Monday, April 18, 2022

Thoughts on a snowy Monday in the Land

NON-BASEBALL

Cleveland State-Dennis Gates-Mizzou saga

All the props to Dennis Gates for landing the Mizzou basketball coaching job.  I think, though, he will be over his head in this one.   I thought this when he got the job (Horizon League to SEC doesn't translate).  Now I read that Tre Gomillon and D'Moi Hodge have transferred to Mizzou.  Again, while I commend these young men for parlaying their relationship with Gates into a basketball scholarship at an SEC school and I loved watching them both play at my alma mater, CSU, Gomillon's game will not translate to a conference like the SEC.  Now Hodge is interesting as he may actually 'go off' with better competition.   Certainly, it will likely help and not hurt his draft stock.  But looking at it from the other side, how in the world does Gates think he will help himself improve from a 12-21 record (5-13 in the SEC) by adding a couple of mid-major players who did not dominate their comference?  I just don't see it and I think if Gates is trying the same thing he tried at CSU, team first, school is important, everything else wll follow those two, he will likely do worse, on average, than the team last year.

Not faulting Gates for reaching for the brass ring, just questioning if he is really a one size fits all coach.  While that works in the Horizon League, I doubt that the scrappy underdog playing the game the right way thing will work in the SEC.   To play there you need talent and Gomillon and Hodge just don't add that much talent to an already talent-starved team in a big boy conference.

LeBron James to Cleveland

Look, most Cavs fans would love to see LeBron play with the Cavs.   I had to laugh though when I waw a trade proposal that sent Colin Sexton, Kevin Love and the exchange of first round draft choices in 2023, 2025 and 2027 to the Lakers for LeBron and his age-38 season/expiring contract.  First, there is not currently a fit for LeBron on this team with our 3 seven footers.  LeBron averaged 37 minutes a game this season.  Kevin Love averaged 22.5 minutes.   Even if we do that substitution, which you would likely have to do, it's going to cost someone some playing time in the front court.   Love fits in well with our 3 big men.   James is going to dominate but may spread the court enough to help.  Though, in my heart and somewhat in my head, knowing how good LeBron makes the guys around him, I could see this working, I like it the way it is now.   So, if pressed, I would trade Love, Sexton and Windler for one year of LeBron and the Lakers' first round pick in 2023.  I still don't think that is the best thing for this team's development but would be willing to make this deal to see if this gets us over the hump and can pass along his playoff experience to this team.

Baker Mayfield

The guy really needs to get over himself.   He was terrible last year.  Forget the injury he was terrible.  Lots of times I saw him not even look to an open receiver while trying to thread the needle through 2-3 defenders.  Never did I see him last year make something out of nothing and many times I saw him make nothing out of something.   Then he has to run his mouth with each time he opens it making it harder for him to get what he wants...out of Cleveland.   Hey Baker, we all want that for you, believe me.  But shut the F___ up.  At this point, if I am the Browns, I keep him, put him on the scout team and put him in a situation where he has to accept a veteran minimum to play on a team in the 23/24 season.   He deserves it...really.

BASEBALL

The way the Indians played over the weekend you could see they are not ready to play with the big boys.   I mean, the Giants had a leadoff hitter hitting .170 and their all-star shortstop cam in hitting under .200 and Buster Posey's replacement was hitting 9th.  Yet we still couldn't even win a game.  I am hoping for 3 more days of snow with the storm following us to NY for the three days after that.

Then we trade for Bryan Reynolds and a reliever using some, but not all, of our prospect captial.

This week asked more questions than it answered:

Is Owen Miller really that bad at second base?

Is Steven Kwan ever going to get another hit?

Will we be able to have an over .500 record against ANY team  that has an over .500 record?

And, of course, when are we going to get Bryan Reynolds or Juan Soto and when are we going to get a veteran reliever or two?

Sunday, April 17, 2022

A look at our outfielders, curent and future

 OK, time for a frank chat.  Our outfield situation is still a mess.  

Myles Straw - He is who he is: a great defensive outfielder and a scrapper at the plate.   He is an old-time, throwback player and, if he avoids injuries, can be a solid career centerfielder for the Indians.  He is locked in centerfield.

Josh Naylor - The best thing I can say about Naylor as an outfielder is that he is better in the outfield than Amed Rosario.   But Naylor is not even an average major league outfielder.   And its not like he is a great hitter.  Now, if you want to throw Franmil Reyes circa 2021 out there you live with his defensive limitations because he is an elite power hitter.   I mean, think Harmon Killebrew.  But Naylor?  He is a utility/platoon guy on a good team and is certanly not an outfielder.

Steven Kwan - He is coming back to earth...fast and hard.  On a good team he is a 4th outfielder who can play center field with enough defense and passable punch-and-judy offense to give Straw a day off.  But, at this point in his career, he is not a starting outfielder.   Still, on a team with Straw, he could be a passable starting outfielder IF the Indians have a pwer-hitting outfielder at the other corner.

Oscar Mercado - Again, a guy who is what he is.   Mercado, in my opinion, is a AAAA outfielder.  He will hang around the majors because he feasts off of bad major league pitching.  But when he faces a good pitching staff, like the Giants, he is basically a non-factor.  Even before the Giants series this was evident, dating all the way back to 2020.  The only reason he is still on this roster is because he is right-handed.  We need to get him out of Cleveland, although, right now, he is our second best defensve outfielder.

Amed Rosario - The experiment was a good one but Rosario is not an outfielder.   He is righthanded, which we need in the outfield but Rosario is a shortstop and, in fact, may only be a really good offensve player when hitting second in the order in front of Ramirez and Reyes.  I think we will find, and its likely part of the reason the Mets were willing to part ways with Rosario, that he has a very limited window of productivity.  And that productivity is at shortstop and hitting second. He is not an outfielder.

Richie Palacios - I like Palacios.  But it is either him or Kwan on this team. I don't really think either is a right-fielder.   Palacios can play some second base and I guess his bat could force itself to the majors in place of Mercado.  But Palacios is a left-handed hitter and is more like Kwan and, therefore, is not really a replacement for what we get from Mercado.

Oscar Gonzalez - Gonzalez is bad defensively with a strong but inaccurate arm.   He takes very few walks and those numbers will likely become totally non-existent aganst major league pitching.   He has two calling cards: he hits for power and hits righthanded.  However, last year is splits were slightly better agains righthanded pitching and even in 2019 when he hit .333 against lefties, it came with no homeruns.   Putting him on the roster and then sending him to the minors if he doesn't pan out would be fine if we didn't have such a roster crunch.   I fear, wthout more seasoning, he will simply be Mercado but without the defense.

Nolan Jones - He is hurt, he was not that productive when he wasn't hurt, he is just learning the outfield, he hasn't played at all this year and he hits left-handed.   There is no plus right now for Jones.  Maybe in the future but not right now.  He is not the answer and might not be for a year or two which will be problematic as he could be out of options by then

So we are back to where we were: We have to trade for an outfielder and obviously the choices would be Bryan Reynolds or Juan Soto (only because his team does not have the players to put around him in the near future to be competitive.   I know the Pirates are in the cat-bird seat but evey day he is with the team he is costing them money and is doing nothing to move them into being a competitive team.  As far as Soto, in our nation's capitol it would be almost impossible to trade the face of the franchise but we know in Cleveland that this is not impossible.  So maybe it can happen.  However, with Hedges at catcher we cannot afford more holes in the lineup.  We have to replace one of those holes (Mercado) with a trade and who better to trade for than guys who will be among our top hitters and not just Harold Ramirez part deux.

Saturday, April 16, 2022

Saturday morning post

 What's right?

The Guardians are hitting the ball.  I make this prediction before tonight's game.   I think they bounce back and score a bunch of runs tonight.  I believe in this lineup.   Is it the best?  Absolutely not.   Put Juan Soto or Bryan Reynolds in this outfield and it would be a GREAT offense.  I just believe in it right now.  

The Guardians are pitching the ball well.  Yes, every pitcher on the roster has been successful.  No big flameouts.   Could they be better?  Sure.  The starters could go deeper and allow fewer runs.  Clase could be sharper.  The defense could help out the pitching staff by giving up less runs.

But I like the Indians so far.  Now, if there is a tougher part of their schedule I would like someone to show it to me so there is an outside chance that by next week at this time we could be looking at being 4-11.  Still, I like this team.

As far as the minor leagues, you gotta love the high K numbers our starting pitchers are getting.  It is too hard to gauge at this point how these gaudy stats will translate long-term as a number of these guys, like Espino, Logan T. Allen and Gavin Williams, among others, are giving up more hits and runs than I would like to see.   Time will tell.

Our minor league hitters are a mixed bag at this point.  Some of the high level prospects who struggled early this season are starting to trend up.  Guys repeating levels appear to be dominant, as expected.   And Arias and Noel look really solid to me, probably the most solid of the guys I have seen.

I love the signing of Ramirez. Exactly the right number of years to get to the right age.   Look at Pujols contract with the Angels.  Probably 3-4 years too long.   Ramirez, through his age 36 season, is about right.  Doesn't mean we won't sign him at the end of it, just means that we won't likely have to have him at age 37 what he was worth at age 29.  I love the signing of Straw.  As the weakest hitting player on the field (outside of the catcher) you can take what Straw gives you.   The signing of Clase is the most dicy but it isn't for a lot of money so it is the right length and the right dollars to hedge against him flaming out, no pun intended.

What needs fixing?

Well, besides trading for Soto or Reynolds, I would say that we have a number of guys like Chang, Bradley and Mercado who simply are not playing like quality major leaguers.  Why do I include Mercado?  Hey, he has run into some balls to get some extra base hits but, aside from those outliers he looks lke the same guy who has frustrated us (and I am sure, the Guardians) over the past two years.   The problem is the book isn't closed on any of these guys and they are all out of options.   So, give them away for nothing or let them rot on the bench?  Those are our only two options at this point if we don't throw them into a trade for Reynolds or Soto.

We have a number of guys on the DL in the minors with Freeman and Jones standing out.  I really want to get those guys playing as it will increase their trade value.  I don't honestly see either of them helping us this year due to their late start but they might surprise me...if they can just get on and stay on the field.

I would love to see more of our high end pitching prospects be successful.  Nikhazy has me scared with his struggles and early exit today.  I would love to see all of our 2021 college pitcher draftees be at least at Lake County with Williams, at least, be at Akron.   Having college pitchers pitching at Lynchburg does absolutely nothing as far as I can tell, to help evaluate them as true prospects.  Not like all 20 draft picks will end up being real prospects

Saturday, April 9, 2022

After the first few days of the season

 Guardians: Didn't improve the offense.  Still not scoring runs.  Maybe we can make a trade for Reynolds but... Still, the pitchng looks pretty good.  Kwan is looking great and it makes you wonder why Zimmer, Mercado, Bradley, Miller, Chang and others can't do the same thing.  I just don't get why our hitters won't just take what the defense gives them like Kwan does.  This just looks like bad coaching to me.   Look, I ahve been a youth coach for more than 30 years and I know that even national level prospects take to training.   Very few of them are stubborn enough or are untrainable enough to limit their progression.   It is normally just bad coaching.   Not throwing anyone under the bus here but these guys should be better...they should be more like Kwan.  

Early in the season Valera, Rocchio and Tena don't look that good.   Tena, especially, looks overmatched at AA.   I don't see their trade value being high enough right now.  Also, they all appear to have significant, loopy uppercuts in their swings that I don't remember seeing last year.  I thought our hitting coaches in the minors were doing better.  Now I am wondering if they are actually hurting these guys.

Espino looked amazing today but he still gave up two HRs and a hard double.  He threw a curveball today that Rodriguez could not handle because it was still breaking so sharply when it got to him.  At this point he has great value but that the uber-value I would like to see if we are going to make a trade.  You put him in the majors with Hedges who can frame and call a good game and Espino has all the tools he needs to pitch in the majors right now.   It would be rough given his penchant of giving up hard contact but he looked good today.  Ditto for Logan T. Allen yesterday.

Williams and Nikhazy look OK, although Williams fastball looks really straight to me.  THe rest of our 2021 draft class is going to take a little while to sort out but no one else looks outstanding in the early going.

I am still wondering what is up with Gabriel Rodriguez and Aaron Braccho.   They didn't start the first game and Martinez did, but hit 9th.   At least they were all at Lake County.  

Of all of our hitting prospects Arias and Noel look the most like I thought they would coming out of the gate.  

Remember, as crowded as our 40-man roster is with prospects, we need most or all of them to excel so they become good trade bait.   Right now, although it is early, I don't see that at all except for a couple of those guys.


Thursday, April 7, 2022

My thoughts going into the season

 1. Having the core of this group together through 2025 would be great and having Ramirez here through 2028 is even better.   That, alone, is cause for much celebration among Cleveland fans.  I wonder how close we actually got to trading Ramirez to the Padres?  Thanks to Dolan for ponying up for this.   I wonder, however, hos this impacts his spending in the future.

2. I look at Steven Kwan and how he takes what the defense gives him and then I look at Bradley, Mercado and Zimmer and I just say to myself "Why?"   Bradley and Zimmer should be doing whatever they can to get hits and that includes slapping the ball the other way to get hits when they are shifted against.  Starting Kwan in the outfield with Rosario and Straw is almost made mandatory by how bad this offense is.   

3. This is a huge year for Gimenez and the Indians.   His hitting philosophy should be more like Kwan than Lindor.

4. I know people will think I am crazy but two of the most important players on this team, in terms of making this lineup productive, will be Yu Change and Owen Miller.  Chang is penciled in at second base and Miller will play first when Bradley sits.   If Bradley remains a pathetic hitter, Miller will get more chances at first base.

5. The key for this team is the bullpen.   It is beyond me how they could let every good reliever be signed and even let the questionable relief veterans go to other teams as minor league free agents.  I mean even Blake Parker just signed with the Cardinals on a minor league deal a few days ago.  I know we have roster problems but we need more bullpen arms.  

6. In all the years I have followed the Indians this is clearly the most difficult team to predict I have ever seen.  Will the starters remain healthy and will the lineup hit?  And, if both those things happen, will the bullpen keep from blowing games before they get to Clase?   I am not going to make a guess at their final record but my hope is that the Guardians get back on the right side of .500 by the end of May and never look back. 

7. I really don't think this is the kind of team that can pick up players early in the season.  I would love to have Reynolds from Pittsburgh or Soto from the Nationals.  We have the prospect capital if we can negotiate a reasonable deal. 

8. If all else fails I hope our mnor league stud list gets bigger and bigger.   Creating good prospects we can play or trade for good value.  I see more potential in our farm system than I ever have.  Look for the Guardians to give Oscar Gonzalez an early chance and look for at least one of our 2021 draftees to make his major league debut this year. 

9. Looking at some of the teams around this league who are likely done before the season starts makes me appreciate Francona more and more.

10. Go Guardians! 

Sunday, April 3, 2022

28 man roster post - The aftermath

 I don't know if I have seen the Guardians set their final roster this far in advance of the opener.   Maybe, logistically, this made the most sense.   I am not sure.   But, in any case, let's break this down.

Catcher: Hedges, Lavastida.   This is the only combination that made sense and the hindsight of knowing that they wre going to keep both Zimmer and Mercado and not keep any non-roster pitchers really cemented this pairing as we had no roster spot to add Sandy Leon.

Infield:  In a pattern that is repeated throughout the opening day roster, experience with the major league Guardians and being on the 40-man roster were the two determining factors.  Therefore the combination of Ramirez, Bradley and Gimenez were locks anyway.  Chang, Clement and Miller earned the last 3 spots by their spring performance and versatility.  

Outfield: Straw, Reyes and Rosario (also could be listed as an infielder, obviously) make perfect sense.  Kwan earned his spot with his ST performance.   The two guys who don't make sense are Zmmer and Mercado.  While Francona always says that ST performance doesn't mean anything, it actually does when it mirrors the performance over the last couple of years in the regular season.    Zimmer has struck out in more than half of his spring training at bats, at least hale (or more) of those against minor league or weaker or less experienced pitchers.  He had his chance and he blew it but he gets rewarded.   Mercado is a mediocre defensive player who is a weak hitter.   The issue here is actually a question:  Would you rather have a Richie Palacios who has potential to contribute offensively or guys who you KNOW, based on their performance in the majors and spring training, are very, very likely to add nothing to this team that got no-hit 4 times last year.  

I mean, at least one of Zimmer or Mercado should have been traded or released, probably Mercado.  We should have signed an outfielder in the off-season (not the injured Michael Conforto who would also cost us our first rund pick).  There is no excuse, if Mercado and Zimmer do start the year on the roster this is inexcusable, especially for a team that was no hit four times last year.

PItchers:  Look, similar to the outfielders, this pitching staff was set in stone last winter when no moves were made by the Guardians to upgrade.  There is not a single surprise on this roster nor should there be because there was no room on the roster to play.   All the minor league invitees got sent back to the minors (they were all second or third tier, at best free agents anyway), hurt guys were put on the 60-day and Tobas Meyers was sent to the minors for more seasoning.  The only pitcher on this roster without big league experience with the Guardians is Konnor Pilkington and he is here for mopup duty only and will be sent down once the rosters are reduced to 26 and the pitchers are limited to 13.   

Summary: ESPN was right.  The Indians get an "F" for their off-season moves, which were essentially non-existent.   Francona, Willis and the management are putting a solid logical plan in place that only has two flaws: If Clase or more than one of our starting pitchers get hurt we are screwed because we can't win by outhitting the other team and (2) Our offense is too weak to even guarantee a good perfomrnace by the starters and relievers will guarantee us a win.   When you are no-hit 4 times last year it is likely you could waste a lot of good pitching performances this year in 1-0, 2-1, 2-0 losses.  Even their minor league free agent signings suck but given that they had no intention of even signing more relievers than Shaw, I can see why they didn't bring in needed relievers on minor league deals.  

Hopefully only positive things happen with the players going forward as we may have just enough to be on the positive side of .500 this year.  Seeing Bieber walk of the mound between innings flexing his hand last night and seeing his performance in the 4th inning didn't give me an assurance that this is going to be the outcome.