Tag Archives: featured

Cavs Fan Is Caught On Live TV Bawling After Last Night’s Loss To The Rockets

Man. Gotta feel for this poor guy. He’s held strong through all of the subtweets and unfollows and cheating rumors and trade rumors and trips down to Miami and blowout losses to bad teams and chemistry issues… but this was his final straw. Losing to Houston without your team’s best player was just too much. Sometimes you’ve just gotta have a good cry surrounded by 20,000+ people because of a late March regular season basketball game. And sometimes you’ve gotta let the tears flow on national TV. We all do it. This doesn’t make him any less of a man, he’s just preparing himself for the next inevitable Cleveland heartbreak.

But wait…

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Imagine those waterworks if the Cavs were in 2nd.

 

10 reasons why Trevor Bauer to the bullpen could work out

https://twitter.com/MLBastian/status/715227548272046080

Trevor Bauer capped off his stellar spring yesterday in game 1 of a split-squad double header by whiffing seven Angels in six innings of shutout baseball. But, and I guess it’s sort of symbolic of the way this rotation battle played out, Josh Tomlin came out in the night cap and one-upped him, striking out ten in six scoreless. Tomlin’s spring stats weren’t nearly as flashy, with a 1.56 WHIP and an ERA sniffing 5, but his gem yesterday, on top of his production down the stretch last year, was ultimately enough to get the nod over the 25-year-old Bauer to start 2016.

I’ll admit, I’m a little surprised by the move. It’s pretty tough to make the argument that Bauer doesn’t have a higher ceiling than both Tomlin and Cody Anderson. His “stuff” is tantalizing, and it seems like he’s “primed for a breakout season” around this time every year. But right now, on March 30th, five days before he squares off against John Farrell and the Boston Red Sox to kick off the 2016 season, these are the five starting pitchers Tito Francona believes puts his club in the best possible position to win consistently.

I don’t necessarily disagree. And here’s ten reasons why.


1 – Power arms dominate bullpens 

Quick, top 5 relievers in the game right now. Ready go. Davis? Miller? Jansen? Familia? Betances? Kimbrel? Chapman? Britton?

What do they all have in common? They throw that round thing fast, and they throw that round thing hard. You don’t see a whole lot of finesse guys having tons of success in the late innings of ballgames nowadays. Power arms dominate the back end of bullpens. Bauer’s fastball hovers right around 93 MPH for his career. Focusing more on velocity this spring, his average fastball has been coming in at about 96. In the bullpen, focusing on one or two innings instead of six or seven, that number could climb even further.

2 – No need to establish all 48 of his pitches in the first inning

I kid. Kind of. Many people, including his manager, believe one of the reasons Bauer sometimes struggles at the beginning of games is because he tries to establish all six of his pitches early. This doesn’t allow him to get a feel for any of them, thus making it harder to throw them for strikes, and thus making it harder to make it out of the third inning. There’s no need to establish anything more than your fastball and maybe an off-speed pitch or two when you’re facing 6 batters instead of trying to go 6 innings.

3 – Starting pitching depth is never bad

Self-explanatory.

4 – Consistency of Anderson/Tomlin plays better with improved offense

As entertaining/infuriating as it was, Bauer was either brilliant or a hot garbage and rotting grass smoothie on any given day last season. He had 8 starts where he went less than 5 innings, and 10 starts where he gave up more than 4 earned runs, both team highs. Again, Anderson and Tomlin are probably a lot less likely to give you the 8 inning, 10 K outings that Bauer occasionally can, but they’re also a lot less likely to make you shut the game off before the Indians bat through the order. It was worth the risk last year when you almost needed those wondrous outings to win with our offense. With an (almost) healthy and (almost certainly) improved lineup in 2016, I’ll take Consistency for 1000 Alex.

BONUS REASON #4.5 – Of those 8 starts of less than 5 innings, 5 came in the second half, and of the 10 starts of more than 4 earned runs, 6 of them came after the All-Star break. Limiting his innings early in the year by having him come out of the pen could help stretch him out and give us productive Trevor when he inevitably starts some games later in the year.

5 – Two guys who can go multiple innings (McAllister and Bauer) can help lighten the load of Shaw/Allen/Manship/etc

“Bunting and driving his relievers into the ground, that’s what Terry Francona DOES!” – Some Indians fans. Having Zach McAllister last year helped with the latter. Having Bauer in the pen will help even more. Say we had a situation where a starter, like oh I don’t know, Bauer, get knocked out of the game early and had to ride ZMac for a solid 3-4-5 innings. That probably still doesn’t get you to the end of the game, so you use another guy or two. Then the next day the opposite happens, but your long guy is OOC, so you have to burn your go-to guys in a game where you didn’t really need to. Enter: 2016 Bauer. Bryan Shaw is on cloud friggin nine this afternoon.

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6 – Starting pitching depth is never bad

See #3.

7 – Could help him mentally having to only focus on 1 or 2 innings (or it could backfire horribly)

This one might be a stretch but it’s certainly not out of the question. Some guys excel as designated hitters because they only have to focus on one aspect of the game. They don’t have to worry about how they’re fielding or throwing the ball, all of their focus is on the opposing pitcher and how he’s  throwing to guys and what his plan is for his next at-bat. Other guys strike out a couple times, drive themselves crazy stewing on the bench and are never heard from ever again. You never know. And you certainly never know with someone as…eccentric as Bauer. But hey. It could happen.

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8 – Tito took another talented arm from the rotation and put him in the bullpen and now he’s one of the best starters in baseball

Carlos Carrasco is obviously a very rare talent, as is the series of circumstances that led to his rise to the top of the pitching totem pole, but you can’t deny some similarities here. Cookie went from giving up 18 runs in his first 4 starts of 2014 and getting demoted to the pen, to being a dark horse Cy Young candidate two years later. Never doubt Mickey Callaway. And never look him straight in the eyes.

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9 – Starting pitching depth is never bad

Jeremy Sowers started 22 games for the Indians in 2009.

10. Cody Anderson didn’t get squeezed out of the rotation

This is a big one. Cody came out of nowhere to most people last year and was remarkably consistent. He then stayed at the complex in Goodyear all summer, worked on his body, and came into camp looking

https://twitter.com/MLBastian/status/700783251003080704

https://twitter.com/MLBastian/status/710487247045275648

He still might have made the rotation even with Bauer, but you never know with the extension given to Tomlin this off-season. Plus I’m pretty sure he’s the only player in the majors that still uses a Nokona glove and I loved those things when I was a kid. Gotta keep them in business.


Before I sign off, let’s all please remember one little thing…

TREVOR BAUER HASN’T BEEN DAMNED TO THE FIERY DEPTHS OF THE BULLPEN FOR ALL ETERNITY.

I’m not a betting man, but if I were I’d say it’s a pretty safe wager that Bauer will start double digit games this season.

And if he doesn’t, we either got insanely lucky with injuries or he wasn’t pitching well enough and this was the right decision in the first place.

PS Bonus reason #12.5 from our friend Matt

 

KEEP THE CHIEF

 

The future of the Indians outfield played together last night

(Bradley Zimmer actually DHed. Semantics.)

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The numbers on the back of their jerseys may have added up to 249, but those weren’t just any minor leaguers running around with Chief Wahoo on their sleeve last night. An outfield of Clint Frazier, Tyler Naquin and Bradley Zimmer (first-round picks in 2012/13/14) is something we’re very likely to see over the next year or two, and will certainly be met with a spike in the number tents erected inside and in surrounding areas of Progressive Field in downtown Cleveland. Naquin has obviously already made the big league club this season, Zimmer seems to be a lock for Opening Day 2017 before even playing in a single game this year, and Frazier isn’t all that far behind him. The “Indians can’t draft” crowd (first cousins to the Dolans R Cheap clan) may not like to admit it, but when your outfield of the future includes three consecutive first round picks (and the two top prospects in your entire system) with that much upside, you’re doing something right.

That being said, last night wasn’t a particularly explosive showing. Against Mariners fourth starter Taijuan Walker, Frazier singled in the first and Zimmer doubled in the third. For the spring, they’ve both had 8 at-bats at the big league level. Frazier (21 years old) has 1 hit and a 5/1 K/BB, while two of Zimmer’s (23 years old) three hits have been doubles and he’s also driven in a run. Naquin (24 years old) really isn’t doing much of anything other than leading the regulars in hitting (.415 in 53 ABs) and triples (3), second in bombs (4), driving in 7, doubling three times and posting an OBP of .456 in his first extended action against big league pitching.

But what about Michael Brantley? Who? Who’s on first. Who, meet Michael Brantley. He’ll be taking your job in the near future. While he’s never played first base in a big league game, he did dabble in the minors and the idea was tossed around in the spring of 2011. Defensive metrics have never loved him as a left fielder, and a move to the infield would certainly help to keep him healthy and his legs fresh as he enters his 30’s. He would also provide a well above average bridge until Bobby Bradley (who DHed in the first game yesterday) is ready for the big show. Bradley hits baseballs hard and he hits baseballs far, but he also fails to connect on quite a few attemps at hitting baseballs and is only 19 years old. He’s a ways away from The Corner.

Yu-Cheng Chang is a guy the Tribe signed from Taiwan a few years back for $500,000. He’s risen to #13 on MLB.com’s list of our top 30 prospects despite being only 19 and having played just over 100 games at Lake County. He’s 1-3 with a triple this spring.

https://twitter.com/MLBastian/status/700446032040038400

https://twitter.com/tpaquette_IID/status/714880704761311232

KEEP THE CHIEF