Can you name all 54 Cleveland Guardians players from the 2022 season?
Cleveland Guardians' Yu Chang is called out on strikes during the sixth inning of a baseball game against the Kansas City Royals, Thursday, April 7, 2022 in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Reed Hoffmann)
By Zack Meisel
5h ago
CLEVELAND — It took a village. Well, it took 54 players. Well, not all 54 actually appeared in a game.
There were a ton of new faces in Cleveland this season. There were players who didn’t survive April, and others who came and went in an instant. In all, 50 stood on the field for at least a pitch. Four others were members of the active roster but never escaped the dugout or the bullpen.
Fifty-four is not an outrageous number — the total typically falls somewhere in the 40s — but it is pretty high when considering a couple of factors:
• The Guardians didn’t endure many injuries. They cycled through rookie after rookie trying to find the proper combination, whereas other teams simply searched for healthy bodies.
• September call-ups aren’t what they used to be. Now, rosters only expand to 28 from 26. They used to balloon to 40.
The question is, can you name all 54 players who contributed (OK, maybe not all 54 contributed directly) to the Guardians’ memorable season? We’ll break it down into several sections to make it more reasonable. Consider this a refresher on everyone’s individual performance this season.
The players described in the numbered writeups are listed at the bottom of each section.
The easy ones (1-12)
1. As several teammates described during the postseason, he’s the “heart and soul” of the club, with a long-term contract and another stat line-stuffing season to his name, despite dealing with a torn ligament in his right hand for the final four months.
2. His fastball velocity may have dipped, but his output didn’t. He reached the 200-inning mark for the second time in his career, a milestone that meant a lot to him after he was sidelined with a shoulder injury for a large chunk of 2021.
3. He led the league in appearances (77) and saves (42), and posted a microscopic ERA (1.36) for the second straight season. He also struck out the side on 10 pitches to seal the American League’s victory in the All-Star Game.
4. His historically proficient start to the season was a harbinger for his impressive rookie campaign, in which he hit .298 with a .373 on-base percentage and recorded more walks than strikeouts.
5. He went from needing a demotion to Triple A in 2021 to starting at second base in the All-Star Game in 2022. Also, in the time it took you to read this, he was hit by two pitches.
6. Remember all the concerns about his durability? Well, he totaled 191 innings, struck out 190 and permitted less than one base runner per inning as he emerged as a front-line starter.
7. The headbutt of his manager will prevail as the lasting image of this slugger, but his most noteworthy storyline from 2022 was how he battled through a full season after suffering a traumatic leg injury the previous summer.
8. He’s as famous for restoring the “SpongeBob SquarePants” theme song into the public stream of consciousness as he is for his three postseason game-winning hits. His power and opposite-field acumen arrived in a timely manner, considering the swift downfall of his fellow slugger and fellow native of Sabana Grande de Palenque, Dominican Republic.
9. You may know him for his constant fidgeting on the mound, his exaggerated celebrations after he records a third out or the Pantene commercial he filmed with umpire Ted Barrett in Minneapolis in September. He returned to his reliable form, with a 2.08 ERA and more than 14 strikeouts per nine innings.
10. He’s as consistent as they come. For context, look at his last three full seasons:
2019: .287/.323/.432 slash line, 30 doubles, 15 homers, 19 stolen bases, 31 walks, 124 strikeouts
2021: .282/.321/.409 slash line, 25 doubles, 11 homers, 13 stolen bases, 31 walks, 120 strikeouts
2022: .283/.312/.403 slash line, 26 doubles, 11 homers, 18 stolen bases, 25 walks, 111 strikeouts
11. His goal was to log 200 innings. He reached 186, though he did that without ever exceeding the 100-pitch mark. His ERA stayed between 3.27 and 4.08 all season.
12. He had a rough season at the plate, but any ball hit in his zip code resulted in an out, which explains why he’s one of the team’s five Gold Glove Award finalists.
1. José Ramírez
2. Shane Bieber
3. Emmanuel Clase
4. Steven Kwan
5. Andrés Giménez
6. Triston McKenzie
7. Josh Naylor
8. Oscar Gonzalez
9. James Karinchak
10. Amed Rosario
11. Cal Quantrill
12. Myles Straw
The second tier (13-24)
13. He landed on the injured list three times, and though he pitched better as the season unfolded, what you’ll surely remember most is the first inning he failed to escape in New York when the Guardians’ season hung in the balance.
14. Things this player didn’t do very often: wear a shirt, compile a lengthy hitting streak. He was, however, the vocal leader of the team, and you won’t find a Cleveland pitcher who has anything negative to say about him.
15. It was a bumpy season for this starting pitcher, and it became even more trying when he bumped his knuckles on the mound after surrendering a home run in Seattle in late August.
16. He seemed to be a bit miscast as a platoon first baseman, though he never really did much convincing that he deserved more opportunities, with a .652 OPS and six home runs.
17. From Rule 5 draft pick to ruling the seventh and eighth innings, this reliever cemented himself as one of Clase’s primary setup men with a 2.69 ERA and 82 strikeouts in 63 2/3 innings. He was even more impressive in the playoffs, with 5 2/3 hitless innings.
18. Manager Terry Francona’s favorite cribbage partner, he was dropped from the active roster in late September, but he stuck around to serve as a mentor to his fellow relievers during the postseason run.
19. He had a nightmarish 2021 season in a starting role, but this 6-foot-8 left-hander thrived as a reliever in 2022, thanks to a killer curveball and an effective two-seamer. He recorded the final three scoreless innings of the team’s marathon win against the Rays in the Wild Card Series.
20. This sidewinding reliever struggled to throw strikes in the first half, but flourished down the stretch before suffering a season-ending injury in that marathon against Tampa Bay.
21. He morphed from a back-end starter into an eighth-inning reliever before settling into more of a middle-relief role. His devastating changeup proved critical for Cleveland’s bullpen in the early months.
22. The club’s only addition before the lockout, this reliever with a spotty track record in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh took a minor-league deal and blossomed into one of Cleveland’s more reliable bullpen options.
23. One of two free agents signed to a major-league contract last offseason, he will serve as the answer to this trivia question: Which player registered the final hit of the Guardians’ 2022 season (playoffs included)?
24. He throws in the upper 90s and no one could touch his slider this season — in fact, no one did touch his slider this season, as it carried a .000 batting average against and an absurd 66.7 percent whiff rate — but an elbow injury considerably shortened his season, and leaves the next chapter of his transformation from center fielder to pitcher a bit unclear.
13. Aaron Civale
14. Austin Hedges
15. Zach Plesac
16. Owen Miller
17. Trevor Stephan
18. Bryan Shaw
19. Sam Hentges
20. Nick Sandlin
21. Eli Morgan
22. Enyel De Los Santos
23. Luke Maile
24. Anthony Gose
The other rookies (25-38)
25. A Red Sox fan who admired Francona as a kid, this outfielder joined the club in late September and registered a .900 OPS in 45 plate appearances, with only four strikeouts. He started the season in Double A and batted .314 with 40 doubles and 20 stolen bases in the minors.
26. He joined the big-league roster during the final week of the season and batted one spot behind his older brother in one of Francona’s final lineups of 2022. He made the team’s postseason roster, but never appeared in a game.
27. Once the organization’s top prospect, this third baseman-turned-right fielder received a promotion to the majors and promptly splashed a home run ball into the fountains at Kauffman Stadium.
28. Cleveland’s first-round draft pick in 2016, this outfielder known for his size, speed and power broke into the big leagues this summer but played sparingly. He’s Kwan’s roommate, meditation partner and common chess opponent.
29. This infielder spent most of August and September in the majors after heating up at the plate in Triple A. The former second-round draft choice owns a career .311 average and .804 OPS in the minors.
30. An upper back/shoulder injury foiled his bid for an Opening Day roster spot, but this pitcher ultimately reached the big leagues in September. He posted a 2.28 ERA in 23 2/3 innings, but his most impressive showing came in Game 4 of the ALDS, when he retired all six Yankees he faced.
31. The most highly touted prospect included in the Mike Clevinger trade in 2020, this infielder started the season as a well-regarded shortstop vying for consideration for the Opening Day roster and ended the season as the club’s first baseman in the ALDS.
32. This left-hander, acquired from the White Sox in 2021 for César Hernández, made 11 starts for Cleveland and logged a 3.88 ERA.
33. In the minors, he did a little of everything: hit for average, rack up doubles, steal bases and make a bunch of contact. He didn’t get a lot of opportunities to do that in the majors this year — he posted a .578 OPS in 123 plate appearances — but he did single in his first two career trips to the plate during his debut in Anaheim.
34. Maile’s stint on the IL at the start of the season paved the way for this catcher to break camp with the big-league club. He ended up appearing in six games and notched his first hit off New York’s Jameson Taillon.
35. For much of the season, he played the role of the guy who covers a bunch of innings in a lopsided loss and then gets designated for assignment the following morning. That’s how he wound up on the Orioles for a few minutes and then back with the Guardians. But at various points in the second half, he provided some pivotal scoreless frames, with his shining moment coming in the club’s 15-inning win to dismiss the Twins from the AL Central race.
36. His Baseball Reference page isn’t a pretty sight at the moment, because he was essentially the Guardians’ sacrificial lamb in a pair of late-season starts against the Astros and White Sox. He surrendered 15 runs in 7 1/3 innings. In the minors, he logged a 4.01 ERA, while totaling 158 strikeouts and only 90 hits allowed in 121 1/3 innings.
37. He made his first minor-league appearance in 2021. In 2022, he made his first (and second) big-league appearance. He split this year between Double-A Akron and Triple-A Columbus, but he did make a pair of spot starts in Cleveland.
38. The Ohio State product made three appearances for the Guardians — one in April, one in late June and one in mid-July. The lefty was ultimately designated for assignment, outrighted to Triple A, and became a free agent at the end of the season.
25. Will Brennan
26. Bo Naylor
27. Nolan Jones
28. Will Benson
29. Tyler Freeman
30. Cody Morris
31. Gabriel Arias
32. Konnor Pilkington
33. Richie Palacios
34. Bryan Lavastida
35. Kirk McCarty
36. Hunter Gaddis
37. Xzavion Curry
38. Tanner Tully
They came, they saw, they vanished (39-50)
39. He predicted the Guardians would surprise people. He was right. But he didn’t stick around to see it for himself. He was a mess at the plate for 70 games. After Cleveland severed ties with him, he joined the Cubs, with whom he was a tick better (.689 OPS versus .603 OPS).
40. Cleveland’s Opening Day first baseman lasted only eight games before the team changed directions. There was too much bust to accompany the boom in his bat.
41. He collected 127 plate appearances with the Guardians and one plate appearance with the Phillies this season, so a healthy playoff share should be headed his way this winter. It’s been a steep fall for this outfielder since a solid rookie showing in 2019.
42. He’s played first, second, short, third and left. He even pitched this season, though he owns an 18.00 ERA and a 16.11 FIP. Now, he’s an Oakland Athletic after the Guardians cut him loose in late September.
43. This infielder’s season started with the Guardians, for whom he tallied 10 hitless at-bats around a lengthy COVID-IL stint. He later played for the Pirates, Rays and Red Sox in his 2022 MLB tour.
44. With a strong start for Triple-A Columbus, he forced his way into a call-up in July. After logging 16 plate appearances with the Guardians, he moved on to the nation’s capital, where he posted a .772 OPS in 115 trips to the plate.
45. He caught for Cleveland in 2020, rejoined the franchise this spring, shifted to the Reds in April, came to Cleveland again in late June and then was traded to the Twins in early August as a favor to a veteran player. Like a boomerang, he’ll be back eventually.
46. A key piece of the Trevor Bauer trade in 2019, this former top-100 prospect couldn’t find his footing with the Guardians, who DFA’d him a few weeks into the season. He caught on with the Orioles, and then the Rockies.
47. The club acquired him from the Blue Jays on Opening Day in a trade for, well, we’ll get to that name shortly. His Cleveland tenure didn’t go so well, culminating in a dreadful outing against the Twins in June. The Orioles eventually scooped him up.
48. He’s a native of Westlake, Ohio. Just as fascinating: He totaled one-third of an inning for the Guardians this season. (He did make 10 appearances for the team last year.)
49. Signed to a minor-league deal when the lockout ended, he made one appearance for the Guardians in late June against the Twins, his former team. He proceeded to pitch 33 times for the Reds this season.
50. Another member of the One Appearance Club, this righty started the season with the Mariners, made his lone cameo for Cleveland in late June and then made 22 appearances for the Pirates.
39. Franmil Reyes
40. Bobby Bradley
41. Oscar Mercado
42. Ernie Clement
43. Yu Chang
44. Alex Call
45. Sandy León
46. Logan Allen
47. Anthony Castro
48. Alex Young
49. Ian Gibaut
50. Yohan Ramirez
It’s like they were never here (51-54)
51. After the season opener in Kansas City, he was traded to Toronto. Four months later, he was claimed by the Phillies. Eleven days after that, he was re-claimed by the Blue Jays. In all, he batted .124 with a .435 OPS in 2022, though none of his 117 plate appearances came with Cleveland.
52. Before 2022, he last pitched at short-season Mahoning Valley, which no longer exists in its Cleveland affiliate form. Tommy John surgery and the pandemic essentially wiped out two seasons for him. He returned to the mound this year, and even spent a few days on the big-league roster in mid-September, but never saw the mound.
53. He joined the club for three days, during its trip to Toronto in mid-August in place of Karinchak, who was placed on the restricted list for the series. He didn’t pitch in any of the games, though. He logged a 3.63 ERA in 28 starts with Triple-A Columbus.
54. He signed a minor-league deal with Cleveland in spring training and received a call-up in early August, but never pitched for the Guardians. The Twins claimed him later that month.
51. Bradley Zimmer
52. Carlos Vargas
53. Peyton Battenfield
54. Jake Jewell