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Posted: Sun Aug 11, 2019 10:18 am
Cleveland Indians return could have been different for Trevor Bauer: The week in baseball
By Paul Hoynes, cleveland.com | Posted August 11, 2019 at 05:05 AM | Updated August 11, 2019 at 09:31 AM
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Yasiel Puig. (Tony Dejak, Associated Press)
INDIANS TURNED TREVOR BAUER TRADE INTO THREE-TEAMER
MINNEAPOLIS – If the Indians weren’t situated where they are today, their return in Trevor Bauer deal may have looked a lot different than it does right now.
The deal was originally a two-team trade between the Indians and Reds. The Indians sent Bauer to the Reds on July 31 for Yasiel Puig, outfielder Taylor Trammell and left-hander Scott Moss.
If the Indians were rebuilding, if they were taking a step back, they may have kept Trammell, the Reds' No.1 pick in 2016. But they were three games behind the AL Central-leading Twins and the front office felt they were still very much in the race.
In the days leading up to the trade deadline, however, they’d had numerous discussions with the Padres about Bauer. San Diego really liked Bauer, but common ground couldn’t be found to make a deal happen. In discussing numerous players inside and outside their organizations, the Indians learned that the Padres liked Trammell.
After that it was like putting the pieces of a puzzle together.
The Indians sent Bauer to the Reds for Puig, Moss and Trammell. Then they sent Trammell to the Padres for outfielder Franmil Reyes, left-hander Logan Allen and infielder Victor Nova.
From the Indians' point of view, they felt they were not only helping the big-league club with the addition of sluggers Puig and Reyes, who added a combined 49 homers and 107 RBI to the Tribe lineup. But they felt Allen could possibly help them in the rotation later this season or next year. Allen was 2-3 with a 6.75 ERA in eight appearances, including four starts, for the Padres earlier this season.
Allen was sent to Class AAA, Moss to Class AA and Nova moved to the Tribe’s entry in the Arizona Rookie League. Allen has struggled in two starts at Columbus, posting a 8.53 ERA. He’s allowed six earned runs in 6 1/3 innings.
The Padres sent Trammell to Class AA Amarillo where he’s hitting .171 (6-for-35) with one homer.
Right-hander Danny Salazar. (Phil Long, Associated Press)
WILL DANNY SALAZAR PITCH FOR THE INDIANS AGAIN?
If Danny Salazar had told Indians trainers that he tweaked his right groin muscle while warming up in the bullpen before his Aug. 1 start against the Astros, maybe things would have worked out differently than they did.
But now he’s rehabbing his injury in Tampa away from the organization. Whether or not he makes it back to the big leagues with the Tribe is questionable.
During his rehab assignment, the Indians watched Salazar throw between 92 and 93 mph. But in his Aug. 1 start, his first in the big leagues since Sept. 27, 2017, he never threw harder than 88 mph. His average velocity for the 66 pitches he threw was 81 mph.
Salazar didn’t say anything about his injury until a couple of innings into his start. If he had said something earlier, maybe the trainers could have treated the injury with a wrap or tape and given him a chance to perform better.
As it was, he returned to the injured list and is hanging onto the last rung on the Tribe’s rehab ladder. The Indians are busy rehabbing pitchers such as Corey Kluber, Carlos Carrasco and Jefry Rodriguez, pitchers who have a chance to help them down the stretch. Salazar is a long way from being included in that conversation.
Manager Terry Francona. (Joshua Gunter, cleveland.com)
THEY SAID IT
* "I’m trying to figure that out right now ... if I had fun or not because I couldn’t even breathe. But I wouldn’t trade it for the world. That’s probably an odd description. But I wouldn’t trade it for the world. I was almost nauseous,” Tribe manager Terry Francona after Thursday’s 7-5 win over the Twins.
* “Yeah, it’s kind of boring. Just trying to stay loose, staying focused. You don’t have anything to do,” right-hander Zack Greinke, on watching Houston score 11 runs during his first win with his new team.
* “Why is everyone so excited to see an opener? It wouldn’t be effective for us. That’s why we haven’t done it. We’re not fools. If we thought it would be beneficial for us, we’d do it,” Royals manager Ned Yost to mlb.com on not using the opener.
Yankee third baseman Gio Urshela. (Frank Franklin II, AP)
THREE UP, THREE DOWN
Baseball is a game of threes. Three strikes in an out. Three outs in a half inning. Here are two more sets of three to consider.
Three up
1. Cody Bellinger, Christian Yelich and Mike Trout all homered on Tuesday. It’s the third time they’ve done that this year. (Elias).
2. Bo Bichette became the first Toronto player to open his career with an 11-game hitting streak. The streak ended Friday.
3. The Yankees finished their season series at Camden Yards. They went 10-0 and hit 43 homers on the Orioles' home ground.
Three down
1. Yankee third baseman Gio Urshela, on Aug. 4 against Boston, hit foul balls off his left and right legs.
2. In their last appearances against the Yankees, Red Sox aces Chris Sale and David Price posted a combined 21.32 ERA, allowing 15 earned runs and 18 hits in 6 1/3 innings.
3. It’s been 10 days since the Indians traded Trevor Bauer to the Reds and he still leads the AL with 14 hit batsmen and 63 walks.
By Paul Hoynes, cleveland.com | Posted August 11, 2019 at 05:05 AM | Updated August 11, 2019 at 09:31 AM
0 shares
18 Comments
Yasiel Puig. (Tony Dejak, Associated Press)
INDIANS TURNED TREVOR BAUER TRADE INTO THREE-TEAMER
MINNEAPOLIS – If the Indians weren’t situated where they are today, their return in Trevor Bauer deal may have looked a lot different than it does right now.
The deal was originally a two-team trade between the Indians and Reds. The Indians sent Bauer to the Reds on July 31 for Yasiel Puig, outfielder Taylor Trammell and left-hander Scott Moss.
If the Indians were rebuilding, if they were taking a step back, they may have kept Trammell, the Reds' No.1 pick in 2016. But they were three games behind the AL Central-leading Twins and the front office felt they were still very much in the race.
In the days leading up to the trade deadline, however, they’d had numerous discussions with the Padres about Bauer. San Diego really liked Bauer, but common ground couldn’t be found to make a deal happen. In discussing numerous players inside and outside their organizations, the Indians learned that the Padres liked Trammell.
After that it was like putting the pieces of a puzzle together.
The Indians sent Bauer to the Reds for Puig, Moss and Trammell. Then they sent Trammell to the Padres for outfielder Franmil Reyes, left-hander Logan Allen and infielder Victor Nova.
From the Indians' point of view, they felt they were not only helping the big-league club with the addition of sluggers Puig and Reyes, who added a combined 49 homers and 107 RBI to the Tribe lineup. But they felt Allen could possibly help them in the rotation later this season or next year. Allen was 2-3 with a 6.75 ERA in eight appearances, including four starts, for the Padres earlier this season.
Allen was sent to Class AAA, Moss to Class AA and Nova moved to the Tribe’s entry in the Arizona Rookie League. Allen has struggled in two starts at Columbus, posting a 8.53 ERA. He’s allowed six earned runs in 6 1/3 innings.
The Padres sent Trammell to Class AA Amarillo where he’s hitting .171 (6-for-35) with one homer.
Right-hander Danny Salazar. (Phil Long, Associated Press)
WILL DANNY SALAZAR PITCH FOR THE INDIANS AGAIN?
If Danny Salazar had told Indians trainers that he tweaked his right groin muscle while warming up in the bullpen before his Aug. 1 start against the Astros, maybe things would have worked out differently than they did.
But now he’s rehabbing his injury in Tampa away from the organization. Whether or not he makes it back to the big leagues with the Tribe is questionable.
During his rehab assignment, the Indians watched Salazar throw between 92 and 93 mph. But in his Aug. 1 start, his first in the big leagues since Sept. 27, 2017, he never threw harder than 88 mph. His average velocity for the 66 pitches he threw was 81 mph.
Salazar didn’t say anything about his injury until a couple of innings into his start. If he had said something earlier, maybe the trainers could have treated the injury with a wrap or tape and given him a chance to perform better.
As it was, he returned to the injured list and is hanging onto the last rung on the Tribe’s rehab ladder. The Indians are busy rehabbing pitchers such as Corey Kluber, Carlos Carrasco and Jefry Rodriguez, pitchers who have a chance to help them down the stretch. Salazar is a long way from being included in that conversation.
Manager Terry Francona. (Joshua Gunter, cleveland.com)
THEY SAID IT
* "I’m trying to figure that out right now ... if I had fun or not because I couldn’t even breathe. But I wouldn’t trade it for the world. That’s probably an odd description. But I wouldn’t trade it for the world. I was almost nauseous,” Tribe manager Terry Francona after Thursday’s 7-5 win over the Twins.
* “Yeah, it’s kind of boring. Just trying to stay loose, staying focused. You don’t have anything to do,” right-hander Zack Greinke, on watching Houston score 11 runs during his first win with his new team.
* “Why is everyone so excited to see an opener? It wouldn’t be effective for us. That’s why we haven’t done it. We’re not fools. If we thought it would be beneficial for us, we’d do it,” Royals manager Ned Yost to mlb.com on not using the opener.
Yankee third baseman Gio Urshela. (Frank Franklin II, AP)
THREE UP, THREE DOWN
Baseball is a game of threes. Three strikes in an out. Three outs in a half inning. Here are two more sets of three to consider.
Three up
1. Cody Bellinger, Christian Yelich and Mike Trout all homered on Tuesday. It’s the third time they’ve done that this year. (Elias).
2. Bo Bichette became the first Toronto player to open his career with an 11-game hitting streak. The streak ended Friday.
3. The Yankees finished their season series at Camden Yards. They went 10-0 and hit 43 homers on the Orioles' home ground.
Three down
1. Yankee third baseman Gio Urshela, on Aug. 4 against Boston, hit foul balls off his left and right legs.
2. In their last appearances against the Yankees, Red Sox aces Chris Sale and David Price posted a combined 21.32 ERA, allowing 15 earned runs and 18 hits in 6 1/3 innings.
3. It’s been 10 days since the Indians traded Trevor Bauer to the Reds and he still leads the AL with 14 hit batsmen and 63 walks.