INDIANS
Why didn’t the Cleveland Indians get more for Corey Kluber? Hey, Hoynsie
Updated Dec 21, 9:38 AM;Posted Dec 21, 5:57 AM
By Paul Hoynes, cleveland.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Do you have a question that you’d like to have answered in Hey, Hoynsie? Submit it here or contact him on Twitter at @hoynsie.
Hey, Hoynsie: Normally I’m very realistic about the moves the Indians make with the understanding that the Tribe is a small market team and money will always be an issue. But I have to admit that I was stunned by the Corey Kluber trade. Delino DeShields provides little upside. Do you think the Indians will use the money saved to sign a hitter like Nick Castellanos? If that’s so, the Kluber deal makes more sense. -- Patrick Kenney, North Tonawanda, N.Y.
Hey Patrick: I think the Kluber deal was a salary dump with fringe benefits. Instead of simply not exercising his $17.5 million option after the World Series, the Indians exercised it with the idea of trading him. They dumped most of the salary and brought back an experienced outfielder and a hard-throwing reliever in Emmanuel Clase, who could help them in 2020. There’s no way they sign Castellanos unless he falls in their lap on a one-year deal and that’s not happening.
Hey Hoynsie: Why did the Indians accept Delino DeShields as a part of the Corey Kluber deal? Why not a prospect? Are we collecting as many mediocre outfielders as possible? These guys are all the same -- with Oscar Mercado, perhaps, being the exception. Hey, maybe they should sign Lonnie Chisenhall or is Shelley Duncan still around? -- Joel Brown.
Hey, Joel: I’m not sure what the Indians are going to do with the nine outfielders on their 40-man roster. You’re right, Mercado could be the only everyday guy in the bunch. DeShields has played parts of five seasons in the big leagues. He hits lefties better than righties, runs well and plays a good center field.
The Indians always talk about getting incrementally better. Maybe DeShields moves the needle a couple more inches than a prospect. What we do know is there are not going to be nine outfielders on the opening day roster.
Hey, Hoynsie: With the reports that the Indians are reportedly requesting teams to make their best offers for Francisco Lindor over the weekend, does this mean that they are so broke that they can’t pay him $16.7 million for 2020? (Lindor is projected to make $16.7 million in arbitration this winter). They cut about $50 million with the trades of Trevor Bauer and Corey Kluber and declining Jason Kipnis’ option for 2020. Has losing minority owner John Sherman’s cash infusion caused this bailout? -- Greg Clark, Elyria.
Hey, Greg: Having Sherman put his shares of the Indians in a trust so he could officially purchase the Kansas City Royals in November certainly hasn’t helped the Tribe’s cash flow. But he pretty much decided to buy the Royals in spring training last year so this didn’t sneak up on anybody.
The Indians’ payroll, with or without Lindor’s salary, will go down for the second straight year. You don’t have to like it, but instead of tanking and going into a full rebuild for four to six years, they’re cutting payroll and trying to win at the same time. It is a risky strategy to say the least, but believe me it beats watching a team lose 90 to 105 games for five or six straight years while collecting high draft picks and saving its money for the next big push. Yes, they won 93 games last year, but they also missed the postseason.
Hey, Hoynsie: I am so tired of the guys on talk radio and fans that write you complaining that Indians owner Paul Dolan is not spending enough money. The Indians are one of the winningest teams in baseball and they perennially rank in the middle of the pack in attendance. The top five teams nearly doubled the Tribe’s attendance in 2019. Assuming the average fan spends $50 to attend the game including seats, concessions, and souvenirs, that equates to a big shortfall for the Indians compared to the top five teams in the big leagues. So if you really care about the Tribe go out and support the team. -- Joe Cerino, Concord.
(attendance link to 2019 - ps they were 22nd out of 30)
http://www.espn.com/mlb/attendance/_/sort/homeTotal
Hey, Cerino: Many will call you a voice in the wilderness (or worse), but you have a point. While MLB teams have many more revenue streams than they used to have, attendance is still a driving force for franchises such as the Indians.
During their current seven-year winning streak, in which they’ve won more games than any team in the AL, they’ve drawn over two million fans just once.
New York Yankees' Gerrit Cole (center), joined by his wife Amy and agent Scott Boras, is introduced at Yankee Stadium after signing a nine-year, $324 million contract.
Hey, Hoynsie: We were all amazed at the size of the free agent contracts that players signed recently at the winter meetings in San Diego. Approximately, how big a cut does agent Scott Boras earn from his clients? -- Alan, Columbus.
Hey, Alan: The New York Post, citing sources, reports that Boras earns about five percent when one of his players signs a multiyear contract. To say the least, it has been a good winter for Boras and his agency and he’s not done yet.
Gerrit Cole signed a nine-year, $324 million deal with the Yankees. Stephen Strasburg signed a seven-year, $245 million deal with Washington, Anthony Rendon signed a seven-year, $245 million deal with the Angels and Mike Moustakes signed a four-year, $64 million deal with the Reds. Boras, at five percent, earned $43.9 million from those four contracts that totaled $878 million.
Boras still has unsigned clients in Hun-Jin Ryu, Dallas Keuchel and Nick Castellanos. By the time all of Boras clients are signed, they should easily top $1 billion.
Hey, Hoynsie: In the early 1960s, the Yankees used to have a six-inning pitcher that was followed by a three-inning reliever to finish games. With a surplus of starters, couldn’t the Tribe do something like that with their six-inning guys like Aaron Plutko and Zach Plesac? It would keep the bullpen fresh. The three-inning relievers could pitch every fifth day just like starters. -- Alan Keller, Leesburg, Va
Hey, Alan: Theoretically it sounds good, but what if Plutko and Plesac get knocked out of the game in the third or fourth inning? What if the three-inning reliever can’t get out of his first inning?
The new 26-man roster means there’s a cap on the number of pitchers a team can carry. It will be 13 pitchers from opening day through the end of August and 14 in September. A 13-man staff consists of five starters and eight relievers. If you have two relievers assigned specifically to follow two starters, what happens if the other three starters are in a funk and manager Terry Francona needs his two three-inning relievers to help out in those games?
Maybe your idea would work better if you used the relievers as openers followed by Plutko and Plesac to pitch the bulk of the innings. That’s what Tampa Bay does so well.
Hey, Hoynsie: I understand the situation about why the Indians have to trade Francisco Lindor. I’m actually for trading him now to maximize his value, but why in the heck would the Indians put Mike Clevinger in the deal also? I read where the Dodgers want Lindor and Clevinger. If that is the case, we need to be getting Cody Bellinger back. Trading a potential ace this early in his career makes absolutely no sense. -- Larry Persinger, Mount Gilead.
Hey, Larry: I don’t think the Indians put Clevinger into the trade talks with the Dodgers. I would imagine it was the Dodgers who asked for Clevinger, especially if the Indians were asking for right-hander Dustin May. Lots of names get added and subtracted in trade talks. I can’t see the Indians putting Lindor and Clevinger in the same deal.
Hey, Hoynsie: Are the Indians pursuing Whit Merrifield? His contract seems affordable: $12 million split over the next 3 seasons. -- Jim, Baton Rouge, La.
Hey, Jim: What’s not to like about a guy who has led the big leagues in hits the last two years? Merrifield would be a nice fit with the Tribe, especially since he could play second base. But the Royals have pretty much said he’s off limits and it’s hard to make trades when the teams involved play in the same division. The asking price is always high because if you’re the Royals would you want to face Merrifield 19 times a year unless you received a big return?
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