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SEATTLE -- Chase DeLauter took a trot around the bases in the first inning Thursday, after hitting his first of two home runs in the Guardians’ 6-5 win over the Mariners. Upon returning to the dugout to celebrate with his teammates, he swapped his batting helmet for a knight’s.

“Just something to celebrate every time Chase hits a homer,” catcher Austin Hedges quipped of the unique garb.

DeLauter hit each of Cleveland’s first four home runs of the season; he went deep again on Saturday. But soon, you’ll see other Guardians players donning the knight helmet, which is a new dugout celebration the club debuted this week.

The medieval theme traces to a group outing Hedges organized during Spring Training. Guardians players enjoyed a night at Medieval Times in Scottsdale, Ariz., where they dressed up as knights and wizards. Tanner Bibee bought the helmet and Kyle Manzardo bought a real (albeit safe, blunt) sword.



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The idea is as follows: When a Guardians player hits a home run, they get to don the helmet. In the clubhouse after a win, Hedges will “knight” the star of the game with the sword, as he did DeLauter on Thursday. Both props have emerged as a means to build team chemistry.

“You can see a lot of guys [around the Majors] excited to put a helmet on, a jacket on, a thing, a trident,” Hedges said of celebratory props that have become a trend in recent years. “Just little things. You’re into it and it’s something to do as a group because it really is such an individual sport.

“The more ways we can apply team things that bring us together, it goes a long way, especially as the season gets longer.”

The past two seasons, the Guardians handed out a championship belt to the star of each win. The team-bonding exercise was the brainchild of former Cleveland right-hander Tyler Beede, and Hedges, a clubhouse leader, later became the belt’s presenter. He delivered it to “the heavyweight champion of the game,” via a WWE-style announcement

The sword has emerged in the belt’s place. Paired with the knight’s helmet, the props are one ingredient to the Guardians’ larger mission this year.

Cleveland finished 28th in the Majors in runs per game (3.97) last season, when it bowed out in the AL Wild Card Series. The club wants to emphasize how it believes it has a good offense, and build some cohesion along the way.



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“Year after year, eventually things are gonna get dropped out,” Hedges said. “It doesn’t hit the same, and you don’t want something to feel forced. Like, ‘Ah, the belt again.’ That was a couple years ago’s identity, last year’s identity.

“The last two years, we won the division, which was great. We have higher expectations. So there’s certain things we have to mix up and change. We’re trying to be more offensive and win the damn World Series. So, similar concept, different idea."

Hedges had some initial concerns about whether his teammates would enjoy the night at Medieval Times. The night out together has ultimately blossomed into something the team can lean upon all season as they look to achieve special things.

"Those are things that I remember when I was young, first couple times going out with the big guys on the team," Hedges said. "You never forget it. Those are stories you’re gonna tell your grandchildren. We had an absolute blast. I don’t think it could’ve gone any better."




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As for the postgame knighting ceremony, well, Hedges noted he was still working on his delivery. It's understandable; Opening Day was his first opportunity at it. It doesn't sound like he'll break out an old-timey English accent.

"I can do my best Bruce Buffer impression," Hedges said. "But what am I going to do, my best Shakespearean? I’ll figure something out."

The knighting did go better the second time around, Hedges noted Saturday. DeLauter was, of course, the recipient after he crushed a two-run homer off Andres Muñoz in the 10th inning, which loomed large in the Guardians' 6-5 win over the Mariners.

DeLauter has kept the helmet warm so far. The team is coming together around his strong start to the season. Maybe, for now, it will remain the Chase Crown.

"I mean, I'm probably not gonna contribute anytime soon," Steven Kwan quipped. "It might be the Chase and Hosey [José Ramírez] crown, but he's got a good look on it. So I think maybe we just keep it like that right now. And it rolls off the tongue."



BIBEE LATEST



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Guardians right-hander Tanner Bibee threw a 26-pitch bullpen on Saturday and felt good afterward. It was a key step after he exited his Opening Day start ahead of the sixth inning due to right shoulder inflammation.

Bibee’s status remains day to day right now, and manager Stephen Vogt noted they will reassess him on Sunday. The Guardians want to give him every opportunity to make his next scheduled start, which is slated for Tuesday against the Dodgers in Los Angeles. They are also preparing for all scenarios.

“Obviously, we're thinking through all the contingencies,” Vogt said. “We're hoping we don't have to use one.”


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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

Guardians trade outfielder to Orioles for right-handed reliever


Updated: Mar. 29, 2026, 7:38 p.m.|Published: Mar. 29, 2026, 7:31 p.m.

By Paul Hoynes, cleveland.com

SEATTLE — Outfielder Johnathan Rodriguez hit 114 homers in the minor leagues for the Guardians but could never find the formula to transfer that power to the big leagues.

On Sunday the Guardians traded him to Baltimore for right-hander Carter Rustad in a minor league deal. When the Guardians reduced their roster to 26 players on Wednesday, Rodriguez was designated for assignment to make room for Rhys Hoskins.

The Guardians had seven days to trade or put Rodriguez on outright or release waivers.

Rodriguez, 26, spent the last nine years with the Guardians. They drafted him out of Puerto Rico with their third pick in the 2017 draft.

He played only 44 games in the big leagues during that time. Last season, he hit .197 (14 for 71) with two homers and 10 RBI in 31 games with the Guardians. At Triple-A Columbus, Rodriguez hit .312 (101 for 324) with 16 homers and 66 RBI.

Rodriguez will join Jhonkensy Noel, another former Cleveland slugger, in Baltimore’s minor league system. They are big, right-handed power hitters who weren’t overwhelmed with big-league opportunities in Cleveland.

Rustad, 6-foot-4 and 194 pounds, went 1-3 with a 3.23 ERA and three saves at three different minor league levels for Baltimore last year. He struck out 56 and walked 23 in 53 innings.

The Orioles drafted Rustad, 24, in the 15th round in 2024 out of the University of Missouri. Cleveland has not assigned him to a minor league team.

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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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Orioles Acquire Johnathan Rodriguez From Guardians

Rodriguez and Noel Reunited

By Mark Polishuk | at March 29, 2026 3:45pm CDT

The Orioles acquired outfielder Johnathan Rodriguez from the Guardians in exchange for minor league right-hander Carter Rustad, MLB.com’s Tim Stebbins. reports. The two teams have each officially announced the trade, and the Orioles optioned Rodriguez to Triple-A.

Rodriguez is a veteran of 44 big league games, all with the Guardians in 2024-25. A third-round pick for Cleveland in the 2017 draft, Rodriguez has been crushing minor league pitching for four years now, and he has a .301/.390/.535 slash line and 56 homers over 1083 plate appearances at the Triple-A level. In the majors, however, Rodriguez has hit only .176/.282/.304 with 36 strikeouts over his 117 PA in a Guards uniform, as his struggles with advanced spin rates have been highlighted against upper-level pitchers.

It was enough for the Guardians to designate Rodriguez for assignment in advance of Opening Day, and Baltimore stepped up with a trade offer to bring the 26-year-old outfielder into the organization. Rodriguez has a minor league option remaining, so he’ll provide the O’s with some depth at the very least, even if it remains unclear where exactly Rodriguez could fit onto their 26-man roster unless an injury arises.

Baltimore is already juggling Taylor Ward, Tyler O’Neill, Dylan Beavers, Leody Taveras, and utilitymen Jeremiah Jackson and Blaze Alexander as candidates for outfield duty. Jackson and Alexander will probably see more time on the infield with Jackson Holliday and Jordan Westburg still on the injured list, however, creating more need for an optionable outfielder like Rodriguez to be part of the mix at Triple-A. It could also be that the Orioles’ evaluators see Rodriguez as a project to be fixed, as his hitting potential and strong throwing arm make him an interesting player to watch if he learns how to handle movement.

Rustad is a few weeks away from his 25th birthday, and the righty was a 15th-round pick for Baltimore in the 2024 draft. The Mizzou product has worked almost exclusively as a reliever in pro ball, and he posted a 3.23 ERA, 24.6% strikeout rate, and 10.1% walk rate across 53 total minor league innings in 2025, moving from A-ball to high-A to Double-A before the year was out.

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Rodriguez received chances to show he could fill in as a power threat in Cleveland's lineup during the 2024 and 2025 seasons, but never found his groove at the big league level. In 102 career at-bats in the Majors, Rodriguez has a .586 OPS with two home runs and 36 strikeouts.

Perhaps the Orioles are willing to give Rodriguez another opportunity for a big league stint later on this season. Although his biggest competition in the Baltimore system might just be another former right-handed hitting Cleveland outfielder, in Jhonkensy Noel.

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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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