Fukudome trade might be too little, too late
Published: Friday, July 29, 2011
By Jim Ingraham
JIngraham@News-Herald.com
Kosuke Fukudome?
It's fun to say, but can he hit?
Can he help?
Or is this too little, too late for the Indians?
Here's what he's not: a big, middle-of-the-order, run-producing bat. That's what the Indians need most.
That's what Fukudome is not.
Here's what he is: not a bad leadoff hitter for now, but a bench player if and when Shin-Soo Choo and Grady Sizemore return. Fukudome is probably just a two-month rental for the Tribe. He can become a free agent after this season, and the Indians will almost surely let him leave.
The Indians aren't in the business of paying $13.5 million — Fukudome's salary this year — to 34-year-old non-home run-hitting corner outfielders who by the end of July only have 13 RBI.
So Fukudome will undoubtedly be renting, not buying, when he explores his housing options in Cleveland.
He is a Band-Aid for a lineup with a gaping wound. Maybe General Manager Chris Antonetti will pull the trigger on another, more significant trade between now and Sunday's trade deadline.
He did say he's still looking. Of course he said he was looking in the run-up to Fukudome Day, too, so I'm guessing Jose Bautista isn't walking through the door anytime soon.
Speaking of the passage of time, here's what's scary.
Even though they are still only, and incredibly, 1 1/2 games out of first place, and even though there are two days remaining until the trade deadline — the Indians may have already missed their chance.
The trade deadline isn't until Sunday at 4 p.m., but the time in which the Indians could have traded for a hitter or hitters who would have allowed them to win some winnable games they instead lost — that time may have come and gone.
Consider the following:
The Indians this season have lost 29 games in which they scored two runs or fewer — seven of those came in July.
Overall this season, the Indians have lost seven games in which their opponents only scored two runs or fewer. Seven! If the Indians had scored just three runs in each of those seven games, that's seven more wins, which takes them from 1 1/2 games out of first place in the division to a 5 1/2 game lead in the division.
The Indians have also lost 13 games this year in which their opponents have scored no more than three runs.
That's not to say the Indians could have won all of these games. But they could have won some of them, perhaps enough of them to be in control of the division now, if not in first place in the division now, if not in first place at the end of the season.
Suppose the Indians finish five games or fewer out of first place this year. That will make all these winnable losses even more painful to ponder.
Many of those missed opportunities at wins have come in the last month. Antonetti said his preference would have been to have made a trade a few weeks ago, but he couldn't find a trade partner.
That's nobody's fault, but that's also an unfortunate development for the Indians, who have lost seven games in July in which they scored two runs or fewer, and lost seven games this season overall when their opponents scored no more than two runs.
Those are games, and wins not acquired, that may cost the Indians a chance to win their division.
And there's no way to make a trade now for another hitter to join Fukudome in the lineup, which would allow the Indians to play those lost games over again.
They're gone. Forever.
I know. If ifs and buts were candy and nuts it would be Christmas every day. But a team's window to win a division doesn't always come at the end of the season. Sometimes it comes in July. Or the last two weeks in July.
For the Indians, it may have already come … and gone.
Or maybe not.
This is why you play the games. A lot of them. One hundred and sixty-two of these babies. What you worry about is the Indians have already played too many of them, and lost so many winnable games because of their impotent offense, that's it's unavoidably going to prevent them from winning their division.
And that the Fukudome trade, and anything that might happen in the next 48 hours, might be too little.
Or too late.
Or too both.