Naquin is opening some eyes
Rookie outfielder collects three hits
Paul Hoynes
phoynes@cleveland.com
The Indians didn't sign free agent Austin Jackson, and they could have used him in center field this season.
If they did that, however, just think how boring the next four weeks would be.
Tyler Naquin, for instance, would have been pushed to the back of manager Terry Francona's lineup card. Right now, he's front and center.
Naquin, in his third start in center field this spring, went 3 for 4 Monday as the Indians beat the Dodgers, 8-5, at Camelback Ranch for their first win of the Cactus League season.
When spring training started, it was believed that the Indians would carry five outfielders as Michael Brantley recovered from left shoulder surgery. The top five were thought to be Rajai Davis, Abraham Almonte, Lonnie Chisenhall, Collin Cowgill and Joey Butler.
A positive PED test eliminated Almonte. Enter Naquin, the Indians' No.1 pick in 2012, with a help wanted sign staked in center field.
Naquin, batting eighth, singled in his first three at-bats Monday. He started the second with a single to right and kept going to second base when Trayce Thompson bobbled the ball for an error.
He scored on a ground out by Jose Ramirez for a 5-0 lead.
He collected his third hit, a two-strike single off lefty J.P. Howell, in the sixth. Once again, he came around to score on a tworun single by Davis.
Defensively, he made a nice catch against Yasmani Grandal in the fourth.
How Indians outfield can save itself
Naquin has plenty of competition in Cowgill, Randy Grossmann, Will Venable and Davis, but he's opening the right eyes.
Francona said batting average is the last thing you want to judge a player by in spring training. In case you're curious, Naquin is hitting .467 (7 for 15).
The Indians, for the second straight game, used power to take an early lead. Ramirez and Giovanny Urshela homered in the first for a 4-0 lead off Alex Wood. Urshela hit a three-run homer after Yan Gomes and Carlos Santana reached on one-out errors by shortstop Corey Seager.
The Tribe hit three homers in Sunday's 6-5 loss to the Brewers. In 2015, they finished 13th in the AL in homers.
Danny Salazar used the early lead to his advantage Monday as he became the first Tribe starter to go three innings this spring. He walked two in the first but didn't allow a run on one hit for his day's work.
It's strange how spring training works. When the Indians signed Juan Uribe in late February, it meant Urshela would open the season at Class AAA Columbus. The Indians love his defense at third base but feel his offense needs a lot of work.
Well, since Uribe was signed, all Urshela has done is hit. While Uribe is getting his spring-training legs under him — he played in a B game Monday — Urshela is hitting .364 (4 for 11) with a homer and five runs in five games. He drove in four runs Monday.
In the bullpen, Joba Chamberlain owes a tip of the cap to right fielder Lonnie Chisenhall for keeping his third inning under control. Chamberlain allowed five straight Dodgers to reach base — the charge included a three-run homer by Charlie Culberson — before Chisenhall turned Adrian Gonzalez's liner to right into a double play for the first two outs of the inning.
Chamberlain had a great first outing, so this one shouldn't hurt too much in his quest to win a spot in the pen. But it's something he would do well not to repeat. Lefty Giovanni Soto, meanwhile, recovered from his Sunday afternoon meltdown against the Giants to put himself back in the race for a bullpen spot. Soto started the eighth by allowing the first two batters to reach before using his slider to induce a double play and a ground out.
Chisenhall got his first hit of the spring with a single in the sixth. The hit came after his double play in the fifth. Not only did he catch Gonzalez's liner, but he threw out Joc Peterson as he tried to go from second to third for a double play to ease Chamberlain's load.
Cowgill had a brain cramp in the sixth. After replacing Chisenhall in right field, he caught a fly ball by Austin Barnes with Rob Segedin on second. Instead of throwing to third, he threw home as Segedin cruised into third.
It's spring training, and such things happen.
B-plus: The Indians topped the Reds, 1-0, in Monday's five-inning ''B'' game at the Tribe's complex. Juan Uribe, in his spring debut, notched the only RBI of the game. He also logged one of the Indians' two hits in his gamehigh four at-bats.
— Zack Meisel