How MLB’s new CBA impacts the Cleveland Guardians — in the present and future: Meisel’s Musings
CLEVELAND, OH - JULY 28: Cleveland Indians right fielder Franmil Reyes (32) celebrates as he rounds the bases after hitting his second home run of the game during the third inning of the Major League Baseball interleague game between the St. Louis Cardinals and Cleveland Indians on July 28, 2021, at Progressive Field in Cleveland, OH. (Photo by Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
By Zack Meisel 4h ago 4
The Cleveland Guardians’ complex in Goodyear, Ariz., is officially open for big-league business. Players will filter in throughout the weekend, with Sunday marking the official, mandatory report day.
A group of players — Shane Bieber, Zach Plesac, Triston McKenzie, José Ramírez, Logan Allen, Josh Naylor, Cal Quantrill, Sam Hentges, Justin Garza, Richie Palacios and Carlos Vargas — arrived at the facility Friday morning for physicals and some casual outdoor work.
Players were prohibited from communicating with the organization during the lockout, so there will be plenty of catching up to do over the next few days. Manager Terry Francona will meet with players. Hitting coach Chris Valaika will introduce himself to his new batch of hitters. The pitching group will gain a sense of how stretched out each hurler is. The training staff will learn more about the recovery process for players coming off injuries such as Naylor, Nolan Jones and Tyler Freeman.
The club’s Cactus League opener is in a week. Opening Day is less than four weeks away, April 7, in Kansas City. The home opener is April 15, against the Giants. There’s no time to waste.
Let the madness begin
One source said to expect the next week or so to be “crazy.” Another advised to watch for a barrage of trades throughout the league. Free agency should unfold rapidly; players want to settle in at camp and teams need answers, so there shouldn’t be too much deliberation or many attempts to spark a bidding war.
Front offices can resume trade discussions that started before the lockout, with both parties knowing the other side is in a hurry. It might be difficult to craft new trade talks while lacking the time and focus necessary to convince the other side to cooperate. Because, you know, everybody followed the rules and kept to themselves for the last three months.
Cleveland’s roster requires modifications. The club has only six relievers on its 40-man roster. The outfield needs an upgrade or two, and additions at first base and/or catcher aren’t off-limits, either. The 40-man roster includes 14 players with no major-league experience.
The Guardians’ payroll ranks ahead of only the eternally rebuilding Orioles and Pirates. The increase in the minimum salary should add at least $2 million to the total. Including projected salaries for the team’s seven arbitration-eligible players — Bieber, Quantrill, Naylor, Austin Hedges, Amed Rosario, Bradley Zimmer and Franmil Reyes — the payroll figures to sit at about $49 million, right in line with the Opening Day payroll from 2021 (and about one-third of the payroll from 2018).
The terms of the new collective bargaining agreement shouldn’t really influence Cleveland’s payroll much. There’s no salary floor or anything mandating that owner Paul Dolan changes his spending habits. And I suspect Cleveland won’t have to worry about the altered competitive balance tax.
As for arbitration, teams and players will exchange salary figures by March 22. Any unresolved cases could be settled during the regular season, which is a bit awkward.
No Rule 5 draft
Cleveland added 11 prospects to its 40-man roster in November to protect those young players from being plucked by another team in the Rule 5 draft. Now, that Rule 5 draft will not take place. It does prevent the organization from losing someone such as Joey Cantillo, a 22-year-old changeup specialist who owns brilliant minor-league numbers and has been throwing harder in minor-league camp. If the Guardians could have peered into the future in the fall, however, they surely wouldn’t have sapped themselves of so much roster flexibility.
It’s certainly understandable why they added players such as Jhonkensy Noel and Jose Tena to the roster — and blatantly obvious why they added top prospects such as George Valera and Brayan Rocchio — but now there are fewer candidates to shuffle. The 40-man roster is full and the Guardians have additions to make, but they won’t be severing ties with the prospects they just added. So, they’ll need to make a trade or two or three, or cut loose someone such as Zimmer, Oscar Mercado or Logan Allen.
As for the other draft, the amateur draft, new rules limit how often a team can hold one of the top picks. Big-market teams can’t earn a lottery pick in consecutive years. Small-market teams can’t earn a lottery pick more than two years in a row. Cleveland, though, hasn’t selected higher than 14th since 2013. The Guardians have the 16th pick this summer.
Schedule changes
Teams will play a more balanced schedule starting in 2023, rather than the traditional, division-heavy slate that forces the Guardians to face the Royals, Tigers, Twins and White Sox 19 times apiece each season. It should give us a more informed understanding of each team’s ability. It should also help MLB market stars better. Ordinarily, Fernando Tatis Jr. might visit Progressive Field once in his entire career. Now, Cleveland fans will be able to watch him in person every other season.
Look, I love Slow’s BBQ, but two trips to Detroit each year instead of three would suffice. Fans should enjoy, say, the Mets coming to town instead of the Royals for a third time in a season, not to mention the opportunity to see their team in more road cities each year. And it’s sensible to make this change now that the universal DH is in place.
Other items of note
• Six teams in each league will qualify for the postseason: three division winners and three wild cards. Those on the 2019 club sure wish that structure had been in place when Cleveland won 93 games but fell short of nabbing a ticket to October.
• MLB will reportedly host games in London, Paris, Asia, Mexico, Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic in the coming years. Cleveland’s trip to Puerto Rico for a two-game set against Minnesota in 2018 was unforgettable, especially Francisco Lindor’s homecoming/”homerun-ning.” Ramírez and Reyes playing before their friends and family in Santo Domingo would be appointment viewing.
• Ramírez should greatly benefit from shift restrictions, which are expected to be instituted before the 2023 season. Opponents realigned their fielders on 96.4 percent of Ramírez’s left-handed plate appearances. That might offer extra incentive for Cleveland to secure him to a long-term extension.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain