
Sunday, June 1, 2008
Pronk to DL, Choo to the Rescue

Thursday, May 29, 2008
Tales from the Teepee Volume 8: Alex Cole

The year was 1990, and the John McNamara led Cleveland Indians were in need of a spark. Hank Peters had noticed that the St. Louis Cardinals possessed a slick fielding speedy outfielder who sported motorcycle goggles. With Mitch Webster not exactly tearing the cover off of the ball, the Indians went ahead and traded catching prospect Tom Lampkin for Centerfielder Alex Cole.
When Cole arrived in Cleveland, he was immediately put into the leadoff spot during a double header against the New York Yankees on July 27th. He went a combined 3-8 and stole his first base off of pitcher Jeff Robinson. That was the first of 40 stolen bases he would accrue over the next 63 games, a staggering feat. Just one week later he would set a Major League record by stealing 5 bases against the lollypop arm of Kansas City Royals catcher Mike MacFarlane. He ended the season batting .300 and driving in 13 runs. As an 11 year old back then, he instantly became my favorite player and I waited over 2 hours to get his autograph at a local baseball card shop that summer.
The Front Office was so excited about this projected future phenom patrolling center field for years to come they immediately moved back and increased the height of the center field wall in old Cleveland Municipal Stadium for the 1991 season. This was done to apparently maximize Cole's range and potential gap hit opportunities. Alex Cole was subsequently caught stealing 17 times that year and never showed his gold glove potential. The wall experiment didn't work as the Indians finished a dismal 57-105 and John McNamara was fired in the middle of the season. Murray Chass wrote about Cole's struggles in the New York Times on July 28, 1991. Here is what he said;
Alex Cole of Cleveland has posed this season's greatest stolen-base puzzle. As a rookie last season, starting a year ago yesterday, he had 40 stolen bases in 49 attempts in only 63 games. This season, he got his 12th stolen base last Thursday night in his 64th game, and he has been thrown out 12 times.
Ironically, Cole's performance in 1990 was pivotal in prompting the power-poor Indians to move back the Cleveland Stadium fences. They figured they would win with speed, primarily Cole's.
"I think it goes back to spring training when Alex fell coming out of the batter's box and dislocated his shoulder," Mike Hargrove, the Indians' manager, said, trying to explain the outfielder's enigmatic effort. "He's been tentative as a baserunner since. He's been hesitant about sliding headfirst, especially going back into first base. It's made him more cautious. He's not aggressive, and he doesn't get a good jump like he did."
Cole, Hargrove added, has played "like he doesn't want to make a mistake" and that, too, has made him cautious. "We did some things to calm his fears," the manager said. "We said if we make mistakes on bases, do it on the base ahead and not on the base behind. Go out and put pressure on the other team. We've let him know that no one's going to shoot him for being thrown out. No one's ever given him that idea. It's just a perceived notion of his that he's under pressure not to make mistakes."
Even though he has tried to steal only 24 times, Cole ranks second in the American League in number of times caught.
It was the beginning of the end for Alex Cole in a Tribe uniform, as he was traded on July 4th, 1992 to the Pittsburgh Pirates for minor leaguer Tony Mitchell to give way to former University of Arizona point guard Kenny Lofton. Cole bounced around the majors the next 4 1/2 years with the Pirates, expansion Rockies, Twins and Red Sox. He was out of the league after the 1996, while bouncing around the minors a few years after that. Unfortunately this is not where the Alex Cole story ends.
In 2002 he plead guilty to possession with the intent to distribute heroin and served 18 months in jail. Four years later, a judgment in excess of $30,000.00 was entered against him for running up credit card bills under a friend's name and then not repaying them (i.e. stealing money).
I prefer to remember Alex Cole as I did 18 years ago, as a speedy centerfielder with the cool goggles. There wasn't much to root for with the Wahoos back then, and he provided hope for a prosperous future. Hopefully the current Indians regime can find a spark plug that they can stick at the top of the order to set the table so we don't have to suffer through anymore disappointing summers.
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Down on the Farm Report: Kelvin De La Cruz

"It is What it Is"

This is out of the ordinary for Wedge, as he usually spits out hyperbole. Maybe the manager shouldn't have pulled out Rafael Perez when he put two runners on in an obvious sacrifice situation? The first runner got on due to a Mandy Marte error, and the second runner got a bloop broken bat hit. With no outs and the White Sox trailing by two, you would figure Ozzie Guillen would have Orlando Cabrera bunt (he did). Then with one out and runners on second and third, lefty A J Pierzynski was due up. Why not keep the lefty on lefty matchup prevail and force the Sox to make a move? Well Betancourt proceeded to give up back to back doubles and the game was over right there.
Why bring this up? Wedge is not the reason this team can't hit or pitch out of the bullpen. He is becoming frustrated and feeling a bit helpless. That is not a good sign for Tribe fans when the usually stoic Wedge is fuming publicly. I unfortunately do not have the answer to the Indians problems, but as stated earlier I believe a deal for a polished hitter would at least shake things up.
Here were some of the Highlights:
Aaron Laffey: 6 IP, 7 hits, 1 earned run. Pitched out of trouble a few times, continues to show grittiness and calmness on the mound. Should not even be considered in any trades as he looks to be a staple in the rotation for years to come, especially with the injury to Adam Miller (my friend Ryan says he told us so).
Jhonny Peralta: 4-13, 2 Homeruns. At least he drove in a runner than himself today. Still sucks at shortstop, but hit the ball hard Wednesday. Hopefully his flailing away at third strike curveballs in the dirt are over.
Tuesday's Game: They won a game, which was a nice change of pace.
Areas of Concern:
Grady Sizemore: 2-13. Regressed a bit from a solid weekend. If this team can ever find a leadoff hitter, he needs to be batting 3rd to alleviate the pressures of getting on base.
Rafael Betancourt: Blew the game Wednesday, giving up back to back doubles. His control has been off and on. Need him to staighten himself out before the season is lost.
Ben Francisco: 2-13. Seems to have caught "the sickness" from the rest of the lineup. It is a sad state of affairs when a guy who was not good enough to start the season on the 25 man roster is now our 3 hitter. He may be pressing. Also his rightfield defense has been shaky at best.
An 11 game homestretch begins Friday in Kansas City as Cliff Lee takes on Gil Meche. There are still 109 games left, so I guess anything can happen.
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Believe it or not, Jorge isn't at home

Borowski
Kobayashi
Perez
Betancourt
Elarton
Mujica
Not exactly reminiscant of the Nasty Boys. Hopefully guys like Mastny and Lewis can figure out there issues in Triple A. Also I imagine that they will eventually stick Travis Hafner on the DL and promote Shin Soo Choo over the weekend. With Interleague play coming up, the current lite hitting Hafner won't be needed until the end of June.
Not So Indian Summer

The Tribe still has a pretty deep minor league system, especially when it comes to pitching. I would hope GM Mark Shapiro would stop sitting on his hands and make the impact trade for major league talent that he has yet to make in his seven years as general manager. They can ill afford to be afraid of dealing a potential top prospect anymore, this team is on the cusp of disaster.
I really do feel for Eric Wedge. People can blame him for lineup issues or relief pitching matchups, but really what can he do at this point? With the extreme lack of clutch hitting, it taxes the bullpen and starters. The pitchers can't give up any runs or the game is over. He could pull a Jim Leyland and swear up a storm, but that would go against everything Wedge's character as manager.
Mark Shapiro and company must let the fans know what their focus is for the rest of 2008 and beyond. GM speak is getting old quickly, so if he feels that this year may be a bust, then it his duty to cut bait (trade CC, Byrd, Blake) and focus on the future.
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Fausto to DL, Lewis sent down, Mujica, Elarton called up

A whole bunch of roster moves were made Saturday, as apparently Fausto Carmona's hip hurt him enough for the Indians to place him on the 15 day DL. Also, the Tribe sent down Jensen Lewis in a move to help locate his velocity. Lewis has not pitched horrible, but if his fastball is not clocking in at least the high 80's, it is a problem. Scott Elarton returns to Cleveland to fill a role in long relief. The team did not really have an innings eater out in the pen all year. Edward Mujica was added for the time being until Jake Westbrook is activated from the DL. Mujica has been pretty bad in the big leagues so far, so I would imagine he will only come in in mop up duty, Elarton took the place of Breslow on the 40 man roster. Finally, the Tribe won last night for the first time in 8 games. It figures the first game I don't watch in a week they win.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Breslow Designated for Assignment, JoeBo Back

Anthony Castrovince of Indians.com is reporting that Craig Breslow will be DFA'd tomorrow in order to add Joe Borowski back to the big club. Breslow had a 3.24 in 8 1/3 innings of work. Craig, we hardly knew you since Wedge would pitch you every ten games. Andy Marte lives to sit on the bench another day.
Labels:
2008 Transactions,
Andy Marte,
Craig Breslow,
Joe Borowski
That's all we got, two goddamn hits?

Wednesday, May 21, 2008
If I were GM for a day...

Send down Asdubal Cabrera and call up Josh Barfield. Now I know J-Barf hasn't exactly been tearing up Buffalo, but Cabrera looks totally lost at the plate, almost hoping for a walk. Barfield cannot possibly due worse, since his .177 batting average places him 90th out of the 90 eligible batters in the AL, 23 points behind 89th place Robinson Cano (.200).
Cut Craig Breslow and activate JoeBo. Although I cringe every time Borowski toes the mound, Breslow has no role on this team and has shown nothing. Need to keep as many hitters on the roster as possible.
Cut Jorge Julio and bring up Adam Miller. With Jorge arguing and shouting at Victor Martinez tonight, get him out of here, he is a stiff. Miller has been lights out in Buffalo and would bring some excitement to a dull team when he pitches.
Trade Paul Byrd to the Braves for infield hitting prospect. Byrd is a gamer and a great clubhouse guy, but he has some value to teams in contention. Paul is a free agent next year, so we may have to pick up some of his salary. Thanks for being a gamer Paulie, it is time for a youth movement.
Cut Andy Marte, activate Jake Westbrook. Marte is a corpse on the bench of the Indians. He is only 24 but his best days will not happen in a Tribe uniform.
Cut David Dellucci and bring up Shin Soo Choo. Choo is raking in Buffalo, Dellucci is who he is. Eat his contract and cut bait.
These moves won't make the lineup menacing, but it may give this team a spark it so desperately needs. The roster changes also may send a message to the team that complacency is not tolerated.
*Note: I know this moves can't all happen in a day, but a fan can dream.
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
No excuses

Manager Eric Wedge continues to watch dreadful offensive baseball. The Indians lost today 4-1 in a game typical of the entire season. They banged out a whopping 4 hits, 3 of the infield variety, while walking zero times. Jensen Lewis came in and gave up two runs, something the bullpen has had a tendency of doing. On the season, the Tribe has now scored 3 or fewer runs in 25 games, which is downright terrible. The starting pitching (CC Sabathia) kept the game close, but was afforded absolutely no help. An outsider may look at the lineup and wonder why us Indian fans believe or offense should even be average. The order looked like this...
1.Sizemore .264
2.Francisco .356
3.Hafner .226
4.Martinez .313
5.Garko .239 (good for 4th best on the team)
6.Dellucci .222
7.Blake .232
8.Carroll .206
9.Cabrera .180
Does not make you forget murderers row does it? 6 through 9 is down right horrid, posing no threat at all to the opposing pitcher. Now I am usually not one to rush to judgement, but something has to be done soon. I know it would be practically be impossible for the whole lineup to collectively stink so bad, but who knows at this point? The front office said that the 40 game mark is when you can really begin to evaluate a team. Well we are 45 games in and the offense is anemic. It is almost like they keep waiting for someone to step up and carry the whole lineup, which is unrealistic and impossible the way this team is composed. Whether it is benching veterans, sending a caravan down to Buffalo (or possibly even Akron), or making a momentum altering trade, the Cleveland Indians are quickly becoming tough to watch for everyone.
Labels:
2008 Series Recaps,
Ben francisco,
CC Sabathia,
Eric Wedge
CC See Ya?

Why should I worry about him leaving? No one stays an Indian. Look at Belle, Thome, and Ramirez. His ERA is over 5! All of these questions and statements provide merit, but Sabathia provides that extra oomph to an already outstanding starting staff. Looking at the American League so far this year, the one constant has been good pitching will beat good hitting, which was evident in the last series the Indians had with the Reds. CC has been the Tribe's stopper for the staff over the past 8 years. 103 wins is no fluke. His early season struggles are a thing of the past. CC seems to generally want to be on this team for the long haul, so why the paranoia?
The Tribe is really in a tough spot when it comes to the 2007 Cy Young Award winner. They love his make up as a pitcher and as a person, but the funds just not be there. Shapiro & Company would like nothing else but to offer Sabathia a contract comprable to his market worth, somewhere around the Peavy/Zambrano contracts (5 year 90 million). The problem is Sabathia will get pressure from the MLB Players Association to shop his wares to all of the other 29 clubs in order to gauge his maximum worth. If this occurs, the Indians will not enter into a bidding war, Cleveland's market size just can't justify an outrageous contract. It would restrict all future roster opportunities (free agents, trades) the Tribe would be able to make, virtually eliminating any payroll flexibility down the road. Cleveland is unfortunately a mid market team, so GM Mark Shapiro is forced to reinvent his ballclub every few years.
The Minors seem to be ripe with pitching talent, as the names of Jeremy Sowers, Aaron Laffey, Adam Miller and David Huff hopefully bring potential prosperity to the big league club. Whether they maintain a track record of excellence is up for debate. As a suffering Tribe fan who has yet to see a World Series Champion, give me a CY Young award winner anchoring my starting staff for the next five years any day of the week.
Down on the Farm Report: Wes Hodges

With the Cleveland Indians offense woes continuing, we decided to take a look at what players may be able to help out in minors. Since Travis Fryman retired in 2002, the last 5 years have seen Casey Blake, Bill Selby, Ricky Gutierrez, John McDonald, Jhonny Peralta, Aaron Boone, Greg LaRocca, Angel Santos, Zach Sorensen, Jose Hernandez, Andy Marte, Ramon Vazquez, Lou Merloni, Hector Luna, Kevin Kouzmanoff, Ronnie Belliard, Mike Rouse, Chris Gomez and Asdrubal Cabrera occupy the hot corner for the Tribe. This spot in the lineup is generally a power position, but as you can see the Indians have been lacking in this area for most of the decade. Currently, the roster is comprised of free agent to be Casey Blake and bench warmer bust Andy Marte, which makes you long for the days of this guy. This seems to be area that needs to be improved in 2009.
To the rescue, (hopefully), is Akron Aeros starting third baseman Wes Hodges. A 2006 2nd round pick out of Georgia Tech, Hodges has quickly moved up three levels since 2007. He is currently batting .287 with 7 Homeruns and 34 RBI. Scouts have said that he in a natural hitter, and possesses outstanding athleticism. His range and arm strength seem above average in the games I witnessed in spring training. Wes has only made 5 errors so far, not bad for his relative youth. Hodges on base percentage (.340) is not quite where it should be, only walking 11 times in 155 plate appearances. As his OBP grows, walks increase and defense remains consistent, Hodges should be in Buffalo sooner rather than later. I would not expect to see him in Cleveland this year unless Major League injuries on the big club arise, as he is not on the 40 man roster. 2009 seems to be Wes Hodges year to compete for the Third Base spot in Spring Training. That would be a welcome addition to a team looking to find another solid run producing staple in the middle of the order for the future.
To read more about Wes Hodges and more, please visit Cleveland Indians Minor League Insider. The site is like a bible to the Indians Minor League system.
To read more about Wes Hodges and more, please visit Cleveland Indians Minor League Insider. The site is like a bible to the Indians Minor League system.
Monday, May 19, 2008
Tribe adds pitcher to 40 Man Roster, Oneli Perez

Labels:
2008 Transactions,
Jason Tyner,
Oneli Perez,
Shin Soo Choo
Gunned Down in the Queen City

Getting back to baseball, we have all heard that the season is a marathon and not a sprint. Well interleague play became an annoying bunion on the big toe of the Indians as they were miserably swept by the Cincinnati Reds over the weekend. The hitting continued to suck dramatically, and our bullpen savior decided to recreate Bob Wickman's Great American Ballpark meltdown of 2006. How is it that Adam Dunn can be a slow, underachieving, below average fielder most of the season and then see Cleveland across the jerseys of the opposing team and immediately become Ken Griffey Jr in his prime? (Not the Griffey now, he looks about done). Watching Dusty Baker chew on his toothpick and readjust his wristbands in the dugout made me want swallow my remote. The Reds are playing well now, but I am sure that reality will strike them by the all star break as it usually does. Their old man general manager will hang on to Griffey and Dunn too long because the organization feels that they can compete this year. The two will leave for free agency, bringing no prospects in return. Also, what team starts Jerry Hairston and Corey Patterson? Those guys make Dellucci and Blake look like cornerstones to any franchise.
The Reds did uncover the flaws that have been plaguing the Tribe for most of the season. Through the first two games, the team went 0-15 with runners in scoring position. Some of that was due to pitchers batting, but most of it was due to the ineptitude of the lineup as a whole. I understand that Wedge is pretty much clueless as to who to bat where in the order (understandably so) but batting Dellucci 3rd is down right ridiculous. He has had some clutch hits with runners on this year but that is way too high of a spot for pretty much a journeyman fourth outfielder. It killed them in the first inning Sunday as he was up with two on and no out and flailed away at a high fastball. Might as well let Francisco hit 3rd as he right now is swinging the best bat. I would prefer just sticking Hafner back there Tuesday and letting things sort themselves out.
Also the savior to the bullpen, Masa Kobayashi became ordinary again. I like his demeanor on the mound but if he ever were to become the closer, these sort of blown saves may occur due to his stuff not being overpowering. His fastball to Dunn was right in his kitchen. The media has reported JoeBo will probably be back in a week and they seem to believe this will settle things down. Most fans will believe what I do, that the 9th will not be safe unless a legitimate closer is brought in. I was all for Raffy, but he wilted under the pressure of the 9th. Kobayashi would provides a decent option, but he is suspect to the gopher ball. As for JoeBo, get out the heart medication because he is excruciating to watch.
Here were some of the Highlights:
Michael Aubrey: First Major League hit was a Home Run: This one week honeymoon by Aubrey will be interesting to watch. His call up may show how committed they are to Garko for the long run. He now has 1 more than our cleanup hitter.
Ben Francisco: 5-11, first HR of the season: I think his teammates should take some notes on his hitting style. Don't over think, see the ball, hit the ball. Has played himself into the everyday lineup.
Fausto Carmona: 7 1/3 IP, 4 hits, 0 walks, 4 K's, 1 earned run: Continues to deal, was robbed of a victory by the bullpen and the offense. No walks is an excellent sign.
Jorge Julio: 1/3 IP, 0 earned runs. Got to pitch, probably a big deal for the Julio family.
Areas of Concern:
Ryan Garko: Got thrown out Sunday at second base after hitting the ball off of the wall. Decided to watch his stroke instead of getting out of the box and hustling down the line. Wouldn't be surprised to see him in a platoon with Aubrey over the next week as Wedge usually does not tolerate lazy play. Also I am gettin tired of his front knee hitting the dirt when he swings at a low pitch. Probably not the best form.
Masa Kobayashi: 1/3 inning, 3 run bomb to Adam Dunn in the 9th, blown save: Crushed the hopes and dreams of every Tribe fan hoping we finally found a closer.
Asdrubal Cabrera: 0-10. Even though his glove has been superb, may need to be sent down to regain confidence in his bat. He is only 22 but he is pulling the ball and hitting way too many fly balls.
David Dellucci: 1-9. Rough weekend for DD, Wedge is asking too much of him by batting him 3rd. Needs to be dropped down immediately.
The Indians get a much needed day off Monday before they face the Chicago White Sox for a three game series in Chi Town. 52 year old Jose Contreras battles CC Sabathia Tuesday.
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