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by TFIR
As you stare at the Indians’ lineup, remember: There’s always plenty of turnover between now and October
By Zack Meisel Mar 27, 2019 53
MINNEAPOLIS — You know what they say about the roster in Cleveland: if you aren’t thrilled with it, just wait five minutes.
Or, maybe that’s the weather in Cleveland. That hasn’t prevented MLB from scheduling early-April games at Progressive Field, but that’s a topic for another chilly day.
The Indians will begin a new season Thursday afternoon with a lineup resembling their final 2018 batting order, just with a complete face-lift that went awry and necessitated a second, third and fourth operation. Of the nine starters, only José Ramírez has a chance at starting for the Tribe on Opening Day.
Six months from now, the Thursday lineup could, too, resemble a relic, a long-forgotten piece of artwork detailed by Terry Francona’s steady left hand. The past three years, one-third of the players on the roster for the Indians’ first playoff game did not start the season with the club.
First, let’s revisit that final batting order from 2018.
There was Francisco Lindor, before his hair turned blue and his calf turned fans blue
There was Michael Brantley, before he joined the team that sent the Indians down their offseason spiral
There was José Ramírez, the lone holdover from that final lineup of 2018, presuming his newly bruised knee cooperates
There was Edwin Encarnacion, now stationed in Seattle, where the Mariners have initiated a rebuild
There was Josh Donaldson, whose uniform will make for a great Random Jersey Sighting candidate a few years from now (Quick: Do you even remember what number he wore during his five weeks with the Indians? [Jeopardy theme plays] The answer: No. 27)
There was Yandy Díaz, required to reserve three seats on his flight to join his new team in Tampa, one for his body and one for each biceps
There was Brandon Guyer, the human dartboard who once owned left-handed pitching
There was Yan Gomes, the catcher shipped to the nation’s capital after his first All-Star Game nod
And there was Jason Kipnis, who has pegged this season as likely his last in Cleveland, but whose aging leg muscles prefer he not sail off into the sunset
Change isn’t necessarily a bad thing and, in all likelihood, there will be much more of it in the months to come. If history is any indication, the Indians’ roster figures to morph quite a bit between now and the end of the regular season. So, no, Thursday’s batting order, potentially topped by Leonys Martín and punctuated by Carlos Santana and Jake Bauers, probably won’t hold steady for 162 games.
2016: 18/25 players on the Opening Day roster made the ALDS roster
Hello: Brandon Guyer, Chris Gimenez, Michael Martinez, Coco Crisp, Lonnie Chisenhall, Andrew Miller, Mike Clevinger
Goodbye: Marlon Byrd, Juan Uribe, Collin Cowgill, Carlos Carrasco, Danny Salazar, Joba Chamberlain, Ross Detwiler
2017: 16/25 players on the Opening Day roster made the ALDS roster
Hello: Jay Bruce, Jason Kipnis, Lonnie Chisenhall, Greg Allen, Giovanny Urshela, Erik Gonzalez, Mike Clevinger, Joe Smith, Tyler Olson
Goodbye: Tyler Naquin, Yandy Díaz, Abraham Almonte, Michael Martinez, Brandon Guyer, Zach McAllister, Dan Otero, Boone Logan, Shawn Armstrong
2018: 16/25 players on the Opening Day roster made the ALDS roster
Hello: Michael Brantley, Josh Donaldson, Melky Cabrera, Greg Allen, Yandy Díaz, Shane Bieber, Brad Hand, Adam Cimber, Oliver Pérez
Goodbye: Lonnie Chisenhall, Tyler Naquin, Bradley Zimmer, Erik Gonzalez, Josh Tomlin, Zach McAllister, Nick Goody, Tyler Olson, Matt Belisle
Only three teams have participated in a playoff series each of the past three years — the Indians, Red Sox and Dodgers — so they’ll serve as comparisons for this exercise. The other clubs have experienced a considerable amount of in-season turnover as well.
2016 Red Sox: 17/25 players on the Opening Day roster made the ALDS roster
2017 Red Sox: 15/25 players on the Opening Day roster made the ALDS roster
2018 Red Sox: 18/25 players on the Opening Day roster made the ALDS roster
2016 Dodgers: 14/25 players on the Opening Day roster made the NLDS roster (10 players opened the season on the injured list)
2017 Dodgers: 14/25 players on the Opening Day roster made the NLDS roster
2018 Dodgers: 16/25 players on the Opening Day roster made the NLDS roster
Some of the turnover is the result of the injury bug; the Indians have been forced to resort to a September shift to center field for Kipnis each of the past two years. Midseason trades, promotions and demotions and playoff roster manipulation also play a role. After all, the Indians used 20 different relievers last season (not including starters who made a cameo or two in the bullpen).
It’s a helpful reminder, though, that a lineup that features Hanley Ramírez batting fourth or fifth and Brad Miller, Max Moroff and Eric Stamets composing three-quarters of the infield might not persist for an entire season. (At least, not if the Indians want to vie for a fourth consecutive division title and keep their starting pitchers sane.)
The 2019 Opening Day roster (barring any last-minute changes)
Pitchers: Corey Kluber, Trevor Bauer, Carlos Carrasco, Mike Clevinger, Shane Bieber, Dan Otero, Jon Edwards, Tyler Olson, Adam Cimber, Oliver Pérez, Brad Hand, Neil Ramírez
Position players: Roberto Pérez, Kevin Plawecki, Jake Bauers, Carlos Santana, Max Moroff, Brad Miller, José Ramírez, Eric Stamets, Jordan Luplow, Greg Allen, Tyler Naquin, Leonys Martín, Hanley Ramírez
Those who should eventually return from injury and nudge their way onto the roster: Francisco Lindor, Jason Kipnis, Bradley Zimmer, Tyler Clippard, Danny Salazar
Carlos Gonzalez also figures to receive a shot to nail down the right-field gig before his April 20 opt-out clause arrives.
Pitchers at Class AAA who are twiddling their thumbs while waiting for the phone to ring: Nick Goody, Nick Wittgren, Adam Plutko, Cody Anderson, Jefry Rodriguez, Chih-Wei Hu, Henry Martinez
Position players at Class AAA who are waiting for an opportunity: Oscar Mercado, Trayce Thompson, Yu Chang, Eric Haase, Bobby Bradley
That’s a larger pool of internal candidates than the one the Indians have been able to draw from in recent years. Last season, the club cycled through the same handful of relief options until Chris Antonetti dealt Francisco Mejía for Hand and Cimber.
So, the Indians might need to rely on their pitching staff to steer them through April as Lindor, Kipnis and Gonzalez work their way back into shape. There will be a trial-and-error period for the bullpen and the outfield, as new faces attempt to become familiar and old veterans attempt to stave off Father Time.
But once the Indians reach the fall, one glance at the roster should make this late-March arrangement a distant, foggy memory.
(Photo of Terry Francona: Alex Trautwig / Getty Images)
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