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Re: Articles

Posted: Sun Jan 19, 2025 11:38 am
by joez
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Guardians Voice Named As One Of The Biggest Offseason Winners

January 18, 2025

By Andres Chavez


When you think of the Cleveland Guardians and their games throughout the years, Tom Hamilton immediately comes to mind.

His name and voice will be forever associated with the franchise, for all the right reasons.

Hamilton joined the Guardians (then, the Cleveland Indians) radio network in the 1990 campaign, and his voice has accompanied the team, for better or worse, since then.

Over his successful career, Hamilton has called more than 5,000 games, including the 1997 and 2016 World Series.

His career work earned him a highly prestigious award late last year, and that makes him one of the 2024-25 off-season winners in the eyes of The Athletic’s writer and former baseball executive Jim Bowden.
“The voice of the Cleveland Guardians learned at the Winter Meetings in December that he had won the Ford C. Frick Award and will be inducted into the Hall of Fame this July in Cooperstown, N.Y. Hamilton has one of the best voices in MLB history. He has truly special energy and enthusiasm and a great baseball mind,”
The Ford C. Frick Award is given every year to one broadcaster for his contributions to the game of baseball.

Hamilton was the chosen one on this occasion, and he has every merit to be the recipient of the important recognition.

He received endless demonstrations of respect and admiration ever since the news was revealed.

Those who weren’t familiar with his work also got to know him and his voice.

You can say with confidence that he was, indeed, one of the winners of the off-season.

No, not all heroes wear capes: the beautiful game of baseball is more than just the players.

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Re: Articles

Posted: Sun Jan 19, 2025 11:43 am
by joez
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Analyst Believes Guardians Made Best Trade Of The Offseason

January 19, 2025

By Andres Chavez


This weekend, the Cleveland Guardians pulled off a jaw-dropping trade.

They agreed to send outfielder Myles Straw, $2 million in international bonus slot money, and $3.75 million to the Toronto Blue Jays in exchange for a player to be named later or cash considerations.

No, we don’t know the player coming to Cleveland, and that’s if there is one.

But it hardly matters because the Guardians got rid of Straw’s contract.

Before the 2022 campaign, Cleveland extended Straw on a five-year, $25 million contract.

The deal has been a disaster because Straw is almost unplayable offensively.

He is so bad that Cleveland waived him and outrighted him to Triple-A before the start of the 2024 season.

He spent the vast majority of the year in Columbus.

Analysts think that the Guardians did very well in the trade.

Some even consider it the best trade of the 2024-25 offseason so far, just because they got rid of most of the $14.75 million guaranteed left on Straw’s deal.

“Chris Antonetti and Mike Chernoff played this perfect. Getting out of that Myles Straw for bonus pool $$ they weren’t going to use is massive for a small-market team. The best trade of the offseason for any team,” BBWAA member and MLB editor at The Score Brandon Wile wrote on X.

The Guardians essentially took advantage of the Blue Jays’ desperation to improve their offer to Roki Sasaki.

In the process, they took on the vast majority of the salary of a player who just posted a 72 wRC+… in Triple-A.

It didn’t seem possible at the end of the season, but Cleveland has managed to free up more than $100 million in two players who didn’t contribute offensively: Andrés Giménez and Straw.

Both players went to the same team: the Blue Jays.

It was a marvelous use of resources by Antonetti and Chernoff.

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Re: Articles

Posted: Sun Jan 19, 2025 11:56 am
by joez
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Taking Guardians fans for granted is not the way to build on attendance success

Opinion: Bob Paulson

Bob Paulson, the former Republican mayor of Solon, writes an occasional column from the middle..

Published: Jan. 19, 2025, 5:26 a.m.


CLEVELAND -- In January 2023, I wrote a column stating that Cleveland will always be a football town, looking at how hard the Cavs work to keep their customer base engaged and some steps the Guardians should take to achieve the same. For weeks, I received reader feedback agreeing with me.

Two years later, it’s still a Browns Town, albeit wobbly. The Cavs look like an elite NBA team. The reigning American League Central Division Champion Guardians drew over two million fans for only the third time since 2008.

One reason they touted for breaking the two-million mark in attendance was their rollout of the $49 monthly standing-room-only Ballpark Pass. I often suggested a promotion like this was needed. The front office always pushed back, stating they don’t devalue their product with deep discounts.

What a great opportunity they had to carry over this excitement into the offseason. Then last month, they traded three-time Gold Glove winner Andrés Giménez, sidestepping paying him $96 million over next five years. Though surprising, this move gets a pass because the team’s baseball operations staff has been more right than wrong with personnel decisions.

Then, their business office followed it up with a press release stating the popular January Guards Fest would not be held. I am dating myself, but that screeching sound was like a phonograph needle being dragged across a vinyl record.

The club claimed the decision was made after “conducting fan outreach from the past several events” and it would return after the 2026 season as a “tri-annual event,” although they actually meant triennial, or every three years. The team is privately held and is not obligated to release the results of any customer surveys.

The outcry on social media was swift and angry. Disappointed fans claimed it was calculated move to further minimize player interaction with them. Season ticketholders said it was yet another perk that was being taken away.

My hunch is that the event was canceled for a combination of reasons. The second year of Progressive Field renovations are in progress and most of the staff has been working remotely. Fan interaction events are labor-intensive. Season ticketholder meet-and-greets with current players have also been scaled back in recent years.

Many players are already working out informally in Goodyear, Arizona ahead of the formal start of spring training next month. Flying a near-full squad across the country for that winter fan event can be disruptive. The Guardians front office was not going to admit that, so they used fan feedback as the excuse.

During the pandemic, the team closed their spring training practice fields to fans. Previously, fans could sit in bleachers near the main field to watch practice and interact with the players and coaches as they walked by.

Post-pandemic visitors to Goodyear can now only view workouts in remote locations in screened or fenced-off areas. They also may be lucky to obtain a couple autographs if players are willing to stop their cars as they exit the gated parking lot.

The excuse the club has used for limiting fan interaction is “for the safety and security of our staff and players.” Yet at the World Champion Los Angeles Dodgers facility in nearby Glendale, Arizona, fans can watch batting practice and simulated games right behind all the backstops.

In 2008, the then-Indians opened Heritage Park behind the center field wall. The two-tiered monument park was billed to “honor the greatest names in club history and celebrate the team’s most memorable moments.”

To help underwrite the cost, fans were invited to purchase commemorative brick pavers “to pay tribute to that special person who passed on their love of the national pastime to you” or to “secure your place in Indians History.” The cost ranged from $150 to $375.

Just over 16 years later, many paver inscriptions are now illegible even though there has never been inordinately heavy foot traffic in the lower tier of Heritage Park, nor is the area exposed to road salt or severe conditions from Cleveland’s winters other than snow.

Before Jacobs Field opened in 1994. excited fans also purchased commemorative pavers around the original location of the Bob Feller statue. They were relocated once during the first ballpark upgrade in 2015 and then dug up in 2023 when that plaza was repaved with concrete.

The current multimillion-dollar Progressive Field renovation is again being paid for by a combination of county and city funding, special taxes and the team. In addition to the necessary infrastructure upgrades, even more revenue-producing venues throughout the park are being created. When Progressive Field reopens this spring, it will have perhaps the largest, most expensive beer garden in Greater Cleveland. The taxpayers are also kicking in $300,000 for a renovated team shop.

When asked a year ago about the Heritage Park pavers, Guardians Senior Vice President/Public Affairs Bob DiBiasio replied that they were “certainly part of the renovations punch list.” Earlier this month, he responded that replacing these pavers is different from the current ballpark makeover and stated that once Progressive Field is “reimagined,” other areas of the ballpark that need attention would be identified.

Even though Heritage Park is not a revenue generator, it still is important to generations of Cleveland baseball fans who paid to be part of this legacy project.

Cumulative decisions like these are the reason fans are “in-like” but not in-love with this team. This too often tone-deaf front office has a curious knack of burning through any goodwill it occasionally generates.

Re: Articles

Posted: Thu Jan 23, 2025 8:24 pm
by joez
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Our Around the Horn series continues.



Over the next few weeks leading up to Spring Training, we’ll go position by position to break down each area of the Guardians’ roster. We’ve knocked out catcher, first base and second base. Let’s move on to shortstop:

Projected starter: Brayan Rocchio
The decision to trade Andrés Giménez was telling.

It showed that the Guardians don’t believe Giménez was going to be the same player he was in his 2022 All-Star season. It showed that they don’t think his glove was enough to outweigh his offensive struggles for the price they would eventually be paying for him. But it also showed their tremendous belief in Rocchio.

Rocchio stands as the lone obvious candidate to play shortstop in 2025. Sure, there are others who could see some time there, but with second base completely open, shortstop is going to fall into the hands of Rocchio once again.

It’s not like we entered the offseason thinking that Rocchio lost his job at shortstop. But there was always a question of whether this team would decide to shake things up at any given time. This is because of Rocchio’s lack of consistency since he has been in the Majors. He played in 143 games last year and hit .206 with a .614 OPS (76 OPS+). But in small windows, he demonstrated why he was a top prospect in the past.

The playoffs are a great example as to why there are still reasons to believe Rocchio can develop into a really solid player. In his first taste of postseason baseball, he recorded at least one hit in each of his first eight games. In 10 total playoff games last year, he went 11-for-33 (.333) with two doubles, a home run and a .906 OPS.

The Guardians know the potential is there.



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The backups: Gabriel Arias, Daniel Schneemann, Tyler Freeman

These options are dependent upon who wins the starting job at second base. Arias is the best suited of these options to handle shortstop, considering he spent most of his time there the past few seasons. However, all three of these infielders have proven they can move all over the diamond, including shortstop. If Arias starts at second base, Schneemann and Freeman can both fill in at shortstop, if needed.



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Question to answer: Can Rocchio be the guy?

There was always a fallback plan. Everyone was anticipating that one day Giménez would be moved to shortstop to clear a path for Cleveland’s top prospect, Travis Bazzana. We even thought it could happen earlier with Juan Brito. Regardless, if Rocchio wasn’t the answer at shortstop, there was always Giménez, who spends his offseasons taking ground balls at short, who could shift over. If he’s a Platinum Glover at second, it seems safe to assume he could be a decent shortstop. But Giménez is gone. Suddenly, there’s no backup plan.

Rocchio can make an unbelievable, highlight-reel-worthy play one second but rush through a routine ground ball that results in an error the next. He can string together a week’s worth of being a real threat in the batter’s box but then go ice cold for the next few weeks. Everyone has seen the best of Rocchio in flashes. But the question that he needs to answer in 2025 is whether he can bring that consistency every day to earn this starting role.



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Who else is in the Pipeline?

Guardians’ No. 4 prospect Angel Genao (High-A Lake County)
No. 9 Welbyn Francisca (Single-A Lynchburg)
No. 23 Alex Mooney (High-A Lake County)



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Last week, the Guardians opened the 2025 international signing period by signing 25 players -- 15 from Venezuela, nine from the Dominican Republic and one from Cuba. Two of these prospects ranked among MLB Pipeline’s Top 50 International Prospects. Catcher Hiverson López came in at No. 41 and shortstop Heins Brito at No. 48.

“The opening of the International Signing Period is a special time as we celebrate the players, and their families and trainers who have supported them along the way. We are thrilled to welcome this group of players into our organization and look forward to partnering with them in their development. While it’s just the beginning of their professional baseball journeys, it’s important to acknowledge the effort, dedication, and perseverance it took to get to this moment. It’s also an exciting time for our organization, including our scouting staff, which worked tirelessly in getting to know these players, and we are so thankful and proud for their contributions.” -- Richard Conway, Guardians director of international scouting.

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Re: Articles

Posted: Thu Jan 23, 2025 8:30 pm
by joez
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Guards bring on reliever Paul Sewald to add experience to bullpen

By Mandy Bell @MandyBell02

January 22, 2025


CLEVELAND – The Guardians have prioritized adding to their rotation all winter long. Now, they’re adding some experience to their bullpen.

The Guardians and free agent reliever Paul Sewald agreed on a one-year contract with a mutual option for 2026, the club announced on Wednesday. In order to clear space for Sewald on the 40-man roster, the team designated reliever Pedro Avila for assignment.

The deal is expected to be worth $7 million guaranteed for 2025 ($1 million buyout), with a $10 million option for 2026, though the club did not confirm the value.

Cleveland had the best bullpen in the Majors last year and although the biggest contributors are set to be back in 2025, the team did part ways with names like Eli Morgan, Nick Sandlin and now Avila – all of whom provided some much-needed depth last season. Sewald will now fill that void.

From 2021 through ’23, Sewald was a steady bullpen presence, keeping his ERA under 3.15 each year while recording double-digit save seasons. His ’24 season wasn’t quite as consistent, with his ERA creeping to 4.31 and his strikeout numbers dropping, but he had to work around neck and oblique injuries that resulted in two stints on the injured list. From the start of 2021, Sewald owns the seventh-lowest batting average against among all MLB relievers at .187. Emmanuel Clase sits just behind him in eighth (.191).

The Guardians know that Sewald has a chance to become a weapon for them out of the bullpen. With Clase working the ninth inning, Cade Smith available for the most critical point in the game and Hunter Gaddis possibly reclaiming his eighth-inning role, Sewald could slide into multiple roles as needed on any given night.

But as important as it is to add another threatening arm to the roster, the Guardians also knew they needed experience. Yes, this group was the best bullpen in the Majors last year consisting mostly of young, inexperienced arms. In 2025, it’s going to be a similar story. Smith will be in his sophomore campaign. Andrew Walters and Erik Sabrowski will still be rookies. Nic Enright and Franco Aleman have really good chances to make their debuts this season. It’s going to be another tremendously young bullpen.

Bringing in a 34-year-old righty with eight years of experience could be key.

Sewald can help lead this group to another year of dominance. Not only is he a reliable arm, but he’s known to be a leader in the community as well. He and his wife, Molly, created Sewald’s Strikeouts 4 Kids in 2022, which has raised over $250,000 to provide children a safe environment that’s free from abuse and neglect. He served as Arizona’s Roberto Clemente Award nominee last year and has clearly demonstrated a natural ability to lead and set positive examples – an intangible quality to add to a young roster.

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