Final Thoughts: José Ramírez’s sneaky great season, Shane Bieber’s brilliance
By Zack Meisel Sep 18, 2020 16
The recipe for snapping an eight-game losing streak: the presence of a Cy Young Award front-runner and a birthday boy completing two mighty hacks and one strange, yet successful, throw-the-bat-at-the-ball-and-pray-it-sneaks-through-the-infield trick.
Shane Bieber and José Ramírez have been the Indians’ most productive players this season. On Thursday night, they ensured the club’s untimely skid wouldn’t persist past eight games. Here are eight final thoughts on the Indians.
1. Ramírez is stealthily enjoying a great season. He leads the Indians in on-base percentage, slugging percentage, OPS, home runs, RBIs, runs scored and stolen bases. Oh, and he’s also tied with Anthony Rendon for the American League lead in WAR among position players, per FanGraphs. In a normal season, he’d be on pace for nearly 8.0 WAR, which is MVP-candidate territory. His statistics resemble the ones he produced in 2018, his most recent top-three MVP finish.
2018: .270/.387/.552 slash line, 146 wRC+, one HR every 14.8 at-bats, one stolen base every 4.6 games
2020: .276/.366/.546 slash line, 140 wRC+, one HR every 14.2 at-bats, one stolen base every 4.8 games
“Him coming out with that energy consistently, every single day, whether we’ve won eight straight or lost eight straight, goes a long way,” Bieber said. “And I know myself and a lot of other guys in the clubhouse appreciate him for that.”
In 2018, Ramírez walked twice as often as he has in any other year. His walk rate isn’t quite as high this season, though it’s still above his norm. His strikeout rate has ballooned to 18.3 percent this season, the highest mark of his career. (His helmet has fallen from his head 38 times this year, a historic pace.)
2. The final haul from Ramírez’s birthday bash: two homers, a double and an RBI poke that trickled through the infield after he tossed his bat at the ball.
He became the sixth player in franchise history with multiple home runs in a game on his birthday. The others:
Carlos Santana: April 8, 2012
Albert Belle: Aug. 25, 1995
Joe Azcue: Aug. 18, 1963
Ray Boone: July 27, 1957
Earl Averill: May 21, 1934
Ramírez, now 28, deemed it his best birthday performance. He also said his pesky thumb, which cost him a couple of games earlier this month, “feels better now.”
Somehow, José Ramírez turned this into an RBI single. (Raj Mehta / USA Today)
3. All right, on to the Indians’ other award candidate.
Bieber will make his next start against the White Sox at Progressive Field early next week. It’s possible it will be his final start of the regular season, his last chance to convince voters he deserves the AL Cy Young Award (he’s the undisputed front-runner) or even the MVP (that could largely depend on which criteria voters prioritize during such an atypical season).
Bieber would be in line to start the club’s regular-season finale against the Pirates on Sept. 27, but there’s little reason for him to log much of a workload that day if the Indians have already clinched a playoff berth. Game 1 of the wild-card round will take place two days later.
No player in baseball has a higher WAR total (2.9), even though Bieber has appeared in only 11 games this season. He leads the AL (by massive margins) in ERA, FIP and strikeout rate. Really, if he avoids getting shelled on Tuesday, he should have the Cy Young Award secured.
Of course, he has given it little thought.
“Baseball is a humbling sport,” he said, “so as soon as you start thinking about accolades and this and that, I feel like it’s going to come and bite you.”
4. Why was the team’s ace throwing his 118th pitch with his team ahead by 10 runs in the eighth inning? After a quick chat with pitching coach Carl Willis — they had placed a limit of 110-115 pitches on Bieber — Sandy Alomar Jr. conferred with the pitcher and the infielders at the mound. Bieber, who had just issued an eight-pitch walk to Derek Hill, had tossed 114 pitches to navigate through 7 2/3 innings. It seemed like an obvious time to summon a reliever.
Bieber said Alomar offered him the option to remain in the game and face Willi Castro or to call it a night.
“He said, ‘If I let you go get this guy, you’re going to be up around 120 (pitches), so you better get him,’” Bieber said. “And I said, ‘Absolutely.’ Obviously, it didn’t play out that way. Baseball is baseball. It’s frustrating.”
Castro socked a three-run homer that barely cleared the fence in the right-field corner. That pushed Bieber’s ERA from 1.37 to 1.74.
“He never wants to come out of the game,” Alomar said. “He keeps fighting to go out there all the time when he has 100, 105 pitches. He wants to go back out there and give the bullpen a breather. … People think when the game is close is when you get the chance. When the game is close, you want to give your pitcher a win — you don’t want him to lose the game. When the game is open, it’s an opportunity for you to go back out there and stay in the game, and if you give up a home run, you’re not going to lose the game. He wanted to pitch.”
The 118 pitches established a new career high for Bieber. Cam Hill recorded the final four outs for the Indians.
5. Bieber breezed through the first seven innings, holding the Tigers scoreless and limiting them to two hits. And he did it all without much fastball command.
“For the first time in a long time,” he said, “I was coming back in the dugout, saying, ‘I don’t know where my heater’s going.’”
It sure helps to have four other pitches he can turn to when necessary. Bieber said Roberto Pérez noticed the issue immediately, so they altered their approach between innings. Bieber relied on his change-up more than usual, as he threw 21 of them and they induced six swings and misses. They still mixed in fastballs here and there so hitters couldn’t eliminate the pitch entirely.
6. The Indians hadn’t dropped eight consecutive games since June 2-10, 2013. With their win on Thursday, they halted their bid to rival the dubious streak from 2012, when they lost 11 in a row from July 27-Aug. 7.
“We really can’t control what’s happened up to today,” Chris Antonetti said. “The reality is we’re still positioned to potentially make the postseason. We know we need to play better than we have over the last couple of weeks. We feel we’re capable of doing that.”
That 11-game skid launched the most rotten month in club history, as the Indians sputtered to a 5-24 record, sealing Manny Acta’s fate as manager. The Indians were outscored 95-34 in those 11 games.
The frustration in the Indians’ clubhouse reached a crescendo at Comerica Park on a Sunday afternoon, when the Indians were attempting to stave off a ninth straight defeat. In the top of the 10th, Travis Hafner and Ezequiel Carrera slugged back-to-back home runs and Lou Marson chipped in an RBI double to stake Cleveland to an 8-5 advantage. Chris Perez recorded two, quick outs. Then, he allowed two walks, an RBI double, a two-run single and a Miguel Cabrera walk-off homer. That capped a Tigers sweep, which all but knocked the Indians out of the division race.
Chris Seddon started on the mound for the Indians that day. Brent Lillibridge started at third base.
The Tribe pitchers saddled with those 11 losses: Josh Tomlin, Justin Masterson, Ubaldo Jiménez (who officially retired this week), Derek Lowe, Zach McAllister, Esmil Rogers, Masterson again, Jiménez again, Perez, McAllister again and Perez again.
7. It’s a season full of chaos, with an expanded playoff bracket, a truncated regular-season schedule and plenty of reshuffling in the standings. But not every player is monitoring the daily activity.
“I’ll be honest, with everything going on,” Oscar Mercado said, “not being able to really leave the hotel and being restricted to being at the baseball field and back to wherever we’re living at, mentally, once I leave the field, I’m trying to stay away from the game. I don’t want to drive myself too crazy or put myself in a tough place mentally. I focus on other things, whether it’s talking to my friends or playing video games or something. So, I’m not really trying to follow (the scoreboard and standings).”
8. I’ve long wondered about the process of filling out the lineup during Terry Francona’s absence. Surely, Alomar scribbles the names onto the card, but is it a solo mission? I asked Antonetti, who said Alomar ultimately makes the decisions, but he has consulted other coaches as well as members of the front office and support staff.
“Anyone who would have something meaningful to contribute to the discussion,” Antonetti said, “Sandy’s engaged them.”
(Top photo: Raj Mehta / USA Today)