Page 725 of 726

Re: Articles

Posted: Thu Jan 30, 2025 9:28 am
by rusty2
Guardians Outright Pedro Avila
By Anthony Franco | January 29, 2025 at 10:41pm CDT

The Guardians have sent reliever Pedro Avila outright to Triple-A Columbus, according to the transaction log at MLB.com. Cleveland had designated him for assignment a week ago when they signed Paul Sewald. Avila has been outrighted once before in his career, which gives him the right to elect minor league free agency.

Avila, 28, was a bullpen workhorse this year. He took the ball 54 times and tossed 82 2/3 relief innings between the Padres and Guardians, fourth in the majors behind Ryan Yarbrough, Derek Law and Luke Weaver. While most of Avila’s work came in low-leverage relief, he managed solid results. Avila turned in a 3.81 earned run average with a decent 23.2% strikeout percentage and 45% grounder rate. The righty had a slightly higher than average 10.2% walk rate, but he was generally an effective bullpen piece for skipper Stephen Vogt. He added four scoreless innings during the postseason.

That was Avila’s second straight decent year. He provided San Diego 50 1/3 innings of 3.22 ERA ball while striking out nearly a quarter of opponents in 2023. That makes it somewhat surprising that he didn’t attract any interest on the waiver wire. Avila is out of minor league options, though, so any team that claimed him would’ve needed to keep him in the MLB bullpen or designate him themselves. Apparently no team was willing to commit him a roster spot.

As mentioned, Avila now decides whether to stick with the Guardians or test the market. That he went unclaimed on waivers suggests he’d probably be looking at a minor league deal with a non-roster Spring Training invite if he elects free agency.

Re: Articles

Posted: Fri Jan 31, 2025 9:42 am
by civ ollilavad
he intelligently declined assignment and is a free agent. I'd be surprised if someone doesn't pick him up. A useful inexpensive flexible member of a bullpen.

Re: Articles

Posted: Fri Jan 31, 2025 3:26 pm
by civ ollilavad
MLB.com ranking of top 10 players at each position which I believe have been posted on the forum show scant recognition of Guardians

Ramirez No. 1 third baseman
Kwan No. 8 left fielder
Smith and Clase No. 2 and 4 relievers
That's hardly looks like a playoff-bound team but they made it last year.
Departed 2B Giminez is rated #9 at his position; Josh Naylor doesn't make the top 10 1B

Re: Articles

Posted: Fri Jan 31, 2025 5:04 pm
by rusty2
Need to compare Guardians with KC, Minnesota, Chicago and Detroit !

Re: Articles

Posted: Fri Jan 31, 2025 6:32 pm
by joez
Image



Must-See Video Shows How Close Guardians Star Was To Joining 40-40 Club

January 31, 2025

By Andres Chavez


By now, the entire baseball universe is familiar with the fact Cleveland Guardians third baseman Jose Ramirez was one home run shy from joining a historic club last year.

The revered 40-40 club (at least 40 homers and 40 stolen bases in the same season) only has six members: Jose Canseco, Barry Bonds, Alex Rodriguez, Alfonso Soriano, Ronald Acuna Jr., and Shohei Ohtani.

Ramirez hit 39 long balls and stole 41 bases in 2024.

He was this close to making MLB history.

If you are a Guardians fan still lamenting J-Ram’s lost chance, then the next video definitely isn’t for you.

Codify Baseball posted a compilation of multiple balls off Ramirez’s bat that looked like homers, but nearly missed.

“José Ramírez would have joined the elite 40-40 club last season if just one of these had been a home run,” they posted on X.

[ I remember posting about a few of these missed chances at the 40 homer season by Ramirez a couple of months or so after the season ended. From the videos, Ramirez would have been closer to a 50 homer season ]

https://twitter.com/i/status/1885123459958923461

Oof.

If only one of those balls had cleared the wall, we would be talking about the seventh 40-40 player in history.

You have balls bouncing off the wall, others caught at the warning track and, to make matters worse, several stolen homers by incredible leaping catches made by the fielders.

Some of these well-struck batted balls would have been home runs if they were hit in a different park.

It just wasn’t meant to be, but this video should be enough to make people realize just how close he was to completing an amazing accomplishment.

Ramirez is a truly special hitter and will try, once again, to join this particularly celebrated club in 2025.

He is slowly getting up there in age, but is still theoretically in his prime and is showing no signs of slowing down.

<

Re: Articles

Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2025 2:08 pm
by joez
Image



Do Guardians need to become Men of Steal again in 2025? Hey, Hoynsie!

Updated: Feb. 01, 2025, 9:38 a.m.|Published: Feb. 01, 2025, 7:11 a.m.

By Paul Hoynes, cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Do you have a Guardians question that you’d like to have answered in Hey, Hoynsie? You can subscribe to Subtext here, text Hoynsie at 216-208-4346 for a two-week free trial or email him at phoynes@cleveland.com.

Hey, Hoynsie: Do you think the Guardians will give the green light to Steven Kwan, Lane Thomas and Brayan Rocchio to steal more bases in 2025 than they did in 2024 after trading key offensive players Josh Naylor and Andres Gimenez? Right now, José Ramirez is the only one that has carte blanche to steal — Skip, Broadview Heights.

Hey, Skip: The Guardians finished second in the American League in steals last year with 148 in 194 attempts (76%). They were caught stealing 46 times, third most in the league.

Manager Stephen Vogt encourages all his players to run. He likes to create chaos on the bases. But there were times last year when the words of former Indians manager Pat Corrales rang all too true. After a long-ago loss at Fenway Park, Corrales summed up his team’s effort on the bases by saying, “We ran until they tagged us out.”

Hey, Hoynsie: Why did you vote for Carlos Beltran, who cheated with Houston, but not Manny Ramirez and Alex Rodriguez on your Hall of Fame ballot? — Paul Williams, Shaker Heights.

Hey, Paul: Players and coaches have been stealing signs for years. Granted Beltran, Alex Cora and the Astros took it to a different level, but I don’t equate it with players injecting themselves with steroids. Steroids change players’ bodies, increasing muscle mass, speed and power. Ramirez tested positive at least twice for performance enhancing drugs and Rodriguez was suspended for 162 games in 2014.

Here’s my ballot: Beltran, Mark Buehrle, Torii Hunter, Andruw Jones, Dustin Pedroia, Francisco Rodriguez, CC Sabathia, Ichiro Suzuki, Omar Vizquel and Billy Wagner.

Hey, Hoynsie: It seems like Triston McKenzie gets a lot of media coverage. What about Logan Allen? — Bill, Tennessee.

Hey, Bill: I think the Guardians saw a glimpse of how good McKenzie can be in 2022 when he went 11-11 with a 2.96 ERA in 191 1/3 innings. Allen has not given Cleveland that kind of season yet, although he did win eight games last year.

Still, they’re both going to get a chance to win a job in the rotation this spring. The Guardians need them.

Hey, Hoynsie: Do you see Carlos Santana becoming Cleveland’s new cleanup hitter? Or does someone like Lane Thomas get a chance in that role? — Steve Buzon, Alexandria, Virginia.

Hey, Steve: Josh Naylor started 139 regular-season games in the cleanup spot last year, but he’s gone. Vogt isn’t shy about juggling the lineup, but I would think he’d keep Santana at or near the cleanup spot as much as possible.

Thomas started 14 games hitting second, 23 hitting fifth and six hitting seventh last year after being acquired from the Nationals.

Hey, Hoynsie: Why is there no love for Kenny Lofton on the Hall of Fame ballot? When you look at the statistics, others with comparable numbers are in or making a big push. — Mark Scott, Malvern.

Hey, Mark: Lofton certainly didn’t deserve to be a one and done on the BBWAA ballot in 2013. I hope he makes the ballot for the Contemporary Baseball Era/Player vote in December 2025 for inclusion in the class of 2026.

The ballot takes into account players who made their biggest contributions since 1980. Lofton deserves another look.

Hey, Hoynsie: Do you think it’s too early to sign Cade Smith, Tim Herrin or Hunter Gaddis to contract extensions? Or did the Myles Straw contract scare the Guardians away from extending guys too early? — Jim B, Independence

Hey, Jim: The Guardians have a history of signing their young players to multiyear contracts to avoid arbitration. I would not be surprised if they approach Smith, Gaddis or Herrin this spring.

They signed reliever Trevor Stephan (four years, $10 million) to the kind of deal you’re talking about in 2023. I doubt Straw’s contract will keep them from pursing other multiyear deals if they can find a willing partner.

Hey, Hoynsie: Is there any chance that the G’s trade David Fry or Kyle Manzardo? Unless Carlos Santana gets injured, they’ll have two guys (Fry & Manzardo) that will be full-time DHs. Before his injury, Fry played catcher, first base, third base, left field and right field. It would seem they’ll need a utility guy to pick up the slack. ― Tim Johnson Rockville, Indiana.

Hey, Tim: Fry is recovering from surgery on his right elbow, so he’s not going anywhere. The G’s are just getting an idea of what Manzardo can do, so why would they trade him? As for finding a new utility player to replace Fry, just about every player on the Guardians’ roster can play five or six positions, with the exception of catching, so I think they’ve got the utility job covered.

Hey, Hoynsie: What’s going on with the Guards’ TV situation? Is there any clarity with the season fast approaching? — Ken Djukic.

Hey, Ken: Look for the Guardians to announce details on their TV deal with MLB sometime around the opening of spring training. Pitchers and catchers report to Goodyear, Arizona, on Feb. 11.

Team officials are scheduled to go to New York this coming week to meet with MLB about the TV deal. I do know that announcers Matt Underwood, Rick Manny and reporter Andre Knott will be back for 2025.

Hey, Hoynsie: Because Cleveland historically has been so heavily invested in pitching in the draft, why are all six members of the top 100 prospects position players? — Ted, Westlake Village, California.

Hey, Ted: It’s not like the Guardians have stopped producing pitchers. Tanner Bibee, Joey Cantillo, Gavin Williams, Andrew Walters, McKenzie, Allen, Gaddis, Herrin and Smith are all homegrown and expected to help this year.

As for the position players at the top of Cleveland’s prospect list, well, some of that can be cyclical, but they weren’t drafted by accident. It’s clear the organization felt it needed an injection of offense.

If Travis Bazzana, Chase DeLauter, Jaison Chourio, Angel Genoa, Ralphy Velazquez and C.J. Kayfus — Cleveland’s top six prospects according to MLB.com — remind people of a group of homegrown hitters named Albert Belle, Jim Thome, Manny Ramirez, Richie Sexson and Brian Giles, who’s going to complain? Belle, Thome, Ramirez, Sexson and Giles were all drafted within six years of each other from 1987 through 1993 by Cleveland.

<

Re: Articles

Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2025 7:41 pm
by joez
Image


Image


Image



Spring Training is almost here.

We’ve spent the last few weeks going position by position to break down each area of the Guardians’ roster. We’ve knocked out all the position players, so let’s move to the rotation.

Projected starters: Tanner Bibee, Luis Ortiz, Gavin Williams, Ben Lively and … Triston McKenzie?

Shane Bieber’s name won’t join this list until the middle of the season after he’s fully recovered from Tommy John surgery. Until then, Bibee will continue to take on the ace duties of this staff, just like he did in 2024. But after that comes a whole bunch of question marks.

The Guardians traded for Ortiz to be in this rotation. And with the impression he left at Progressive Field last year, allowing just one hit in six scoreless innings, Cleveland is excited about the future with this right-hander. But can the Pitching Factory work its magic and take his game to the next level?

Williams will assuredly be in the rotation on Opening Day. The question is whether he’ll be able to find the consistency that he was lacking last year. Instead of taking a leap forward in his development, he was sidelined for the first half of the season and fought through rust when he returned.



Image


Lively was excellent for the Guardians all season, but his 151 innings in the regular season were by far the most he’s thrown in his career. How will he bounce back in 2025? Will he be able to be as effective as he was last season? It’s hard to predict.

And then there’s McKenzie. For someone who entered last season hopeful to put his 2023 injuries behind him and get back to the elite hurler he’s proven he can be, it was quite a disappointing campaign for him. He spent half of the year with Triple-A Columbus and now needs to reclaim his spot in the big league rotation (more on this in a minute …).

The depth: Joey Cantillo, Logan Allen, Slade Cecconi, Doug Nikhazy

Now, the Guardians always find a way to dig into their farm system and discover more arms. Plus, they’ll probably add a few more pitchers to Minor League deals before Opening Day. However, these are the top choices they're working with at the moment.

Cantillo looked great the longer he was in the Majors last year. And he will surely be in the mix for the No. 5 starter spot. Allen is in a similar boat as McKenzie, trying to prove that last year’s struggles were a fluke and he can quickly right the ship. The Guardians traded for Cecconi, who will likely end up in the bullpen, but their plan is to stretch him out as a starter during Spring Training so they have plenty of options. Nikhazy is on the 40-man roster, but he has yet to make his big league debut.



Image


Question to answer: Can McKenzie reclaim his spot?

We touched on it a little bit already, but this is so critical for the Guardians to figure out that it deserves its own section.

This is a guy who the Guardians hoped would be the No. 2 starter last year. Well, actually, after Bieber was injured, they needed McKenzie to step up to be the rock of this rotation. He was the one with the most experience. His presence was desperately needed, and yet, he ended up spending the second half of the season in Triple-A.

McKenzie couldn’t find his command. It would also come and go in Columbus. He had to watch the Guardians’ playoff games from the stands instead of the dugout, and it was part of what left the team heavily depending on its bullpen rather than its rotation for the first time in a long time.

As we already said before, the Guardians don’t have a tremendous amount of starting depth, especially in the first half of the season before Bieber is ready to go. And with at least one question mark beside each starter’s name (aside from Bibee), it would be tremendously helpful for this team to be able to lean on an experienced starter like McKenzie every fifth day. If he looks like he did in 2022, this is a completely different rotation.



Image



Who else is in the Pipeline?

Guardians’ No. 7 prospect RHP Braylon Doughty (Rookie level)

No. 10 RHP Daniel Espino (on the 40-man roster)
No. 14 RHP Joey Oakie (Rookie level)
No. 16 LHP Michael Kennedy (High-A Lake County)
No. 18 LHP Josh Hartle (High-A Lake County)
No. 19 RHP Chase Mobley (Rookie level)
No. 20 LHP Parker Messick (Double-A Akron)
No. 21 LHP Jackson Humphries (Single-A Lynchburg)
No. 24 RHP Cameron Sullivan (Rookie level)
No. 28 LHP Ryan Webb (Triple-A Columbus)



Image



QUOTABLE

“I’ve had a lot of individual conversations already with people. It hurts. When you watch a good friend and a teammate leave, it’s hard. And we empathize with that. We feel it, too. It’s not just the players. It’s part of it. And at the end of the day, no matter what it is, if it’s an injury, a trade, whatever happens, it creates opportunity for somebody else. And there’s going to be a game tomorrow. So, we’re gonna have opportunities for guys.” -- Guardians manager Stephen Vogt, on addressing the team after key players were traded during the offseason

<

Re: Articles

Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2025 8:10 pm
by joez
Image



Five things the Guardians must do to repeat as AL Central champs: The week in baseball

Updated: Feb. 01, 2025, 4:07 p.m.|Published: Feb. 01, 2025, 3:09 p.m.

By Paul Hoynes, cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Here are five things that have to happen for the Guardians to repeat as American League Central champions in 2025.

1. Find five reliable starting pitchers

Right now the Guardians have Tanner Bibee, which is a good place to start. Ben Lively gave them 29 gritty starts last year, but when it came to postseason time the Guardians bypassed him and went with injured Alex Cobb for two starts that did not go well.

The Guardians acquired Luis Ortiz from the Pirates at the winter meetings, who they immediately put in the rotation. He made 37 appearances last year, including 15 starts. The Guards really like him, so let’s see how that goes.

If Bibee, Lively and Ortiz open the season in the rotation, that still leaves two open spots. At some point one of them could belong to Shane Bieber, but it’s unclear when he’ll be back from Tommy John surgery on his right elbow. If Bieber returns for the stretch run, that would be a good thing, but the fourth and fifth spots still need to be filled for the bulk of the season.

Gavin Williams, Triston McKenzie, Logan Allen, Joey Cantillo and Slade Ceconni are in line for those jobs. Williams dealt with right elbow injuries last season that limited him to 16 starts. McKenzie and Allen spent most of the season at Triple-A Columbus. Cantillo made his big league debut last year and Cecconi was acquired from Arizona in the Josh Naylor trade.

Cleveland received only 805 innings from its rotation last year. It was the third fewest innings in the league. The starters have to get deeper into games in 2025.



Image



2. Stay strong in the Central

The Guardians won the AL Central last year at 92-69, but the competition was strong. Four of the five teams had winning records with Kansas City and Detroit finishing tied for second and joining the Guardians in the postseason.

Cleveland went 30-22 in the division, but the Royals were better at 33-19. The Twins went 29-23, the Tigers 28-24 and the White Sox 10-42.

This winter the Royals re-signed right-handers Michael Wacha and Michael Lorenzen. They added free agent closer Carlos Estevez, while trading right-hander Brady Singer to Cincinnati for Jonathan India.

The Tigers, who lost to the Guardians in five games in the ALDS, have added second baseman Gleyber Torres, right-hander Tommy Kahnle and Cobb. They reportedly are in the bidding for third baseman Alex Bregman.

The Twins, who are being sold, haven’t done much this winter.

The White Sox and new manager Will Venable are trying to dig out from a historic 121-loss season.

The Guardians, meanwhile, traded All-Star Josh Naylor, three-time Gold Glove winning second baseman Andres Gimenez and center fielder Myles Straw. Free agent-wise, they signed first Carlos Santana, right-hander Paul Sewald, catcher Austin Hedges and Bieber.



Image



3. Replace offense

It’s going to take some doing to replace the 108 RBI that the Guardians removed from the lineup by trading Naylor to Arizona. Bringing back Santana for a third time will help, but in his long and accomplished career the switch-hitter has never reached the century mark in RBI. To ask him to do that at 39 is a stretch.

Perhaps a full season from Lane Thomas will close the gap. He drove in 63 runs in just 130 games last year for Washington and Cleveland. In 2023, Thomas’ best season to date, he hit .268 (168 for 628) with 28 homers and 86 RBI.

All-Star Jose Ramirez is coming off one of the best all around seasons of his career. He hit .279 (173 for 620) with 39 homers, 119 RBI, 41 steals and 114 runs. Santana, hopefully, can provide some of the protection that Naylor did when hitting behind Ramirez.

Steven Kwan, entering his fourth year, has done a good job setting the table from the leadoff spot. He was slowed somewhat by injuries last year, but made his first All-Star team, won a third Gold Glove and shined in the postseason.

What the Guardians need is contributions throughout the lineup. DH Kyle Manzardo had a good September and postseason, but the bottom of the lineup doesn’t offer much of a threat. More production from catcher Bo Naylor and shortstop Brayan Rocchio would help. So would more pop from right field where Will Brennan and Jhonkensy Noel are expected to platoon.



Image



4. Protect the pen

Manager Stephen Vogt, in his first year on the job, leaned heavily on the bullpen. He didn’t have much of a choice with the rotation injured and ineffective for much of the season.

The bullpen carried the Guardians to the division title, but it started to show some wear in the postseason. By the end of the postseason, Tim Herrin, Hunter Gaddis, Cade Smith and Emmanuel Clase each had 80 or more appearances.

Those four are expected to be eased into spring training and the exhibition season. When the regular season opens on March 27, Vogt said he’ll go to the bullpen as much as it’s needed.

That’s why it was good to see the Guardians sign Sewald to a one-year $7 million deal. His experience will help the pen. They also have young arms in Andrew Walters and Erik Sabrowski who will fill some innings.



Image



5. Play defense

An underrated part of the Guardians’ game last year was their defense. They finished second in the big leagues, according to the Fielding Bible, in defensive runs saved.

Gimenez, traded to Toronto at the winter meetings in December, was a big part of that. He not only played excellent defense at second base, but he was a master at turning relay throws into outs at home with his strong and accurate arm.

The Guardians have a number of candidates to replace Gimenez, but none can match him defensively. While Gimenez’s power faded over the last two years, he still drove in 63 runs in 2024, while stealing 30 bases for the second straight season.

So replacing Gimenez is going to take some doing. Juan Brito, Tyler Freeman, Angel Martinez, Gabriel Arias and Daniel Schneemann are some of the possibilities.

The rest of the Guards’ defense is solid. On the left side of the infield, Ramirez and Rocchio were Gold Glove finalists last year. Santana won his first Gold Glove last year for his play at first base with the Twins. Bo Naylor and Hedges have received high grades for their defensive work behind the plate, while Kwan is an excellent defender in left.

<

Re: Articles

Posted: Sun Feb 02, 2025 1:43 pm
by joez
Image



What we didn't know about Stephen Vogt a year ago – Terry's Talkin' Guardians

Updated: Feb. 02, 2025, 7:00 a.m.|Published: Feb. 02, 2025, 5:34 a.m.

By Terry Pluto, cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio – “I really love this job.”

Stephen Vogt casually mentioned that in the middle of the press conference with the media on Monday. It was a chance for the Guardians manager to meet with the media with spring training approaching.

There was plenty of talk about who will replace Andres Gimenez at second base. The Guardians mentioned at least five different names. I sort of zoned out after Daniel Schneemann. A smart manager doesn’t want even a long-shot candidate to feel left out, so I understand Vogt’s Mr. Big Volume approach to the question.

My guess is the Guardians plan to give Juan Brito a legitimate shot, much like they opened the door for Steven Kwan to win the left field job during the spring of 2022. Kwan had to hit and earn it, which he did. It’s the same challenge facing Brito.

he Guards do love Brito, who played the entire 2024 season at Class AAA Columbus. He was only 22, one of the youngest players in the International League. A switch-hitter, Brito batted .256 (.807 OPS) with 40 doubles, 21 HR and 84 RBI.

But this isn’t about who replaces Gimenez at second … or about Carlos Santana taking over for the traded Josh Naylor at first … or who will bat cleanup behind Jose Ramirez.

Plenty of time for all the basic talk in the next several months before the March 27 opener.



Image



Think back to a year ago

“I really love this job.”

Those words stuck with me. Vogt now can say them with more validity because he actually did it for a year.

Vogt retired as a player at the end of the 2022 season. He was Seattle’s bullpen coach in 2023. Next, he was replacing Terry Francona in the Cleveland dugout.

At the press conference announcing Vogt’s hiring, team president Chris Antonetti and GM Mike Chernoff said all the right things. They discussed Vogt being well-prepared for the job despite his obvious lack of experience. They praised his communication skills and the incredible respect many in baseball have for the former catcher.

Some of the Guardians privately compared Vogt to the hiring of Kevin Cash. A former catcher and Cleveland bullpen coach, Tampa Bay gave their team to Cash for the 2015 season. They believed Cash had the right stuff to manage, despite being only two years away from playing.

Cash had losing seasons in his first three years at Tampa Bay. He’s had six winning records in his last seven seasons, including five trips to the playoffs.

Would Vogt be another Cash? He was handed a team with a 76-86 record in 2023. Did anyone picture the Guardians winning the Central Division? Or how about Vogt being named American League Manager of the Year?

Yours truly picked them to finish with a 72-90 record. The Guards were 92-69. Never was I so happy to be wrong.

Playing vs. managing
A year ago, Vogt was taking over for the winningest manager in Cleveland baseball history. He had zero managerial experience at any level. How would he handle the pressure, the media, the front office, the coaching staff and yes, the losing.

In baseball, you can win 100 games but still lose 62 times. Some managers can’t handle that. Mike Hargrove learned to do it and took Cleveland to the World Series in 1995 and 1997.

I remember a candid conversation with Hargrove about the differences between playing and managing. I’m paraphrasing, but Hargrove mentioned how he would not be happy if his team lost. But if he had a couple hits – at least there was some personal satisfaction. In the end, a player only is responsible for his own performance.

But a manager feels the weight of everything having to do with the team. I recall Francona telling me how a few times a year, he’d be up until 3 a.m. second-guessing himself for a move that backfired. It could even be the right decision in terms of putting the odds of success in your favor, but if it fails … well, it was the wrong decision.

Vogt has talked about “not going back on a decision (that went wrong), but learning from it.” That is all a manager can do.

A little bit of Tito

At his introductory press conference, Vogt said something that stuck with me: “I’ve been released. I’ve been traded. I’ve been the worst player in baseball. I’ve been one of the best players in baseball. I’ve been a prospect. I’ve been a nobody. You name it. No matter who walks in the doors of that clubhouse, I feel like I know where they’re at and I can relate to them.”

Francona had much the same background. He was a former first-round draft pick. He was a phenom as a rookie with Montreal, then suffered a catastrophic knee injury. The rest of his playing career was a series of mostly downs (injuries, trades, being cut) and a few high spots.

The man players call “Tito,” Francona has the marvelous ability of connecting with all kinds of players. He’ll show it again in his new job as manager of the Reds.

As for Vogt, I often see a bit of Francona in the current Cleveland manager.

When Vogt won the Manager of the Year Award, he called it, “An organizational award.” He mentioned ownership, the front office, the coaches, the players, the minor league system and many others.

Francona nearly spoke from the same script after his three Manager of the Year Awards in Cleveland. But he was sincere, as was Vogt.

When he received the award, Vogt mentioned what he learned from his father as a 9-year-old: “When it’s negative, it’s about you. When it’s positive, it’s about your teammates.”

Knowing Francona, he’d smile at those words. And like Francona, Vogt loves managing a baseball team.

<

Re: Articles

Posted: Sun Feb 02, 2025 3:53 pm
by joez
Image



Bruce Drennan Says He’s A Big Fan Of 1 Guardians Offseason Move

Justin Hussong

February 2, 2025


The Cleveland Guardians haven’t had a busy offseason after a surprising ALCS appearance.

The front office’s main focus has been fortifying an already strong pitching staff.

Even though the team hasn’t made the big splash many wanted, Bruce Drennan recently said he’s a big fan of one of its moves this offseason.

In a recent episode of Bonus Time, Drennan got excited about the team’s addition of reliever Paul Sewald, saying, “He is an excellent, excellent, excellent addition to an already tremendous bullpen.”

Sewald didn’t have a great year for the Arizona Diamondbacks last season and lost his closer job en route to a 4.31 ERA, his highest in a full season since 2019.

It’s unclear where Sewald will fit in an elite bullpen, but he could fill the role Nick Sandlin left behind.

Sandlin made 68 appearances last season and had a 3.75 ERA before being traded to the Toronto Blue Jays along with Andres Gimenez for Spencer Horwitz.

Sewald was signed for just one year and $7 million, so it’s a low-risk deal for a team that needed a contingency plan in case any of its workhorses falter after an incredibly long season.

Cade Smith, Hunter Gaddis, Tim Herrin, and Emmanuel Clase all appeared in at least 74 games during the regular season last year.

All except Herrin had some hiccups in the playoffs, with Clase specifically melting down a few times and costing the team pivotal wins.

If any of them hit a wall this year, Sewald will be there to fill in.

<

Re: Articles

Posted: Mon Feb 03, 2025 8:46 am
by civ ollilavad
Unless Sewald hits the wall first. which he did last year

Re: Articles

Posted: Mon Feb 03, 2025 11:26 am
by TFIR
Cleveland Guardians mailbag: Offseason takeaways, clubhouse leaders and random jerseys
Image
CLEVELAND, OHIO - OCTOBER 18: Jose Ramirez #11 of the Cleveland Guardians hits a RBI double in the seventh inning during Game Four of the American League Championship Series at Progressive Field on October 18, 2024 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)
By Zack Meisel


CLEVELAND — Straight to your questions (which have been lightly edited for clarity).

I know it’s hard to predict — we thought 2023 would be a huge year and when it wasn’t we thought 2024 would be a down year — but are the Guardians poised to make another run? It doesn’t seem like any AL Central team has made a huge splash. Please give me some optimism, Zack! — Alex A.

The glass-half-full take is, they stood atop the division all season despite an absolute horror show of a rotation. That unit is still full of question marks, but there’s far more upside. It’s hard to envision it not improving. The bullpen has enough depth to guard against inevitable regression. The offense is a different story. Even as a staunch believer in Steven Kwan repeating his All-Star form, in Kyle Manzardo crushing righties and in Juan Brito and Chase DeLauter eventually being above-average big-league hitters, I still have skepticism about the lineup as a whole. But in the AL Central, those ingredients make you a contender.

This will be 14 seasons in a row with a different starting right fielder in Cleveland on Opening Day. Is it more likely we get a repeat in the next two seasons or never again? — Tyler B.

As I wrote last week, it’s been 13-for-13 since 2012: Shin-Soo Choo, Drew Stubbs, David Murphy, Brandon Moss, Collin Cowgill, Abraham Almonte, Lonnie Chisenhall, Tyler Naquin, Domingo Santana, Josh Naylor, Steven Kwan, Will Brennan and Ramón Laureano.

Brennan could be the guy this year and he started the 2023 opener. But they haven’t had a right fielder start on Opening Day in consecutive years since Choo. If the Royals start lefty Cole Ragans on Opening Day, Jhonkensy Noel could make it 14 different names. There’s hope, though. DeLauter could offer some stability to the position. (Yes, we thought the same thing about Moss and Chisenhall and Naquin.) My bet would be DeLauter ends the streak by starting both in 2026 and 2027.

The front office has stockpiled starting pitching depth this offseason. Would you say they have very low expectations for Triston McKenzie and Logan Allen? — Alex K.

Every team tells itself it’s short on starting pitching. The Guardians entered last season banking on McKenzie and Shane Bieber and Gavin Williams and instead wound up leaning on Matthew Boyd and Alex Cobb and Ben Lively. Carlos Carrasco went from “heartwarming homecoming” to “holy mother of God, he ranks third on the team in innings.”

If McKenzie and/or Allen rebound, that’s a massive benefit for the Guardians. If they don’t, maybe Williams will. Maybe Bieber will offer a second-half jolt. Maybe Joey Cantillo or Slade Cecconi will emerge. Maybe Luis Ortiz will join Tanner Bibee as a frontline starter. “It’s better to have pitching depth and not need it than to not have it at all,” said a wise philosopher/and writer for The Athletic.

Who do you see as a possible surprise contributor in 2025? — Craig S.

This isn’t a huge leap, since he showed flashes last season in his first taste of the majors, but I’ll say Cantillo. If he doesn’t throw enough strikes, this answer will look foolish, but there are some intriguing tools. His elite extension (99th percentile) helps his 92-mph fastball play up, and his off-speed stuff, especially his changeup, all graded out well, which explains his healthy whiff and strikeout rates.

What is the plan for when David Fry comes back? With Manzardo and Carlos Santana dancing around first base/DH, will there be room for Fry? — Mike K.

Fry could return from elbow surgery in May or June, but he won’t play the field in 2025. Between him, Santana, Manzardo, Noel and the fact that Stephen Vogt is insistent on getting José Ramírez some DH days, it’s crowded. Fry, Santana and Noel all tend to fare better against lefties, so Vogt could deploy them at DH, first and right field, respectively. So, Manzardo might have until Fry returns to prove he doesn’t need a platoon partner.

Top five Guardians/Indians games this century? — Thomas K.

I’m favoring games that had some stakes, with all due respect to some long-forgotten, zany, back-and-forth bout from April 2004. (Otherwise, I would have included the May 2018 game in which Cleveland scored five in the ninth to tie the Astros, both teams scored in the 13th and then Greg Allen walked it off in the 14th.)

1. Game 7, 2016 World Series
2. Game 3, 2024 ALCS
3. The comeback vs. the Mariners on Aug. 5, 2001
4. Game 2, 2017 ALDS
5. Win No. 22 in a row, Sept. 14, 2017

Five honorable mentions:

• The Bug Game (Game 2, 2007 ALDS)
• The Jason Giambi Game, Sept. 24, 2013
• The 19-inning win in Toronto on Canada Day in 2016, Cleveland’s 14th consecutive win
• The 1-0 marathon win against the Rays in the wild-card round in 2022
• The 15-inning win against the Twins on Sept. 17, 2022, that all but sewed up the division

What player(s) do you anticipate filling the leadership and locker room roles of Josh Naylor and Andrés Giménez this year? — Connor C.

Don’t forget Boyd, who had an enormous influence in the clubhouse, even in a short period. I’ve heard rave reviews about Paul Sewald’s presence. Santana is an obvious answer to your question. Kwan and Ramírez, too. Bieber and Bibee on the pitching side. Austin Hedges was born for the role. There are plenty of candidates.

Two million fans, an ALCS appearance and a cut in payroll, it appears. Please explain. Thank you. — David C.

(Takes a deep breath)

Let’s start here: The entire league needs a reckoning. The way MLB operates, this is a miserable sport to discuss during the offseason in more than half of the league’s markets. We’re conditioned to talk market sizes and payrolls and TV partnerships instead of trades and free agents and prospects. We’ll have to wait until at least the next round of collective bargaining warfare to see if anything changes.

In Cleveland, the issue is some combination of revenue and risk-averse ownership, but we’ll never know exactly how much weight to assign each because we’ll never see the books, so we’re left holding the same, brain-rotting conversations winter after winter. The bottom line is, team values continue to rise. League revenues remain healthy. David Blitzer has his hand in a bunch of sports franchises and he jumped at the chance to eventually take over in Cleveland, so the financials can’t be too horrifying. (Even with the messy TV situation, of which some of the details on the new arrangement will be revealed in the next week or so.)

No rational person is suggesting the Guardians spend like the Dodgers or Mets. Spending doesn’t guarantee anything, though it does provide some margin for error, rather than require this front office to be perfect. But to get to the doorstep of the World Series, with fans engaged, and then complete an offseason in which the highlight is that they shed a bunch of future salary (which they guaranteed to those players in the first place) seems far riskier than taking some chances with trades or free agency to address roster deficiencies and get over the hump. (Also, they’re not the only AL Central team to have an underwhelming offseason after a surprisingly successful season.)

The Guardians set out to bolster their starting pitching depth, both in the minors and the majors, and they did that (and they’re still browsing, too). The lineup, though, needs help. They’re banking on DeLauter and Brito. They’re betting on Santana’s bid to outrun Father Time, on Bo Naylor breaking out and on Brayan Rocchio pretending it’s always October. That’s a lot of ifs, and this felt like the right spot on the timeline to get out of their comfort zone to alleviate some risk, especially when considering the countdown until majority ownership changes hands. Wouldn’t the Dolans, native Clevelanders, want to do everything in their power to cement their legacy as the group that ended the league’s longest title drought?

Thank goodness spring training is almost here.

What’s the over/under on the number of times Terry Francona goes to Cleveland camp instead of Reds camp? — Gil R.

The facilities are separated by less than half a mile on S. Wood Blvd in Goodyear, Ariz. It’ll likely take some time for Francona to reconfigure his muscle memory. Here’s a prediction: At some point, there will be pranks. Ten years ago, Francona and bench coach Brad Mills (who joined Francona’s Reds staff) engaged in water balloon warfare with Cleveland’s front office during spring training. Francona always has high jinks in mind, and Chris Antonetti and Mike Chernoff are not above participating.

Should we even be thinking of Daniel Espino anymore? Or does he still have a path to the major-league bullpen if he stays healthy? — A.J. D.

He hasn’t taken the mound in a game in 34 months, and that number will keep growing as he completes his recovery from his latest shoulder surgery. He’s only 24, and his stuff was so lethal before all of this, that even a shell of his former self would still be intriguing. It’s just impossible to know when he could return or how he’ll look when he does. But they’ve kept him on the 40-man roster this long and haven’t started his service time clock, so there’s always hope, even if faint.

What was the reasoning behind canceling Guardsfest? I don’t live in the Cleveland area so have never been able to attend, but it seemed like a great event to build fan support. The decision to cancel it was puzzling. — Charles S.

I heard rumblings about this last season, with reasoning ranging from cost to the headache of getting commitments from players to it taking a backseat to planning for renovations. I figured with the team scoring its best attendance figures in 16 years and reaching the ALCS, any excuse would be rendered moot. I understand the challenges with putting it together — this grants them a runway to map out how to make it better in the future — but I don’t understand the benefits of dismissing an obvious way to create buzz for the new season and preserve the vibes from a great 2024 campaign. That 6-year-old who gets to whack an underhand lob from Tim Herrin in late January will be a Tim Herrin fan forever. They’ll beg their parents to buy tickets to a game. It’s simple marketing. It’s exposure for a team that needs it. See you in 2027.

What’s the best non-Guardians Random Jersey Sighting that you’ve ever seen? — Steve H.

This bit actually started in 2012 when a friend and I spotted a St. Louis Rams Adam Archuleta jersey at a food festival in downtown Chicago. I’ll never forget the guy in a San Diego Padres Johnny Manziel jersey at a bar near Fenway Park in August 2017.

My favorite Cleveland sightings from 2024, by the way, are Ron Karkovice, Zach Sorensen, Michael Aubrey, Cord Phelps, Matt Ginter, Matt Joyce, Kevin Rhomberg, Aaron Fultz, Arthur Rhodes, Jerry Spradlin, Jim Brower and Billy Traber.

Every year, I think we’ve exhausted the supply of random jerseys, and every year, there are 30-40 new sightings that leave me in awe. God bless you sickos willing to fork over $75 to support some long-forgotten reliever who made six appearances for the team 20-some years ago.

Re: Articles

Posted: Mon Feb 03, 2025 12:50 pm
by TFIR
Regarding Sewald - don't forget that he (along with all the DBacks pitching staff) went the distance in 2023 and felt the effects in 2024.

Re: Articles

Posted: Tue Feb 04, 2025 3:59 pm
by rusty2
Guardians Prospective
@CleGuardPro
When the Cleveland #Guardians officially begin spring training the teams 40-man roster will potentially be able to add as many as four new players.

First day of spring training the organization can add players to start the season on the 60-day IL which will lead to the openings.

Guardians players that will or might be placed on the 60-day IL.

LHP Sam Hentges
RHP Shane Bieber
RHP Trevor Stephan
INF David Fry

This will allow the team to add more players possibly through free agency without having to DFA someone that's currently on the 40-man.
Last edited
11:34 PM · Feb 3, 2025
·
9,335
Views

Re: Articles

Posted: Tue Feb 04, 2025 4:00 pm
by rusty2
Jon Heyman
@JonHeyman
·
6m
Vince Velasquez to Guardians, pending. Minors deal. Invite to MLB camp