6842
by TFIR
From walk-on to workhorse: The blossoming of Bieber fever
Zack Meisel May 20, 2019 7
CLEVELAND — Shane Bieber glanced over to his teammate at the adjacent locker.
“Do you really do your interviews with this?” Bieber asked, contemplating whether he should place the red and gold crown atop his neatly combed hair.
“Put it on, Rook,” Trevor Bauer replied.
“Don’t work that way,” Bieber countered. “I’m the king now.”
Several times this season, Bieber has possessed the coveted “King of the Hill” crown, awarded to the Indians’ most prolific starting pitcher in a particular series. He’s still the runt of the rotation, but he has quickly risen to the ranks of the trustworthy workhorses — the arms Terry Francona can rely upon to turn over a lineup a few times, to throw 110 or more pitches, to bail out an oft-bumbling batting order.
And he’s still only 23, still a bit shy of registering a full year of big-league service time.
The rotation remains the foundation of the Indians’ roster, and though they dealt for Bauer, Corey Kluber, Carlos Carrasco and Mike Clevinger, Bieber is a homegrown jewel, drafted just three years ago and already blossoming on the main stage. It’s a critical development for a team that opts to avoid the account-draining free-agent pitching pool, a team with a couple of aching aces on the mend.
And it’s an impressive ascent, considering Bieber came close to not pitching at all in college, a sequence of events that replays in his head on a daily basis.
“I can’t believe how it’s worked out,” Bieber said.
Had Tyler Mahle not signed with the Reds out of high school, he likely would have occupied the roster spot at UC Santa Barbara that Bieber ultimately claimed.
At the time, Bieber would have been content with that arrangement. He just wanted to attend the university, another four years of basking in the California sun with a side gig of studying sociology. Baseball or no baseball, the school’s backdrop was the beach. What’s not to like?
Instead, he walked on at UCSB, and he narrowly edged out another player for a spot on the spring roster his freshman year. The team was desperate for pitching, so it tabbed Bieber as the Sunday starter, the No. 3 pitcher in its weekend rotation.
“My first year was OK,” Bieber said. “I had a serviceable arm for Sundays.”
The next year, baseball evolved from fun to fundamental. That’s when he caught the Indians’ attention, when he first started to sense he might stand a chance at being drafted. After he posted a 2.24 ERA during his sophomore season, he participated in the Cape Cod League, despite some initial resistance from his college coach. Bieber craved the extra experience and expertise, even though he’d be limited to a few innings for a handful of starts. Matt Blake, now the Indians’ assistant director of player development, served as his pitching coach.
Blake’s scouting report on Bieber at the time: 88-91 mph, with a looser slider that he could throw for strikes, and a changeup without much separation off the fastball. His fastball command was paramount to his success.
Blake was blown away, though, that this 20-year-old was so intent on absorbing as much information and advice as possible, and on learning from a group of unfamiliar coaches with whom he’d only spend three weeks. During the amateur scouting process, the Indians search for those characteristics that indicate a player will work tirelessly to improve, and Bieber checked that box.
“It was kind of like, ‘OK, something’s going on here that’s going to give him a chance,’” Blake said. “And he went out and had a really good spring the next year, with a little bit higher velocity, but he was largely the same guy. I don’t think it would’ve been easy to say that, ‘This guy is going to end up being 93-96 (mph) with four quality pitches,’ but there were some qualities that (made) you say, ‘This guy has a chance to grow more than the average college pitcher would.’”
In the wake of his Cape performance, Bieber rested that fall, and when he returned in the spring, his fastball velocity had jumped to the 91-93 mph range. He maintained an elite walk rate and produced a bevy of ground balls. The Indians thought his fastball offered even more upside, too.
They hired Blake as a lower-level pitching coordinator later that year, and they selected Bieber in the fourth round of the 2016 draft. Blake watched him breeze through Mahoning Valley, Lake County and Lynchburg. When he transitioned to his current role, Blake observed Bieber at Class AA Akron and Class AAA Columbus.
“He was able to take feedback, both from the objective reports that we have,” Blake said, “and from the subjective evaluations of the coaches, and then continue to add to his process, but not necessarily throw out what makes him successful in the meantime.”
Bieber never stuck around for long at any minor-league stop. In all, he logged a 2.24 ERA in 277 minor-league innings, while issuing only 19 free passes. Less than two years after he was drafted, the kid who nearly headed to college solely to study sociology and assemble sandcastles had reached the big leagues.
(Rick Osentoski / USA Today)
When Bieber seized a spot in the Cleveland rotation last summer, Bauer and Clevinger had a chat.
Who was this new kid? Bieber didn’t spend spring training in big-league camp, in part because the front office feared Terry Francona would be infatuated and plead for Bieber to make the Opening Day roster, which didn’t jibe with their developmental plan. Clevinger knew Bieber pitched “like a crafty righty,” but nothing else.
“We had to watch to see who he is before we invested time. That’s just life,” Clevinger said. “But once we saw he was a guy who was putting in the work and cares, I talked to (Bauer) and we’re like, ‘Remember how it took us a while to get into ourselves, to mold ourselves? We can go and have him skip this step right now. He’s already light-years ahead of us when it comes to age, with where he’s at right now. We could have him skip a whole two-year setback of figuring himself out.’ It took TB two years and me like a year and a half to really come into ourselves and find it. We just thought we could help expedite that process with Biebs.
“Anyone can put on a face, but it’s totally different when you get here. Nothing can prepare you for being here. I don’t care what anyone says. Unless maybe you’re — like, Vlad (Guerrero) Jr. might be a different scenario, because he was born in the lights. No matter who you are or where you come from, it’s different when you get here as a young guy, especially as young as he is.”
Bauer and Clevinger ultimately adopted Bieber as their little brother in the rotation, and they urged him to unleash more oomph on his fastball, which resulted in that low-90s velocity creeping up toward 94-95 mph. In the ninth inning of his matinee masterpiece Sunday, Bieber registered 94 mph on all three heaters he threw.
“Hopefully Biebs will do that for the next guy who comes up,” Bauer said. “He’ll be able to communicate in his own way to that guy.”
It helps that Bieber doesn’t act like a typical 23-year-old. Francona often refers to him as being “mature beyond his years.” As cliché as it sounds, there’s truth behind it. Just ask the guy who has caught all but two of his starts this season.
“I wouldn’t say I was this mature,” Kevin Plawecki said. “I’m not a pitcher — I mean, sometimes I am — certain situations that he gets in, he’s able to stay focused and not let the moment get away from him. At that age, I don’t know if I could have done that, to be completely honest.
“He’s 23. I made my debut at 24. So at 23, I was still in the minor leagues, but at the same time, at 24, I was still pretty young coming into the league and my head was spinning quite a bit. With him, you don’t really see that at all, so that’s pretty special.”
Last spring, Carl Willis snuck away one morning to watch Bieber throw live batting practice on a back field at the Indians’ complex in Arizona, the pitching coach’s first view of the right-hander. He marveled at Bieber’s command of the strike zone, and at how a pitcher so short on experience could operate as though he had pitched in the majors for a decade.
A few months later, Bieber became his pupil.
“He stepped right in,” Willis said, “and has proven to be a major-league pitcher. He’s also watched and listened, both from coaches and teammates, to learn how things work at the major-league level, what hitters are trying to do to combat what you’re trying to do. I think maturity is just the best word. The results are a reflection of that.”
Those results — a 3.22 ERA, a 3.74 FIP, 10.6 strikeouts per nine innings this season — have proved pivotal given the pain endured by Clevinger and Kluber. Bieber twirled a complete-game shutout against the Orioles on Sunday, tallying 15 strikeouts and, true to form, issuing no walks. He said he had every pitch working, and his teammates advised him to capitalize on it.
He located a mid-90s fastball to any coordinates Roberto Pérez requested. He baffled Baltimore’s hitters with a curveball that plunged toward the dirt upon arrival to the plate — nine of the 19 he tossed resulted in swinging strikes. The Orioles also whiffed on 11 of the 30 sliders he slung their way.
Bieber was eyeing a complete game all afternoon. After the eighth, with Bieber sitting at 98 pitches, Willis asked how much the milestone meant to him.
“A lot,” Bieber told him.
No other words were uttered. Bieber jogged to the mound for the ninth and set down the Orioles on nine pitches. Chris Davis offered a futile wave at three consecutive curveballs to seal the shutout.
When Bieber arrived at his locker, that shiny crown was waiting. And so were his teammates, who doused him with a variety of substances — with “interesting” scents — to honor the feat.
Only three pitchers in franchise history had recorded 15 strikeouts and no walks in an outing: Sam McDowell, Luis Tiant and Kluber. Only Tiant did so in a complete-game shutout.
Tiant lasted 19 years in the majors, collecting 229 wins and posting a 3.30 ERA. McDowell made six All-Star teams and led the AL in strikeouts on five occasions. Kluber has a pair of Cy Young Awards resting on a shelf in his home.
Meanwhile, Bieber appeared in his 30th big-league game Sunday. And even that would have seemed like a far-fetched forecast five years ago, when Bieber snuck his way onto a collegiate pitching staff.
“I think about it every day,” Bieber said. “It’s pretty crazy.”
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