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Guardians rally for 5-3 win after spotting Angels early 2-0 lead

Updated: Mar. 06, 2026, 6:37 p.m.|Published: Mar. 06, 2026, 6:09 p.m.

By Paul Hoynes, cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Petey Halpin and Chase DeLauter drove in runs Friday in the fifth inning as the Guardians broke a 2-2 tie in a 5-3 Cactus League win over the Angels at Goodyear Ballpark.

Daniel Schneemann opened the fifth with a single. He stole second and scored on Halpin’s double to right for a 3-2 lead. Steven Kwan followed with a walk and DeLauter singled to left to score Halpin for a 4-2 lead.

DeLauter, who started in right field and batted second, was in the lineup for the first time since March 1. He’d been sidelined with a sore hamstring.

The Guardians stretched the lead to 5-2 in the sixth on a single by Gabriel Arias. Cleveland’s shortstop, who missed five games with a sore lower back, was 2 for 2 with two RBI.

Gavin Williams, in his third start of the season, allowed two runs, one earned, in 3 2/3 innings for Cleveland. He struck out five and didn’t walk a batter.

The Angels took a 2-0 lead in the first on doubles by Adam Frazier and Jeimer Candelario. Errors by the Guardians escorted Candelario home. He took third on an errant throw by DeLauter, and scored on another errant throw by catcher David Fry.

Cleveland came right back to tie the score with two runs in the second against lefty Reid Detmers. Schneemann’s fielder’s choice scored Fry, and Arias scored Schneemann with the tying run on a sun-ball double to right field.

Connor Brogdon earned the win with a scoreless fifth, while Will Dion pitched the ninth for the save.

The Guardians, 7-8 in Cactus League play, finished with eight hits. Schneemann and Arias were the only Guardians with two hits in the game. Schneemann is hitting .368 (7 for 19) and Arias is hitting .333 (4 for 12) this spring.

Next

Right-hander Slade Cecconi (0-1, 3.86) will make his third start of the spring when the Guardians play the Padres on Saturday at Goodyear Ballpark. Game time is 3:05 p.m. Guardians TV/WTAM 1100 will simulcast the game.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
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Guardians News and Notes: Stuart Fairchild Hit a Grand Slam off a Retiree

https://www.mlb.com/video/stuart-fairch ... st-popular

by Quincy Wheeler

Mar 7, 2026, 8:28 AM CST


Well, Stuart Fairchild had quite a night for Taiwan.

He went 2 for 2 with 2 walks and a grand slam. Czechia pitching isn’t great as he hit his grand slam off a 32 year-old who retired from Triple-A. But, still, props to Fairchild and Taiwan who shutout Czechia 14-0.

The USA team destroyed Brazil and the Domincan team demolished Nicaragua as WBC action continued.

The Guardians also beat the Angels yesterday in Cactus League action. Chase DeLauter returned to right field and had a hit, Petey Halpin and Kahlil Watson looked good in a tough outfield situation for defense and Halpin had a hit. Gavin Williams threw four solid innings, Connor Brogdon and Codi Heuer looked good in a scoreless frame each. Gabriel Arias saw his shadow (had a couple hits) in his return, so we will have six more weeks of him at shortstop, I’m sure.

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Guardians outfielder swings his way into WBC lore with majestic grand slam

How grand it is.

By Henry Palattella

5 hours ago


https://twitter.com/i/status/2030126270684504514

Stuart Fairchild helped his case to make Guardians roster with WBC grand slam

That’s one way for Stuart Fairchild to make an impression.

While Fairchild’s on the Guardians’ roster bubble this spring, he still elected to play for Chinese Taipei in the World Baseball Classic instead of spending the entire spring in camp with the Guardians.

His decision looks a little better after Friday, as Fairchild slugged a 389 foot grand slam in Chinese Taipei’s 14-0 win over Czechia in Pool Play.

Although things hadn’t gone great for Fairchild and his Chinese Taipei teammates in their first two games of the WBC, Fairchild erased most of that with his second inning homer that extended his country’s lead to 6-0.

His homer came on a changeup that Czechia starter Jan Novak left over the plate. Although Fairchild’s clearly been seeing the ball well (as evidenced by the number of near home runs he hit during the first two games of the tournament), he finally had an at-bat where he put it all together.

Even though Fairchild’s blast didn’t come against MLB competition, it still obviously helps his case to make the Guardians' big league roster.

He’s currently in camp as a non-roster invitee, so the Guardians would need to add him to both their 40-man and 26-man rosters should they choose to add him to their lineup.

Luckily for Fairchild, almost all of the Guardians’ main options in the outfield hit left-handed, so he’d provide some much-needed balance to Cleveland’s outfield picture.

Johnathan Rodríguez is currently the only right-handed hitting outfielder on Cleveland’s roster, but he’s hit just .176 across his MLB career and has gone just 3-for-14 this spring.

No one’s expecting Fairchild to hit a grand slam every time he takes the plate (he’s never hit a grand slam in his MLB career), but he has a solid skillset that could make him a successful outfielder for the Guardians.

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Rhys Hoskins goes deep as Guardians belt out nine more hits in 7-1 spring training win against San Diego

Updated: Mar. 07, 2026, 6:07 p.m.|Published: Mar. 07, 2026, 5:55 p.m.

By Joe Noga, cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Rhys Hoskins struck out swinging to cap a 13-pitch at-bat in the second inning Sunday against San Diego starter Michael King.

That wasn’t unusual, given Hoskins’ early struggles in training camp since signing a $1.5 million free agent contract late last month and getting a late start.

But when Hoskins faced King again in the fourth inning, he didn’t give the Padres right-hander a chance to settle in. Hoskins blasted a two-run home run to left field — his first homer in a Guardians uniform — as Cleveland bullied its way to a 7-1 win in Cactus League action at Goodyear Ballpark.

Hoskins, making his first start of the spring at first base, jumped on a first-pitch fastball from King with two out and Kyle Manzardo aboard in the fourth. It was just the second spring hit for Hoskins in six games.

Hoskins entered the contest with seven strikeouts in his first 12 at-bats, but his second inning plate appearance seemed to settle him in as he fouled off five consecutive offerings from King before swinging through a changeup. His blast in the fourth inning left little doubt, sailing over the head of Carlos Rodriguez and into the left field bullpen after leaving the bat with a 104 mph exit velocity.

Hoskins added a two-run single with the bases loaded in the fifth inning, giving him four RBI on the afternoon and breaking the game open as Cleveland went on to score five times in the frame and push its lead to six.

Slade Cecconi continued his strong spring start, logging four innings and allowing just one run on a walk and five hits with three strikeouts.

Former first round pick Daniel Espino followed Cecconi to the mound in the fifth. After allowing a leadoff double to Padres infielder Nick Solak, Espino retired the next three hitters he faced on strikes. Espino whiffed Mason McCoy and Jase Bowen and got Nick Schnell on a 97 mph fastball at the bottom of the strike zone that survived an ABS challenge by Schnell for the second out of the inning.

Stephen Kwan, playing center field, delivered a leadoff triple against King and scored Cleveland’s first run on an RBI sacrifice fly by George Valera. Kwan later walked and made a pair of nice running catches in the outfield. He was also credited with an outfield assist when he threw to Gabriel Arias whose relay throw to Brayan Rocchio in the fourth inning cut down Ty France at second base as France tried to stretch a single into a double.

Right-hander Peyton Pallette gutted through another inning in his second spring outing. After allowing two runners to reach base, Pallette recorded a pair of strikeouts and escaped the eighth unscathed when Braedon Karpathios grounded out to Gabriel Arias at second base.

The Guardians return to action Sunday against the Rockies at Salt River Fields. First pitch is set for 4:10 p.m. with lefty Joey Cantillo (0-1, 11.12 ERA) on the mound for Cleveland. Righty Eiberson Castellano (0-0, 2.25) will start for Colorado. The game will air on CLEGuardians.tv featuring the Rockies telecast and on MLB.com with Rockies radio.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
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Smith welcomes the pressure as key piece in Guardians' bullpen

3:56 PM CST

GOODYEAR, Ariz. -- In an alternate universe, Cade Smith’s everyday uniform may have included a white lab coat. Before he established himself as a dominant reliever in the Guardians’ bullpen, the right-hander contemplated pursuing a career in medicine.

Smith majored in biology at the University of Hawaii -- and even earned the award for the top GPA among all male student-athletes -- and becoming an eye surgeon was one potential career path that crossed his mind. His interest in that realm dated back to middle school, when his class studied the eye around the same time his father, Tim, underwent laser eye surgery.

“My rough plan was that if baseball hadn't worked out, that I would get my degree and try to go on to med school,” Smith said, “And just see if there was going to be something along the way that I would stumble into and end up being really good at.”

The family and professional life balance of a laser eye surgeon's career appealed to Smith. Procedures also involve using machines, so the 26-year-old (who noted he has large hands) would not have to worry about nimble elements such as giving stitches.

Baseball, ultimately, has worked out quite well for Smith, which essentially made his decision for him. But that potential alternate reality is another example of him having the necessary temperament to thrive in the high-leverage moments -- which he has consistently pitched in during his career and will continue to do so in 2026.

“The dude's not afraid to operate on someone's eye,” manager Stephen Vogt said. “He's probably not going to be afraid of getting three outs at the end of a game, because I know I wouldn't have the confidence to operate on anybody's eye.”

The difference this year is that Smith is expected to get the bulk of the Guardians’ ninth-inning and save opportunities. It’s a role he was elevated into in 2025, after closer Emmanuel Clase went on non-disciplinary paid leave on July 28. From that point on, Smith converted 13 of his 17 save opportunities and logged a 2.79 ERA and a 1.76 FIP in 29 innings over 30 appearances.

Smith acknowledged there was an adjustment period after the Clase development, which, for him, included a blown save on July 28. That was the reality for Cleveland’s entire bullpen; everyone had to band together to fill the void. But they were able to come together to, ultimately, lead the Majors with a 2.92 ERA from July 28 through the end of the regular season.

“All of a sudden, we have this event happen, and we have to decide how we're going to respond to it,” Smith said. “Every single guy in the bullpen pitched in and held together. It's a team within the team. It's a tight-knit group. It's been so much fun the last few years to be down there, and that played a big role in how we banded together to handle that shake-up.”

Breaking down the Guardians' 'pen ahead of the 2026 season
Smith has been one of the best relievers in MLB the past two seasons. Since his debut on March 30, 2024, he’s logged a 2.42 ERA, which ranks eighth out of 107 pitchers who have thrown 100-plus innings in relief. But he’s not taking any of his past success for granted.

Smith noted there’s still work to be done. He knows he must remain consistent and diligent to be trusted with the opportunities he has earned to this point.

“I'm not taking it for granted that I'm solidified on the team,” Smith said. “But if they call me in certain situations more meaningful than in my rookie year, I'm happy to step up and happy to go out and perform, knowing that the work that I've done has prepared me for that, and also understanding that it's an honor to actually be asked to pitch in those situations.”

Smith is asked to pitch in those situations because he has the stuff and demeanor for it. He pointed to his faith as to why he’s able to stay so composed in high-wire situations. Whether he has a good or bad performance, it doesn’t change who he is or his identity. Through that, he can trust his work and abilities when he takes the mound and just have fun competing.

Post-baseball, perhaps Smith will follow a path within medicine. That would obviously depend on what the rest of his career looks like and how long it spans. But the door isn’t closed.

For now, Smith will be the calming presence the Guardians need anchoring their bullpen.

“He's a calculated, calm person,” Vogt said. “He's very easy-going. He just never spikes. I’ve never really seen him fluctuate. He speaks the same after a good outing as a bad outing. He's so dialed in on his routines. He's just a consistent human being.”

Tim Stebbins covers the Guardians for MLB.com.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
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Stephen Vogt Uses 3 Words To Describe Young Guardians Pitcher

March 8, 2026

By Jimmy Swartz


The Cleveland Guardians have built a reputation for developing versatile pitchers, and one young arm is already drawing attention during spring training. As the team continues evaluating depth options on the pitching staff, left hander Will Dion has quietly impressed the coaching staff with his flexibility. The former draft pick is still working toward earning a consistent role at the major league level, but early signs suggest he could provide valuable depth.

Dion was originally drafted by Cleveland in the ninth round of the 2021 MLB Draft after pitching at McNeese State. Since entering the organization, he has steadily worked his way through the minor league system while developing his command and pitch mix. While he may not generate the same headlines as some of Cleveland’s top prospects, the left-hander has continued to show the type of versatility that teams often value in a pitching staff.

During spring training, Guardians manager Stephen Vogt highlighted that exact quality when discussing Dion’s performance.

According to a report from Cleveland.com, Vogt described Dion as a “Swiss Army knife” because of his ability to fill several different roles on the pitching staff.

That description reflects how the Guardians may view Dion moving forward. Pitchers who can start games, provide multi-inning relief, or step into different situations throughout a season often become extremely valuable pieces of a roster. Teams frequently need that type of flexibility as injuries and scheduling demands force constant adjustments to the pitching staff.

Dion recently showed that versatility during a spring training appearance where he delivered one scoreless inning while recording a strikeout. While it was only a brief outing, it reinforced the idea that he could contribute in a variety of situations if needed.

Having pitchers who can adapt to different roles gives the coaching staff more options when managing the bullpen and rotation. That strategy could create opportunities for players like Dion.

Spring training performances do not always determine a player’s long-term role, but Dion’s early impression has clearly caught the attention of the coaching staff. If he continues to show the same versatility and reliability, the young left-hander may find himself contributing to Cleveland’s pitching depth sooner rather than later.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
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Young Guardians Player Is Turning Heads In Spring Training

March 8, 2026

By Justin Hussong


The Cleveland Guardians are counting on a lot of young players taking big steps forward in 2026, as evidenced by the lack of aggression in free agency. Prospects like Parker Messick, George Valera, Chase DeLauter, CJ Kayfus, and potentially a few others are looking good in Spring Training and could carve out major roles for themselves in 2026.

The biggest prospect of all is Travis Bazzana, though fans are likely going to have to wait at least a month or two to see him in Cleveland. The issue is that when he does inevitably come up, he is going to displace somebody, and if one current middle infielder keeps performing like he has been, it probably won’t be him.

Mason Horodyski of WEWS recently shared a clip from Stephen Vogt’s Spring Training press conference where the two-time Manager of the Year had a lot of praise for shortstop Gabriel Arias. The 26-year-old looks like an improved hitter this spring, and Vogt made sure it didn’t go unnoticed.

“His at-bat quality has been phenomenal. Laying off pitches that he’s chased in the past, it’s been really fun to watch. I think his at-bat yesterday, working it to 3-2, taking a few pitches that he would have swung at and then driving it up the middle for a base hit. Gabby has had a great spring,” Vogt said.



Arias is heading into his fifth year with the team and has yet to breakout at the dish. He hit .220 with a career-high 11 homers, but he also struck out 162 times in just 432 at-bats.

He isn’t the only young veteran fans are hoping can go up another level at the plate, but Arias could be fighting for his job this season. Bazzana is coming to take over at second base, and if Arias is being outperformed by Brayan Rocchio, he could easily be pushed out while Rocchio shifts back over to shortstop.

It’s a pivotal year for Arias, and hopefully the at-bats he is having in Spring Training are indicative of some changes he made this offseason. He needs a big year as badly as anybody on the roster.

[ The sole purpose for Gabe Arias' playing winter ball this past season was to improve his quality of at-bats. He performed well this winter ball season and made significant changes. We'll have to wait and see if his efforts translates into quality at bats this summer. ]

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
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Guardians Made 4 Roster Moves On Sunday

March 8, 2026

By Jimmy Swartz


The Cleveland Guardians continue to shape their roster as spring training progresses, making several moves as they work toward finalizing the team for the upcoming season. Like most organizations during this time of year, Cleveland is evaluating young players while gradually trimming the roster. On Sunday, the Guardians announced four roster moves.

According to reporter Mason Horodyski, the Guardians optioned two players while reassigning two others to minor league camp. These types of moves are common during spring training as teams begin narrowing their pool of players.

“The #Guardians announced the following moves Sunday: – Daniel Espino and Franco Aleman have been optioned to AAA Columbus – Ryan Webb and Alfonsin Rosario have been reassigned to Minor League camp,” Horodyski wrote.

Right-handed pitchers Daniel Espino and Franco Aleman were optioned to Triple-A Columbus. Being optioned means both players remain on the organization’s 40-man roster but will begin the season in the minors unless they are recalled later.

Espino remains one of the more intriguing pitching prospects in the organization. The talented right-hander has shown flashes of high-end ability but has also dealt with injuries that have slowed his progress. Sending him to Columbus allows the Guardians to continue managing his development while giving him consistent opportunities to pitch.

Even with the option move, Espino showed encouraging signs during his most recent spring outing. Espino threw one inning and had three strikeouts on Saturday. Performances like that demonstrate the type of electric stuff that has long made him a highly regarded arm within the system.

Following these moves, Cleveland’s spring training roster now sits at 55 players. That number will continue to shrink as Opening Day approaches and the team finalizes its active roster.

As the Guardians move deeper into camp, more roster decisions will likely follow. Each move brings the team one step closer to determining the group that will represent Cleveland when the regular season begins.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
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Espino optioned, but Guardians hope to see him in Majors in '26

33 minutes ago

GOODYEAR, Ariz. -- Daniel Espino has been one of the Guardians’ best stories of Spring Training this year. At some point this summer, he could become one of the best stories of their entire season.

The Guardians optioned Espino (who's ranked as their No. 18 prospect by MLB Pipeline) to Triple-A Columbus on Sunday, as part of their latest wave of Spring Training roster cuts. The club also optioned right-hander Franco Aleman to Columbus, and reassigned lefty Ryan Webb and outfielder Alfonsin Rosario to Minor League camp.

Espino made a good impression on the Guardians’ brass this spring, which has marked another milestone for the 25-year-old who has dealt with incredible adversity over the past four seasons. But his option was unsurprising given how Cleveland is approaching his build-up process this season.

Espino has made one Minor League appearance since April 2022; he threw two-thirds of an inning with Columbus on Sept. 20 this past season. In between, he underwent a pair of right shoulder surgeries that kept him off the mound.

•After setbacks and tragedy, Espino nearing ultimate goal

The Guardians need to learn how much Espino can pitch and how frequently he can pitch. They want to do so appropriately, outside of the pressure cooker of the big leagues. They also want him to just get some action under his belt given his limited sample size the past four years.

“I'm just happy he's healthy,” manager Stephen Vogt said. “We’ve got to be mindful of how we build him up to see what he'd be capable of to help us. We need to do that for Daniel's future and for us right now. He’ll continue to work through a progression.

“We want him to impact our big league team this year. That’s all of our goals. We have to do that together."

Espino has made two Cactus League appearances thus far. He tossed a scoreless inning in a start on March 1 against the D-backs, in which he threw just nine pitches. His four-seam fastball averaged 96.3 mph and maxed out at 98 mph. He pitched in relief Saturday against the Padres, when he worked around a leadoff double by striking out the next three batters he faced in a scoreless appearance. Espino’s four-seamer averaged 96.7 mph and maxed out at 97.3 mph vs. San Diego.

Espino noted this spring how his velocity remaining where it is after two shoulder surgeries was a pleasant surprise to even himself. It’s a testament to the work he’s put in through years of rehab.

"This guy's super talented, and he's worked his absolute backside off,” Vogt said. “I don't know if there's a harder worker or a better teammate in this building than Daniel Espino. He brings joy to everybody he's around and has worked really closely with. Kudos to our medical staff and [strength and conditioning] staff just to have him back on mounds throwing. But all the credit goes to Daniel.”

Cleveland now has 55 players remaining in big league camp.

Tim Stebbins covers the Guardians for MLB.com.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller


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Guardians bold predictions from ESPN would be good news for Chase DeLauter, Tanner Bibee and Rhys Hoskins

Billy Heyen

11 minutes ago


The Cleveland Guardians have a lot of the same faces for the 2026 MLB season.

Two of the notably new guys are Chase DeLauter and Rhys Hoskins, with different points of arrival to the Guardians for the new campaign. Both are involved in some exciting bold predictions from ESPN, too.

ESPN's Eric Karabell put together a prognosis for each American League team, and those two are among a bunch of Cleveland players named in the predictions.

Karabell begins by predicting three Guardians to have 30-homer seasons: Jose Ramirez, Kyle Manzardo and Hoskins.

For Hoskins and Manzardo both to do that, one would have to be close to the every-day DH.

Hoskins signed earlier in Spring Training from the Milwaukee Brewers. The former Phillies star wasn't really sought after, and he sort of had to settle for a small deal with Cleveland. Karabell clearly believes Hoskins can still get it done.

He then predicts that Chase DeLauter will get 510 at bats. That's significant, because the promising prospect has been injured often in his professional career.

DeLauter has the weird reality of having made his debut in the postseason last year for Cleveland, so he's still seeking his regular season MLB debut, which should come on Opening Day.

Karabell thinks David Fry will get back behind the plate on a semi-regular basis, and for fantasy baseball players, predicts that Fry will finish as a top-15 catcher.

He also has a prediction for righty ace Tanner Bibee. Karabell thinks Bibee will makes his first All-Star Game, win 15 games and strike out 200 hitters.

If these players pull off these feats, this could be a fun season for baseball on the shores of Lake Erie.

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Eric Karabell is a senior fantasy sports writer for ESPN, where he primarily covers fantasy sports across football, baseball, basketball. He also contributes to ESPN’s betting coverage.

A member of the Baseball Writers Association of America (BBWAA) and a Hall of Fame voter, Karabell joined ESPN in 1997 and has served as both a writer and editor during his tenure, with regular appearances across ESPN’s networks and multimedia platforms, including SportsCenter.

Karabell is best known for his signature preseason columns — the Do and Do Not Draft List — across multiple sports, as well as his popular Don’t Be Surprised series and weekly rankings.

He has received multiple Fantasy Sports Writing Association (FSWA) awards and is widely recognized for helping pioneer and elevate fantasy sports coverage through practical, data-driven analysis. He previously hosted ESPN’s Fantasy Football Baseball podcast and the nationally syndicated Fantasy Focus Football Sunday morning radio show.

A charter member of the Fantasy Sports Writers Hall of Fame (2010), Karabell is also the author of The Best Philadelphia Sports Arguments. He earned a Bachelor of Arts in Communications from American University, where he covered sports for The Eagle. Prior to joining ESPN, he worked as a staff writer for The Washington Post, The Philadelphia Inquirer and The Ring magazine.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller


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A post I think on the Athletic discussed 10 interesting position battles in spring training camps. One was the CLE OF. Noting DeLauter, Valera, Kayfus and Jones in competition. One posted comment was incisive: "Jones is having a good spring" observed the knowledge fan. Perhaps he posted that after day 1 of spring training.
Since then Nolan is now 1-22 with a single walk and 12 strikeouts.

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I think so. Jones has been very "Noelish".
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
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STUART FAIRCHILD




Too many bodies, too few spots: the Guardians’ outfield competition is about to get brutal

Published: Mar. 09, 2026, 11:22 a.m.

By Cleveland Baseball Talk Podcast, cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Here’s the kind of problem every organization wants — and the kind that still keeps a manager up at night: too much outfield talent, not enough spots to fit them all.

That’s exactly where the Guardians find themselves as spring training turns the corner toward the regular season. On the latest episode of the Cleveland Baseball Talk Podcast, beat reporters Joe Noga and Paul Hoynes dove headfirst into one of the most loaded — and most consequential — roster battles in recent Guardians memory.

Steven Kwan is pretty much locked into center field. That much is settled. But the corner outfield spots and the bench? That’s where things get genuinely messy. Noga laid out the scope of the logjam with blunt clarity:

Chase DeLauter, George Valera, Steven Kwan, CJ Kkayfus, Angel Martinez. It’s a very crowded outfield picture. And oh yeah, Nolan Jones still out there and he’s kind of struggling still at the plate. There’s too many bodies for too few spots right now,” Noga said.

And now, add Stuart Fairchild back into the equation. The versatile outfielder just returned from the World Baseball Classic — where he slugged two home runs, including a grand slam, for Chinese Taipei — carrying serious momentum heading back to Cactus League games. Manager Stephen Vogt was already singing Fairchild’s praises before the WBC, pointing to his ability to play all three outfield positions, contribute at the top of the order, and steal bases. He’s not showing up just to take up space on the roster.

In a dangerous place, if current trends hold. Jones looked sharp in the very first spring game — two hits — and has stumbled badly since, showing the same troubling patterns that defined his difficult 2025 season. Hoynes relayed a pointed message from Vogt that should have Jones paying close attention:

“(Vogt) said he needs to see conviction out of Jones. And I wasn’t quite sure what he meant... he said he’s caught in-between again as he was last year, late on the fastball and out front on the breaking ball. And that wants to see conviction from Nolan Jones,” Hoynes said.

“Conviction.” In spring, that word from your manager is a warning shot. When Vogt is publicly framing it as something he still needs to see from a player, the message is clear: time is running out.

Noga went further, raising the uncomfortable question hovering over the entire situation: do the Guardians look to trade Jones if they can’t find a spot for him on the roster?

That’s the cold reality of a roster crunch. DeLauter is producing every time he takes the field. Martinez is pressing his case. Fairchild is riding World Baseball Classic momentum back into camp. Daniel Schneemann has reportedly had a strong spring. The competition isn’t sitting around waiting for Jones to find his swing — and with a $2 million contract on the books, the Guardians will need to make a hard call sooner rather than later.

Three weeks of Spring Training remain. Every at-bat counts. And for Stephen Vogt, the hard decisions are no longer theoretical.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller


Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO

Re: SPRING TRAINING 2017!

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Young Guardians Hitter Could Be Due For Breakout Season

March 9, 2026

By Mike Battaglino


The Cleveland Guardians will be looking for offense from anyplace they can get it this season. After ranking among the worst teams in MLB last season, and having done little this offseason to address the concern, Cleveland could use a boost from its returning players.

It would be a huge help if catcher Bo Naylor can carry over his production from the final month of last season into this year. Not only would it lengthen the lineup for manager Stephen Vogt, but it could also take some pressure off the prospects as they adjust to their first full season.

Naylor was recently given a notable ranking among MLB starting catchers by Bleacher Report, which placed him at No. 23 out of 30 but mentioned his potential upside.

“Naylor is only 26 years old and going into his fourth season as the primary backstop in Cleveland, with glove-only veteran Austin Hedges behind him. He had an .872 OPS with 10 extra-base hits last September, and that could be the springboard to a breakout 2026 campaign for a player with a better hit tool than his sub-.200 average suggests,” Joel Reuter wrote.

As stated, Naylor failed to hit .200 last season, posting a .195 batting average in his 123 games. With Hedges only hitting .161, the position was a complete void for the Guardians, until Naylor broke out down the stretch.

In 19 games in September and October, he batted .290 with three home runs and an impressive 16 RBIs. Every one of those runs was needed as the Guardians rallied from 11 games behind to overtake the Detroit Tigers and win the AL Central.

If Naylor can produce that way from Opening Day, it could allow young outfielders Chase DeLauter and George Valera to settle into their bigger roles. It also could make up for a lack of offense from middle infielders Gabriel Arias and Brayan Rocchio until top prospect Travis Bazzana is ready for his MLB debut.

In four spring training appearances, Naylor is batting .500 with an exceptional OPS of 1.383, which is helped by three doubles among his five hits. That would indicate that the adjustments to his swing are continuing to pay dividends and he will be able to pick up right where he left off last season.

Anything close to an All-Star-type season from Naylor would go a long way toward helping the Guardians get back to the playoffs.

<
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller


Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO