocketing over the last two years, being able to acquire two bullpen arms in their late twenties at club-friendly salary levels will significantly improve their chances of winning not just this year, but next year as well.

The Indians didn’t have enough elite prospects at the top of their farm system to be able to keep Mejia from being the centerpiece in the deal going the other way. In the short term, the Indians did the right thing; however, in five years it’s very possible that they’ll be looking back regretting it. Of course, if the deal leads to a World Championship this year or next, no one will care, and they shouldn’t. Trades are made with the intent of winning championships, not winning the trades themselves, just like when the Chicago Cubs traded Gleyber Torres to the New York Yankees for Aroldis Chapman.

SAN DIEGO PADRES: A
Padres General Manager A.J. Preller made yet another of his signature trades, which are all about trading proven veteran players for quality prospects, rather than centering quantity of prospects as the return. This formula has worked well for him and the Padres so far, highlighted by his June 2016 trade of James Shields to the Chicago White Sox, in which he got back top prospect Fernando Tatis Jr. Tatis has a chance to be a perennial All-Star with both silver slugger and MVP Award potential. That trade has a chance to go down as his very best, but this one might give it some competition in time.

In my opinion Mejia, 22, is the best offensive catching prospect in baseball. I’ve seen a lot of him over the past several years and am convinced that he will eventually develop into the type catcher that can slash .300/.370/.500 with 15-20 home run power. Defensively he has a gun for an arm and his ability to block balls, frame pitches and call a game have been improving every year since he entered professional ball back in 2013 as a 17-year-old.

The Padres are making the right call by leaving him at catcher and letting him develop more in the minor leagues. I think at the very least he’ll develop into an average defensive catcher; some scouts are convinced he will end up being above-average when fully developed.

Some people around the game are critical that the Padres didn’t get a second player back in the trade. I wholeheartedly disagree. To be able to get another elite prospect for two relievers is a no-brainer, especially a prospect with the relatively low risk of Mejia. When I was the GM of the Cincinnati Reds, I seemed to always trade my relievers in their prime for position players, and was never afraid to make the deal for one quality prospect rather than a package of quantity prospects. Examples were my trade of Dave Burba to the Indians for Sean Casey; Jeff Shaw to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Paul Konerko; and Jeff Brantley for Dmitri Young. All three position players became All-Stars. There is no doubt in my mind that Preller’s strategy on how to build the Padres into a contender is on the right track. The fact that San Diego has ten of the top 100 prospects in baseball, according to MLB Pipeline, is impressive, and is the right formula for a bright future.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

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BA Midseason report; I'll put most of it in Minor Matters but here's the lead:

The Indians came into the 2018 season as heavy favorites in the American League Central and at the All-Star break they held a 7.5 game lead in the division.. That doesn’t mean it’s been a smooth first half in Cleveland, however. The Indians’ 52 wins at the break were the fewest of any division leader, and their massive lead in the Central owes much to no other team in the division being above .500.

The Indians have gotten impressive offensive production from shortstop Francisco Lindor and third baseman Jose Ramirez, who both ranked in the top three in the AL in home runs at the break. Cleveland’s rotation has again been strong, anchored by Trevor Bauer, Mike Clevinger and Corey Kluber. Rookie Shane Bieber has joined the rotation and impressed in his debut and closer Cody Allen remains consistent at the back of the bullpen.

Aside from Allen, however, the Indians bullpen has been its biggest weakness. Lefthander Andrew Miller has been limited by injury and Cleveland has struggled to find a consistent combination in the bullpen. To that end, the Indians sacrificed No. 1 prospect Francisco Mejia to San Diego in exchange for All-Star closer Brad Hand and rookie reliever Adam Cimber. While a bitter pill to swallow, the Indians badly needed help for a relief corps that ranked 29th in MLB with a 5.29 ERA.

The Indians’ system is still deep in the middle of the infield and they still could tap into that depth for more veteran help to strengthen the team for another playoff run.

With Hand and Cimber now in tow, Cleveland enters the second half in a strong spot. If Chris Antonetti and Mike Chernoff can find a way to further strengthen the club for the stretch run, the Indians should again be well positioned for October baseball

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Let’s talk about the Cleveland Indians’ outfield

Zack Meisel 1h ago 1

A study​ conducted by​ the International​ Journal of Science or​ Something revealed that​ it is, in​ fact,​ possible to​ discuss the​​ state of the Indians’ outfield without making that face that looks like you just removed the lid on a carton of months-old milk.

The outfield is the Indians’ primary concern as the non-waiver trade deadline lurks. They can address the situation in a few different ways, which is helpful, since the outfield trade market isn’t exactly flush with attractive options.

First, let’s assess the current crop in Cleveland.

Left field
WAR: 1.8 (17th among the league’s 30 teams)
wRC+: 108 (13th)

Center field
WAR: 0.6 (22nd)
wRC+: 63 (29th)

Right field
WAR: 0.7 (22nd)
wRC+: 85 (22nd)

Michael Brantley patrols left field, but he’s headed for free agency this winter (and, judging by defensive metrics — minus-11 defensive runs saved and a negative zone rating — he’d probably be best suited for first base for another team that isn’t so devoid of capable outfielders). He has turned in a glowing season at the plate, but even his offensive numbers pale in comparison to his most treasured attribute this season: reliability. The guy who appeared in only 101 games the past two years has missed only five contests since he joined the team a week into the regular season.

Brantley might be worth keeping beyond this year, but he might also have a line of suitors eyeing his services.

Rajai Davis and Tyler Naquin represent the center-field tandem at the moment, with Bradley Zimmer sidelined for eight to 12 months and Greg Allen stationed at Class AAA Columbus. Zimmer’s extended absence — and the uncertainty associated with shoulder surgery — should cast even more doubt upon next year’s outfield. Naquin is more equipped for a corner outfield spot, but these are desperate times.

Melky Cabrera is the right-field-platoon-partner-du-jour for Brandon Guyer who, despite some wretched numbers against righties (.292 OPS, which seems impossible to attain), has actually produced quite well against left-handed pitching (.864 OPS). Cabrera isn’t the most nimble fielder, but he has tallied five hits in 11 at-bats (how’s that for a sample size?) since rejoining the big-league club over the weekend. Lonnie Chisenhall, on the 60-day disabled list, won’t return until September, if at all this season.

The question with Cabrera is the same one the team never really answered during his first stint with the club: How long do the Indians need to determine whether he deserves regular playing time when it matters most? He was a roster casualty in June, but later re-signed with the organization. If the team trades for an outfielder, where does that leave Cabrera?

When considering the outfield’s murky outlook for next year and beyond, an upgrade at either center or right field seems not only desirable, but absolutely necessary. A starting outfield of Guyer, Naquin and Allen won’t cut it in 2019.

There are a few routes the Indians could travel to enhance their outfield production.

Option 1: Add an infielder to the mix and shift Jason Kipnis to the outfield

Would the buzz for an Asdrubal Cabrera homecoming exceed the hype that surrounded Jim Thome’s return to Cleveland seven years ago? OK, certainly not, but what if the Indians tossed the Mets a prospect to borrow Cabrera for a few months? The teams completed a similar arrangement with Jay Bruce last summer. Cabrera, who owns an .809 OPS this season, could play second or third and offer the Indians some additional flexibility (with Kipnis booted to the outfield, of course).

Miami’s Derek Dietrich, a St. Ignatius grad, could provide similar flexibility, as he’s played first, second, third, left and right in the past few years. Oh, and he boasts a .287/.354/.463 slash line this year.

Dietrich is under team control through the 2020 season. Cabrera can test the free-agent waters this winter. Given Kipnis’ rocky season, this wouldn’t exactly rejuvenate the outfield, but the lineup would certainly be strengthened.

Option 2: Hey, you know Yandy Díaz, the guy with the Everest-sized biceps? Why not use him more?

Díaz is batting .500! With a 1.143 OPS! OK, so that’s in the 14 plate appearances he has amassed since his promotion to the major-league roster late last week. And, he could be headed for Class AAA Columbus before the game Tuesday against the Pirates, as the Indians must clear a spot for Shane Bieber.

Díaz has nothing left to prove at the plate in the minors. He can fall out of bed (directly into a position to complete 500 push-ups) and register a .400 on-base percentage. He walks a ton, strikes out infrequently and can scorch grounders and liners through the infield at will. No, he won’t hit for much power and his defense remains a question mark — though the team hasn’t exactly granted him an extended look at any singular spot.

This is really just an extension of Option 1. If the Indians wanted to experiment with Díaz in right field, they would’ve parked him there for the past five months.

There has to be a role for a guy with his offensive profile, though. Maybe it’s at third base, with José Ramírez sliding over to second and Kipnis returning to the outfield. Maybe it’s a timeshare at first with Yonder Alonso. Maybe it’s an acting gig as a flex-happy Albert Belle in a future film about the ‘90s Indians.

Option 3: This isn’t so complicated; just trade for an outfielder

The fact that next year’s outfield looks so meager should make this option the most prudent choice. There are a couple of tiers of trade candidates: rentals, non-rentals who would be a slight upgrade and non-rentals who would offer a significant boost.

Now, a player’s availability can be fluid at this time of year, and the practicality of someone being moved often depends on the offers teams submit. The Pirates might have been more inclined to move Starling Marte or Gregory Polanco before they rattled off 10 consecutive wins (and those two would be perfect fits in Cleveland, though they would require a hefty portion of the remaining talent in the Indians’ farm system).

Rentals such as Adam Jones and Curtis Granderson could be had, but they don’t really blow away the talent already at Terry Francona’s disposal. That said, they also shouldn’t cost an exorbitant amount. It’s a pretty weak market for short-term solutions.

As for longer-term options, well, that’s a different story. There are some intriguing entities in this group, such as Dietrich and Corey Dickerson. Perhaps the Indians could pry loose Adam Duvall or Leonys Martín or Randal Grichuk or Marcell Ozuna.

It would behoove the front office to complete some of its forthcoming winter homework in advance. Since the Indians only had to part with one prospect in the Brad Hand deal — granted, it was their top prospect — there remains some minor-league ammo capable of netting a skilled, controllable player.

The Indians have two months to solve their outfield equation, but they only have a week before many of their boxes must be checked. Some of these outfielders might slip through the cracks and become available in August, but the ones who fit the Indians’ ideal need — someone who can help in 2018 and beyond — likely come with a July 31 trade expiration date.

The Indians might have only one week to replace the spoiled milk in the fridge.

— Reported from Cleveland

Photo: Melky Cabrera (Frank Jansky/Getty Images)
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

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The Corey Kluber evaluations continue
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By T.J. Zuppe 2h ago 6

The​ repetitive thump​ of bass​ echoed through the Progressive​ Field speakers as​ Corey Kluber exited​ the​ dugout and​ ventured toward​​ the middle of the diamond.

“Jungle,” the popular tune from the X Ambassadors served as the usual soundtrack to Kluber’s on-field warmup, but with every toss, we inched closer to a journey into a different sort of excursion, one meant to document the hurler’s every motion.

Kluber’s bright red socks were pulled above his thighs — his first time sporting the knee-high look since early April. But what could it mean?

His first pitch, a two-seamer, entered the strike zone at 91.7 mph, a little below his season average. It was fouled off. Two pitches later, Corey Dickerson struck a well-placed grounder through the hole between short and third at 99.2 mph. Hmm, what could we make of that?

Kluber’s first pitch to Starling Marte came up and in, knocking the right-handed hitter out of his toe-hold. The right-hander stomped and kicked at his landing spot on the mound, emphatically placing the dirt in its proper position. On the next pitch, Marte clobbered a four-seamer into the waiting arms of Tyler Naquin in center for the game’s first out. Two pitches later, Gregory Polanco tapped into an inning-ending double play, neutralizing the threat, giving Kluber his first results since he received an injection in his sore right knee prior to the break.

It was at this moment a realization became abundantly clear — this is how every Kluber start will be examined for the foreseeable future.

Exhausting, but true.

Every move the righty makes will be diagnosed for deeper meaning. Every offering he tosses will be judged against all others. And while the first three hitters Monday night continued to add to the growing sample size we’re left to delicately explore, nothing about the events that followed his quiet first inning did much to silence or dismiss that reality from existence.

Granted, just three of the seven runs Kluber allowed on Monday were earned. There wasn’t much he could do about his defense failing to turn a double play or dropping a simple pop up at the mound. Either one of those plays would have ended the second inning without a single blemish.

Instead, Josh Harrison’s three-run blast over halfway up the left-field bleachers served as the opening blow in a barrage of attacks, ones partially made possible by the fielding gaffes.

“Any time you give a team five outs, you know extra outs, (you take a huge risk),” Terry Francona said. “He damn near got out of it. He got ahead, 0-2, then he hung a breaking ball.“

Still, we haven’t consistently seen the same Kluber that carried a 1.99 ERA through his first 14 starts of the season. Sure, it’s fair to wonder how a better defensive effort might have worked in his favor Monday night, but that still doesn’t completely nullify the 5.21 ERA he’s carried through his past seven outings, nor does it alleviate much of the anxiety felt over his health after the gel shot he received before the All-Star Game.

Simply, until Kluber consistently proves to be over the bothersome knee, mechanical issues or anything else currently plaguing the two-time Cy Young Award winner, the questions tied to his health and performance will continue to dominate the narrative — at least until he begins to dominate opposing hitters in the way many have come to expect.

“I thought his breaking ball was probably better,” Francona said. “I thought his fastball command was not where it usually is.”

Kluber’s pitch chart appears to agree.

Belt-high, middle-middle, that’s no way to live.
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But was that due to a sore knee? Or, did the rust that developed over the extended break between starts play a more critical role? While both possibilities would have likely led to the same destination Monday, ultimately, the latter points in a much more hopeful direction.

“(The knee) wasn’t an issue at all,” Kluber said. “Just gotta get my delivery to the point where I can make good pitches consistency. My knee was fine. Didn’t have any issues.”

For clarity, the topic was brought up a second time by reporters.

“It was fine,” he reiterated. “It hadn’t been an issue. It felt fine tonight. It felt good. I don’t think the knee is anything to worry about.”

Fair, but as we established before the break, the two issues — the knee and the mechanical flaws — appear to be linked.

Kluber’s release point had lowered because his entire delivery had slightly scrunched on his back knee, perhaps leading to some lost movement and inconsistent command. The injection and additional time between starts were provided in hopes of removing any lingering discomfort in the knee, offering a more sturdy base to make the necessary adjustments in his delivery.

But if the knee is still a bother, then the only real remedy is rest. On the flip side, if the knee is truly a non-issue — only Kluber knows the exact extent of how much it impedes his mechanics — then what the righty needs more than anything is repetition to find himself.

That’s a hell of a dichotomy.

Of course, we’re also talking about a guy that often spends time in the weight room after his starts. It’s no surprise that his preference is to get back on a regular routine, something that became interrupted by the recent 10-day stretch between outings.

“You’ve got to address the issue,” Kluber said, “figure out what it is. And then you have to kind of retrain your muscle memory so to speak to get back to where you want to be. We go out there and we do it however many times. When you get into a bad habit, sometimes you get stuck, so you have to retrain yourself to do it properly.”

And he’s absolutely sure his knee isn’t still a factor?

“Whether it’s because of my knee or my knee was because of that, I think that’s part of the stuff that got out of whack,” Kluber said. “It’s pretty blatant when you watch video that things aren’t really the same in certain spots. So it’s just a matter of, like I said, going through repetitions, dry runs to get it. It’s easy to see where you want to be, but to actually get your body to do it, that’s where you just have to work at it.

“But if I feel fine physically, I feel confident I can figure out the other stuff.”

So, repetition it is, and with that, the evaluations continue.

Each outing will serve as its own test, each with its own set of variables, including everything from his velocity and movement to his fastball command and sock placement. Every element will be delicately observed, each carrying a unique level of weight and anxiety. And those observations will continue until his recent inconsistencies been planted firmly in the rearview.

— Reported from Cleveland
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

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Of course, we’re also talking about a guy that often spends time in the weight room after his starts. It’s no surprise that his preference is to get back on a regular routine, something that became interrupted by the recent 10-day stretch between outings.

I'll tell you another thing I noticed - this is the 2nd time a rain delay happened when he pitched and it didn't go well.

It is probably nothing but I do wonder if someone so accustomed to routine gets thrown off.

Or, and also, he seemed to keep kicking the mound area doing landscaping. So the wet mound area may have distracted him.

Oh - and the botched plays may have had a TON to do with it as well.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

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Rays Major League debut: Playing the Field
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Johnny Field is not throwing away his shot.
By John Ford@kingofchapter1 Apr 12, 2018, 11:00am EDT
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Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports
Back at the end of Spring Training, the competition for the final roster spot looked as if it was coming down to either Brandon Snyder or Johnny Field. It seemed like maybe the best shot the 26 year-old Field was ever going to see to break into the big leagues. So it had to be frustrating and bittersweet for Field when at the eleventh hour, the Rays went a different route, trading for his good friend and University of Arizona teammate, Rob Refsnyder, and sending Field back down for a third tour in Durham. Was the outfielder’s best shot slipping away?

But baseball gonna baseball. Just a couple weeks and a couple injuries later, and Field is back, getting the promotion to the Tampa Bay outfield with the demotion of reliever Ryan Weber. A corresponding 40-man move is still pending.

Johnny Field has always been a winner. A four-time state champ at Bishop Gorman High School in Las Vegas, where he excelled at second base, Field then went on to star in the outfield for the University of Arizona, winning the Pac-12 batting title in 2012 while putting up 370/.476/.529 slash line, and propelling the Wildcats to the 2012 College World Series championship.

His successful track record, if not his tools, is what led to his selection by the Rays in the fifth round of the 2013 draft. Field signed for $247,500.

Field has never been a scout’s dream. Depending on the context of the conversation, the words to describe Field range from “hustle,” “good makeup,” and “grinder,” to “fringy,” “undersized,” and “below average [name any tool].”

MLB: Spring Training-Boston Red Sox at Tampa Bay Rays
Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports
When Field was drafted, most scouts pegged a move back to his high school position of second base to allow his fringy undersized below average tools to play. But he has stuck it out in the outfield, proving his versatility and making up for any lack of speed and arm strength with good instincts.


The reason he never moved back to second is...interesting?

That first summer in the New York Penn League I played outfield and the goal was to go to instructs and learn second base there and play it from there.” Fields. said about the plan to play second base. “Last two or three weeks of the season in the span of two weeks I broke my jaw and then I broke my hamate bone in back to back weeks. So, I went to instructs just to rehab obviously and didn’t get a chance as a second baseman.”

Stu Barnes, the Rays outfield coordinator at the time, then told Field they liked him in the outfield, and that was that.

Field climbed through the Rays system in the normal fashion, one step at a time, until plateauing in Durham a couple years ago. At every level, he did Johnny Field things: hit for modest average, with modest power, and modest stolen base totals, while playing adequate defense across the outfield. His lifetime minor league slash line is a respectable .271/.330/.444. He has only cracked the Rays’ Baseball America Top 30 list once, ranking #27 in 2014.

Beyond the gritty hustle, Johnny’s best asset has always been his good feel for hitting and his compact righty swing. You can really see how quick he is to the ball in the video below (and also that he’s probably a bit smaller than his listed 5’10”).


Field has been passed over twice in the Rule 5 draft, and for good reason: just about every organization already has a Johnny Field—a grinder who does nothing exceptionally well, but a lot of things decently. A guy just hoping for a shot.

Sometimes, the Johnnys Field cash in their chance and turn it into a career, a la Justin Ruggiano. Sometimes they fall flat. The “whys” often come down to luck and timing as much as they do talent.

So here’s hoping for some good luck and timing for Johnny Field. The Rays could use a little of that right about now.

Welcome to The Show, Johnny!

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Thought this was interesting:

Sarris: Does command age better than stuff?


By Eno Sarris 5h ago 11

A strike​ is a strike,​ no matter​ how you get it.​ That sounds like​ a truism you could​ hear​ from any​ grizzled baseball​​ veteran. But the beauty — and struggle — of baseball is that are very few subjects that are black and white. The further you dig into something you believe to be true, the more you tend to find nuance.

It is true that, in terms of predicting a pitcher’s strikeout rate, called and swinging strikes are about equal. Which is to say, if you’re projecting a pitcher’s strikeout rate, adding called and swinging strike rates doesn’t make your projections any better.

That’s what Matt Swartz found in 2010, and it’s stuck with me ever since. Swinging strikes are slightly more sticky year to year, but if neither really makes our projections more effective, why should we differentiate much between the two?

I’ve preferred swinging strikes to called strikes for two reasons. For one, getting a swinging strike seems like a two-person interaction: You don’t need the umpire to call the pitch a strike in order to get the strike. It’s just such an iconic moment that really seems to define what we call “stuff” — you got the batter to try, and to fail.

The other reason had to do with measurement. We didn’t really have great measurements for command, and so I became a command agnostic. As a result, while trying to better define what characteristics made a pitch nastier, and how pitchers could get swinging strikes, I ignored the command and called strike side of the ledger.

Recently, though, advancements in command, such as Command+ from STATS and CMD from Baseball Prospectus, have brought me back to the other side. The later-career success of Bartolo Colon, and his level of excellence as judged by those stats, made me wonder if stuff was inherently young and command was the key to aging well.

So I asked Jeff Zimmerman to create two aging curves for me. One for called strikes and one for swinging strikes.
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Put more colloquially, this means that pitchers retain their ability to get called strikes later into their career than swinging strikes. I showed this to one major league pitcher and his response was brief:

“That’s the most obvious thing ever.”

He might be right, but I see an interactivity between swinging and called strikes that makes this fascinating to me. Like, for example, the aspects of a pitch that elicit swings also affect how likely you are to get a called strike. If that seems confusing, stick with me.

The harder you throw, the more you elicit swings.

“With a 97 mph fastball, you have to get going earlier and you have to decide earlier whether to swing or not,” agreed Oakland All-Star Jed Lowrie.

Velocity Band Four-Seam Swing%
97+ 52.3%
94-97 48.9%
91-94 45.7%
91- 42.1%

Right away, you can see that you kind of have to get more called strikes as you age. Because velocity only goes down, you’ll get fewer swings, and you’ll have to adapt to that change. Cubs starter Jon Lester recently told me about the struggle to adapt to this fact as he’s aged.

“I don’t have 95 anymore. You have to swing more on higher velocity, because you have to get going earlier,” the lefty said before the All-Star break. “That’s where, two years ago, my curveball played more because I was sitting 93-95, and I pitch in a lot, so guys were already getting going earlier on pitches inside, and then that curveball didn’t get there and they swing over the top.”

The umpire is a part of this trend, too. You get more called strikes as you age because you throw slower — and high-velocity pitches are tougher for the umpire to see. Travis Sawchick recently picked up this thread from Jeff Sullivan over at FanGraphs. He studied the borderline parts of the strike zone and found a large velocity effect:

Fastballs 92 mph or less: 2,805 called strikes, 2,602 balls (51.8% called strikes)
Fastballs between 93-96 mph: 2,474 called strikes, 2,627 balls (48.5% called strikes)
Fastballs 97 mph or greater: 251 called strikes, 363 balls (40.8% called strikes)

So there are fewer called strikes with top end velocity because the batter swings more often and because the umpire calls those pitches strikes less often.

The last complication comes from the actual process of getting a called strike. Imagine a pitcher known for getting called strikes. He’s got to be around the zone a lot. Which means that hitters would know he’s around the zone a lot, and will be swinging. If they’re swinging, it means fewer called strikes (and if the ball is in the zone, likely some decent outcomes for the hitters).

So how do you get a called strike in that situation? I turned to the starter who’s currently the best at getting called strikes — Kyle Hendricks — and it turns out that weak contact might actually be the way to more called strikes.

“They might see that I’m around the zone a lot generally, but they also have to take what they see that day,” pointed out Hendricks about the role of the scouting report and how often batters swing at his pitches. “When they’re not swinging, it’s usually because I’m falling behind early, ball one, ball two. I want them to swing early because I want soft contact.”

This was something Lester echoed.

“I can throw this pitch in this area and I can get a foul ball, and that’s a strike,” he said of the battle for strike two if the batters aren’t swinging. “And now I’m on strike two. I’ve put them on the defense. We talk about that a lot, where can I go to get a foul ball.”

Once Hendricks gets some soft contact, the game really begins.

“When they’re aggressive, you start expanding the zone,” Hendricks said. “You have to see if they’re really offering at certain pitches or if it’s more of an auto take. If they’re just giving up on everything, you know you haven’t established anything they have to respect. They’re just waiting you out until they see something middle-of-the-zone and you have to come to them. If you’re noticing they’re jumpy, that’s usually when you’re hitting spots and addressing them in the zone, and when they’re jumpy you have expand off of it.”

Only then can Hendricks focus on called strikes, especially late in the count.

“I’ll notice guys taking my changeups if I’m only throwing them down, so I’ll pick my spots and then throw a first-pitch strike,” the righty said. “Then it’s in their mind that you’ll do that, and you can expand off of it.”

Here’s the king of called strikes, telling us that the order of business is something like strike one => weak contact in the zone => aggressive hitters => swings and misses outside the zone => takes on certain pitch types outside the zone => using those pitch types inside the zone for called strikes.

That’s not at all simple.

“How often do you realize it before they realize it,” is how Hendricks put it. “It’s the cat and mouse game.”

Still, even if Hendricks feels that he hasn’t had his glove-side command all year — something we noticed a while back — he’s number two on the Command+ leaderboard right now, and number one in called strikes. These things seem related.

The whole cat and mouse game that Hendricks described, even if it includes elements of weak contact and swinging strikes, and is perhaps augmented by his low fastball velocity, works because of his command. Maybe we’ll find later that, once we have a good sample of our new command stats, that they age better than the various stuff metrics we’ve been been developing, and then this aging curve will seem prescient.

And maybe it does make intuitive sense that a skill based on placing the ball would age better than a skill that relies more on velocity. That doesn’t mean we can say any of this with a ton of certainty, or separate stuff from command all that easily, though. Everything is intertwined.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

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Trevor Bauer doesn't really care if you like him.

"Like me. Love me. Hate me. Whatever. Hopefully, you just remember who I was," he told reporters last week at the All-Star Game in Washington, D.C.

He's certainly making his 2018 season worth remembering. Bauer threw seven scoreless innings in the Cleveland Indians' 4-0 victory over the Pirates on Wednesday, snapping Pittsburgh's 11-game win streak and improving his season numbers to 9-6 with a 2.32 ERA.

In a crowded American League Cy Young field, Bauer is right up there alongside Chris Sale, Justin Verlander and Luis Severino as one of the favorites, with Corey Kluber, Blake Snell and Gerrit Cole also in the mix. Bauer leads the league in innings (3 2/3 more than Verlander), is second to Sale in strikeouts (197 to 192), ranks fifth in ERA (2.32 to Sale's 2.13) and is fourth in OPS allowed.

Bauer has long been a favorite of statheads for his obsessive dedication to analytics, but he never put everything together over his first four full seasons, with a 4.30 ERA and zero seasons with an ERA under 4.00. He made the news less for his pitching and more often for his off-the-field pursuits (playing w
ith drones) and his Twitter spats (earlier this season, he accused Astros pitchers of illegally doctoring baseballs to improve their spin rates).

Some believed Bauer made improvement in the second half of last season, when he lowered his first-half ERA from 5.24 to 3.01. I wasn't buying that because the big difference in his splits was mostly a result of sequencing. Check his opponents' batting line:

First half: .269/.333/.454
Second half: .263/.324/.436

This year's improvement is real, however, and it comes courtesy of an improved slider that he's throwing a lot more often, giving him a big strikeout weapon. Against the Pirates, five of Bauer's 10 strikeouts came on the slider, but adding another weapon to his arsenal has made his fastball more effective. Last season, he used his slider just 1.7 percent of the time; this year, he has used it nearly 15 percent of the time, and batters are hitting just .081 against it in 138 plate appearances that have ended with the pitch.

As a result, he has increased his overall strikeout rate from 26.2 percent to 31.6 percent while lowering his batting average allowed from .266 to .212. His results with two strikes are vastly more dominant:

2018: .120/.193/.170, 55.3% SO rate, 0.3% HR rate

As you might expect, Bauer went to the slider only after more intense study in the offseason. He used high-tech tools to monitor its spin rate and talked about comparing his slider to those of teammates Kluber and Mike Clevinger, giving him the confidence to throw it more often. That has taken him to a new level -- maybe a Cy Young level.

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The return of a healthy Andrew Miller would make October matchups fun, but his first task is proving his readiness
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By T.J. Zuppe Jul 26, 2018 3

Bullpen​ pitchers typically​ operate under​ the impression they could​ be called upon​ at any time​ in​ any situation.​ They go​​ over scouting reports, build relationships with their catchers and spend much of their day preparing their bodies for the chaos that awaits them.

And then there are minor-league rehab assignments.

Everything from the timing of the outing — relievers can occasionally start the game or enter under very specific circumstances — to the awkward midday commute from the big league facility to a minor-league ballpark makes it difficult to simulate normal.

(If you’re a local Uber driver, don’t be shocked if you’re tasked with safely delivering Andrew Miller to a local Indians affiliate in the next week or so.)

To say things are “different” is an understatement.

“You spend a couple hours in a car,” Miller said. “You go pitch in a game that’s scheduled. You know exactly when you’re going to pitch. You don’t know the hitters you’re facing. You’re throwing to a different catcher every single outing. It’s just the reality of when you’re going on a rehab assignment. It’s not the adrenaline you get when you run on the field here and get to throw to a familiar catcher and have a scouting report and all that stuff.”

That’s why Miller’s ugly stat line at Double-A Akron on Tuesday — he was charged with four runs on two hits, with a walk and hit-by-pitch in just 1/3 inning — didn’t have anyone slamming the panic button.

That’s not to say the results on rehab are worthless. Players can often still succeed based on pure ability or superior talent. You still read the radar gun and look for any potential warning signs. But for the most part, they’re worth taking with a grain of salt, maybe more.

“A couple months from now, when he’s dealing for us, nobody’s going to care that he gave up runs in Akron,” Terry Francona said. “That’s part of why he’s going through what he’s going through. And he’s starting to pick up the pace of when he’s pitching, so you’ll see that get cleaned up.”

And that’s the biggest goal of this lengthy rehab.

The Indians didn’t want to experience a setback when it came to Miller’s bothersome right knee. They’ve held him out of action since the end of May, hoping the extended rest and slow build would have him operating at his highest level down the stretch.

It’s been so slow, in fact, the memory of the Grim Reaper-esque reliever has grown more and more difficult to conjure. It’s been a while since we’ve seen prototypical slider-slinger, the one that baffles opposing hitters at an almost unfair rate. His absence played a major role in the bullpen struggles and their eventual acquisition of Brad Hand and Adam Cimber from the Padres, two talented, controllable arms capable of fortifying a scuffling group.

The lengthy process is one Miller certainly wishes could be accelerated, but he also conceded that the inflammation and soreness in his right knee earlier this year likely played a factor in causing his mechanics to go haywire, which, outside of some atypical performances, might have also caused some of the other bumps and bruises he’s battled this season.

So now, things are simplified.

Each outing — he’s made four appearances thus far — represents a different challenge. His three prior rehab outings with Triple-A Columbus featured one run allowed, a homer, in three innings of work. Recently, he’s ramped up to rehab appearances every other day, finally pushing down on the accelerator with a bit more force.

Miller is just as eager to prove his readiness to himself as he is the club (he’s also a free agent at the end of the year, adding to the personal complexities), but he’s also doing his best to respect the process, knowing it’s far better to shake off some rust and “bad habits” on assignment than in the thick of a heated eighth-inning jam against the heart of a big league lineup.

For now, that means success comes in the form of checking boxes — sometimes even one at a time. So, while the mechanics, location and velocity are all still working their way back, the most important factor, his health, is something the 33-year-old reliever is pleased with.

“It’s as good as I’ve felt in a long time,” Miller said. “The results weren’t good, but I honestly think I threw the ball pretty well at the start of it. I gave up two really weak infield singles. The wheels really fell off after that. But that’s really my battle right now — just consistency in my mechanics. I wish it would have come sooner than later, but I’m working towards it. I don’t think it’s far off.”


Andrew Miller hopes a return to health will leave some early-season frustrations in the past (Rick Osentoski/USA Today Sports)
And as those boxes get checked, he nears a highly anticipated return, one that when paired with the addition of Hand and Cimber, could transform their most glaring weakness into a potential strength.

On Wednesday, the pair of former Padres proved how vital their acquisition. With the tying run approaching the plate, Cimber entered in the eighth to eventually net a double play — a common occurrence for the ground ball-inducing side-armer. Hand followed and stranded a runner at third, staying on to record the final three outs to earn the save in a four-run game.

Their addition has already thrust Zach McAllister and Dan Otero into more advantageous roles, and with Cody Allen working through some delivery inconsistencies of his own, Hand and Cimber have lightened the workload, allowing him to iron them out in less stressful situations. Francona has also utilized Oliver Pérez and Neil Ramírez earlier in games.

A healthy Miller could make the Indians, a group that has lingered near the bottom of the relief leaderboards for much of the season, a matchup nightmare in October.

Need Pérez or Ramírez for a key at-bat in the fifth inning? Francona can use them without hesitation. Need a critical double play ball in the sixth? Cimber or Otero can emerge from beyond the bullpen door. And with Hand, Allen and Miller looming at the backend, Francona can pick and choose which combination makes the most sense over the final three frames.

Of course, that is all predicated on Miller’s health.

Despite a feeling that his return is near, no one has any way of guaranteeing he’ll be anything close to the 2016 version that helped introduce a new way of deploying relievers in the postseason. The knee is something the lefty also endured last season, so it’s certainly possible it will serve as something he manages for the rest of his career.

Unable to completely rule out the potential for a setback or relapse — there’s a level of volatility when it comes to any sort of malady — snagging Hand and Cimber for Francisco Mejía became even more necessary. And if the Indians, for any reason, were forced to enter October without the best variation of Miller, the presence of the newest arms would reduce the sting.

(And it probably wouldn’t hurt to continue exploring the relief market for additional insurance through the end of August.)

However, if Miller returns in the coming weeks featuring the same sort of dominance many have come to expect, it will be the second time in three years the club has added one of baseball’s most dynamic, lethal relief arms for the stretch run, giving them a bullpen capable of matching up against the league’s most feared sticks.

And no one will care that Miller gave up those runs in Akron.

— Reported from Cleveland
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

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As the Indians seek outfield help, Brandon Guyer’s lefty-mashing is a breath of fresh air
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By Zack Meisel Jul 28, 2018 3
DETROIT​ — Odds​ are, the​ Indians’ outfield will undergo​ yet another face-lift​ over the next​ few​ days. There​ likely is​​ no cure-all for the unsightly numbers the band of misfits has contributed this season, but that area of the roster remains the primary focus for the front office.

There exist only two examples of stability in the outfield, and one fills a part-time role. Michael Brantley has authored a throwback season, serving as the steady force between switch-hitting sluggers Francisco Lindor and José Ramírez.

Then, there’s Brandon Guyer, who reminded observers Friday night why he remains on the Indians’ roster: to aggravate opposing left-handers. He launched Daniel Stumpf’s low fastball toward the left-field seats, aimed his right index finger at the visitors dugout and pumped his fist as the baseball disappeared beyond the green fence.

Guyer had no idea why he pointed his finger as he rushed out of the batter’s box, his three-run homer having removed all doubt from the Indians’ series-opening victory. Perhaps he should have pointed it at the scoreboard, where some lackluster statistics accompanied his name. He knows those numbers don’t tell the entire story.

After all, the guy boasts a .977 OPS against lefties this season. That places him behind only Mookie Betts, Giancarlo Stanton, Nicholas Castellanos, Steve Pearce, Lorenzo Cain, Mike Trout, Mark Canha and Matt Kemp when considering outfielders who have most frequently feasted on southpaws. You know, a couple of MVP candidates, a handful of All-Stars.

And Brandon Guyer.

His overall line appears rather uninspiring: .210/.304/.403. But the drastic difference, based upon the handedness of the gentleman tossing the little orb his direction, illustrates Guyer’s value to an Indians team desperate for any modicum of production from its outfield.

Guyer vs. LHP in 2018: .282/.400/.577 (.977 OPS)
Guyer vs. RHP in 2018: .104/.140/.146 (.286 OPS)

“He’s a threat,” Francisco Lindor said. “They take Melky (Cabrera), who has been hot, to put Guyer in and then he hits a home run. It’s like you get no rest. You get no rest. That’s what it’s all about. That’s when we become very successful, when we all understand our roles and we all do something to help the team win that day. We’re not about (just) me and José or (Corey) Kluber. It’s everybody on the 25-man roster doing something to help the team win.”

With that said, the Indians need more than 1 1/2 capable outfielders. Consider their rank at each spot, among the league’s 30 teams.

LF: 15th in wRC+ (104), 16th in WAR (1.6)
CF: 29th in wRC+ (61), 24th in WAR (0.4)
RF: 22nd in wRC+ (89), 20th in WAR (0.9)

Guyer has collected seven hits in 11 at-bats since the All-Star break, a microscopic sample size, sure, but an impressive one, given he often has only one crack at leaving his mark on a game. His pinch-hit homer Friday was the team’s first of the season and the third of his career.


Brandon Guyer’s home run Friday was the Indians’ first pinch-hit homer of the season. (Raj Mehta/USA Today Sports)
Guyer’s abysmal showing against righties — 5-for-48 with 19 strikeouts — has torpedoed his overall clip. (He actually said he felt more comfortable against righties when he was a minor-leaguer, and his statistics support that claim.) But the plan would be for someone else to approach the plate with a righty on the mound in October. It’s just that, well, the identity of said individual remains a mystery.

Tyler Naquin exited the Indians’ clubhouse with a black backpack strapped to his shoulders Friday night. He was scratched from the lineup with a hip injury, and he’ll be re-evaluated in Cleveland. Terry Francona hinted that the team would likely complete a roster move prior to Saturday’s game.

Brantley, Cabrera and Rajai Davis manned the outfield Friday. Greg Allen has shuttled between Columbus and Cleveland throughout the season. Even with Guyer posting Trout-ian numbers against lefties, the Indians sorely need reinforcements in the outfield. The front office has scoured the trade market in search of help.

Two years ago, they added Guyer to the fold at the deadline with the thought that he could mash lefties. He’s filled that role pretty effectively when healthy. Every afternoon, he scans the scouting report on his iPad for information on how the opposing team has recently attacked right-handed hitters and which relievers they turn to in certain situations.

On Friday, Francona summoned one of the few reliable outfield bats on the roster. Guyer made the most of the opportunity.

“He looks so dangerous right now,” Francona said. “His batting average may not look like it, but that’s not the hitter that’s up there right now.”
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain