Re: SPRING TRAINING 2017!

1321
Image




How David Fry's updated role could help him be the Guardians' secret weapon in 2026

Fryday.

By Nicholas Anderson

2 hours ago


As we inch closer to Opening Day, most of the talk around the Guardians has been about the young guns and battle in the starting rotation. But if you want to know who the real X-Factor could be for the Guardians in 2026, look no further than David Fry.

After a 2025 season that felt like a series of unfortunate events that started with recovery from Tommy John surgery and ended with a scary hit-by-pitch that caused multiple facial fractures, Fry is finally healthy. And a healthy version of Fry changes everything for Guardians manager Stephen Vogt.

David Fry could end up re-finding his All-Star form for the Guardians in 2026
The All-Star pedigree

While it's easy to let Fry's tough, injury-plagued season from last year cloud you memory, don't forget that Fry was an All-Star in 2024. When he’s right, he is a menace at the plate.

In his breakout season, he posted a .804 OPS and was one of the best hitters in baseball against left-handed pitching, slugging nearly .600 against southpaws.

Last year, he was limited exclusively to playing at designated hitter and pinch-hitting thanks to offseason Tommy John surgery. He was pressing and trying to produce while essentially playing one-handed.

That's not the case this season, as he's back and ready to move all around the diamond. Vogt has already noted that Fry's throw-downs and back-picks from behind the plate look as strong as ever. Getting that All-Star bat back in a rhythm is the exact kind of internal addition this lineup desperately needed.

The Ultimate positional luxury

What makes Fry a secret weapon isn't just the bat; it’s the fact that he’s a human swiss army knife. Now that he’s a full season removed from elbow surgery, he is reclaiming his status as the most versatile player on the roster.

He can play behind the dish, and has been concentrating on catching this spring so he can be a high-level backup option for Bo Naylor.

He can also play at the corners, and is a natural at first base and third base. He can also play the corner outfield spots in a pinch.

This isn't just about versatility for versatility's sake. By having a guy who can legitimately catch and play the field, the Guardians gain a hidden roster spot. It allows them the luxury of carrying an extra pitcher without sacrificing bench depth.

Leadership and grit

In a clubhouse filled with 23 and 24-year-olds, Fry’s veteran presence is massive. He’s a guy who has gone through some stuff in his career, and that perspective is invaluable for the rookies.

He’s the ultimate glue guy. He doesn't complain about his role; he just asks where his glove is. Whether he’s pinch-hitting in a high-leverage spot or giving Naylor a day off behind the plate, Fry is the piece that makes all the other moves possible.

The bottom line

If Fry returns to his 2024 form, the Guardians' offense (which struggled mightily against lefties last year) gets an immediate, massive boost. He is the secret weapon that makes this roster deep, flexible, and dangerous.

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


Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO

Re: SPRING TRAINING 2017!

1322
Image




Guardians could lose 2 useful players after setting 2026 Opening Day roster

6h · Henry Palattella

The Cleveland Guardians 2026 Opening Day roster is here. And although there aren’t any huge surprises, Cleveland’s front office still had to make some big decisions around some key roster battles.

The biggest two roster battles came in the form of the final bullpen spot and last two spots in the outfield which went to Colin Holderman, Angel Martínez and CJ Kayfus, respectively. The Athletic's Zack Mesiel was among those to relay the news on social media.

The Guardians decision to roll with those three players means that outfielder Stuart Fairchild and reliever Kolby Allard are both on the outside, which could result in the Guardians losing either player to another team over the next 48 hours

Kolby Allard and Stuart Fairchild won’t make the Guardians’ Opening Day roster

While the Guardians didn’t remove either player from their roster since they’re both on spring training deals, MLB.com’s Tim Stebbins reported yesterday that they both have upward mobility clauses in their contracts that gives them the chance to see opportunities with another team if they weren’t added to the Guardians’ roster.

They’ll both now have that chance, and it wouldn’t be a surprise if either of them get scooped up by another team thanks to what they could bring to the table.

The Guardians’ signed Fairchild to a minor league contract right around Christmas, and he hit .222 with one home run in 10 games with the Guardians this spring while also playing for Chinese Taipei in the World Baseball Classic.

While he showcased a stunning amount of pop in the WBC with two home runs in four games, his value is in his legs and contact approach. He would have been the fourth outfielder in the Guardians’ outfield, and could be scooped up by another team to fill that exact role.

This is the second straight spring that Allard’s been in camp with the Guardians, and it’s the second straight spring that he’s not going to break camp with Cleveland.

Last year Allard spent the first four weeks of the season at Triple-A before the Guardians called him up at the end of April. That kicked off a prosperous partnership where Allard turned in a career-best 2.63 ERA in 65 innings while pitching in a variety of roles.

That wasn’t enough for him to stick on the roster in the offseason, as the Guardians outrighted him off their roster following the season. He elected free agency and eventually reunited with the Guardians on a minor league contract later in the offseason.

He had a 4.05 ERA in 13 1/3 innings this spring and was briefly getting stretched out to work as a starter, but he eventually shifted back to a bullpen role.

Allard seemed to have a leg up on Holderman thanks to the fact the Guardians open the season with 13 games in 14 days, but Cleveland’s front office ended up going with Holderman (who they signed to a one-year, $1.5 million contact in the offseason) and Codi Heuer, who they added to the 40-man roster over the weekend and subsequently sent to Triple-A.

While these moves aren’t a guarantee that both players could end up leaving Cleveland (Allard stayed with the Guardians after being DFA’d last July and returned to the big league roster less than a week later), but they’ll both get a chance to explore the free agency landscape.

And if they do get scooped up, they both have a chance to turn into a player who could haunt Guardians fans.


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


Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO

Re: SPRING TRAINING 2017!

1323
Image




Austin Hedges’ injury should open door to surprise Guardians promotion

By Henry Palattella

11 hours ago


The end of spring training is always a bit of a scary time in baseball.

While it’s mostly a time of hype and excitement thanks to the start of the regular season being so close, it also is a time when most teams would prefer to wrap their players in bubble wrap so they can stay healthy for that start of the season.

The Guardians found that out the hard way on Monday night when catcher Austin Hedges left in the ninth inning of their penultimate spring training game after being hit on the hand by a 93.1 mile per hour sinker from Arizona pitcher Casey Anderson.

Hand injuries are no joke for any MLB player, they’re really no joke for catchers since that’s such a demanding position physically. And, with the start of the season a little less than 48 hours away, the Guardians are at a point where they may need to rush to replace Hedges’ spot on the roster.

And if they do need to replace Hedges, there’s one move that stands out above the others: Call up catcher Cooper Ingle.

Cooper Ingle could be the Guardians’ catcher of the future

Hedges’ injury could have a huge ripple effect across the Guardians’ roster since Bo Naylor and Hedges are the only catchers on the team’s 40-man roster.

While the Guardians wouldn’t be in as dire of a situation as other teams thanks to David Fry’s ability to play catcher, this will be his first time working as a catcher since midway through the 2024 season. It would be smart to have some insurance alongside him.

Enter Ingle, who is entering the season as the No. 99 prospect in all of baseball, per MLB Pipeline.

Ingle played in 120 games last season across Double-A and Triple-A, where he slashed .260/.389/.419 with 10 home runs, 55 RBI. He also walked 86 times compared to 85 strikeouts, marking the third straight season he finished with more walks than strikeouts.

He’s clearly a talented hitter, and he wouldn’t need to be in the lineup everyday since Naylor is clearly the top catching option. No need to worry about Ingle getting exposed night in and night out.

That role could end up being a reason they don’t call him up, however, as the Guardians have shown a penchant in the past for not calling up top prospects until they can get everyday playing time.

As such, it wouldn't be a surprise to see the Guardians call Dom Nuñez up instead. Nuñez spent a week on the Guardians’ roster last year and appeared in two games while Hedges was on the concussion injured list.

He’s the stereotypical “break glass in case of emergency” catcher who the team has no problem adding (and subsequently removing) from the 40-man roster.

Adding Ingle to the roster would be an incredible swing that would start his big league timeline and make him a permanent addition to the 40-man roster.

It would be an aggressive move, but it may be a move that they have to make later this summer if Ingle starts the season hot. Why not get started on it now?

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


Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO

Re: SPRING TRAINING 2017!

1324
Image




Results Are In For Austin Hedges’ Injury

March 24, 2026

By Mike Battaglino


The Cleveland Guardians will enter Opening Day with a large piece of good news. The hand injury suffered by Austin Hedges in the next-to-last spring training game is not serious, and the backup catcher could avoid a trip to the injured list.

That means the Guardians might be able to bypass some unexpected juggling of their 26-man roster before beginning the season against the Seattle Mariners on Thursday. Hedges is one of three catchers Cleveland is expected to carry, including starter Bo Naylor and David Fry.

According to Mason Horodyski, following X-rays, the Guardians updated Hedges’ status and are listing him as day-to-day.

“Austin Hedges had an X-ray this morning that came up negative. He is day-to-day with a bone bruise, per Guardians Chris Antonetti,” Horodyski posted on X.

A bone bruise avoids the worst-case scenario, which would have been some type of fracture, likely to the hamate bone, in Hedges’ hand. He was hit by a pitch in the ninth inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks and could have been facing an extended absence.

The Guardians did not announce a corresponding roster move, so Hedges will likely remain on the team to open the season. With Fry available to back up Naylor, Hedges can take a couple of days off, if needed, to get back to full strength.

The return of Fry is critical to this scenario. After not being able to play the field last season while recovering from elbow surgery, he showed early in spring training that he could return to his duties behind the plate with no issues.

Naylor is expected to get the bulk of the playing time again this season after his breakthrough offensive performance in last year’s pennant race. With the Guardians counting on internal improvement to boost their offense, Naylor could be one of their key players this season.

Hedges is entering his 12th major league season, his fifth overall with Cleveland and third in a row after playing elsewhere in 2023. He is considered a defensive specialist, as he has a lifetime batting average of under .200.

But he has proven to be a reliable and effective player under manager Stephen Vogt, who fortunately will be able to count on him again moving forward.

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


Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO

Re: SPRING TRAINING 2017!

1325
Image




Guardians

Guardians make 26-man roster official ahead of Thursday’s season opener in Seattle


Updated: Mar. 25, 2026, 4:56 p.m.|Published: Mar. 25, 2026, 1:19 p.m.

By Paul Hoynes, cleveland.com

SEATTLE — MLB approved the Guardians’ 26-man roster on Wednesday before their season opener Thursday night against Seattle at T-Mobile Park.

To reach the 26-man limit, the front office had to make some late adjustments including designating for assignment outfielder Johnathan Rodriguez. They needed Rodriguez’s spot on the roster to add Rhys Hoskins, who came to camp in February on a minor league deal.

In other moves, right-handers Andrew Walters (right lat) and Hunter Gaddis (right forearm) were placed on the 15-day injured list. Outfielder George Valera (left calf) was placed on the 10-day injured list.

The IL moves for Walters and Gaddis were retroactive to Sunday.

Left-hander Kolby Allard, right-hander Ben Lively, outfielder Stuart Fairchild and catcher Dom Nunez were re-assigned to the minors. Lively is still recovering from Tommy John surgery on his right elbow.

The Guardians drafted Rodriguez in 2017 out of the Carlos Beltran Baseball Academy in Puerto Rico. He made his big-league debut in 2024 but never showed the power he did in the minors where he hit 114 home runs in his career.

Hoskins, who spent the last two years with Milwaukee, hit .282 (11 for 39) with three homer, 10 RBI and a .968 OPS this spring for the Guardians.

Here’s how the 26-man roster breaks down:

Starting rotation (5): Tanner Bibee, Gavin Williams, Slade Cecconi, Joey Cantillo and Parker Messick.

Bullpen (8): Cade Smith, Shawn Armstrong, Connor Brogdon, Matt Festa, Tim Herrin, Peyton Pallette, Erik Sabrowski and Colin Holderman.

Catcher (3): Bo Naylor, David Fry and Austin Hedges.

Infielders and DH (7): Kyle Manzardo, Brayan Rocchio, Jose Ramirez, Gabriel Arias, Daniel Schneemann, CJ Kayfus and Hoskins.

Outfielders (3): Steven Kwan, Angel Martinez and Chase DeLauter.

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


Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO

Re: SPRING TRAINING 2017!

1326
Image



Guardians

The Guardians’ opening month schedule is an absolute nightmare — will they survive the gauntlet?


By Cleveland Baseball Talk Podcast, cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio — The Guardians are about to find out — fast — if they’re ready for 2026.

Not in the abstract. Not in a carefully managed Arizona exhibition game where starters throw two innings and everyone’s at the pool by noon. This is the real thing. And the schedule Cleveland drew to open the 2026 MLB season is one of the most punishing opening gauntlets in recent memory.

On the latest episode of the Cleveland Baseball Talk Podcast, beat reporters Joe Noga and Paul Hoynes laid out exactly what the Guardians are walking into — and they pulled absolutely no punches.

Noga set the tone immediately, and the bar he set should stop every Cleveland fan in their tracks.

“This is by no means a cakewalk,” Noga said. “If the Guardians make it through the end of April, based on the opponents that they’ve got on the schedule right now with their heads above water, they’ve done a tremendous job.”

Head above water. That is the bar. Not building a division lead. Not making a statement. Just staying alive through April would qualify as a legitimate achievement given what this team is about to face.

Hoynes, who has covered this franchise through decades of highs and lows and seen his share of brutal schedules, wasn’t offering any false comfort.

“This is a really tough opening month,” he said. “This opening road trip against Seattle and the Dodgers. Then they come home for the home opener against the Cubs.”

Seattle. The Dodgers. The Cubs. Three playoff teams in a row just to crack open the season. If you thought it leveled off from there, think again. Hoynes went down the full list — and reading it feels like staring directly into the abyss.

“Kansas City, which has made a lot of improvements over the last two years and is really young, always plays Cleveland well,” Hoynes said. “Then you go to Atlanta, a traditionally strong team. Then they come home to face Baltimore, who spent millions this offseason on improving their roster. And then Houston, who has always given Cleveland a tough time. You go on the road to Toronto, who played that great World Series against LA, and then you end with Tampa Bay, another tough team.”

Count them up. Seattle. The Dodgers. The Cubs. Kansas City. Atlanta. Baltimore. Houston. Toronto. Tampa Bay.

That is not a schedule. That is a gauntlet with no emergency exits.

And the quality of the opposition goes beyond the names on the marquee. The Dodgers alone could give Cleveland fits. By the time the Guardians arrive in Los Angeles, they’ll be staring down Shohei Ohtani, Roki Sasaki, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto — the World Series MVP — in a three-game series.

Cleveland caught a brief glimpse of what facing Sasaki looks like this spring when Kyle Manzardo unloaded a grand slam against him in an exhibition game. That’s spring training. The Dodgers in April with the lights on is an entirely different conversation.

Every single opponent on this opening stretch is either a defending playoff team, a projected division winner, or a franchise that has invested aggressively to compete in 2026. There are no gimmes. There are no gentle opponents to find your footing against. Cleveland has to be ready from pitch one.

What makes this storyline even more layered is the additional complexity the Guardians are carrying into this stretch. They’ll be managing Chase DeLauter’s workload, integrating new pieces, and watching young players take their first steps in a full-time big-league role — all while going toe-to-toe with the sport’s elite every single night.

Manager Stephen Vogt acknowledged the challenge with characteristic levelheadedness, noting that every team plays the same 162-game schedule. He’s right. But there’s a difference between knowing that intellectually and surviving this kind of opening stretch in real time, in front of a Cleveland fanbase hungry for answers.

As Noga and Hoynes made clear on the podcast, if the Guardians can keep their heads above water through April, the schedule softens — and that’s when this team, loaded with talent and built to win, can truly start to fly. But none of that matters until they get through what’s coming first.

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


Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO

Re: SPRING TRAINING 2017!

1327
Image




Guardians

‘If he’s on the bubble, we should all be on the bubble’: The shocking truth about Angel Martínez’s Opening Day roster spot


Published: Mar. 25, 2026, 12:32 p.m.

By Cleveland Baseball Talk Podcast, cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Angel Martínez did everything right. He came into spring training locked in, swinging with authority, making plays, stealing bases — doing all the things a player does when he’s desperate to prove he belongs at the highest level. He put together one of the most dominant offensive springs a fringe roster candidate has ever had.

And he almost didn’t make the Guardians’ Opening Day roster.

Let that sink in.

The full story of how Martínez went from the hottest bat in camp to one of the last names announced on the 26-man roster is exactly the kind of thing that reminds you just how unforgiving this sport truly is. On the latest episode of the Cleveland Baseball Talk Podcast, beat reporters Joe Noga and Paul Hoynes dug into the details — and what they uncovered was both stunning and deeply revealing about how roster decisions actually get made in Major League Baseball.

Noga set the table by laying out just how dominant Martínez actually was this spring.

“Hitting .356 with an 1.196 OPS and about a dozen extra base hits and he was still that close to not making the roster?” an incredulous Noga asked.

A .356 average. An OPS north of 1.100. Thirteen extra base hits. In almost any other scenario, numbers like that are a first-class ticket directly onto the roster — no questions asked, no deliberations required. Instead, Martínez was on the bubble, sweating out roster decisions, playing in the final spring training game like his career was on the line.

Because in a very real sense, it was.

Hoynes, never one to mince words, cut right to the heart of it.

“It just shows you how cruel this game can be,” Hoynes said, “If he’s on the bubble, we should all be on the bubble after the camp he had.”

Baseball is a cruel game. That phrase gets thrown around a lot, but it hits differently when you apply it to a player who literally did everything asked of him and still wasn’t guaranteed a spot. If Angel Martínez — with that spring — was sweating it out, then what does it take?

The answer lies in the cold arithmetic of roster construction. This wasn’t really about Martínez at all. It was about the pieces around him and a front office chess match that played out over weeks of careful deliberation. Specifically, the decision to keep outfielder CJ Kayfus on the roster over Stuart Fairchild created a ripple effect that nearly swept Martínez off the roster entirely.

Noga explained the behind-the-scenes maneuvering.

“Fairchild was the odd man out in the outfield competition,” he said. “We both thought that he had a really good chance at making the roster because he swings the bat from the right-hand side of the plate and he’s so versatile in the outfield. But the Guardians decided to stay with Kayfus and not have to make another move on the 40 man roster.”

One 40-man roster maneuver. That’s the margin separating a roster that includes Martínez from one that might not. The Guardians chose to avoid the organizational chess move required to protect Fairchild, which meant Kayfus stayed, which shifted the pressure onto the final outfield spot — and Martínez, despite his brilliance at the plate, got caught in the crossfire of roster math that had nothing to do with his performance.

It speaks to something fundamental about how MLB rosters get built. Raw performance matters enormously — but so do roster rules, positional depth, handedness balance, minor league options, and 40-man construction. The game within the game is just as complicated as what happens between the chalk lines.

And through all of it, Martínez kept playing like his job wasn’t safe — because it wasn’t. He opened that final spring training game with a single and immediately stole second base. Still grinding. Still proving. Still refusing to give the front office an easy reason to leave him off the bus.

They couldn’t do it. Angel Martínez made the team. The Guardians are better for it.

But this conversation is a vivid reminder that in baseball, doing everything right still might not be enough. The roster is a living document governed by rules and restrictions that extend far beyond what any player can control on the field.

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


Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO

Re: SPRING TRAINING 2017!

1328
Image




Guardians could catch early 2026 break as Dodgers' rotation issues take center stage

By Henry Palattella

1 hour ago


The Cleveland Guardians won’t get any time to ease into the 2026 season thanks to a season-opening road trip with series against the Mariners and Dodgers.

While April doesn’t determine whether a team is going to make the postseason, a rough start can put a team in a hole that’s incredibly tough to crawl out of (see last year’s Atlanta Braves).

But the Guardians appear to have caught a much-needed break when it comes to their series against the Dodgers thanks to starter Roki Sasaki’s recent struggles.

Sasaki took the ball for the Dodgers on Monday in Los Angeles’ penultimate spring training game and had a disastrous start where he allowed five earned runs and six walks over two innings of work. He only managed to throw 32 of his 66 pitches for strikeouts.

He left the Dodgers’ game against the Angels midway through the first inning after giving up three straight walks and not recording an out. He returned again in the second inning (pitchers are allowed to re-enter games during spring training) and was removed after allowing a leadoff walk in the fourth inning.

Although Dodgers manager Dave Roberts was adamant after the game that Sasaki will take the mound for Los Angeles in their series opener against the Guardians next Monday, it’s clear that the 24-year-old starter isn’t in the best place mentally ahead of the start.

The Guardians won’t be seeing Roki Sasaki at his best in series against Dodgers

Sasaki finished the spring with an unsightly 15.58 ERA in 8 2/3 innings, which has led to some calls that the young starter should begin the season in the minors as opposed to on Los Angeles’ big league rotation.

The Dodgers signed Sasaki last offseason in the hopes that he could be the next great starter in their vaunted rotation. Instead he only made eight shaky starts for the Dodgers before going on the injured list with right shoulder impingement.

He ended up returning at the end of the season and pitched well out of the bullpen, but Dodgers brass made the decision to move him back to the starting rotation this season. And it hasn’t gone well so far.

Part of the reason for that decision is because of the lack of depth in that rotation, as Blake Snell and Gavin Stone are going to start the season on the injured list while fellow starter River Ryan is working his way back from Tommy John.

After the start, The Athletic’s Katie Woo reported the Dodgers are planning on having long reliever Justin Wrobleski available in the bullpen to soak up some innings behind Sasaki, but it’s clear the Guardians are going to get a chance to face off against the defending champions when they’re not going to be at their best.

The Guardians need to take advantage.

The good news for Cleveland is that they have a lineup led by pesky hitters like Steven Kwan and José Ramírez who can both frustrate pitchers by fouling off a lot of pitches. That’s the kind of approach the Guardians are going to need to take against a clearly wounded Sasaki.

It may only be one game in March, but it’s the kind of game that could set the tone for the rest of the season, espically since they're going to go against Shohei Ohtani the next night.

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


Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO