The 2021 Cleveland Indians postmortem: The good, the bad, the ugly and the bizarre from an 80-82 season
CLEVELAND, OH - APRIL 26: Cleveland Indians third baseman Jose Ramirez (11) throws to first base for an out during the second inning of the Major League Baseball game between the Minnesota Twins and Cleveland Indians on April 26, 2021, at Progressive Field in Cleveland, OH. (Photo by Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
By Zack Meisel 3h ago 9
ARLINGTON, Texas — In mid-June, Terry Francona’s crew had sprinted to its best start since 2007, a season that wilted one step short of the World Series. Six weeks later, Cleveland had endured a nine-game losing streak, a collection of hitless performances, four trades and the loss of its manager.
Yeah, we witnessed the best of the 2021 team. And we witnessed the worst of it.
Ultimately, the club settled somewhere in the middle, with an 80-82 final standing, its first losing record since 2012, when a nightmarish summer cost Manny Acta his job and fueled the organization to lure Francona to the shores of Lake Erie.
The last two months were an odd, unfamiliar scene, with Francona relegated to the sideline, with a bunch of new faces filling the dugout and others playing out the string before they head elsewhere over the winter.
In the coming weeks, we’ll detail the offseason plans, the pivotal decisions, the possible moves, why the front office and the core players insist the club has a bright (near) future and what the organization must do to make that a reality. But for now, let’s examine what went right, what went wrong and what was weird about Cleveland’s 2021 season.
The Good
Your innings leader, just as everyone expected
It required three significant injuries, a couple of demotions and a mid-season role change, but Cal Quantrill led the team in innings pitched. He started the season in the bullpen. That says a lot about the flimsy state of the rotation this season, but it’s also a credit to Quantrill, who emerged as a consistent force in the second half of the season, once he built up his pitch count and no longer needed to take the hill on short rest.
Quantrill’s 1.94 ERA since the All-Star break ranked second in the majors, behind only Atlanta’s Max Fried. He averaged more than six innings per start during that stretch, an impressive feat given his limited workload at the start of the year. He joked with The Athletic this week that he’s aiming for 300 innings next season, twice his 2021 total. Really, he said, he’s eyeing 200 frames.
José being José
Ho hum, another top-five MVP finish might be headed José Ramírez’s way. He seemed to do everything really well this year. If not for the defensive wizardry of the A’s Matt Chapman, Ramírez would likely be the favorite to capture the Gold Glove Award for American League third basemen. He ranked in the 94th percentile in Statcast’s Outs Above Average metric and only Chapman and Atlanta’s Austin Riley amassed more defensive runs saved at third base. He hit 36 home runs. He tallied 103 RBIs. He swiped 27 bases. He rarely struck out. He finished tied for second in the AL in fWAR. Oh, and he now wears a chain that displays a picture of him wearing a chain.
The Straw that stirs
For a team long desperate for competent outfielders, the Indians nabbed one they had coveted for more than a year when they flipped Phil Maton and Yainer Diaz to the Astros for Myles Straw.
Diaz, who turned 23 this month, did post an .889 OPS in A-ball this season. Maton finished the year with a 4.73 ERA.
Cleveland, meanwhile, has at least one answer in the outfield. Straw ranked 23rd among all AL players in fWAR, with 3.6. Following the trade, he batted .285 with a .362 on-base percentage and 13 stolen bases in 14 attempts. He also ranked in the 98th percentile in Outs Above Average and recorded five defensive runs saved, as he hauled in every fly ball hit to his area code. He’s under team control for four more seasons.
Rosario’s greatest hits
Before the season, Amed Rosario vowed his 2019 numbers — a .287/.323/.432 slash line, 15 home runs, 19 stolen bases — were more reflective of his ability than his 2020 struggles. His 2021 performance supported his claim.
“There were lots of ups and downs, and it was hard to find the confidence (last season),” Rosario said. “I had a lot of ups and downs in this season as well, but I felt the confidence was back in there and that allowed me to show the best version of myself.”
Rosario was once a top-five prospect in the sport, and it’s easy to spot the traits that vaulted him toward the top of the rankings. He collected hits in bunches, especially against left-handed pitching. He has flashed some pop and some speed, and extracting more from those tools would help his cause. For a lineup sorely needing contributions, his rebound proved critical. His defense might eventually force him off shortstop, but Cleveland’s decision-makers are still waiting for someone else to offer them incentive to do so.
Cleveland, you have your closer
One Royals player asserted last week that Emmanuel Clase was “the toughest pitcher I’ve ever faced.” Clase probably won’t capture AL Rookie of the Year honors, but he deserves strong consideration. He posted a 1.29 ERA this season; among qualified relievers in Cleveland history, only José Mesa’s 1.13 ERA in 1995 is better. Clase allowed one earned run in his final 32 appearances.
Kids, learn to throw 102-mph cutters.
‘How do you like them apples?’
Ramírez set the tempo on the bases all season. In spring training, coaches told the club’s young position players to watch him, and for good measure. Ramírez ranked as the 143rd-fastest player in baseball this season, but he stole 27 bases in 31 attempts and routinely snagged an extra base when possible.
“I pay attention to the game,” Ramírez said, “what the pitcher is doing, what the catcher is doing, what the outfielders are doing, the alignments. I’m aware I’m not the fastest runner, so I have to take all advantages possible when I’m running the bases.”
There’s no better example than when Ramírez was caught in a rundown after notching a two-run single to right field against the Orioles on June 16. Ramírez somehow slipped out of the game of pickle and plunged head-first into second base, causing broadcaster Matt Underwood to shout, “How do you like them apples?” Then, Ramírez realized no one was covering third, so he beat Baltimore shortstop Freddy Galvis in a footrace the final 90 feet to convert a single into three bases.
The Indians ranked third in the majors with 108 stolen bases. They were only caught 17 times. That 86.4 percent success rate was far and away the best in the majors. Many players credited first-base coach Sandy Alomar Jr. for helping them select the proper times to run.
Ramírez’s aggressiveness resulted in a record number of helmets flying off his head. I asked Ramírez on Sunday morning to guess how many times he lost his helmet.
“I’m not sure,” Ramírez said, “but I think there’s a guy out there keeping count of how many times it’s happened.”
Caught red-handed.
Ramírez guessed 60 to 70. The actual final tally: 79.
The road to Williamsport
The team’s trip to the Little League World Series served as a welcome reprieve, given the trades, Francona’s decision to step away and the fact the club had fallen out of the postseason race. The players soaked up the opportunity to rediscover the kid-like spirit that made them fall in love with baseball in the first place. They interacted with Little Leaguers and then put on a show for them that Sunday night as Cleveland capped a three-game sweep of Shohei Ohtani’s Angels.
Related: A day at the Little League World Series with big leaguers
The Bad
Still waiting …
Andrés Giménez impressed the club so much during spring training that he won the starting shortstop gig weeks in advance of Opening Day. Owen Miller started the Triple-A season in such a sizzling manner, he earned an early-season call-up. But those guys, in addition to Yu Chang, endured some extended rough patches, and it has left a cloud of mystery hanging over the future of the team’s middle infield. Are any of the three positioned to start on a regular basis next season? Will prospect Gabriel Arias factor into the equation?
Giménez before his mid-May demotion: .179/.226/.308 slash line
Giménez since his early August return: .252/.322/.393 slash line
Miller before his late-June demotion: .106/.143/.128 slash line
Miller since his late-July return: .236/.275/.368 slash line
Chang before his early July demotion: .176/.211/.287 slash line
Chang since his late-July return: .271/.314/.543 slash line
There’s much more to this than surface-level statistics, of course. The club has been impressed by Chang’s late-season hard-hit ability — his expected batting average and slugging percentage, based on quality of contact, soared as the summer unfolded — and they appreciate the defensive versatility he and Giménez provide.
There will be plenty to settle in spring training, though. It’s difficult to forecast where all of these young middle infielders will wind up. It’s not as though they all made convincing cases to earn daily playing time in 2022.
Rotating
Shane Bieber, Zach Plesac and Aaron Civale all suffered season-altering injuries in a span of four weeks, leaving the club with a completely different starting pitching quintet than the one with which the club opened the season, as Logan Allen and Triston McKenzie had returned to Triple-A Columbus.
At one point, the team deployed a rotation of Quantrill, J.C. Mejía, Sam Hentges and Eli Morgan, with Quantrill and Mejía occasionally pitching on short rest. That’s a product of poor fortune and a lack of depth, influenced by both a paltry payroll and a loss of typical minor-league development in 2020. Mejía previously pitched in A-ball. Hentges had a rough season at Double-A Akron in 2019 before spending last summer at the alternate site. Cleveland’s house of cards collapsed rather quickly, though some trades, drafting and development have restored the structure.
We hardly knew ye
Remember Ben Gamel? He served as Cleveland’s leadoff hitter for part of April. He finally notched his first hit in his 11th game, only to be designated for assignment the next day. He proceeded to play regularly for the Pirates.
Remember Jake Bauers? Cleveland’s brass handed him the first base job after spring training, but the decision never paid dividends. Bobby Bradley replaced him in early June and Bauers moved on to Seattle, where his results haven’t changed.
Remember Eddie Rosario?
Home runs with the Braves: seven in 32 games
Home runs with the Indians: seven in 78 games
He also hit for the cycle in a game in which he saw only five pitches.
Remember César Hernández? Before the club dealt him to the White Sox in July, he had already established a new career high in home runs. He hasn’t fared as well in Chicago, for whom he has posted a .608 OPS.
The Ugly
Hitless history
Carlos Rodón no-hit Cleveland in April. Wade Miley no-hit Cleveland in May. The Tampa Bay Rays no-hit Cleveland in a seven-inning affair in July. Corbin Burnes no-hit Cleveland in September.
In The Year of the No-Hitter, in which a league-record nine were recorded, Cleveland played the role of punching bag. In three of the nine historic feats, they’re the group sauntering back to the clubhouse as the other team forms a dog pile in the center of the diamond. The fruitless effort against Tampa was deemed a “notable achievement” since double-header games didn’t last a full nine innings this year.
Quiet in the corners
Straw rates as about a league-average hitter this season, and relative to his colleagues in Cleveland, that seems like otherworldly production at the plate. Josh Naylor’s injury (more on that in a moment) left some unanswered questions. The club traded away Rosario, a free-agent flop, and devoted playing time to a handful of guys with limited track records the last two months. None capitalized on the opportunity.
Bradley Zimmer offered the occasional stolen base or moon-orbiting home run, but never demonstrated much consistency or contact ability at the plate. Harold Ramírez made plenty of contact, but didn’t hit for power and manned the outfield as though he suffered from an outfield fence allergy. Oscar Mercado never mustered much of anything in the batter’s box. The team didn’t even bother to include Daniel Johnson in its September plans.
If the club learned anything about its corner outfield this season, it’s that its long-term solutions are probably playing elsewhere at the moment.
Naylor’s pain
It was a jarring sight watching Naylor writhe around in the outfield grass at Target Field after he attempted to avoid a collision with Ernie Clement in late June. Naylor never stepped foot onto the field again in 2021, but he has been working out at the team’s complex in Arizona following surgery to repair leg fractures and torn ligaments. The team is hopeful he’ll be able to participate in spring training, but making any assumptions about what he might be able to offer in 2022 seems premature.
Roberto Pérez’s swan song?
Cleveland’s catchers contributed a 54 wRC+ this season (100 represents league-average offensive output), the worst mark of any team in baseball. In all, the group supplied a .184/.241/.331 slash line. Roberto Pérez and Austin Hedges are known for their defense and handling of a pitching staff, so offense is usually considered a bonus. But the team needs more production than that.
Pérez struggled to stay healthy, first dealing with a finger injury and then bursitis in his right shoulder. He stood on the top step of the visiting dugout at Globe Life Field on Sunday morning and pondered whether it would be his last game in a Cleveland uniform. The club holds a $7 million option on him for 2022. They have yet to inform him of their decision, he said. Hedges is in line to earn $3.5 million to $4 million in his final year of arbitration this winter.
Ope, didn’t see ya there
On July 30 in Chicago, Johnson bumped into Zimmer as the two attempted to corral a fly ball. The baseball caromed off Zimmer’s glove and resulted in a Yoán Moncada home run. Johnson didn’t hear Zimmer call for the ball.
The Bizarre
He got injured how?
Plesac fractured his thumb while removing his shirt and catching the digit on his chair. Civale sprained his middle finger while tossing a pitch. Pérez was crossed up by James Karinchak and wound up snagging a curveball with his bare hand, resulting in a fractured finger that required surgery. Bieber suffered a shoulder strain, but not in any absurd manner.
Record-setting manager … maybe
If Francona returns to direct the Guardians in 2022, he’ll do so as the winningest manager in franchise history. The club is operating according to that plan. If for some reason Francona cannot extend his tenure in Cleveland, the results from the final two months of the season will be credited to DeMarlo Hale. At the time he stepped aside, Francona sat five wins shy of tying Lou Boudreau’s team record of 728 managerial victories.
Lost in the lights
On May 4, umpire Angel Hernandez lost a ball in the lights on the display board in the right-field fence. The baseball fell between Harold Ramírez and Naylor, but Hernandez motioned for an out. Runners and fielders were confused. Amed Rosario tagged out Andrew Benintendi. Players held up their hands, wondering why Hernandez made his ruling. In the end, the crew awarded Benintendi third base and allowed Whit Merrifield to score.
The next night, Royals pitcher Brady Singer was ejected after jawing at Hernandez. Manager Mike Matheny and pitching coach Cal Eldred were also tossed.
Two outs for the price of one
Salvador Perez recorded a double play when he tagged out two Cleveland runners at third base on July 9. The Royals had caught Johnson in a rundown between third and home, but as Johnson retreated to third, César Hernández slid into the same base. Perez applied his glove to both runners multiple times, including once Johnson had stepped off the bag, and Cleveland converted a prime eighth-inning scoring chance into a wasted opportunity.
Majestic drives only
Zimmer hit eight home runs this season. Four of them measured at least 446 feet. He crushed a 471-footer off Texas reliever Justin Wilson, the longest ever recorded for a Cleveland hitter in the Statcast era (since 2015). His final one measured a season-low 408 feet, but he hit it off his older brother, Kyle. It was the fourth instance in major-league history — and the first in nearly a half-century — of one brother homering off another.