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Hillbilly wrote:
Roberto has been hot this week though so I need to pipe down. :lol:
Don't pipe down...keep the kiss of life going! It's working again.

Look, the bottom line is that both Gomes and Yonder Alonso are completely sucking this season, so we got lucky there.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

Re: Articles

6890
C'mon, pretty bad lineup when Perez is DHing. Lefty on the mound or not.

I do like what Plawecki is doing with the young pitchers though behind the plate. 2 nights in a row.
Last edited by TFIR on Sat Jun 08, 2019 5:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

Re: Articles

6896
He certainly is forcing you to stretch your insult skills. I am confident you are up to it though. :idea:

Hey, maybe some Jose Ramirez insults (hair??) will get him going.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

Re: Articles

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C.C. Sabathia says Roberto Alomar called all his pitches from second base during a Cleveland Indians playoff win in 2001
Updated Jun 8, 12:27 PM; Posted Jun 8, 11:02 AM
Yankees pitcher CC Sabathia signs an autograph for one of the Cleveland Boys & Girls club kids whom he brought in for Friday night's game in Cleveland. (Tony Dejak | AP)
AP

Yankees pitcher CC Sabathia signs an autograph for one of the Cleveland Boys & Girls club kids whom he brought in for Friday night's game in Cleveland. (Tony Dejak | AP)

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By Joe Noga, cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio — When C.C. Sabathia was a young player first breaking into the big leagues, he had plenty of veteran teammates with the Cleveland Indians who helped him along the way.

“There were a lot of them,” Sabathia said. “I was on an older team coming up that first year. They all treated me like a little brother.”

Jim Thome, Dave Burba, Chuck Finley and Ellis Burks were among those Sabathia singled out as particularly influential in his early days back in 2001. But perhaps one teammate had a bigger impact than the rest during Sabathia’s first playoff start against Seattle in October of that year.


Roberto Alomar approached Sabathia in the dugout after the rookie had given up a run in the first inning of Game 3 of the American League Division Series.

“I came in and Robbie could see that I was flustered,” Sabathia said. “He was like ‘Hey, don’t shake off Einar (Diaz) the rest of the game. I’m calling the pitches from second base. Just go out and do your thing.’ It worked out. I didn’t give up another run.”

Cleveland went on to win, 17-2, but eventually lost the series in five games to a Mariners team that had won 116 during the regular season. However, the lessons that Sabathia learned in Cleveland about leadership and how to build a winning clubhouse culture stayed with him for the duration of his 19-year major league career.

“I think this organization does a good job of making sure that the clubhouse is good and the culture is good; that’s all I was about,” Sabathia said. “That’s all I had ever known.”

Sabathia said finding a place with that same clubhouse culture was a concern for him when he was a free agent heading to New York. He said he feels fortunate to have had the chance to grow into that role with the Yankees through the years.

“It’s something that as a young player, I definitely noticed, the guys that helped me, and you want to be that guy for another young player, for sure.”

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‘He molded me into what I am now’: CC Sabathia, Carl Willis reflect on their history before the pitcher’s Cleveland finale
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By Lindsey Adler Jun 8, 2019 5
CLEVELAND — Twenty-one years ago, CC Sabathia stepped off a plane in Greensboro, N.C., and met the man who would turn him into a pitcher. He was still just 17 years old and beginning his professional baseball career nearly 3,000 miles from his hometown in California.

Carl Willis, then the pitching coach for the Cleveland Indians’ rookie ball team in Burlington, N.C., was 37 years old and in only his second season of coaching in pro ball. He was younger than Sabathia is now and had the task of helping the Indians’ strong but very raw first-round pick begin to cultivate his true potential.

“Honestly, I had some nerves about the responsibility of being this guy’s first pitching coach in professional baseball,” Willis, now the Indians’ major-league pitching coach for the second time, said in Cleveland on Friday.

Sabathia and Willis worked together from rookie ball up through Double A, then Sabathia made the jump to the majors at the age of 20. Willis was promoted to the Indians’ major-league pitching coach in 2003 and worked with Sabathia as he continued to develop, until he was traded to the Milwaukee Brewers in July 2008.

During that run with the Indians, you might recall a Cy Young season for the big lefty — a season in which he’d throw 241 innings and strike out 209 batters.

Sabathia has downplayed any sentimental feelings during his return to Cleveland this weekend, where he’ll pitch for one last time in the ballpark where he made his major-league debut in April 2001.

“We’re trying to win every day,” Sabathia said during a news conference Friday. “So there’s really no room for none of that mushy stuff. It’s about going out and trying to win a game every day. It’s not really about me. It’s fun to be in these moments now where I’m here when it’s Cleveland and it’s a place I played. It’ll be fun to deal with this weekend. I wish I was more sentimental in that way, but no. It is what it is.”

It’s Sabathia’s prerogative not to feel too “mushy” during his final career weekend in Cleveland, but he appears to be alone in that sentiment. The Indians hung a Lego portrait of Sabathia in the visitor’s clubhouse this weekend and have prepared a scoreboard retrospective that features not just the pitcher’s early strikeouts but also his two home runs for the team. Three of his four children were born in Cleveland, and they’ll once again make the weekend trip to cheer on their dad.

Willis acknowledged that he will have some of the “mushy” feelings Sabathia could do without this weekend in Cleveland. Twenty-one years have gone by quickly for him as he’s continued to follow Sabathia’s career while he’s moved around in his own coaching life.

“I am excited to watch him pitch on Saturday,” Willis said Friday. “I truthfully am. I’ll be honest with you: I’ll be a little sad as well.”

Sabathia entered the Indians organization as someone with obvious strength and athleticism but hardly any serious coaching or training on how to be a pitcher. He was a multisport athlete in Vallejo, Calif., and it was on Willis to teach him how to pitch rather than just throw.

“He molded me into what I am now,” Sabathia said of Willis. “I didn’t have a windup, I didn’t have a delivery, I didn’t have any of that stuff. I owe him everything.”


Willis first saw Sabathia’s range of ability when he asked the young pitcher if he had ever thrown a changeup, despite being a high school pitcher who could blow away guys at 97 mph. Sabathia told him he had never thrown one in a game but had tinkered with one on his own.

“So he shows me his changeup and it’s really, really good,” Willis recalled. “I called a report in that night and said he showed a good feel, and I got about six calls back that said, ‘Are you crazy? No one’s said anything about that.’”

It’s the moment that sticks with Willis when he’s asked when he knew Sabathia had the potential to be a special pitcher.

“I think, for me, seeing his ability — not to just have that arm strength, but at that age to have the feel for a changeup — you just knew he wasn’t gonna be a guy who was just gonna beat guys with velocity,” Willis said. “He was gonna become a pitcher. It took some time, but that’s what happened.”

In 2009, Willis left the Indians organization to join the Seattle Mariners first as a pitching coordinator and then as their major-league pitching coach through the 2013 season. He went back to the Indians organization briefly before becoming the Red Sox pitching coach in 2015. In 2017, he rejoined the Indians to serve as their pitching coach after Mickey Callaway was hired by the Mets.

Willis’ path has crossed with Sabathia’s from opposing dugouts before, but he knows Saturday’s game is likely the final time he’ll get to see his friend and mentee pitch in person.

“That first ace that you have is always gonna be special,” Willis said of Sabathia. “I think because our path through the system came together, I don’t know that there will ever be another pitcher that I feel as connected to as him. I’m proud to say that because of the person he is as well.”

Willis notes that he was younger than Sabathia is now when they first met and began to work together, joking that it makes him feel a little old. But that represents more than age — it represents tenure — and Willis can say, if nothing else, that he helped develop a man who’d go on to have a 19-year, possibly Hall of Fame career.

“I’m happy for him that he is seemingly content with moving on, but I always follow his games and follow his career and how he’s doing,” Willis said. “I just wish the best for him. I know he’s gonna be fine after baseball, but I’ll miss following him during the season.”
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

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Meisel’s Musings: Roberto Pérez’s renaissance, trade-deadline planning and Brad Hand’s perfection

Zack Meisel 2h ago 6
CLEVELAND — As Roberto Pérez stepped into the batter’s box on Saturday afternoon, Adam Plutko and Shane Bieber chatted in the dugout about the catcher.

Pérez has blossomed with the bat this season, boasting a career-best .830 OPS. The two pitchers have taken notice, with Plutko describing the basis of their conversation as: “Who is this guy, man? We don’t even recognize him.”

“I think he’s just a lot more confident now,” Bieber said to his rotation mate.

As the words rolled off Bieber’s mouth, Pérez’s bat struck again.

“As soon as he said ‘confident,’ ” Plutko said, “the ball went over the fence. It couldn’t have been better timing. It was just one of those weird things you put out into the ether. He’s quite a power.”

So is the key to success having Soothsayer Shane say something out loud? Or, perhaps, it’s just a matter of Pérez benefitting from regular playing time and soaring belief in his ability to smack baseballs a long way.

Pérez has already established a career high with 11 home runs, including one in each of his first four games of this homestand. In any other year, he’d be a leading All-Star candidate, but this year’s crop of American League catchers has produced some glitzy hitting statistics. The past few years, it’s been more of a Salvador Pérez & Close Your Eyes And Point To A Name approach. Now, Gary Sanchez, Mitch Garver, James McCann, Robinson Chirinos, Omar Narvaez, Christian Vazquez, Pedro Severino and Pérez could all make a case.

Pérez ranks eighth among AL catchers (minimum of 100 plate appearances) with a 116 wRC+. Ranking eighth might not sound like much of a feat, but for a guy who posted a wRC+ of 55, 73 and 40 the past three years to now be hitting 16 percent better than league-average, that’s saying something, especially given the dearth of reliable hitting in Terry Francona’s lineup.

“I’m trying to lay off that slider down and away,” Pérez said, “which early I was chasing that pitch a lot. Right now I am swinging with confidence, just taking it pitch by pitch. Don’t try to do too much, try to put the ball in play and make something happen.”

Pérez has already drawn more walks this season (22) than he did last year (21), support for Francisco Lindor’s claim that the catcher owns one of the best batting eyes in the league. Pérez has also clubbed the ball more to the opposite field. Six of his 11 home runs have landed beyond the center- or right-field fence.

Opposite-field percentage:
2017: 15.9 percent
2018: 23.7 percent
2019: 31.3 percent

“What comes first?” Francona said. “It’s easy to tell people to have confidence. I think it’s because he’s staying on the ball so much better.”

And it’s helped to have those long-awaited everyday at-bats.

“It’s nice to be able to play every day,” Pérez said, “and knowing if you go 0-for-4, you’re confident that you’re going to be back there the next day. I know it’s tough playing once a week or twice a week, but I’m not taking it for granted, man. This is the opportunity I was waiting for and now I’m just getting the most out of it.”
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Wheeling and dealing


Trade winds will soon start to swirl, and this season, there might be more July activity than usual. There’s no more August waiver period, so contenders will need to shore up their rosters before July 31.

The Athletic caught up with Indians president Chris Antonetti to discuss how the rule change might influence negotiations and decisions this summer.

Antonetti: “We know there’s not going to be opportunity to make meaningful trades on either side in August. I think what you’ll see is contending teams will not only be focused on making big trades prior to the July deadline but also trades that can enhance their depth to help get them through things that may happen in August and September. One of the things that August was really valuable for, especially for contending teams, was when you had an injury or something happened, you could adjust or find someone who could fill a gap for you. Now you have to plan ahead for that in July. I’m not sure how much of an effect it’ll have on big, headline-grabbing trades, but on some of the smaller, roster-maneuvering deals, I think we’ll see a lot more of those in July.”

When Michael Brantley sustained an ankle injury in early August 2017, Antonetti called the Mets and swung a trade for slugger Jay Bruce the next evening. The Indians also acquired former AL MVP Josh Donaldson on the final day of August last year, a last-minute upgrade to the club’s lineup.

Those sorts of deals will no longer take place. And will teams now have to pick a side — buyer or seller — earlier than normal?

Antonetti: “ I think most teams still had to do that by July 31 because trading valuable players, guys who are attractive to a lot of teams, in August is a difficult thing to do. I still think most teams will decide their general direction before the end of July.”

The Indians are one of those teams lacking an obvious direction. They could swap some prospects for major-league help in an effort to hang around the wild-card chase or attempt to trim the Twins’ 10 1/2-game advantage in the division. They could sell some sensible pieces, such as Trevor Bauer. They could choose both options. Or neither.

Antonetti: “The natural way the calendar works is that after the draft passes, teams can refocus and spend more of their time on trades.”

Evaluating the Indians’ potential buy/sell scenarios

Is there a draft in here?
We covered the ins and outs of the Indians’ two picks from Day 1 of the draft last week. Here’s a bit more on the club’s Day 2 picks, spanning rounds 3-10, featuring insight from Scott Barnsby, the Indians’ amateur scouting director.

Round 3: Joe Naranjo, 1B (Ruben S. Ayala HS, Chino Hill, Calif.)

Nicknamed “Joey Barrels,” Naranjo batted .382 with 17 extra-base hits in 102 at-bats during his senior season.

Barnsby: “Really impressive bat-to-ball. Left-handed, really pretty swing, natural, loose, easy. Controls the strike zone, recognizes pitches. Rarely expands, can use the whole field. Watching him over the last year or so, he’s really started to develop some power, so we feel like it’s in there. Left-left guy, so he plays some corner outfield, some first base. He’s athletic enough to move around, but the calling card is the bat.”

Round 4: Christian Cairo, SS (Calvary Christian HS, Clearwater, Fla.)

The son of longtime big-leaguer Miguel Cairo, Christian hit .425 during his senior season.

Barnsby: “He’s got the arm strength to stay at shortstop. He’s versatile enough where he could play short or second base, but we see him as a shortstop. Another guy with really good bat-to-ball, controls the strike zone, uses the whole field. Not a big frame, but he’s strong, put together. He can run, good athlete.”

Round 5: Hunter Gaddis, RHP (Georgia State)

Gaddis led his conference with 112 strikeouts (in 91 innings), though he posted a 4.85 ERA.

Barnsby: “This guy has got a really good arm. He threw in the Cape last summer, had him up to 95 (mph). He pitched all spring with a plus fastball. He’s got an advanced feel for the changeup, throws a slider that misses bats. He had a little up-and-down year this year in terms of performance.”

Round 6: Jordan Brown, SS (Junipero Serra HS, San Mateo, Calif.)

Brown batted .419 during his high school career, including .464 as a senior.

Barnsby: “He’s really young, and he’s got a really good frame. We’re obviously hoping he develops physically and grows into some power because we like his swing and we think he’s going to hit, and we think he’s really going to have some power down the road. Defensively, he’s got the actions to stay at shortstop, but it’s a big frame. You never know where the body ends up, but we’re confident he stays on the dirt. Right now we’ll give him every chance to stay at shortstop, and we’ll see where that one ends up.”

Round 7: Xzavion Curry, RHP (Georgia Tech)

Curry posted a 4.08 ERA, with 66 strikeouts in 57 1/3 innings for the Yellow Jackets this season. A high school quarterback, Curry arrived at Georgia Tech as a two-way player, but he focused on pitching in college.

Barnsby: “Throws a lot of strikes. This guy can really pitch. He can pitch with his fastball. He pitches up in the zone with his fastball, misses barrels, is deceptive. He’s got a good slider. He doesn’t use his changeup very often. We feel like once he starts to use that more and develops it, it’ll be a pretty effective pitch for him. He hit a little bit of a speed bump at the end of the year with his shoulder, which is why the innings were down a little bit. He’s missed the last few weeks. We’re confident he’s going to bounce back. They’ve been taking it slow with him at the end of the season. He just needs more time, and then he’ll be ready to go.”

Round 8: Will Brennan, OF (Kansas State)

Brennan was a two-way player for the Wildcats, but the Indians will use him strictly as an outfielder. He struck out in only 4.8 percent of his plate appearances in three college seasons and walked nearly three times as often.

Barnsby: “He can run. He can play all three outfield positions. The pitching — he’s got arm strength, so he can play left, center or right.”

Round 9: Will Bartlett, C/1B (IMG Academy, Bradenton, Fla.)

Bartlett batted .500 with 10 doubles and seven homers in 94 at-bats this season.

Barnsby: “This guy not only has really impressive bat-to-ball, he’s got big, raw power, and we’re pretty confident this guy is going to be able to get to his power. He can impact the ball when everything is on time. Rarely swings and misses. Big, strong physical kid. You see him up at first base. He’s athletic enough to move around. But right now, probably ends up at first. But the calling card with him is the bat.”

Round 10: Zach Hart, RHP (Franklin Pierce University)

Barnsby: “Big, physical kid. He threw well in the Cape last summer. He’s been pretty successful for four years at Franklin Pierce. A four-year starter, senior, and we agreed to terms with him and he’s ready to go.”
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Quotes to note
“Baseball, it’s crazy. It’s a round baseball that comes in a square box. Don’t forget that.” — Francisco Lindor

“I was so happy we won because I told Olson that if that scoreboard wouldn’t have been there, I would’ve picked up that ball on the way home. That was one of the longest home runs, golly. My goodness.” — Francona, on Byron Buxton’s scoreboard-scraping homer off Tyler Olson on Wednesday

Final thoughts
1. Brad Hand certainly deserves a spot on his third consecutive All-Star team. His first-half numbers are quite jarring — and they’re the best of his career.

0.98 ERA
1.70 FIP
1 HR allowed in 27 2/3 innings
League-leading 19 saves in 19 chances
40:7 K:BB ratio

His name will pop up in trade rumors over the next seven weeks. After years of sitting through ninth-inning tightrope acts featuring Bob Wickman, Joe Borowski, Chris Perez and Cody Allen, Tribe fans must be enjoying the lack of stressful final frames.

2. When do the Indians begin their scouting process for the 2020 amateur draft? Well, in the past. The team has developed an underclass scouting crew, with analysts who have been monitoring the 2020 class. The rest of the amateur scouting department will now begin studying up on the work that has already been started. Barnsby and other members of his team will spend this week in Phoenix watching the Perfect Game National Showcase.

3. Some candor from Francona when The Athletic asked about José Ramírez on Sunday morning:

“Every time I think he’s going to turn a corner, he doesn’t. I have so much belief in him that he will, it’s just been hard for him. It’s been a prolonged period and I know it’s got to be wearing on him. But I feel so strongly that he will figure it out.”

Ramírez did collect a couple of singles and a stolen base on Sunday. His slash line sits at (Alert: Not Safe For Work) .203/.299/.301.

(Top photo: Jason Miller / Getty Images)
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain