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10546
Steven Kwan’s rise from pinball wizard to the Guardians’ humble hitting savant
Zack Meisel
Jun 24, 2024
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CLEVELAND — Steven Kwan’s path to hitting prominence started in his grandmother’s garage, where he fiddled with a rickety, outer space-themed pinball machine.

Press the flipper. The ball shoots through a metal rail to the top of the board, where it waltzes with a pinwheel. Then go to work. With expert timing on the controls — quick fingers and a quicker mind — the game could last all afternoon.

The root of Kwan’s rise to prominence in the batter’s box for the Cleveland Guardians is his hand-eye coordination, a trait mastered through childhood summers full of pinball.

Two decades later, Kwan is flirting with a .400 batting average and blazing a trail to the All-Star Game. He’s leaving those in his dugout saying “wow” and leaving those in the opposing one asking: “How?”

How could this 5-foot-9, 170-pound chess champion who was never a high-profile prospect, who figured his rotten freshman year at Oregon State was his baseball journey’s death knell, reside in the same stratosphere as the sport’s slugging behemoths?

“He’s a pain in the ass,” Toronto Blue Jays manager John Schneider said, complimentarily.

Kwan is the lone soul disinterested in the hype. His dad floods his phone with jarring statistics, but Kwan responds by urging him to ditch social media. He’ll entertain those facts in December, after the season and after a long-awaited, mind-cleansing vacation. He can’t be bothered with adoration. The instant he allows his focus to stray, he insists, he won’t be prepared to keep this going.

This surge, though, has planted Kwan on the national radar, even if he won’t indulge.

When he turns on an inside fastball and yanks it off the foul pole, he credits his “shorter limbs,” not his unparalleled contact ability. He explains every hit as a lucky bloop or the byproduct of fortunate placement. When he received a smattering of MVP chants as he approached the plate on Saturday, Kwan considered it nothing more than fans’ beer-fueled babbling.

“He’s the humble king,” said teammate Will Brennan.

That grounded attitude has guided Kwan to this point, in which he rivals the league’s luminaries on every leaderboard. So have a rigid commitment to mental preparation, a determination to prove his mom wrong and, of course, pinball.

When he was four, Kwan told his mom he wanted to be a baseball player. Her response, as Kwan recalls?

Probably not. Let’s focus on something else.

Jane was playing the odds, and Kwan still teases her about her errant projection during their weekly catch-up sessions. She never intended to doubt him. She just aimed to offer a dose of reality.

He understands her position.

“Small kid. Barely any athleticism in our family,” he said. “My name is freaking Steven.”

He refused, however, to ponder the future or shore up a plan to enter the business world once the baseball dream fizzled. He entered what he described as “survival mode,” a one-year-at-a-time approach to an athletic career that figured to slam into a dead end before long.

In his first college game, he went 0-for-3 with two strikeouts, a missed sign, a botched bunt attempt and a misplayed ball in the outfield. He was convinced he had no future on the diamond. But, he said, he wouldn’t quit “until someone rips the cleats off of me.” That never happened, and Kwan adopted his mom’s hyper-realistic approach as he pushed forward.

He didn’t expect to break camp with the Guardians in 2022, especially with a shorter audition because of the lockout. But he started in right field on Opening Day. He was certain he’d head to Triple A after a week or two, once Josh Naylor returned from injury. He hasn’t been back to Columbus, aside from a rehab assignment. And Kwan and Naylor are now two pivotal cogs in Cleveland’s lineup. They sat in the Guardians’ postgame interview room on Sunday and lauded each other for their power displays.

As Naylor waxed poetic about Kwan’s evolution as a hitter, Kwan stared down at the table, almost humiliated by the praise. Anytime someone mentions a Kwan surge, he’s quick to stress the law of averages will soon rear its head.

And so, no, he won’t get caught up in the hysteria surrounding his .390 average.

“Hitting like this just isn’t very common,” he said, “so I’ve never really thought about something like this.”

Scott Barlow allowed Kwan’s first big-league hit, a sinking liner past the second baseman on a fastball at the top of the zone. When the two became teammates this season, Barlow had Kwan sign a bat for him. It rests in the back of the reliever’s locker.

Barlow was the first of many who have struggled to unearth a formula to quiet Kwan’s bat. The best tactic isn’t some 98 mph heater or wipeout slider or funky, left-handed arm slot. It’s prayer.

When Kwan swung and missed for his 15th strikeout of the season one day last week — for perspective, Reds shortstop Elly De La Cruz has 103 — manager Stephen Vogt and bench coach Craig Albernaz looked at each other and gasped.

“It’s like a glitch,” said catcher Austin Hedges.

Vogt remembers game-planning for Kwan last year as Seattle’s bullpen coach. The strategy was to throw it down the middle and let him either slap a single somewhere or, ideally, shoot it toward a fielder. There was no use in wasting pitches against a guy who has a better handle on the strike zone than the umpires and who can recognize and make contact with anything, anywhere.

“You can have a scouting report on him,” Barlow said, “but he covers so much. You can do soft away, hard in and mix and match, but his ability to make an adjustment in the middle of a pitch and time it up, whether it’s to foul it off or rifle a line drive off you real quick, it’s crazy.”

He ranks at the top of the leaderboard in strikeout rate and whiff rate, and he rarely chases pitches out of the zone. If he does, it’s for one of those short-limb-driven fastballs that he converts into a souvenir.

Kwan spent his winter seeking ways to hit the ball with more authority. More muscle and better bat speed weren’t the remedies. He’s still that scrawny kid named Steven.

No, the key was in his approach. He stepped into a Chicago batting cage and practiced swinging and missing more. He needed to reach a point of acceptance. He’d stand in, spot the ball, take a healthy hack and if he missed — which goes against every cell in his body — he had to learn to shrug it off.

The plan was to take more chances in advantageous counts when a whiff would be less detrimental than weak contact. He strived to alter his bat angle and to elevate a pitch he knew he could damage, to target the outfield gap or the fans in the third row instead of the Bermuda Triangle between the shortstop, third baseman and left fielder.

On Sunday, Kwan turned on another fastball and pulled it into the right-field seats. He has already hit a career-high seven home runs, in one-third of the plate appearances of a normal season. He’s jockeying with Shohei Ohtani for second place behind Aaron Judge in the league’s slugging ranks.

Just don’t tell him any of these facts until December.

When Kwan showers after a game, he watches the shampoo, soap and water funnel down the drain. In his mind, everything that transpired on the field goes with it.

There’s no hitting streak at stake. There’s no slump weighing him down. Every day is a clean slate.

“A lot of us can learn from that,” Brennan said.

Each day, Kwan jots down in his journal three things he did well, a way to practice gratitude after partaking in a game based on failure. When he was twice thrown out on the bases in Atlanta earlier this season, he scribbled about the thought process that prompted each mistake. He couldn’t punish himself for taking a chance he assumed would pay off. And he was reminded he should work on executing a steal of third. Any silver lining is a worthwhile takeaway. When he spent four weeks on the injured list in May, Kwan wrote about being thankful the injury wasn’t worse, given his history with finicky hamstrings.

Most mornings, Kwan meditates for 10-15 minutes. It centers him and helps him dismiss any intrusive thoughts and block out noise, though he admits that’s been more difficult lately, given the increased attention on his every swing.

Hedges took Kwan under his wing in 2022 and said it was the easiest mentorship he’s ever forged. Kwan was curious and caring, eager to learn how to stick in the majors and how to foster a healthy clubhouse culture. Hedges has watched him blossom into a leader — he’s the Guardians’ union rep at 26 years old. Now, he finds himself learning from Kwan and marveling at his influence on a first-place team.

“He inspires the hell out of me,” Hedges said.

His parents are savoring every moment of this ride, too. Most nights, they schedule dinner around the Guardians’ first-pitch time. On the West Coast, that often means a 4 p.m. meal. They wouldn’t dare miss the game’s most lethal leadoff hitter take his first cuts.

Kwan owns a 1.023 OPS. In his last 33 games, he has 16 multi-hit affairs and only five strikeouts. He has more walks (19) than strikeouts (16) this season.

And it all traces back to that pinball prowess. Kwan’s parents met while playing pinball in the ’80s. Kwan remembers asking for their permission to use the family computer so he could play a pinball game. He’d spend hours pushing Z with his left index finger and comma with his right index finger to trigger the flippers, and to cultivate the skills that would eventually make a kid named Steven one of baseball’s most imposing hitters — even if he refuses to embrace that title.

“It feels lazy to be like, ‘It’s baseball. It’s lucky,’” Kwan said. “But I think sometimes it has to just come down to that.”
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

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10547
Southpaw Boyd has deal with Guardians (sources say)

KANSAS CITY – The Guardians have started to try to chip away at their lack of starting pitching depth.

The team agreed to terms with lefty starter Matthew Boyd, a source told MLB.com’s Mark Feinsand on Thursday. Boyd has been a free agent since the offseason, as he recovered from Tommy John surgery that he underwent last June.

Given his medical history and the fact that he hasn’t played yet this year, this deal comes with some risk. Plus, he is coming off of a lackluster 2023 before he was sidelined. But the Guardians don’t know how much his throwing elbow contributed to his 5.45 ERA in 15 starts. And coming off of an injury like this makes him an affordable option to turn to. If he pitches well, this could end in a high reward.

This doesn’t mean that the Guardians are no longer on the hunt for starting pitching at the Trade Deadline. Depending on how many starters are actually on the trade market, this could just be some insurance to give them some depth before a bigger move is made.

For now, the Guardians can see what Boyd can provide. Maybe he can get back into his high-strikeout ways like when he fanned 238 batters over 185 1/3 innings in 2019. In 15 starts for Detroit in '21, he owned a 3.89 ERA, but he was again derailed by arm injuries that resulted in flexor tendon surgery.

The Guardians know that they need extra starting options. Gavin Williams is nearing a return to the rotation, but Triston McKenzie and Logan Allen haven’t been as consistent as hoped. And with Shane Bieber out for the year and not many hurlers close to ready for a callup at Triple-A, Cleveland has to find other answers.

It’s impossible to know what to expect from Boyd, given his situation and how long it’s been since he's faced big league hitters. But the Guardians can root for the best-case scenario, which would be the southpaw consistently eating up innings to take some pressure off an overtaxed bullpen.

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10549
Guardians Reinstate Gavin Williams From 60-Day IL, Option Triston McKenzie
By Mark Polishuk | June 30, 2024 at 10:51am CDT

The Guardians announced that Gavin Williams has been reinstated from the 60-day injured list, after the right-hander has been sidelined the entire season due to elbow discomfort. Williams will take the rotation spot of fellow righty Triston McKenzie, who has been optioned to Triple-A Columbus. To open a spot for Williams on the 40-man roster, Cleveland designated right-hander Darren McCaughan for assignment.

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10550
Triston McKenzie, Gavin Williams, Matthew Boyd and a messy Guardians rotation
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Jun 23, 2024; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Guardians starting pitcher Triston McKenzie (24) reacts as Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (27) rounds the bases on a two-run home run in the first inning at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: David Richard-USA TODAY Sports
By Zack Meisel
Jun 30, 2024

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Shane Bieber threw only 166 pitches before his season abruptly ended. Gavin Williams has thrown zero. Triston McKenzie’s next start will come against the Toledo Mud Hens.

Despite a mess of a starting rotation — a rare development for a long-standing pitching factory — the Cleveland Guardians reached the midpoint of the season on pace for 104 wins, which would rank second in franchise history.

Williams will make his long-awaited return to the big-league staff this week with a start against the Chicago White Sox. He’ll replace McKenzie, whose search for answers will shift two hours south to Triple-A Columbus.

“I don’t think he’s far off,” Guardians manager Stephen Vogt said Sunday morning in the visitors dugout at Kauffman Stadium. “I think he needs to go down there and take a breath and get back to being himself. We see the stuff. The stuff is there. It’s the command.”

McKenzie totaled only 16 innings last season because of shoulder and elbow injuries. He opted to rest and rehab a tear in his right UCL rather than undergo Tommy John surgery. He has insisted all season he hasn’t felt pain. Vogt and team president Chris Antonetti also contended that health isn’t the issue for McKenzie.

“Our medical staff works with him every day,” Vogt said. “Triston is healthy. He feels great. We see it. The velocity is up. The stuff is there.”

McKenzie topped out at 95.6 mph Friday, his oomphiest fastball of the season. His past three outings, he registered his three best average fastball velocity marks of the season: 92.2 mph, 92.9 mph and 92.6 mph.

It hasn’t mattered, though, because the pitch continues to get pummeled. Hitters have posted a .303 average and .652 slugging percentage against McKenzie’s fastball this season.

2021: 16 home runs allowed on 1,216 fastballs
2022: 13 home runs allowed on 1,575 fastballs
2024: 16 home runs allowed on 683 fastballs

McKenzie boasts a devastating curveball and slider, but he hasn’t had the fastball — and, more to the point, the fastball command — to set them up properly. Three metrics that all tie together tell the story of his 2024 season: walk rate, chase rate and barrel rate.

He’s falling behind in the count a lot, hence the 14.4 percent walk rate — more than double his walk rate from 2022, when he was a borderline ace — which ranks in the league’s 3rd percentile.

First-pitch strike rate in 2022: 62.5 percent
First-pitch strike rate in 2024: 52.9 percent
League average rate in 2024: 61.0 percent

Hitters aren’t chasing his pitches out of the zone.

Chase rate in 2022: 32.0 percent (75th percentile)
Chase rate in 2024: 22.2 percent (4th percentile)

As pitching coaches like to say, a breaking ball with a bunch of movement is only effective if the hitter will chase it. It’s easier for a hitter to resist a curveball that plummets out of the zone when ahead in the count. And if they can resist it, they know they’ll set themselves up to get one of those juicy fastballs they can obliterate.

McKenzie’s barrel rate: 13.0 percent
League average barrel rate: 7.0 percent

Hitters are feasting on the fastball when they know McKenzie needs to throw a strike. They’re making contact on his pitches in the zone 87.1 percent of the time, an extremely high rate.

The results: a lot of walks, a lot of home runs and a lot of questions about a guy who was a trendy Cy Young Award pick before last season. In his past three starts, McKenzie has totaled 7 2/3 innings, 12 earned runs, 11 hits allowed (five home runs) and 11 walks.

“It needs to get better,” Vogt said. “Triston knows that. He’s aware of it. He wants it, too.”

A midseason reset in the minors benefitted McKenzie in 2021. He delivered a seven-start stretch in August and September of that year in which he logged a 1.76 ERA, with a .385 opponent OPS.

The Guardians are hopeful this trip to Columbus will pay similar dividends because their rotation needs every ounce of help it can receive. McKenzie isn’t the only shaky starter; Logan Allen and Carlos Carrasco have higher ERAs and have similarly saddled the bullpen with extra work.

Cleveland’s rotation ranks last in the majors in fWAR, 22nd in ERA and 26th in innings. The hard-throwing Williams is a welcome addition, though Antonetti said he’ll initially be on a restricted plan.

The club signed veteran lefty Matthew Boyd to a major-league deal, but he isn’t expected to join the active roster until sometime in August as he completes his recovery from Tommy John surgery. He’s throwing live bullpen sessions and will eventually ramp up to rehab starts. It’s an interesting union, with Boyd trusting the Guardians to restore him to health and set him up for free agency this winter and the Guardians confident he can offer a lift to the staff for seven or eight weeks.

It’s too early to forecast how the July 30 trade deadline will shake out. Boyd arms the Guardians with another option for later, a dose of insurance. Only a handful of teams have emerged as surefire sellers at this point, so price tags for starting pitching — the top priority for many contenders — are high. That’s not unusual at this juncture on the calendar. As the deadline nears and teams feel more urgency and the identities of buyers and sellers become clearer, more productive dialogue will take place.

That’s a few weeks away, though. The Guardians can’t bank on the trade market to serve as the remedy to everything that ails them. They need a more reliable rotation to help them survive the second half, let alone navigate the postseason. A confident, strike-throwing McKenzie would go a long way.

“We’re the best team with Triston on it,” Vogt said. “We need Triston.”
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

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10551
Welcome to July, the month that could change the Cleveland Guardians forever
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CLEVELAND, OHIO - NOVEMBER 10: President of baseball operations Chris Antonetti of the Cleveland guardians speaks prior to introducing Stephen Vogt as the 45th Manager of the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on November 10, 2023 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images)
By Zack Meisel
8h ago


KANSAS CITY — Welcome to July 2024, what could become one of the most consequential months in the 124-year history of Cleveland’s baseball franchise.

OK, perhaps that’s a bit dramatic. But the Guardians have never had a month like the one that lies ahead. It’s not every year that they enter trade season at the top of the standings, with an opportunity to shore up some roster deficiencies and build on a strong first half. And in no year have they owned the top pick in the amateur draft, with an opportunity to toss a top prospect — plus a couple of other high picks — into their farm system.

Rarely do those two assignments simultaneously land on a general manager’s desk. The team always talking about “threading the needle” and tackling short- and long-term contention plans has never been better situated to do so. July marks the peak of summer, and it’ll mark the peak of activity for Cleveland’s front office. For a few weeks, the daily itinerary for the decision-makers in the front office has included draft meetings and trade dialogue. Ask team president Chris Antonetti or GM Mike Chernoff about their to-do list and their first reaction is to laugh.

Somehow, after a rocky 2023 season and a dormant winter, the stars aligned to place the Guardians at the center of the baseball universe for July 2024. This month, they’ll find themselves in the middle of every conversation. What a time to be the Guardians.

They have owned the No. 2 pick in the draft on five occasions, but never the top pick, and they had only a 2 percent chance of claiming the top pick in the lottery before they struck fortune. Antonetti suggested over the weekend the team might not finalize its selection “until moments before we make the pick” on July 14. Posturing? Maybe. Regardless, he’ll snap his fingers and add a top-50 prospect in the sport to the farm system, likely someone who could barge his way into Stephen Vogt’s lineup by next summer. Whether it’s Oregon State second baseman Travis Bazzana or Georgia slugger Charlie Condon or West Virginia shortstop J.J. Wetherholt, the choice figures to be the top prospect in the organization the instant he shakes hands with commissioner Rob Manfred. It could be the most promising young player they’ve added in a long time, someone to spearhead the franchise’s bid to win a World Series in 2025 and beyond.
Cleveland could select Oregon State infielder Travis Bazzana with the No. 1 overall pick on July 14. (Kevin Neri / USA Today)

But what about the franchise’s bid to win the World Series in 2024?

That top pick’s mere presence should make it easier for the front office to stomach unloading some prospects at the trade deadline. Their needs are clear: help in the rotation, more help in the rotation, even more help in the rotation and then more help in the rotation. Once they’ve exhausted their search for more help in the rotation, they can proceed to something other than more help in the rotation, such as a right-handed bat.

The Guardians have been in contact with other teams about potential trades for weeks now, but those conversations are mostly supplying the groundwork for deals that won’t materialize until closer to the July 30 deadline, if at all. Multiple league executives predicted talks would pause around the draft before gaining steam in the last two weeks of the month.

With three wild-card berths up for grabs in each league and so many teams hovering around .500, the market could develop slowly until desperation sets in as the deadline approaches. One executive described many teams as presenting a “wait-and-see approach” and suggesting they lack clarity on a plan. Teams stuck in the middle figure to wait as long as possible before being forced to decide to buy, sell or stand pat. The Guardians fell into that category last year, opting to sell off Aaron Civale and Josh Bell after weeks of deliberations about whether they had the ingredients to make an October run.

Since there are only a handful of clear-cut sellers at this point, those clubs hold the leverage, asking for each rival GM’s first-born and stressing that they can simply wait until closer to the deadline, when more teams will be in pursuit. The Guardians won’t be the only team chasing after starting pitching help, which will further complicate matters.

They need a boost in their rotation to survive 162 games as much or more than they do to help them win in October, when they can lean more heavily on their league-best bullpen. Starting pitching help isn’t the only option. They could add another hitter, and since they have so many versatile position players, they can target just about anyone made available.

Another alternative should the starting pitching market not improve: adding to what’s already a deep, imposing bullpen to convert it into one that can compensate for a beleaguered rotation the way Cleveland’s relief corps did in October 2016. This isn’t at the top of the priority list, but it would offer protection should rookies Cade Smith, Hunter Gaddis and Tim Herrin stumble in the second half, and it’s usually easier (depending on skill level) to land a reliever in July than a starter.

The Guardians have been aggressive in this spot before, defying modest expectations to emerge as a bona fide contender. In 2011, (prematurely) sensing they were on the verge of a contention window, they packaged four prospects, including a pair of first-round pitchers, for Ubaldo Jiménez, the best starting pitcher available. In 2016, they shipped four prospects to the Yankees for Andrew Miller (and they were in on Aroldis Chapman, too, as a contingency) and two more prospects for Brandon Guyer. They tried to send four others to the Brewers for Jonathan Lucroy, but the catcher vetoed the deal, a development that still makes Cleveland’s executives chuckle and shake their heads.

They also struck deals for Jay Bruce in 2017 and Josh Donaldson in 2018, and in 2019 flipped top prospect Francisco Mejía to the Padres for Brad Hand, the top reliever on the market. If they bundle some of their top prospects this month, they can compensate for it with their new draft class. They own three of the first 48 picks (1, 36, 48).

The Guardians haven’t won the World Series since 1948, a mere 909 months ago. If they finally break the hex, whether this year or in the near future, July 2024 might have a lot to do with it.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

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10552
Old article on Spencer Howard

How Spencer Howard went from top Phillies prospect to trade bait: ‘It could have gone a million different ways’
CINCINNATI, OHIO - JUNE 28: Spencer Howard #48 of the Philadelphia Phillies looks on from the dugout after being relieved in the third inning against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on June 28, 2021 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Dylan Buell/Getty Images)
By Matt Gelb
Jul 30, 2021
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PITTSBURGH — Spencer Howard took a walk Friday afternoon while the Phillies decided to trade him. He was barefoot and accompanied by Connor Brogdon, a soon-to-be-former teammate. They strolled along the edge of the grass, from foul pole to foul pole, at PNC Park. When they paused in the left-field corner, Brogdon checked his phone. Howard peeked at his and quickly stuffed it in his pocket. He had an idea of what was coming, but at 2:30 p.m., he chose ignorance.

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“It could have gone a million different ways, but I’m at peace with how it went,” Howard said a few hours later. “I’m excited to turn a new page and see what there is in store for me in Texas.”

A mere 378 days earlier, the most powerful person in the Phillies organization went on his Twitch stream and made a proclamation. “If Spencer Howard isn’t starting in our rotation by Game 6 in New York against the Yankees, there’s a problem,” Bryce Harper said on July 17, 2020, and it was difficult to reconcile Friday how the Phillies went from there to here.

They are, in the immediate, a better team. Kyle Gibson, who has a 2.87 ERA but walked eight batters in his final start with the Rangers, is an upgrade for a rotation that craves one. Ian Kennedy is 36 years old and has seen it all in this game. Maybe he becomes the Phillies closer. At the very least, he will pitch important innings. And Hans Crouse, a right-handed pitching prospect who was drafted 21 picks after Howard in 2017, will slot high in the Phillies’ prospect rankings.

But the Phillies sold low on Howard, who would have fetched more eight months ago. He was deemed untouchable by the previous front-office regime. He has suffered shoulder trouble in his past two seasons. He was on an innings limit in 2021 because the Phillies were concerned about his arm, yet they were willing to alter his role every few weeks. For an organization that extended the longest of leashes to Vince Velasquez and Nick Pivetta, Howard’s 52 2/3 innings in the majors were a cameo. That the Phillies turned him into a fourth starter, a potential closer and a lesser prospect prompts the question: Did the industry’s opinion of Howard fall this far, or did the Phillies bungle it?

The further and further Howard crept from his breakout season in 2018, the more doubt filled any discussion about him. Last week, the Phillies told interested teams they were willing to talk about Howard in a trade — as long as it wasn’t for a rental player. The Phillies had bigger ideas in mind for the deadline, but according to multiple sources, they encountered tepid interest in the prospects they were willing to deal. Howard was their best trade chip — and, even then, his value was not what it once was.

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“He’s not established,” president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski said. “And, really for us this year, if you were telling me we’re going to get four to five innings out of him the rest of the year on a consistent basis, I’d be thrilled. Would have been thrilled. With us to try to win, I don’t think that’s really enough right now from that spot.”

If anything, Howard represents another in a long line of developmental failures for the Phillies. There are legitimate concerns about his durability and his secondary offerings. But the Phillies often did not put Howard in the most optimal position. Dombrowski acknowledged as much.

“I think he’s been in a tough spot in his development situation here in the organization for an extended time,” Dombrowski said. “When you look back, I mean, he’s had some injuries. He had the COVID situation last year. He had some issues in spring training, delaying him a little bit. Watching his innings this year, moving him back and forth. I mean, it was a tough situation for him. We’re doing the best job we could to handle it for him and handle it for us. Could it have affected him? Perhaps. I think probably the best thing, really what he was doing now and he had done the last couple of times at the minor-league level, was to get the ball and go start.

“I wish that opportunity would have come up here. We gave him the opportunity, but it seemed like something happened whenever we would give them that opportunity — through really no fault of his own.”

Manager Joe Girardi echoed that. He wasn’t sure if the erratic routine contributed to Howard’s inconsistent performances.

“It’s hard to say,” Girardi said. “I think what hurts a lot of times is … I mean, last year was just a tough year for everyone involved. He didn’t get to take that next step of his normal progression. Right? Then there was a need for him. And I’m sure it’s happened to a lot of players. There are a lot of guys who didn’t get to play last year. He at least got to play. But it interrupted a lot of stuff. It just was a huge interruption to a lot of peoples’ growth.”

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In the end, according to numerous sources within the front office, the Phillies were worried enough about Howard’s progression beyond 2021 to harbor serious doubts about his viability as a big-league starter. The Rangers, according to a source, still graded Howard as a potential mid-rotation pitcher. Crouse, who turns 23 in September, will go to Double-A Reading. “We would not have been able to access Howard, in particular, and certainly not this package of these three pitchers if we were not willing to include a prospect of Hans’ caliber in the deal,” Rangers president of baseball operations Jon Daniels said. The Phillies, to sweeten it, dealt from a glut of A-ball pitchers by sending Kevin Gowdy and Josh Gessner to Texas.

Howard said he pushed himself to become obsessed with routines tied to weight lifting and arm care. He preferred to be on a regular starter’s routine because that was most familiar to him. It’s not as if Howard was blameless; there were the odd excuses for his sharp decline in velocity after two or three innings. He might overthink certain things. He had chances, albeit limited, to solidify his place. He never did.

Howard does wonder how his career might have unfolded had the Phillies just treated him as a traditional starter from the beginning.

“Yeah,” Howard said. “I try to not dwell on that stuff too much because it is what it is. The front office here, Joe and everyone, they’re just doing what they thought was best for the team. I can get behind that. No hard feelings.”

Two minutes after 3 p.m., Howard approached a group of Phillies pitchers in right field. He laughed with Zack Wheeler and Aaron Nola. Howard was supposed to join them atop a strong rotation. Instead, the Phillies opted for less upside but more certainty in Gibson. It was a “win-now” transaction for a team that is built to win now but has provided scant evidence it can actually do it.

Howard hugged some teammates. “It’s bittersweet,” he said. He disappeared with pitching coach Caleb Cotham and went into Girardi’s office. The manager told him the news he already knew. Another Phillies prospect, dispatched to a new organization, walked out the door.

“I was mulling the idea over but trying not to let it affect day-to-day life,” Howard said. “You never know at the end of the day. It was definitely in the back of my head. It’s just crazy.

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10553
It looks like he has around 300 innings pitched over the last 4 years both in the minors and majors

almost a 9 k's per 9 innings but 4 walks per 9

Not sure why the Guardians picked him up when they are contending and he needs a roster spot

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10554
Not sure why the Guardians picked him up when they are contending and he needs a roster spot

Guardians are going to have to work on the fringes. Not a lot of good pitchers that are available now or at the trade deadline. Guardians will try one big trade to get a young, contract controllable starting pitcher.

Re: Articles

10555
I still like Jesus Luzardo from the Marlins. He's a southpaw and would fill an immediate need.

Crucially, he is also a cost-controllable asset. Luzardo is still under team control for three more seasons, making him doubly attractive to trade partners.

Of course, the Marlins know all of this and will want a substantial haul in any trade involving Luzardo. For now, the lefty remains a member of Miami, but teams looking for starting pitching help are certain to come calling about his availability.

If your going to make a big splash, now is the time.

<
“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

Re: Articles

10556
Marlins' Jesus Luzardo set to miss 4-6 weeks with back injury
Associated Press
Jun 22, 2024, 01:55 PM ET

MIAMI -- Marlins left-hander Jesus Luzardo went on the 15-day injured list for the second time this season, this time because of a lumbar stress reaction, and manager Skip Schumaker estimated his Opening Day starter could be sidelined four to six weeks.

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10557
Even though Jesus Luzardo is on the 60-day injured list, teams are still checking in with the Marlins about the left-hander’s availability, USA Today’s Bob Nightengale writes. Luzardo’s initial IL placement took place on June 19, so he won’t be back until August 18 at the earliest as he recovers from a lumbar stress reaction. If Luzardo was indeed able to return around that date and return in good form, there would be plenty of time for the southpaw to contribute to a contender for the remainder of the season, yet naturally his health situation would make for some tricky trade negotiations with Miami. From the Marlins’ perspective, it is hard to imagine they would agree to sell low on one of their top trade chips, especially since Luzardo is still under team control through the 2026 season.

Re: Articles

10558
Long article in the Athletic assessing Hall of Fame chances for active players. Here's the paragraph on Jose Ramirez

RAMIREZ: I filed José Ramírez under “Case Not Closed” in last year’s Hall column. But upon further review, he’s played himself into a more prominent tier than that.

He’ll finish this season with more than 1,500 hits and (if he keeps doing what he’s doing) his seventh top-10 MVP finish. He’s on track to join the 300-Homer, 300-Steal Club. And he’s the face of a franchise that sure does win a lot. He’s still only 31. So he can’t quite see Cooperstown from here. But Cooperstown can see him.


And CLASE:

CLASE: Five seasons into his career, the Guardians’ unhittable closer has a 1.81 ERA and 136 saves (and counting). Is that good?

First five seasons
Mariano Rivera
2.58 ERA
1.11 WHIP
129 SAVES
182 ERA+ {I don't what that is]
Emmanuel Clase
1.81 ERA
0.92 WHIP
136 SAVES
231 ERA+
But is it safe to say that all closers don’t age like Mariano? It is! So let’s see where this goes, because Clase is definitely in session.

Re: Articles

10559
Well, I did not know about that Luzardo injury. If we can take a chance on Boyd, I still think we should take a shot at Luzardo. He certainly has the stuff.
“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

Re: Articles

10560
Howard replacing Allen (optioned out to Columbus), Howard's been activated. It doesn't sound like a logical move to me. I guess we shall see

As I posted about the offense, I like the experimentation. Trying to put together an improved rotation. If you're going to experiment, now's the time. A 6 run lead isn't great, but enough leeway for experimentations. We should have a very good idea of what kind of team we should field entering the second half of the season.

<
“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