Guardians’ top 3 draft picks, José Ramírez’s Home Run Derby decision and doubleheader madness
James Madison outfielder Chase DeLauter (22) takes off his gear as he heads to first base after being walked during an NCAA baseball game on Wednesday, April 2, 2022 in Richmond, Va. (AP Photo/Mike Caudill)
By Zack Meisel
Jul 18, 2022
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CLEVELAND — The Guardians, staying on brand, selected an outfielder and a couple of college-aged starting pitchers with their three Day 1 draft picks Sunday.
They snagged an outfielder with their initial pick in 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2016. Those four players — Tyler Naquin, Jackson (nee Clint) Frazier, Bradley Zimmer and Will Benson – have combined for 6.4 WAR, per Baseball-Reference.
Cleveland collects college pitchers by the bushel. The club opted for 19 pitchers with its 21 picks last summer, and all but one came from a collegiate program.
So, who are these guys?
Round 1, No. 16: OF Chase DeLauter, James Madison
DeLauter is 6-foot-4, 235 pounds, and the Guardians believe if he doesn’t stick in center field, he’ll wind up in right.
“He can really cover a lot of ground,” said scouting director Scott Barnsby, who added DeLauter runs a 6.5-second 60-yard dash. DeLauter arrived at JMU as a two-way player, so he has “some carry on his throws,” Barnsby said.
DeLauter, 20, posted a .437/.576/.828 slash line with 10 stolen bases in 118 plate appearances this season, but he suffered a fractured foot in April that required surgery. The Guardians met with him at the MLB Draft Combine last month and DeLauter said he was “95 percent recovered,” with the final 5 percent being the mental hurdles associated with returning from injury. He recently held a pre-draft workout to showcase he was back to normal.
From The Athletic’s Keith Law: “DeLauter opens his front side way too early as he tries to cheat to get to velocity, and thus becomes vulnerable to off-speed stuff moving away. Florida State’s lefties just attacked him with fastballs and he struck out six times in those two games, giving teams the book on how to approach him. There could be more here with a lot of swing and mechanical work, but scouts are concerned he just can’t get to velocity consistently without that early move.”
Barnsby lauded DeLauter’s pitch recognition and strike zone awareness, two tenets of Cleveland’s hitting operation. The organization has largely shied away in recent years from targeting all-or-nothing sluggers, preferring hitters who possess innate abilities that position them to make frequent contact, while possibly growing into some power down the line.
“Not only does he have really good bat-to-ball (skills),” Barnsby said, “but he can also impact the ball to all fields. We’ve seen him drive the ball out to left-center. We’ve certainly seen him pull the ball.”
Round 1, No. 37: SP Justin Campbell, Oklahoma State
Justin Campbell pitches in the Big 12 tournament in 2021. (Alonzo Adams / USA Today)
A college pitcher with healthy walk and strikeout rates, good command and unspectacular velocity? That’s the Cleveland Way. Campbell also arrived on campus as a two-way player but zeroed in on pitching the last couple of years. Barnsby said he has an “easy, average fastball” and a “really good feel for his changeup.” This season for the Cowboys, the 6-foot-7 right-hander posted a 3.82 ERA with 25 walks and 141 strikeouts in 101 1/3 innings.
Here’s Law’s scouting report: “(He works) mostly with his fringe-average fastball, largely 90 to 92 (mph). His curveball is slow but has solid depth and above-average spin, while the changeup has both fading action and deception from his delivery. His delivery works, and he repeats it well. The main question is whether he has enough fastball to be a starter, especially when he’s pitching every fifth day rather than every seventh. If you think he can start, he’s a high-floor, low-ceiling prospect, but if you think the fastball is too light or can’t be improved, he’s probably a 4A starter.”
This description fits a number of Cleveland draft picks in recent memory, and Campbell is joining the right organization to get more out of his fastball and pair it properly with his other offerings.
Round 2, No. 54: SP Parker Messick, Florida State
The left-hander had an extreme 8-to-1 strikeout-to-walk ratio for the Seminoles this season, with 18 walks and 144 strikeouts in 98 2/3 innings. In 2021, he earned ACC Pitcher of the Year honors. Like Campbell, he pairs an average fastball with a changeup he throws to both lefties and righties.
Here’s what Law had to say: “Messick was one of the most dominant starters in Division I this year … but he does it with mirrors: He’s mostly 89-92 mph, with good secondary characteristics, getting a lot of deception from a funky delivery and pairing it with a solid-average changeup. Multiple scouts have commented on his apparent lack of conditioning and whether he’d hold up as a pro starter.”
Now for some other musings …
1. The Home Run Derby
Jose Ramírez homered twice Saturday, pushing his season total to 19. (David Richard / USA Today)
José Ramírez has twice declined the league’s invitation to join the Home Run Derby field in the past, but not this year. So why in 2022, when he’s nearing his 30th birthday and dealing with a bothersome thumb?
“My family,” Ramírez said. “They want to cheer for me. Especially my mom. She wanted to see me there.”
Double-A hitting coach Junior Betances, who instructed Ramírez in rookie ball, will pitch to the four-time All-Star. Betances insists he won’t be nervous, since it’s “the same as throwing BP. He’s the guy who has to put on the show.”
Then again …
“I can’t imagine throwing batting practice on that stage,” manager Terry Francona said, “because all you can do is screw up.”
Ramírez ranks tied for 10th in the American League with 19 home runs. He ranks fifth with a .576 slugging percentage.
No Cleveland slugger has ever captured the derby crown.
Cleveland’s Home Run Derby history
• Albert Belle, 1993, Camden Yards: Failed to advance past opening round
• Belle, 1994, Three Rivers Stadium: Failed to advance past opening round
• Belle, 1995, The Ballpark in Arlington: Lost in the finals to Frank Thomas
• Manny Ramirez, 1995, The Ballpark in Arlington: Failed to advance past opening round
• Jim Thome, 1997, Jacobs Field: Failed to hit a single home run
• Thome, 1998, Coors Field: Lost in the finals to Ken Griffey Jr.
• Grady Sizemore, 2008, Yankee Stadium: Lost opening-round tiebreaker to Dan Uggla
• Carlos Santana, 2019, Progressive Field: Failed to advance past opening round
2. Mother Nature’s madness
The defining image of the Guardians’ first half? How about a tarp covering the infield at Progressive Field?
Cleveland has had 10 postponements, nine via rainout and one for a COVID-19 outbreak. Sunday’s washout was a fitting end to a rain-soaked first stanza of the schedule.
The slew of schedule adjustments have forced the Guardians to play eight doubleheaders to this point. They have another one looming Saturday in Chicago. They also have doubleheaders on the docket for Aug. 15 (against the Tigers) and Sept. 17 (against the Twins).
Here’s how the club will assemble its starting rotation out of the All-Star break:
Friday at Chicago: Cal Quantrill
Saturday at Chicago (Game 1): Triston McKenzie
Saturday at Chicago (Game 2): TBD
Sunday at Chicago: Shane Bieber
Monday at Boston: Zach Plesac
Tuesday at Boston: TBD
Part of the equation is Aaron Civale, who is set to meet with a hand specialist Monday. Konnor Pilkington was initially slated to start one of the games of the doubleheader Saturday, but he might have to join the rotation on a more regular basis. Civale can’t return to the active roster until a weekend series against Tampa at the end of the month, at the earliest.
3. Welcome to The Show
Ten rookies have made their major-league debut for the Guardians this season. That’s 10 welcoming meetings in Francona’s office.
“We have so many difficult conversations with guys,” Francona said. “You have to take a second and enjoy the good ones. … A lot of them aren’t married or have kids. So this is probably the most exciting day of their life.”
Francona didn’t experience a similar warm welcome for his big-league arrival on Aug. 19, 1981. He arrived at the Astrodome, where his Expos were playing, in the fourth inning.
Four innings later, he grounded out to first.
“(Manager) Dick Williams just said, ‘Grab a bat, you’re leading off,’” Francona said. “He wasn’t exactly Mr. Warm and Fuzzy anyway.”
4. Francona’s health
Cleveland’s manager says he’s lost count of how many surgeries he’s had but estimates it’s “up over 45 or so.” When a team staffer underwent a procedure at the Cleveland Clinic last month, Francona told him: “Tell the people in the OR I said hello. Tell them I’ll be back. I don’t know when, but I’ll be back.” When another member of the organization had work done earlier this year, the doctors joked she was in the “Tito Suite.”
Francona says he has no regrets about returning for the 2022 season. He hasn’t made a decision about his future.
He wears a steel plate in his shoe to protect the toe that required surgery last September. He also has “drains in my backside,” which will remain until he has an operation at the end of the year to “try to eliminate that.”
“I’m OK, though,” he said.
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