Now that Josh Donaldson is in the picture, what’s the Indians’ plan for him and others?
By T.J. Zuppe Sep 2, 2018 4
Terry Francona used to cringe when Edwin Encarnacion would extend his right arm for a trot around the bases. The perch for Encarnacion’s imaginary parrot typically appeared seconds after a game-altering blast.
“Now I love it,” Francona said with a smile.
That feeling wasn’t all that dissimilar from his perspective of past Josh Donaldson at-bats. Francona would turn to his bench coach, Brad Mills, uttering his private desires for each of the slugger’s plate appearances.
“I hope he swings so hard he hurts his back,” he’d joke.
But now, Francona can put away his voodoo dolls. He can stop wishing for pulled muscles or timely days off.
For the rest of this season, he can root for Donaldson to inflict harm upon others. He can put the difficulty of retiring the former MVP on the opposing side. He can just enjoy the destruction he creates.
“He kinda puts a little fear into you when he gets in the batter’s box,” Francona said. “He plays with an edge. He plays hard.”
That is, if he’s healthy.
The Indians took a risk in dealing for Donaldson — and not necessarily in the currently unnamed talent they’ll eventually send back to the Jays to complete the trade or the final bit of the infielder’s salary they’re still responsible for (the Jays kicked in $2.7 million to help pay down what’s left of his $23 million contract).
The danger comes from the unknown — something most contending teams are trying like hell to avoid this time of year. The Indians, on the other hand, are embracing it, all for the chance at a significant payoff.
“We know there’s some risk there, but it’s got a chance to make us better,” Francona said.
But from where does that risk come?
The first unknown is the most glaring: his availability.
Donaldson hasn’t played in major-league games since the end of May due to a left calf injury. He made it into two rehab games at the end of August, hardly enough time to emphatically prove he’s on an inevitable path to considerable playing time in the final month of the season.
Even when he wasn’t limited by shoulder and calf issues this year, his 36 games with the Jays (.757 OPS) didn’t exactly mirror the All-Star-caliber production we’ve seen in the past five years.
But then you reflect on the .901 OPS he’s posted since the start of 2013. You think of the 33 homers he’s averaged in that five-year stretch. You think of the gaudy wins above replacement totals he’s built since becoming one of the league’s most complete and dangerous position players.
Through that lens, it becomes a lot easier to believe he’s still capable of thumping pitchers in the postseason at a rate no other available hitter available could’ve matched.
Clearly, the Indians felt good enough about those odds. They were given time to briefly scout him on rehab. They were able to scan his medicals and get familiar with his situation before completing the deal Friday.
They’ll sit down with him in the next few days to better map out a plan for his eventual return. They’ll place him under the microscope and evaluate how far away he truly is.
Given what making room for Donaldson means to the players already entrenched in their positions, they need to be right about the gamble.
There’s no greater risk than taking baseball’s best third baseman and moving him across the diamond in the middle of another MVP-caliber season. Yet, that’s exactly what José Ramírez will be asked to do, if and when Donaldson is ready to play on a semi-regular basis.
Ramírez won’t immediately slide over to second base, but he’ll begin to take ground balls on the right side of the infield in preparation for Donaldson’s return. Ramírez’s only hesitation was being asked to bounce back and forth between the two positions, something Francona assured him they wouldn’t do.
Second base is probably Ramírez’s best defensive position, but how will adding one more potential distraction to the mix affect him over the final month? And what about the man already manning that spot?
Jason Kipnis might be the one most affected by the trade.
The veteran infielder had previously indicated he’d be open to an outfield move at the trade deadline — he shifted to center field out of necessity at the end of 2017 — but when the club wasn’t able to snag an infielder at the end of July, it appeared he was ticketed to remain at second base.
The trade for Donaldson altered that outlook.
“I don’t think he was jumping for joy,” Francona said of Kipnis and the prospect of another late-season position switch, “and I don’t think we expected him to (be).”
Donaldson’s acquisition also comes in the midst of one of Kipnis’ better small-sample stretches in an otherwise frustrating and forgettable offensive season.
(In fairness to the club, they’ve been far more patient with Kipnis’ struggles than many clubs might’ve been.)
Instead of focusing on the balance and hand-positioning adjustments that have him feeling more comfortable at the plate over the past week, he’ll be taking extra time to add fly balls to his pregame work, all in an effort to play some outfield over the final month.
Francona chatted with Kipnis before the game Saturday. His overall message: When the time comes, Kipnis must prove to be their best option.
“I don’t think it’s fun to hear that,” Francona said, “but Kip’s a pretty good competitor. We’ll see how it goes.”
The left-handed hitter responded by slugging a pinch-hit homer in the loss to the Rays.
“I don’t know where Kip ends up,” Francona said after the game, “but I guarantee every time he hits, I’ll be rooting for him like I always do. He can help us. We don’t think otherwise.”
Overall, that’s a lot of uncertainty — probably a lot more than a team hoping to gain momentum entering the postseason would prefer to have. Yes, the Tribe’s division lead offers the luxury of some experimentation down the stretch, but the reward has to outweigh the possible downside.
Donaldson fits that mold.
“Sometimes,” Francona said, “you get to this part of the season and, all of a sudden, it’s a little uncomfortable because you’re having (tough) conversations with guys. But that doesn’t make it wrong.
“The potential reward is worth it.”
The anxiety Francona once felt each time Donaldson stepped to the plate helps explain why. They’re hopeful that the imposing third baseman can inflict similar suffering on the clubs they face in October.
Few are capable, when right, of bolstering a lineup quite like the right-handed hitter. And for that reason, the Indians will accept the risk without any sort of guarantee.
“When he’s in that batter’s box,” Francona said, “he’s one of the guys who, you think, ‘Uh oh.’
“Now we can be cheering for him.”
— Reported from Cleveland
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