Saturday, April 30, 2005

Fits and Starts

Baseball is funny. Sometimes it can be agonizing, but at times it can seem so simple and beautiful.

Yes, the Indians beat a Royals team that looked just plain awful. But I guess you have to start somewhere. Zack Greinke is one of the game's best young pitchers, and the Indians were patient, and started to the ball much they did last year; lots of doubles, taking pitches up the middle and the other way. Frankly, the Indians lineup isn't built like earlier incarnations, but they can be successful if they stick to what they do best.

If you want to show a young player how to hit, you could do a lot worse than to show tape of Travis Hafner. The only thing Pronk hasn't done thus far is to start hitting homers, but those will come. Victor Martinez, a notoriously slow starter, is looking much better at the plate. I don't think Grady Sizemore is ready for the top of the order, but then again, Coco Crisp hasn't been that much better.

During Thursday's game, Detroit manager Alan Trammel walked Ben Broussard, the go-ahead run, to get to Aaron Boone in the eighth inning. That tells you all need to know about how awful Boone has been at the plate. Did Jim Thome have slumps this bad? Yes, I know we're seeing a year's worth of rust coming off Boone's bat. Yes, I know Boone has been a maked improvement in the field. But a .130/.208/.319 line in the lineup every day is an enormous black hole, a singularity of offensive ineptness that seems to be sucking the offense from the players hitting around him.

If you haven't been looking ahead to May, be prepared for some brutal stretches in the coming weeks. After the Indians are finished with Kansas City, they go on a 9-game road trip to Minnesota, Texas, and Los Angeles. Ick. During the month of May, the Indians play the Angels six times and the Twins eight times. All of which makes taking care of business at home very important. A 3-6 record at the Jake isn't going to get it done.

CC Sabathia is looking very good. Granted, the lineup he faced tonight was barely International-League quality, but there were very few loud outs. When a pitcher is dominating, his outs are generally weak grounders, infield flies, and of course, strikeouts. Sabathia's control wasn't the greatest, but his stuff was excellent, as evidenced by all the weak outs coming from Royal bats.

Speaking of CC, check out the newly updated CC Hat Tribute at Mistake by the Lake. The Danny Ferry exhibit has me entertaining thoughts of constructing a baseball wing. Cory Snyder would obviously in the inaugural induction class, as would Jeff Manto and Chris Magruder.

Right now I'm working on the last two papers of my academic career. Boy does that feel good to say.

Finally, a word about the recently retired Paul Shuey. Paul had, when healthy, as good a pitching repetroire as any reliever in the game. But injuries literally cut Shuey's career in half. He was the Indians' first-round choice in 1992; a high-school shortstop from Michigan named Derek Jeter was taken by the Yankees four picks later. But he did make the majors, and was a key part of several playoff teams. Given recent history, I'd think he'll stay with the organization in some capacity.

Wednesday, April 27, 2005

Sabathia Signs!

Well, it happened; the Indians have extended CC Sabathia through 2008. Think of the new deal as a two-year deal; Sabathia's current contract, which runs through 2006, will be kept intact. The 2007-2008 portion of the contract pays Sabathia $17.75M plus incentives. Those two years are important, because they are "free agent" years.

The breakdown by year:

2005 - $5.20M
2006 - $7M (option picked up)
2007 - $8.75M (free agent year)
2008 - $9M (free agent year)

Sabathia can also earn incentives during the last three years of the contract, and can make as much as $11.75M in 2007 and 2008.

For the Indians, this is not only a good deal financially, but an important turning point in public perception of the franchise. While the team gave out long-term deals to Travis Hafner and Victor Martinez, this deal is a much more important one because Sabathia would have been able to walk after the 2006 season. For a fan of a team who lost home-grown talent like Jim Thome and Manny Ramirez to free agency, today is a great day.

Sunday, April 24, 2005

Prospect Profiles: Jason Cooper and Kevin Kouzmanoff

Numbers 15 and 16 on my list are both college sluggers.

16. 3B Kevin Kouzmanoff
How Acquired: 2003 Draft (6th Round)
College: Nevada
ETA: 2007


YearLeagueAgeAB2BHRSBBAOBPSLG
2003SSA22206882.272.342.437
2004A-2347335165.330.394.526


Along with Pat Osborn, Kouzmanoff gives the Indians organization a pair of decent prospects at third base, an organizational black hole in recent years. Kouzmanoff had a fantastic year in his first season in a full-season league, although he posted those numbers at the age of 23. He's starting this year in Kinston, but I'd like to see what he can do in Akron before the season's over. He's not going to be a star by any stretch of the imagination, but he does everything well enough. BA's John Manuel pegs him as Casey Blake with less power.

15. OF Jason Cooper
How Acquired: 2002 Draft (3rd Round)
College: Stanford
ETA: 2006


YearLeagueAgeAB2BHRSBBAOBPSLG
2002A-2155540.255.339.564
2003A-2226217123.298.385.553
2003A+222181793.307.380.528
2004AA2342224142.239.321.424
2004AAA2352131.173.295.365


After a great 2003 campaign split between Lake County and Kinston, the AA level proved difficult for Cooper, and thus far a return engagement hasn't been good. A couple things are working against Jason. First of all, he's at best a left fielder, thanks to a poor throwing arm. Secondly, there's a lot of outfield competition in the organization, from Sizemore and Crisp in Cleveland to Gutierrez and Snyder in the high minors. He was left eligible for the Rule 5 draft, one of the better position players unprotected, but didn't get picked. He's a guy who has good power potential, but like a lot of power hitters has to be able to control the strike zone. So far in Akron, he hasn't been able to do that, posting a poor 25:8 SO/BB ratio. His stock is falling rapidly in my opinion.

Friday, April 22, 2005

A Quick Update

Posting will continue to be light for the next week or two. I'm graduating in mid-May, so I have a lot things to take care of in real life. Until then, I'll try to drop by twice or thrice a week, which isn't as often as I'd like, but circumstances mandate it.

The past three games have featured crushing losses, although of different variaties. At least the team has chosen multiple ways to lose, right? Thursday night's loss to the Angels rates as the most bizarre of the three (Alex Cora playing left field?), although the formula of losing close games has remained the same. Most of the blame has to be laid at the feet of the offense. The lineup let Jarrod Washburn off the hook, and kept the Angels in the game. While Bob Wickman deserves some of the ire due to putting the leadoff batter on in the 9th, the game should not have been that tight to begin with. When an offense isn't productive, little mistakes can mean the difference between victory and defeat. So far, the Indians have had to win the hard way, and that's not an easy way to accumulate victories.

Profiles of Jason Cooper and Kevin Kouzmanoff should be up on Sunday.

Monday, April 18, 2005

Pardon Me While I Get My Violin...

George Steinbrenner is apparently angry at his teams' 4-8 start:

Steinbrenner issued a statement after the game saying, "Enough is enough. I am bitterly disappointed as I'm sure all Yankee fans are by the lack of performance by our team. It is unbelievable to me that the highest-paid team in baseball would start the season in such a deep funk. They are not playing like true Yankees. They have the talent to win and they are not winning. I expect Joe Torre, his complete coaching staff and the team to turn this around."


After the Yankees sweep the Devil Rays, this will die down. But it's a bit amusing to hear the Big Stein complaining after only 12 games
.

Transactions

Reinstated LHSP CC Sabathia from the 15-day Disabled List

From the looks of his performance, Sabathia appears to be over his oblique strain. CC was consistently reaching the mid-90s with his fastball, and his control was excellent; he walked only one batter. Thus far, pitching doesn't seem to be the weak link in the Indians' chain. With the return of Sabathia, Jason Davis moves into the "6th starter" role, where he'll relieve a starter who left early, or pitch multiple inning stretches during blowouts. This leaves one of the existing bullpen members out in the cold, and the winner is.....

Optioned RHP Matt Miller to Buffalo (AAA)

Unfortunately for Miller, he had an option remaining, so he gets sent to Buffalo. The ROOGY hasn't been used too much in the first two weeks of the season, and although he's sporting an ERA of 0.00, he'll join folks like Fernando Cabrera, Andrew Brown, and Jake Robbins in the Bisons' pen. Rafael Betancourt was the other possible demotee, but he's been even better than Miller, not allowing a hit in his 7.2 IP thus far. I think he's in a role where he can thrive as long as he's not overused; he can give you 2 inning stretches once or twice a week. Of course, now that Jason Davis is now a part of the bullpen, he might only be asked to go an inning at a time, but the use caveat still should apply.


Sunday, April 17, 2005

Prospect Profiles: Dan Cevette and Justin Hoyman

Time for a break from the major-leaguers, at least until they start playing like major-leaguers.

These two pitchers are both part of the Lake County rotation, although that's where the similarities end.

18. LHP Dan Cevette
How Acquired: 2002 Draft (3rd Round)
High School: Elkland HS, Pennsylvania
ETA: 2008

YearLeagueAgeIPERAH/9W/9SO/9
2002R+18524.679.005.376.23
2003R+1957.13.459.104.557.53
2003SSA197.28.2216.435.873.52
2004SSA20361.256.001.509.75
2004A-2043.22.478.862.898.45


Until this year, the Indians have kept Dan in mostly short-season leagues, waiting patiently for his frame to fill out and for him to learn how to pitch. Last year in Mahoning Valley, Cevette finally was able to control his pitches, and his stuff did the rest. Towards the end of the year he was promoted to Lake County, where he held his own. Cevette throws in the low 90s, but his best pitch is his curveball. The Indians are conservative with young arms, but I can realistically see Dan in Kinston by July if all goes well. There's a lot of upside here.

17. RHP Justin Hoyman
How Acquired: 2004 Draft (2nd Round)
College: Florida
ETA: 2007

YearLeagueAgeIPERAH/9W/9SO/9
2004SSA22132.086.232.775.54


Hoyman is a polished pitcher, and I think the Indians probably slotted him too low by starting him in Lake County. Hoyman had an interesting journey to professional baseball; his community college shut down after the 9/11 attacks (because tourism revenue dried up), and he got a scholarship at the University of Florida. Before his junior season, he put on 30 pounds, which increased his velocity by about 5 mph. He pitched well in a tough conference, and was rated by The Hardball Times as the third best pitcher in the college baseball. He's 23, so he has to move quickly. Not much upside, but he can be a decent starter in the majors. Hoyman's calling card is a heavy sinker, so think of him as Jake Westbrook Lite.

Friday, April 15, 2005

Game #10, Lineup #10

Tonight's lineup:

CF Coco Crisp
2B Ronnie Belliard
3B Jose Hernandez
C Victor Martinez
RF Casey Blake
1B Ben Broussard
DH Ryan Ludwick
SS Jhonny Peralta
CF Grady Sizemore

One of the main reasons Hafner is sitting is his history vs. Santana: 0-7, 5 K.

Regardless, this might get ugly given the Indians' hitting woes and who's on the mound.

Ben Sheets

Another data point for the Indians to refer to in their negotiations with CC Sabathia:

The Milwaukee Brewers have signed pitching ace Ben Sheets to a new four-year contract extension worth $38.5 million.

Sheets, 26, had signed a $6 million deal for 2005 in February, but left open the option of tearing it up and negotiating a new four-year deal or merely adding a three-year extension. The two sides agreed to tear up the old deal and sign a new extension through 2008


Like Sabathia, Sheets was under team control through 2006, so this deal is very relevant. Johan Santana's deal was also made under similar circumstances; he's receiving $40M over the next four seasons. As it is now, it'll probably take about $9M a year to get Sabathia locked up through 2008. Is that a good investment? Well, $9M is a very large chunk of the current team payroll, and there's the injury factors. But in today's market, you're going to pay at least $7-8M for decent starters, not to mention the price tag for top-of-the-rotation guys.

I say if you can lock up CC through 2008 for $34M or less, you do it. As you approach Sheets or Santana money...well, I'm glad I don't have to make those types of decisions.

Carnival of the Enigmas

Let's start out with Milton Bradley. A recent Los Angeles Times article sheds some light on what happened behind the scenes during Milton's turbulent 2004. There's some interesting tidbits in the article, including Bradley's relationship with CC Sabathia:

Former Cleveland teammate and close friend C.C. Sabathia had a candid discussion with Bradley on Super Bowl Sunday, saying he was still angry because Bradley's behavior prompted the trade to the Dodgers before last season.

The final incident in Bradley's tumultuous 2 1/2 years in Cleveland came at the end of spring training when Manager Eric Wedge thought Bradley did not run out a pop-up.

"C.C. is like my brother and when he said, 'You left me and I'm still upset,' that was real," Bradley said. "We wanted to turn Cleveland into a powerhouse, and I see now that my actions were wrong and hurt people."

When the Dodgers traveled from Vero Beach, Fla., to Winter Haven to play the Indians in spring training, Bradley made sure he was one of the few regulars to make the two-hour bus ride.

"By trading me they made a big statement about the direction the organization was going," he said. "I understand they had to do it. I needed to go to Winter Haven to talk to some people. I needed to go for closure."


This obviously is a markedly different outlook than the one he had immediately after the trade. I guess it's easy to be cynical with Bradley, considering all the other times he's appeared contrite. But I still hope that Bradley can finally put aside his emotional issues and have a stellar career in baseball.

Next is Albert Belle. Justice B. Hill's piece on Albert is right on the money; for all his well-documented flaws, Belle was the best player of the mid-90s Indians, and it's not even close. Belle was one of the most feared hitters in baseball during the peak of his career; unfortunately, his ability as a player was often overshadowed by his persona. It never helps your image when you don't talk to the media, and undoubtedly a lot of baseball writers took shots at Albert because he didn't to them talk after games. Belle wouldn't defend himself, so the only view of Belle the fans saw was the intense player on the field, and broken thermostats and rebuffed Trick or Treaters away from the diamond. Obviously there were players who were liked more, but Belle was simply the best player on those teams. Hill sums up his article thusly:

Hate him for his surliness; that would be just. But realize, too, that no player out of that class of talent in the 1990s produced as much when it mattered as Belle did.


I have no doubts that whenever Belle is up for the Hall of Fame, a lot of writers won't vote for him because of who Albert Belle was; an intense, surly, sometimes confrontational superstar. I still remember him as a phenominal baseball player, whether I was watching him in Canton or in Cleveland. Unfortunately, separating the persona from the athlete isn't something sportswriters do well.

Hey, let's talk on-the-field issues!


  • The Indians beat the White Sox 8-6 last night, no thanks to Ben Broussard and a kid sitting in the left field corner. Broussard frittered away a run because he didn't step on the bag, while the kid interefered with Grady Sizemore's fifth inning double. Aaron Boone would have scored from first if the ball wasn't touched. Fortunately, neither run made a difference in the game, as the bullpen once again slammed the door shut, preserving a victory. Credit also has to go to Alex Cora, who made several exceptional plays in the field, as well as "bunting" a base hit through the left side, setting the stage for a three run sixth. Thus far, both Cora and Hernandez has been as advertised.


  • Both Travis Hafner and Victor Martinez look to be back on track, but Aaron Boone still looks lost at the plate. Ryan Ludwick has gone 0-for-the-season so far, which is huge since Casey Blake is still out with a hamstring tweak. Well, there's Juan Gonzalez and his hammy as well, but I guess there no point in mentioning him considering that Juan's hamstring injuries are usually of the season-ending variety.


  • Walking Willie Harris (lifetime .305 OBP) and Timo Perez (lifetime .306 OBP) to get to Paul Konerko is just asking for trouble, and that's what Scott Elarton got.


  • Grady Sizemore's opposite-field double in the fifth illustrates his potential. I think he just needs more playing time.


  • I really have no idea who gets sent down when Sabathia is activated for Sunday's game. Neither Betancourt and Miller deserve a demotion, and I'd like to see Jason Davis to remain on the roster to provide some length to the bullpen. Maybe Scott Sauerbeck gets some tendinitis between now and then. I guess you'd rather have these decisions to make then the pitching moves the Indians had to make last year at this time.



Wednesday, April 13, 2005

A New Pronktract

Signed 1B Travis Hafner to a three year, $7M contract with an option for 2008

The contract essentially buys out his arbitration years; the contract is timed so that Hafner will be able to file for free agency after the 2008 season.

First of all, let me say that I like Hafner; he's a tremendous talent. That being said, I think this a mistake. Not a huge mistake, given the dollars involved, but a mistake nonetheless. Hafner is as about as close as you can get to a full-time DH, and if Michael Aubrey progresses as planned, that's where Pronk will stay. Designated hitters are fairly easy to come by, and although Hafner's 2004 was an MVP-caliber season, his value to the team wasn't as much as Victor Martinez's was. Martinez plays a position where any offense is a bonus; locking him up is a great idea. Locking up Pronk is more questionable. I'll have more on this in the coming week.

Placed 2B Danny Garcia on the Disabled List (AAA - shoulder); Recalled IF Jake Thrower from Extended Spring

It looks like it's bad karma to be the Bisons' starting second baseman. Warren Morris injured a finger in Spring Training, and now Garcia is out with a shoulder problem. Thrower is a AAA veteren, though this is his first time in the International League.

Placed OF Ben Francisco on the Disabled List (AA - thumb); Promoted OF JJ Sherrill to Akron (AA) from Kinston (A+)

Promoted OF Ricardo Rojas to Kinston (A+) from Lake County (A-)

Sunday, April 10, 2005

Weekend in Review

I've been hammered with projects and papers recently, but the end is in sight! Well, at least I can see a speck of light in the tunnel I'm currently in.



  • Even with the six runs off Jeremy Bonderman in the first inning today, the Indians' bats have really been quiet. The team is ranked near the bottom in several offensive categories, including batting average (13th), OBP (13th), Slugging percentage (14th), and hits (14th). The defense has been even worse than the offense; the team is ranked last in fielding percentage.

    So how did the Indians go 3-3 on the road trip? This may come as a shock to most of you, but it's mainly because of the bullpen. The bullpen's ERA the first week of the season was 2.63, good for 3rd in the league. Tribe relievers are holding opposing batters to a .516 OPS, and they sport a very good K/BB ratio of 4.00.

    Of course all of these numbers are subject to the sample size rule, and things can (and probably will) change drastically in the next couple of weeks. Bob Wickman bounced back from his horrendous outing against the White Sox to save two games this weekend. Jake Westbrook will probably bounce back after laying an egg this past Saturday. Jhonny Peralta will settle down in the field. Making too much of one week's worth of games is a very easy trap to fall into, especially since that one week is the only piece of evidence you can relate to. Terry Pluto, as usual, is the voice of reason, commenting on Peralta's early defensive struggles.


  • Sheldon Ocker is out with a Dolan is Cheap!TM column, calling out ownership for possibly letting CC Sabathia walk two years from now. These two paragraphs taken together are quite humorous:

    With insurers limiting coverage of players' contracts to no more than three years, and pitchers being more vulnerable to serious injury than position players, the wisest course might be to limit a proposed contract for Sabathia to three seasons, maybe with a fourth-year club option.

    But Sabathia is 24. He would be only 29 after the option season ended, and Shapiro would have to start all over again -- and next time he would be forced to offer stratospheric money.


    So which is it? Should they only give him a short-term deal because of health concerns, or should they try to lock him up for longer? The rest of the article goes back and forth in the same fashion. Here's my take: now is the time to get an extension in place, probably an extra two years would be the best they could do. Use the recenet extensions of Freddy Garcia and Johan Santana as templates. If he wants to test the free agent market, then there isn't much you can do; if he wants to pitch in the Bay Area, there isn't much you can do. I do think it's very possible to get an extension done through 2008; the team is heading in the right direction, several similar deals have been signed, and the team and Sabathia has gotten along well. Beyond that, you just have to see how things work out. Cleveland isn't a market where you can pay many players top dollar; that's just part of the current financial status of baseball.


  • There's good news and bad news from Extended Spring Training. Jody Gerut has been cleared for game situations, but 2004 draft pick Scott Lewis is on the shelf with shoulder soreness. Lewis, who underwent shoulder surgery while at Ohio State, is on a "non-throwing" program, so hopefully simple rest will be enough.

Friday, April 08, 2005

Turnabout is Fair Play

Well, Shingo Takatsu decided to do his best Bob Wickman imitation yesterday, serving up three home runs in the 9th inning. While Casey Blake is a decent power threat, the fact that he gave up taters to both Coco Crisp and Ronnie Belliard suggests that Takatsu was just throwing "hit me" fastballs.

Cliff Lee was horrible in his first start of the season. As usual, his problems stemmed from his lack of control. Yes, he only walked one batter, but he also fell behind almost every hitter he faced, and when that happens, even the best get hit hard. Lee's great stuff make outings like these so frustrating; you know he's *this* close to being a very good starting pitcher, but a simple lack of control is keeping him from making a giant leap forward.

Of course the good news is that after Lee left the game, the White Sox didn't score again. Betancourt looked outstanding, striking out four in his 2.2 innings, as did Riske, Howry, Rhodes, and Miller. The only two that didn't pitch in the game were Bob Wickman and Scott Sauerbeck, who may have some arm issues. The best stat (at least by my tastes) is this: after Lee left the game, Indians pitchers did not walk a single batter. Making hitters earn their way on base is a key to successful bullpen, and the five pitchers today followed it.

The Indians did benefit from some of White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen's moves earlier in the game. He used three relievers in the seventh inning, which left him short after the Indians sent the game to extra innings. Luis Vizcaino was the last arm available by the 10th, and after the Indians had scored 6 runs in the 11th, backup catcher Chris Widger was warming up.





Thursday, April 07, 2005

Well, That Was Great

I didn't think it was possible to give up four runs that quickly.

Kevin Millwood didn't look that good, but pitched around a lot of jams. Miller and Rhodes looked outstanding. But it was all for nought, for Wickman came into the game in the 9th and threw BP to the White Sox. Suddenly a lineup that had been effectively shut down for 16 innings looked like the 1927 Yankees.

Enough of that. I sure don't want to talk about it anymore.

The terms of Victor Martinez's five-year extension were released on Wednesday. The Indians have an option for 2010, which could keep Victor around an extra year, since he'd be eligible for free agency by then. As with these types of contracts, both management annn player take big risks. Giving a five-year deal to anyone is risky, and the Indians are on the hook for $15M through 2009. Of course Victor will be vastly underpaid if he continues to play at an All-Star level through the balance of the contract. Here's the breakdown by year of the dollars:

Signing Bonus: $1M
2005: $500,000
2006: $800,000
2007: $3M
2008: $4.25M
2009: $5.7M
2010: $7M Club Option (or $250,000 buyout)

My early take is that this is an absolute bargain for the Indians, provided Victor stays healthy; they have the option of buying out a free agent year to boot. But remember that these types of contracts don't always work out: see Joe Mays and Jaret Wright.

The next target for an extension should be CC Sabathia. The difference with Sabathia is that he has much more leverage than Martinez did. CC is eligible for free agency after the 2006 season, and given the exhorbitant contracts given out to starters last offseason, he could cash out in a big way if he tested the market. For the Indians, the Johan Santana signing may provide somewhat of a roadmap to get a deal done. Santana received a four-year contract worth $40M from the Twins in the offseason two years before he could test the free agent waters; obviously the Indians aren't going to go as high as that, but at least it gives the club something to work off of.

What about Travis Hafner? I don't think there should be a rush to lock him up. Wait a year, see if he can repeat his tremendous 2004 effort this year, and begin negotiations then.

Monday, April 04, 2005

Game 1: White Sox 1, Indians 0

So much to talk about, so little time.

First of all, fantastic performance by Westbrook. The Konerko double was the only real mistake of his outing, but it ended up costing him the win. Unfortunately for Westbrook, Mark Buerhle pitched just as well; the two pitchers looked to be doppelgangers of each other. Both were throwing strikes, working quickly, and getting ground ball after ground ball.

Peralta's muffed attempt allowed Konerko to score; I don't think there's any question that if he fields the ball cleanly, Konerko, who's one of the slowest runners in the game, would have been out at the plate. That Peralta was one who made the error was too bad. I'll pretty much guarentee that at least one of the beat reporters say something to effect of "Vizquel would have made that play" in tomorrow's papers While they have a valid point, Peralta also made a play earlier in the game that Vizquel couldn't have made; he went to his right to field a ground ball in the hole, and forced the runner at second. Vizquel can't make that throw at this point in his career. But for Peralta, every error he makes is going to dredge up Vizquel references, and it really can't be helped.

Aaron Boone looked good at third base. It doesn't appear that his knee is bothering him, which is promising. But for goodness sakes, he needs to hit farther down in the order. Blake needs to be hitting fifth against left-handers and second against right-handers if Sizemore isn't going to be hitting second.

Last season Belliard's deep positioning at second base didn't really cost him. Today he was out position on Pierzynksi's dribbler; it didn't cost the team a run, as Westbrook induced Joe Crede to hit into a double play, but it's something I've been watching since Belliard joined the team.

Now the good news: it looks like the Indians have locked up Victor Martinez through his arbitration years. Shapiro termed the contract "historic" compared to other deals to players with the same amount of service time. I would guess that means Martinez's deal is going to be more than the extension signed by CC Sabathia, but considering that the Indians have locked up players like Manny Ramirez and Jim Thome at similar points in the players' careers, the statement piqued my interest. My hope is that the deal allows the team to keep Martinez past his free agent eligibility, which would probably be after the 2009 season. Martinez would be 30 in 2009, which puts him a bit past his prime, especially considering the his position. So regardless of how long he's signed, the Indians will probably be getting the best six years of Victor's career. Now it remains to see just how much they're paying him.

Thirty-eight minor-league players have been suspended by MLB for testing positive for steroids. There were no Indians on that list, but all of those mentioned train in Arizona. I'd have to imagine the Florida results will be announced in a couple of days.



Opening Day

Is it me, or should the first Monday of the baseball season be a national holiday?

Anyway, I'll be stuck in class today while the Indians play; actually I won't be able to watch the entire Chicago series, which sucks.

The depth chart has been updated. Keep in mind that the Akron roster is a guess; the Aeros, like usual, haven't posted anything in regards to their roster. The rest should be fine.

I should be back tonight.

Friday, April 01, 2005

Juan....Gone

Placed OF Juan Gonzalez on the 15-day Disabled List (hamstrings)

Well, who knew that the chewing gum and baling wire holding Juan together would deteriorate this quickly? Well, perhaps they held him together just long to make the team and then, exhausted with relief, fell apart. Hamstring injuries don't go away easily, and can linger for a long time. Pedicting 200 at-bats for Juan this season is probably optimistic.

Recalled OF Grady Sizemore from Buffalo (AAA)

By "Buffalo" I mean the next baseball field over in Winter Haven, because that's where he was playing. At least he didn't have to put any extra miles on his car while driving to Cleveland. It looks like Grady will be eased into the lineup, sitting against some left-handers (for example, against Mark Buerhle on Monday), but otherwise should be playing in center field every day. I think it's worth a shot to bat him second against right-handers, with Belliard replacing him against southpaws. Unfortunately, Aaron Boone looks to be miscast in that role. Boone doesn't walk much (.332 career OBP), and isn't a contact hitter (his 162-game strikeout average is 103). The lone justification for hitting him second might be his speed, but the Indians don't run often enough to take advantage of it; besides, why run when you have Hafner and Martinez up? Boone is a useful hitter, but he belongs farther down in the order. Heck, Casey Blake is a much better alternative, given his prowess against right-handed pitching and patience at the plate.

April Fools

A great read today is Mistake by the Lake's April Fools columns, one for each Cleveland team. Check out the Indians section, where Corey gives a pretty convincing argument why the Indians are destined to fail this year. Now I know why the Yankees signed Tony Womack in the offseason...