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Logan T. Allen among Guardians minor leaguers to get big league training camp invite

Updated: Feb. 03, 2023, 6:57 p.m.

By Joe Noga

CLEVELAND, Ohio —

Spring training is less than two weeks away and the Guardians have invited eight players from their minor league system to participate in major league training camp, the club announced Friday.

Pitchers Logan T. Allen, Peyton Battenfield, Nick Mikolajchak, Andrew Misiaszek, Luis Oviedo and Cade Smith will join infielder David Fry and outfielder Micah Pries at the outset of big league camp.

Cleveland has issued a total of 15 invitations to major league camp, including previous invites to pitcher Touki Toussaint, catchers Cam Gallagher and Meibrys Viloria as well as outfielder Roman Quinn.

Allen, 24, was Cleveland’s second-round pick in 2020 out of Florida International. He is rated the No. 6 prospect in the Guardians farm system according to Baseball America and went a combined 9-7 with a 4.75 ERA in 2022 between Double-A Akron and Triple-A Columbus over 132 2/3 innings. Allen led all Cleveland minor leaguers in strikeouts with 177, the third highest total in all of MiLB, and was second in innings.

Battenfield, 25, was acquired from Tampa Bay at the 2021 trading deadline for OF Jordan Luplow. He went 8-6 with a 3.63 ERA in 28 starts in 2022 at Columbus, leading the organization and Int’l League in innings. Battenfield was on the major league roster last season while the team was in Canada playing Toronto, Aug. 12-14, but did not pitch.

Mikolajchak, 25, was a non-roster invitee in 2022 and was Cleveland’s 11th-round pick in 2019 out of Sam Houston State. He went 5-2 with a 3.04 ERA in 47 relief appearances for Columbus last year, allowing just three home runs and striking out 50 in 50 innings.

Misiaszek, 25, was Cleveland’s 32nd-round pick in 2019 out of Northeastern, where he was teammates with Aaron Civale as a freshman. He went a combined 5-2 with a 2.04 ERA in 42 appearances between Akron and Columbus last year. Misiaszek owns a professional ERA of 3.03 in 91 outings.

Oviedo, 23, was claimed on waivers from Pittsburgh April 26 after splitting the season between four different stops in the Pirates and Guardians organizations. Oviedo spent the first five years of his career in Cleveland’s player development system prior to his December 2020 Rule 5 Draft selection by Pittsburgh.

Smith, 23, posted a 4-2 mark with 13 saves and a 2.93 ERA in 44 relief outings between Akron and Columbus, leading Guardians minor league pitchers in saves (13) and was second in relief strikeouts (99). Owns a two-year professional ERA of 3.36 in 77 relief outings.

Fry, 27, spent entire 2022 season in Columbus, finishing tied for fourth in the organization in doubles (27) and RBI (74). Fry led Columbus in home runs and RBI. He appeared in 63 games at third base, 38 games at first base, 12 games at catcher and made nine starts at designated hitter as he was named an organizational all-star by MLB.com. Fry earned a spot on the Rising Stars team in the Arizona Fall League after hitting .286 in 13 games with eight RBI. He was acquired from Milwaukee in March to complete the trade that sent J.C. Mejia to the Brewers.

Pries, 24, spent entire season at Akron, leading the club in homers and RBI on his way to organizational all-star honors. On the year, he batted .266 with 29 doubles, five triples, 18 home runs and 73 RBI in 122 games. Pries was selected by Cleveland in the 13th round of the 2019 draft.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
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Guardians Truck Day sees a return to normalcy after pandemic, lockout seasons

Updated: Feb. 03, 2023, 7:07 p.m.

By Joe Noga

CLEVELAND, Ohio —

Of all the early February traditions in northeast Ohio, the gathering of local media to watch Guardians staff load equipment into a tractor-trailer bound for Arizona is probably the most noteworthy. In fact, it might be the only early February tradition in northeast Ohio, besides not watching the Browns in the Super Bowl.

Nothing gets fans fired up from behind their computer screens more than seeing gear bags, golf clubs, bicycles and pallets of bubble gum, hauled throughout the concourse at Progressive Field and crammed into a shipping container for the three-day journey to Goodyear.

ruck Day feels a little different than in recent years, however, after two seasons of dealing with pandemic protocols and the uncertainty created last year by MLB’s labor unrest. Clubhouse manager Tony Amato said this time around, things are a little more back to normal.

“We were flying by the seat of our pants the last two years,” Amato said.

With more time to plan and fewer surprises, clubhouse workers were able to gather equipment and gear from each player ahead of time, and had enough notice to accommodate whatever front office workers that planned to make the trip to spring training.

“Thing went a lot more smoothly this year,” said assistant clubhouse manager Brandon Biller.

Manager Terry Francona’s scooter, “the hog” as it is affectionately known, did not make the trip this year. After a whirlwind weekend in late January that saw the scooter stolen and returned to the Guards skipper by Cleveland Police, it is staying put in Cleveland. Francona utilizes a golf cart to get around the club’s training facility and back and forth to Goodyear Ballpark.

Drivers from Andrews Moving & Storage will steer Cleveland’s uniforms, bats, baseballs and more over 2,000 miles in the next three days before arriving and unloading at training camp. Pitchers and catchers participating in the 2023 World Baseball Classic will report to their respective MLB camps by Feb. 13, while position players participating in the tournament will report by Feb. 16. Everybody else should be in camp by Feb. 17 with the first full-squad workout set for Feb. 21.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
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Cleveland Guardians hire Amanda Kamekona as their first woman on-the-field coach

By Paul Hoynes

Updated: Feb. 03, 2023, 7:14 p.m.|


CLEVELAND, Ohio --

The Guardians have hired Amanda Kamekona, the first woman on-the-field coach in franchise history. The hire continues a MLB-trend of bringing more women coaches into the game.

Kamekona will be one of three hitting coaches working with Cleveland’s two complex teams in Goodyear, Arizona, this season. The Guardians have an Arizona Rookie League team and a developmental team.

“AK is a dynamic coach,” said James Harris, Guardians assistant general manager and former director of player development. “She’s excited about learning and will help our players develop. I couldn’t be more excited to have her as a teammate.”

Guardians Prospective first reported the hiring of Kamekona.

The Guardians have had female mental skills coaches in the past, but never one that instructed players on the field.

Kamekona, 36, played two years of fastpitch softball at Cal State Fullerton before transferring to UCLA for her final two seasons. She was a two-time All-America and Pac-10 selection at UCLA and helped the Bruins go 96-20 in her two years there.

In 2008, Kamekona’s first year at UCLA, she lead the team with 14 homers, 46 RBI, 47 runs, 17 doubles and a .663 slugging percentage.

She played professionally for the Carolina Diamonds and the New York-New Jersey Comets in National Pro Fastpitch.

While she was still playing professionally Kamekona served as an assistant coach at Limestone College in Gaffney, South Carolina, before becoming the head at Brevard College in Brevard, North Carolina.

Kamekona attended Ayala High School in Chino Hills, California. As a freshman and sophomore, she played on the boys baseball team, but switched to girls fastpitch in her junior year.

MLB has increased its efforts to create more opportunities for women on and off the field. In 2022, several women were hired as on-the-field instructors. Rachel Balkovec became the first woman to manage a professional team when the Yankees named her manager of their Class A Tampa Tarpons for the 2022 season.

Other female coaches working for MLB teams as of 2022 included Bianca Smith and Katie Krall of the Red Sox, Alyssa Nakken, Giants, Rachel Folden, Cubs, Ronnie Gajownik, Diamondbacks, Vernonia Alvarez, A’s, Jaime Vieira, Blue Jays, Caitlyn Callahan, Pirates, Gretchen Aucoin, Mets and Kayla Baptista, Rangers.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
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Triston McKenzie breaks silence on MLB shift changes, ‘excited’ for Guardians’ Jose Ramirez

By Joey Mistretta

Published January 31, 2023 at 10:27 AM CST


MLB is banning the shift in 2023. Players have discussed the topic and offered different opinions. Some players are destined to benefit more than others from the change. Cleveland Guardians’ starting pitcher Triston McKenzie recently addressed MLB’s decisions to ban the shift and expressed his excitement for teammate Jose Ramirez as a result of the new rule, per Bally Sports Cleveland.

“I think it’s going to change how we play the game currently, but I think it’s still going to be baseball,” McKenzie said. “I think the game is going to have to be a little more athletic in certain aspects, but I don’t think it’s going to change the game to a degree that everybody thinks it’s going to change it to. I think there’s going to be numbers that are going to change, but the game is going to stay the same.”

Guardians’ reporter Andre Knott then mentioned that some of Triston McKenzie’s teammates may put up big numbers stemming from the MLB shift ban.

“And I’m excited for it (Jose Ramirez)! Yes!” McKenzie responded.

Jose Ramirez cut down on his pull-percentage in 2022 and began hitting the baseball up the middle on a more consistent basis, per Baseball Reference. But the shift allowed infielders to stand directly behind second base. If Ramirez, who hit the ball up the middle at a 50 percent clip in 2022, continues to implement a similar approach he could be in line for a massive performance in 2023. And Triston McKenzie is certainly “excited for it.”

McKenzie and Ramirez are looking to lead the Guardians back to the postseason following the team’s impressive 2023 effort.

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Larry Doby and his friend Don Newcombe


These MLB legends were trailblazers in Japan


By Anthony Castrovince

February 2nd, 2023

Billy Joel’s world tour had reached Japan, and that gave Larry Doby Jr. -- a member of Joel’s road crew -- an opportunity to explore an oft-forgotten piece of his famous father’s baseball history.

So on a break between concerts on that day in 1995, Doby Jr. and some fellow roadies boarded a bullet train bound for Nagoya, where the Chunichi Dragons still played in the open-air stadium with the all-dirt infield that the elder Larry Doby and his friend Don Newcombe had briefly called home more than 30 years earlier.

“When [people in Nagoya] found out who I was,” Doby Jr. recalled with a smile, “they were bowing to me.”

In the United States, we know Doby as the Hall of Famer who broke the American League color barrier, and we know Newcombe as both the first pitcher to win the Cy Young Award and the first Black pitcher to win 20 games in a season and start in the World Series.

The single season Doby and Newcombe played for the Dragons -- with Newcombe primarily playing at first base, not pitcher -- is a mostly forgotten footnote to the great careers of these trailblazers.

In Japan, however, they remember Doby and Newcombe as trailblazers of a different sort.

“My dad and Mr. Newcombe are still held in really high regard in Japan,” Doby Jr. said, “probably because they were the first ex-Major Leaguers to go over there and play.”

Doby and Newcombe were both on their last legs as players when they signed on with Chunichi in 1962. Doby was nearly three years removed from his final Major League game, while Newcombe had spent the previous season pitching for Spokane in the Triple-A Pacific Coast League.

But in Chunichi, these recently retired stars were revered and celebrated as potential season saviors for a Dragons team in need of a boost.

The arrival overseas of Doby and Newcombe was both a continuation of a historical trend of Black players influencing the Japanese game and the beginning of a new trend of established Major Leaguers extending or reviving their careers in Nippon Professional Baseball.

A 1934 barnstorming tour of Japan that featured Hall of Famers Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Jimmie Foxx, Lefty Gomez, Charlie Gehringer, Connie Mack and others is often credited with helping to launch professional baseball in the Land of the Rising Sun. After efforts to start a professional league in Japan earlier in the century had fallen flat, that tour, in which Major League luminaries competed against some of Japan’s best players from the high school and collegiate ranks, sparked enough interest to help initiate the Japan Professional Baseball League (JPBL) -- the forebearer to the present-day Nippon Professional Baseball -- in 1936.

But the Negro Leagues also played a part in baseball forming a professional toehold in Japan.

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Biz Mackey's time in Japan


In 1927 -- and again a few seasons later -- a Black club known as the Philadelphia Royal Giants visited Japan and other parts of Asia on a goodwill tour. During the first tour, players like Biz Mackey (who hit the very first home run at Jingu Stadium, which was constructed in '26 and still stands today) and Rap Dixon wowed with their prodigious power, and the Royal Giants’ speed and strong, accurate throws also left lasting, inspiring impressions on the Japanese athletes. Some Negro League researchers have suggested that the Japanese game more closely resembles the Negro Leagues -- with an emphasis on teamwork, small ball and finesse pitching -- than the American or National Leagues.

And whereas the white players on their later tours would often run up the score on their inferior Japanese opponents, the Black players were said to approach their games with respect and sportsmanship.

“Other countries rejected baseball because the visiting professionals left fledgling players disillusioned with the game through defeat,” Japanese baseball historian Kazuo Sayama once wrote. “We were lucky enough to have the chance to neutralize the shock. … The Royal Giants’ visits were the shock absorber.”

As historian and author Bill Staples Jr., a member of the board of directors for the Nisei Baseball Research Project, wrote in an email, the story of how baseball came to be such a popular and important sport in Japan can’t be told without mention of the influence of those early Black players.

“There’s no doubt that the tours of the white Major Leaguers did a lot to increase the fans’ demand for pro baseball as a form of paid entertainment,” Staples wrote. “But I argue that it was the tours of the Nikkei [Americans of Japanese ancestry] and Negro Leaguers who made the greatest impact on the supply -- the quality of the players that Japan had to put on the field. … The pre-war tours of the Nikkei and Negro Leaguers helped the Japanese elevate their level of play and maintain their passion for the game when they needed it most -- and thus, the Japanese Baseball League began in 1936.”

Ten years before Jackie Robinson’s 1946 arrival to the Dodgers’ Montreal affiliate began the integration of affiliated Major League Baseball, the nascent JPBL had its first Black player in the form of a pitcher named Jimmy Bonner.

Bonner had made a name for himself with the San Francisco Colored Giants, Oakland Black Sox and Berkeley Grays, catching the attention of Harry Kono, a West Coast businessman and agent for the Dai Tokyo Baseball Club of the JPBL. Kono recruited Bonner to play for Dai Tokyo.

“Dashing Bonner Releases an Amazing Crossfire from his Iron Arm,” read one (translated) caption from a Japanese newspaper at that time.

Alas, in his one month with the club, Bonner and his “iron arm” struggled with a tighter strike zone and different ball. He didn’t last long in Japan, but he set a precedent for an American-born player journeying across the Pacific to play professionally.

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Roy Campanella, Don Newcombe, Jackie Robinson of Dodgers, and Larry Doby at the 1949 All Star Game

World War II, of course, changed everything -- both for the JPBL (which became NPB in 1949) and Japanese-American relations, in general. Professional baseball in Japan became a more isolated endeavor for a long while.

On April 28, 1952, however, the Treaty of San Francisco, which formally ended Japan’s role as an imperial power and ended the Allied nations' post-war occupation of the country, went into effect. That very day, third baseman John Britton and pitcher Jimmie Newberry -- two former Negro League stars then under the contractual control of Bill Veeck’s St. Louis Browns -- were lent to a Hankyu Braves team in need of talent in what was billed an “Independence Day gesture.”

“As Japan gains its independence as the world’s newest democracy, we of the St. Louis Browns are happy to aid the mutual relations between the United States and Japan by sending two of our American ballplayers to the Japanese pro leagues,” Veeck said in a statement to reporters. “In Japan, as well as in America, baseball is the national game, and we feel this gesture on the part of American baseball will go a long way towards cementing good relations with the Japanese.”

The following year, two more former Negro League stars -- Larry Raines and Jonas Gaines -- would also join Hankyu, which finished in second place in the Pacific League in 1953.

The goodwill gesture had been a success, and a bridge had been built.

But when Britton, Newberry, Raines and Gaines were sent across the Pacific, none of them had played in the American or National Leagues (of the four, only Raines, who played briefly for Cleveland in 1957-58, would do so). It was not until the early 1960s that a process we are now familiar with -- established Major Leaguers extending their professional careers by venturing over to Japan -- was initiated.

And it began with two particularly big names in Black baseball history.

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Yukio Shimabara and Newcombe in 1957

Two Japanese baseball representatives and their interpreter walk into a bar.

That’s not the setup to a joke; it’s the setup to the story of how Newcombe and Doby changed Nippon Professional Baseball forever.

In 1962, Newcombe was no longer pitching but, rather, running a liquor store and cocktail lounge in Newark, N.J. One day, the three visitors cited above visited to gauge his interest in playing in Japan … primarily as a first baseman, not a pitcher.

The 1956 NL champion Dodgers team that included Newcombe had visited Japan after the World Series. So he was familiar with the country. And though the Dragons unsuccessfully tried to recruit the likes of Robin Roberts and Billy Martin, Newcombe accepted their offer.

“When I agreed to go,” Newcombe once told Doby biographer Joseph Thomas Moore, “and when the publicity came out about it, I got a call from Pierre Salinger.”

As in, the future U.S. Senator and ABC News correspondent and then-press secretary for President John F. Kennedy. Newcombe and Salinger had golfed together in the past.

Just 17 years after the United States dropped atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the U.S. was in the process of establishing positive relations with the newly democratic nation.

Baseball was a shared love, a crucial common ground.

“[Salinger] asked me to come to the White House for an interview,” Newcombe continued. “When I got to the White House, Salinger told me that, in effect, I would be representing President Kennedy and the United States. He said we had established pretty good relationships with the Japanese people, and through baseball, we could establish further relationships and even open up the possibility of other American players going to Japan.”

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Roy Campanella, Don Newcombe, Larry Doby and Jackie Robinson

Newcombe was not given any duties to perform by the president’s office, but he was asked to comport himself respectfully. He was up to that task, and he wanted to bring along a friend. He urged the representatives from the Dragons to offer a contract to Doby, too.

“[Doby] didn’t want to play because of his ankle, and he didn’t think he could get in shape,” Newcombe recalled. “I told him, ‘Larry, here’s a chance to make some money, and you won’t have to work hard. It seems to me to be easy baseball to play. If you can get in any kind of shape, you can hit the ball.’”

Doby, who had served as a scout for the White Sox and was in the process of purchasing a Newark liquor store and bar of his own, was on board. His son was only 4 years old at the time -- yet, all these years later, he remembers it well.

“My mother took him to the airport,” Doby Jr. said. “It was raining, and I’ll never forget it. He left, and we didn’t see him for months.”

Doby went solo overseas, living alone in a Nagoya hotel room. Newcombe brought his wife and young son and lived in a house in the suburbs.

“The club has done more than we anticipated,” Newcombe told an Associated Press reporter early in his tenure. “My wife has been provided with everything from diaper pins to an electric washer-dryer combination.”

In Japan, these tall Black men (Doby stood 6-foot-1, Newcombe 6-foot-4) certainly stood out in the crowd as “gaijins,” or foreigners.

“At the time, Newcombe and Doby were two of 21 foreign players in Japan,” Staples wrote. "Others were mostly white and Nikkei players. They were the only African-Americans. The presence of all foreign players in NPB was controversial -- still not well-received by everyone in Japan.”

But the Dragons’ Hawaiian-born coach Wally Yonamine, who selflessly retired as a player to make room for Doby (NPB limited the number of foreign players on each roster), saw the big picture.

“Even if they don’t help our club, they will help our players,” he said at the time. “In the end, Japanese baseball will benefit.”

Doby and Newcombe attended a few receptions and were invited to meet Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda during their time in Japan.

Mostly, though, their business was baseball.

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Dodgers Legend: Don Newcombe

Newcombe was an important pitcher in MLB, but he had also swung the bat well in his career. He batted .300 or better in four seasons in his limited opportunities and even hit seven homers with nine doubles for the Dodgers in his All-Star 1995 season.

So while his move to first base was unorthodox, it wasn’t completely out of the blue. In his first 11 at-bats, he hit a homer, a double and two singles. He was an instant spark for the Dragons, who were in last place in the Central League when he arrived and gradually began to move up the standings.

“Newk may well be considered as playing the role of a stimulant for his team,” a Japanese radio commentator was quoted as saying.

All told, Newcombe played 81 games, batting .262 with 12 homers and 23 doubles. He only pitched four innings.

Doby arrived 10 days after Newcombe because he was tying up loose ends with his liquor store purchase. And Doby was rustier, having not played the previous three seasons. The transition was difficult for him.

“The first month or so, it was tough, just getting into shape,” Doby later told Moore. “But I enjoyed it there. I felt relaxed. I had Newk’s friendship. The Japanese people treated us with a lot of respect and fine hospitality. I knew I was at the end of my career, so I took the games one at a time.”

Over time, Doby’s power shone through. Though he would bat only .225 in 72 games, his 10 homers left a lasting impression, as writer Kiyoshi Nakagawa marveled in his 1976 book “40 Years of Chunichi Dragons.”

“Even today,” Nakagawa wrote, “there are still quite a few fans who remember the sound of Doby’s bat cutting the air and his special swing.”

Ultimately, Newcombe and Doby made a modest impact on the results (the Dragons wound up finishing a respectable 70-60-3, good for third place in NPB’s Central League) but a big impact at the gates, with attendance rising from about 5,000 per game to 20,000.

And Doby and Newcombe themselves were impacted by the experience.

“My dad brought back a ton of kimonos and those wooden shoes with the heels on them [geta],” Doby Jr. recalled. “He brought back these geisha dolls, a ton of that stuff.”

Doby also began to call the family German shepherd “Gondo,” after Dragons pitcher Hiroshi Gondo.

“I don’t know if [the name] was in honor of him or if he didn’t like the guy,” Doby Jr. said with a laugh. “But he was a pretty good pitcher. I’m assuming, because he didn’t say anything bad about him, that it was in honor of him.”

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Larry Doby's pioneering career

Doby would recall that he received letters from several of his Japanese teammates for years after that 1962 season.

“He always said his biggest mistake was that he didn’t go back,” Doby Jr. said.

Doby was lonely in Japan with his family back in New Jersey. In 1963, he asked for more money to bring his family along, but he and the Dragons could not come to an agreement.

Newcombe, meanwhile, had possibly, in Staples’ words, “scouted himself out of a job,” as he helped the Dragons sign more American players like Jim Marshall. NPB rules allowed for only three foreigners per roster. The team invited him to return as a coach, but he declined.

So their time in Nagoya proved to be just a one-year experiment, and it was the final playing opportunity for both Doby and Newcombe.

Back in the States, Newcombe battled alcoholism, then went on to become the Dodgers’ director of community affairs in the 1970s -- delivering speeches on the pitfalls of drinking and serving as an inspiration by helping others. He passed away in 2019. Doby went on to become MLB’s second Black manager with the White Sox in 1978. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in '98 and passed in 2003.

In Japan, Newcombe and Doby set a template that would be followed by many other established Major Leaguers in the ensuing years.

Three-time All-Star George Altman went on to a long and productive NPB tenure that included time with the Lotte Orions and the Hanshin Tigers. Longtime infielder Clete Boyer spent several seasons in Japan and even roomed with all-time Japanese home run leader Sadaharu Oh. Three-time Gold Glove winner Willie Davis spent two seasons in Japan before returning to the States to finish his Major League career with the Angels. Warren Cromartie left MLB in his prime to go to NPB, where he was MVP of the Central League in 1989. Tuffy Rhodes' 464 home runs rank 13th all-time in NPB.

That’s just a smattering of the influence American players have had on NPB.

It’s a tradition that even made it to the movies. In the 1992 comedy “Mr. Baseball,” Tom Selleck plays fictional Yankees first baseman Jack Elliot, who is traded to an NPB team during Spring Training and forced to adjust to a new league and landscape.

Elliot’s new team? The Chunichi Dragons.

So Newk and Doby set a precedent for players, both real and imagined. And that’s why they are known as trailblazers, both here and abroad.

Anthony Castrovince has been a reporter for MLB.com since 2004. Read his columns and follow him on Twitter at @Castrovince.

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

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Guardians Beat

By Mandy Bell
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February 04, 2023
Josh Bell smiles while he stands in Cleveland's locker room, wearing a Cleveland Guardians sweatshirt while holding three bats

Welcome to another installment of the Guardians Newsletter. I’m Mandy Bell and I’m entering my fifth season covering Cleveland. Let’s get into the good stuff:

The closer that Spring Training gets, the more the realization sets in that the Guardians may be content with just the two additions they picked up over the winter. That means the pressure for Josh Bell to perform will only be greater … as if it wasn’t high already.

“With pressure, there has to be something there that’s worthwhile at the end,” Bell said. “I know what a power bat can bring to this team and what it means to José [Ramírez] to have someone with power behind him.”

What the Guardians can expect from Bell

Bell has built a reputation of getting off to a hot start. Guardians manager Terry Francona's teams have been known for the opposite. Bell can bring some nice pop and energy to this lineup in the early (and sometimes brutal) weeks of the regular season in Cleveland. Last year, he was tremendous with the Nationals before he was sent to San Diego at the Trade Deadline, hitting .301 with an .877 OPS in 103 games. In his lone All-Star season in 2019, Bell hit .302 with a 1.024 OPS in the first half, compared to a .233 average with a .780 OPS in the second half. In his career splits, the trend remains the same.

Seeing Bell get a great jump out of the gate won't be too surprising. For him to help take this offense to the next level and get closer to assuring a second consecutive AL Central title, Bell will need to stay consistent all season, which he's already said he's confident he can do. And with Steven Kwan and Ramírez ahead of him, he'll have plenty of opportunities to make an impact.

"I think when you look at the lineup and have three to four guys around 20 stolen bases, especially at the top of the lineup, that's a huge opportunity for me to continue to play the game I want to play," Bell said. "For me, I can just focus on playing my game and be a complement to this great team."
GIF of Steven Kwan nodding his head and pointing his finger after reaching base in a game, fans in background clapping

What the Guardians can hope for

Power.

There really doesn’t need to be much more of an explanation than that singular word. The Guardians have been craving a big bat in the middle of the order for years now, and after Franmil Reyes failed to fill that void last season, the need became glaringly obvious.

Bell hit 37 homers in 2019, 27 in ’21 and had 14 in the first half of last season before he was traded to San Diego, where he saw his offensive production slide. His career OPS entering ’23 is .810 and he already has a 100+ RBIs season ('19) under his belt. And for a team that hit the second-fewest homers in ’22 with a collective OPS (.699) and wRC+ (99) that ranked in the bottom half of the league, this addition was a no-brainer.

As much as Cleveland proved it can find ways to win without sluggers, it would be more than happy to have a couple of big swings added in the mix.

“It seems like this team is already slated to score a lot of runs with their style of baseball,” Bell said. “If I’m locked in power-wise, the team’s going to be in a great spot. But if we’re at the half and I’m hitting .330, everyone’s going to be happy, too. You have to pick your poison with this squad, we can beat you in plenty of different ways.”

If Bell comes as advertised, he and Ramírez could finally be the middle-of-the-order duo the Guardians have been waiting for.

“That was another big reason why I wanted to come here,” Bell said. “Hopefully we’re an awesome one-two punch.”
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain

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What’s on the Guardians’ checklist for spring training 2023? Hey, Hoynsie

Updated: Feb. 04, 2023, 2:08 p.m.|

By Paul Hoynes

CLEVELAND, Ohio --

Do you have a question that you’d like to have answered in Hey, Hoynsie? Submit it here. You can also subscribe to Subtext here or text Hoynsie at 216-208-4346 for a two-week free trial.

Hey Hoynsie: While spring training performances don’t generally predict regular season success or failure, what are some of the things you’ll be watching for in spring training that may be an indicator of how the upcoming season will unfold? -- Jim Z, Durham, New Hampshire.

Hey, Jim: It will be interesting to see how Aaron Civale and Zach Plesac do this spring. We’ll also get a chance to see some of the young infielders on the 40-man roster if Andres Gimenez and, perhaps, Jose Ramirez play in the World Baseball Classic.

Another thing to look for will be how players adjust to the new rules -- pitch clock, no shifts, larger bases etc. They will be implemented in spring training.

Hey, Hoynsie: Are the Guards thinking about moving Zach Plesac to the bullpen? To me it makes more sense to give his spot to Eli Morgan or take a long look at Tanner Bibee. -- Mike, Litchfield, Connecticut.

Hey, Mike: I haven’t heard any talk like that. Plesac has been a starter his whole career. He did make two relief appearances last year, one late in the regular season and one in Game 4 of the ALDS. As for Morgan, he made the move to the pen last year and the Guardians like him there. Bibee (8-2, 2.17) had a good year at Class A Lake County and Class AA Akron, but he probably needs some time at Class AAA Columbus.

Hey, Hoynsie: Does the Wahoo Club still exist? Are they making plans for an out of town bus trip this year? -- Patrick Grijak, Garfield Heights.

Hey, Patrick: The Wahoo Club still exists. It just changed its name to the 455 Club to celebrate John Adams and the sellout streak at Progressive Field. They are planning a bus trip to see the Guardians play the Mets at Citi Field from May 19 through May 21.

Hey, Hoynsie: Doesn’t Cleveland have a recording of John Adams’ drum beat? They should play that forever. I also wonder if they’ll honor him with a uniform patch on the players’ jerseys? -- Jim B., Independence.

Hey, Jim: They do have audio of John Adams’ drumming and will use it this season at Progressive Field. They used it last year in the postseason. They’d show a graphic of a drum on the scoreboard and the audio of Adams drumming.

The Guardians are currently thinking of other ways to honor Adams. Last year, they put him in their Distinguished Hall of Fame, placing a bronzed bench with a drum on it at Heritage Park. They did it then so he could be part of the ceremonies and enjoy it.

Hey, Hoynsie: What gave John Adams the inspiration to bring his bass drum to a Tribe game back in 1973 and how did that catch on to become the ritual for the rest of the Cleveland faithful? -- Andy Mees, Sandusky.

Hey, Andy: When Adams was young, he went to Municipal Stadium and liked the sound that fans made when they banged the empty wooden seats to start a rally. He tried to mimic that with his bass drum ... and the rest is history.

Hey Hoynsie: Any information on how Josh Naylor’s weight reduction plan is going this off season so far? -- John Kyle, Westfield Center.

Hey, John: Naylor talked to reporters at Guards Fest and looked good. We didn’t see him step on a scale, but manager Terry Francona was pleased with the way he looked.

Hey, Hoynsie: Last week you received a question about Steven Kwan. I consider myself more than just a casual fan. When I saw Kwan in spring training I thought he’d be back in Triple-A by the end of May because he had no power. Shows how much I know. -- John, Parma.

Hey, John: Don’t feel bad. Kwan and the Guardians surprised a lot of people last season.
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Cody Morris is the guy who seems ready to contend for the 5th starter job vs. Plesac who was lousy last year; and Civale who was not very good either. Morris pitched very well is his limited opportunities in September. Morgan will not start; he's proven to be effective once through the lineup only. Good middle reliever except for the periods when he isn't

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FORBES BUSINESS SPORTS MONEY

Cleveland Guardians’ Catcher Mike Zunino Is An Excellent Bridge To Prospect Bo Naylor


Bernie Pleskoff Contributor

Feb 4, 2023,06:17am EST

The Cleveland Guardians have upgraded their catching depth this offseason.

The Guardians have added veteran catcher Mike Zunino as a free agent, signing him to a 1-year, $6M contract.

In addition, the Guardians have signed veteran catchers Cam Gallagher and Meibrys Viloria as non-roster, spring training invitees.

Prospects Bryan Lavastida, Bo Naylor, and versatile corner infielder and catcher David Fry round out the current primary organizational catching depth.

In all probability, Zunino, who will turn 32 in March, will be the team’s primary catcher. Unless there is another addition, it is likely Zunino’s back-up on the 26-man roster will be determined following spring training.

Ultimately, the Guardians are hoping Naylor will assume the catching role in the future. For now, however, Naylor is probably headed for more seasoning in his development at Triple-A Columbus.

Zunino will enter the 2022 MLB season after undergoing surgery for Thoracic Outlet Syndrome on his left, non-throwing arm. He played in only 32 games for the Tampa Bay Rays last season.

Zunino originally reported a tingling sensation in his left arm. He received a Botox injection in June and neck treatment in July of 2022. He had his surgery July 28, 2022.

According to Hopkinsmedicine.org, Thoracic Outlet Syndrome (TOS) occurs when the nerves leading from the neck to the arm are compressed. This form of TOS is called Neurogenic TOS. More than 90% of cases are neurogenic.

Venous TOS occurs when the vein is compressed, leading to upper body thrombosis.

It is unclear to this writer which form of TOS impacted Zunino.

Zunino is expected to be ready to resume his baseball activity at the start of spring training.

During attendance at the MLB Scouting Bureau’s Scout School, this old scout learned the value and importance of risk/reward calculations in player transactions.

To this scout, the rewards for signing Zunino far outweigh the risks that his injury permanently hampered Zunino’s offensive or defensive abilities.

If, in fact, Zunino is symptom free, he will provide an offensive upgrade to the Guardians starting lineup.

Zunino is also known as a good defensive catcher. He handles pitchers well, and his defensive mechanics are well above major league average.

One might wonder if Guardians manager Terry Francona, and Tampa Bays manager Kevin Cash have discussed the abilities and surgery regarding Zunino? Francona and Cash are very close friends.

Also during Scout School, instructors shared three major questions for scouts to answer for themselves when evaluating a player, and his potential “fit” for a team. They include:

1- Does the player have the skills to play the game?

2- Is the player better than those we have at his position?

3- Can the player play for us?

Question three is critically important. In short, does the player have the attitude, demeanor, desire, knowledge of the game and temperament to fit into the team’s clubhouse without causing undo harm? Not all players have that ability.

For this scout, Mike Zunino is an excellent fit for a Guardians team that has a need for a primary catcher until Bo Naylor’s development is complete.

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Tampa Bay Rays' Mike Zunino, center, is congratulated by teammates in the dugout after hitting a hit

Mike Zunino As The Primary Catcher:

Mike Zunino assumes the primary catching role that was ably handled in 2022 by Austin Hedges.

Hedges, 30, offered the Guardians steady and reliable defensive play behind the plate.

In 2021, Hedges threw out 31% of the runners trying to steal. Last year, his percentage dropped a bit to 22%.

Hedges did not provide much offense for Cleveland. While he had some important and timely hits, he finished the year hitting .163/.241/.248/.489 with seven home runs, and 30 RBIs in 338 plate appearances.

Hedges has signed a free agent contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Luke Maile, 31, was the backup to Hedges last season.

Like Hedges, Maile didn’t offer much offense. He hit .221/.301/.326/.627 with three home runs and 17 RBIs in 206 plate appearances.

Even with low offensive production, Maile did a credible job as part of the Guardians catching combo.

Maile has signed a contract with the Cincinnati Reds.

Both Hedges and Maile were “defense first” catchers. They handled games well, were good shepherds to their pitching staff, and they had good catching mechanics that included good blocking, good pitch framing, and timely, accurate “pop” and throw skills from behind the plate.

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Seattle Mariners' Mike Zunino claps after scoring against the Los Angeles Angels in the second

About Mike Zunino:

Right-handed hitting Mike Zunino is 6-2, 235 pounds, with an ideal frame for a catcher.

Zunino was a 1st round selection of the Seattle Mariners out of the University of Florida in 2012.

Zunino hit .348 in 595 collegiate plate appearances. In two seasons, he hit 38 home runs, and drove in 134 runs.

The Golden Spikes Award is given to the best amateur player in the United States. Zunino won the coveted award in 2012.

As the third overall pick in the draft, Zunino received a $4M signing bonus from the Mariners.

Zunino made his major league debut at the age of 22 in 2013. He played parts of six seasons with Seattle.

On November 6, 2020, the Mariners traded Zunino to the Tampa Bay Rays, where he has played parts for four seasons.

While he is a good defensive catcher, Zunino’s power might be his best overall tool. In fact, in 2021, he hit a career best 31 home runs. He made the American League All Star team that year as well.

Zunino has strong hands and wrists, and has always had a strong and accurate throwing arm. While the entire body is engaged in throws from the catching position, Zunino’s injury last year did not impact his throwing arm.

Zunino has thrown out 28% of runners trying to steal in his 832 games played as a major leaguer.

A tough out, Zunino goes to the plate with a plan. A smart hitter, Zunino makes good, hard contact, and he has the ability to use the entire field.

When evaluating Zunino during the 2012 Arizona Fall League, this scout gave him a Grade of 60 on the 40-80 MLB scouting scale. That translates to a player with more than one above average tool, and the potential to be an occasional All Star.

One comment Zunino made to this writer during that fall season still lingers. He said he felt he should be the starting catcher for the Mariners. That, at the age of 21, and in only his second year as a professional.

In fact, he was right. Zunino made his big league debut the following season.

Since that time in the Fall League, Zunino has not shown an ability to hit for a good batting average, posting a career .200 average in parts of 10 big league seasons covering 2,958 plate appearances. He has, however, hit 145 career home runs, with the potential to bring that powerful bat to Cleveland.

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Cleveland Guardians designated hitter Bo Naylor (44) in the dugout

Conclusions:

New Guardians primary catcher Mike Zunino is a good offensive/defensive catcher, capable of providing a quality starting catcher upgrade.

Zunino will be called upon by the Guardians to mentor prospect catcher Bo Naylor and provide the Guardians with an offensive upgrade.

If Zunino proves to be healthy, the Guardians may have found an outstanding upgrade for their already exciting, and promising lineup.

To this scout, the rewards for the Guardians signing Zunino far outweigh the risks that issues linger from 2022 Thoracic Outlet Syndrome surgery.

While Bo Naylor may be the Guardians catcher of the future, Mike Zunino is capable of providing an excellent bridge until the graduation of Naylor to the big leagues.

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FORBES BUSINESS SPORTS MONEY

Cleveland Guardians Won’t Sneak Up On Anyone In 2023


Jim Ingraham

Contributor

Jan 27, 2023


That the Cleveland Guardians have had a relatively quiet offseason is evidenced by the fact that the biggest news relating to the team recently was the theft of Manager Terry Francona’s scooter from his residence in downtown Cleveland.

Francona uses the scooter to go to and from Progressive Field on game days during the season. It was stolen from his residence last week, but Cleveland Police found the scooter, and returned it to Francona on Wednesday.

With Operation Scooter solved, Francona and Guardians officials can return to their preparations for the start of spring training next month at their complex in Goodyear, Arizona.

A year ago at this time the Guardians were putting the finishing touches on an even quieter offseason that left fans and media scratching their heads, given that the ballclub was coming off a dismal 2021 season, and a record of 80-82. That was Cleveland’s first losing season since 2012.

Francona was hired in 2013, and he’s since become the longest tenured and winningest manager in Cleveland history.

The concern at this time a year ago was that the Guardians had done nothing of consequence to improve their roster, and optimism among the fan base was non-existent.

But then the 2022 season happened, and everything changed.

Predicted by nobody to win their division, the Guardians not only won the AL Central, they won it handily – by 11 games over second-place Chicago. They followed that with an exciting postseason in which they went a combined 4-3 in a wildcard series vs. Tampa Bay and Division Series with the Yankees, coming within one win of reaching the ALCS.

The Guardians did it with the youngest roster in the major leagues, and became the first team in history to win its division or league title with 17 rookies making their major league debuts.

It was probably Francona’s finest hour as a manager, and, indeed, he was voted the American League’s Manager of the Year, the third time in Francona’s 10 years in Cleveland that he has won that award. In addition, Cleveland president of baseball operations Chris Antonetti was voted by his peers as Major League Baseball’s Executive of the Year.

What can the Guardians do for an encore in 2023? Well, they started by doing something they didn’t do a year ago. They added two proven major leaguers to fill two holes in their lineup.

Cleveland signed two free agents, first baseman Josh Bell and catcher Mike Zunino. The 30-year-old Bell, who should add some desperately-needed power to Cleveland’s lineup. Among all major league teams only Detroit hit fewer home runs in 2022 than the 127 hit by Cleveland. To that end, the Guardians signed free agent first baseman Josh Bell to a two-year $33 million contract, with the second year being a player option. They also signed catcher Mike Zunino to a one-year, $6 million deal.

Bell, who had career highs in home runs (37) and RBI (116) for Pittsburgh in 2019, will go into Cleveland’s lineup as the No. 4 hitter, and split first base and designated hitter duties with Josh Naylor.

Zunino will catch the bulk of the games and serve as a mentor to Naylor’s brother Josh, 22, who appears to be the Guardians’ catcher of the future.

Beyond that, Antonetti and company didn’t tinker with the Guardians’ still very-young core, which features plenty of speed and aggressiveness. Cleveland led the majors, by almost 100, in fewest strikeouts and the Guardians were third in the majors in stolen bases.

The ringleader, as usual, was All-Star third baseman Jose Ramirez, who hit .280, with 29 homers, 126 RBI and 20 stolen bases. All-Star and Gold Glove second baseman Andres Gimenez hit .297 with 17 home runs, and had the highest WAR (7.4) of all American League players not named Aaron Judge.

Rookie left fielder Steven Kwan hit .298 with 19 stolen bases, was the second hardest hitter in the American League to strike out, and was one of four Guardians who won Gold Gloves, the others being Gimenez, center fielder Myles Straw, and pitcher Shane Bieber, a former Cy Young Award winner who finished seventh in the voting on that award in 2022.

Positionally, the Guardians are not only set at every spot, they have plus hitters and excellent defenders at most of them.

As a group they are young, aggressive, talented, hungry to improve on the surprising success they had last season, and they have a future Hall of Fame manager sitting in their dugout.

So unlike the quiet offseason of last year, the Guardians, trying to build on their surprising and impressive 2022 season, have made a couple key additions to their roster this offseason, in hopes of going even deeper into this year’s postseason.

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Cleveland Guardians' 2023 Official Regular Season Schedule

FanNation

By Jack Vita

2/4/23


The Cleveland Guardians are now less than two months away from Opening Day.

The Guardians will open the season on the road in Seattle, playing a four-game series against the Mariners. They will then travel to Oakland for three games with the Athletics.

The Guardians will play their home opener Fri., April 7 against the Seattle Mariners. After three games with the Mariners, the New York Yankees will come to town, before the Guardians go on the road once again, visiting Washington D.C. and Detroit for series with the Nationals and Tigers.

For the first time ever, the Guardians will play a series against each of the other 29 Major League Baseball teams. All 30 teams will play a series against each other, for the first time in baseball history. The hope is that it will generate more fan interest, as star players from the opposite league will appear at the city's home ballpark every other year. Guardians fans will get a chance to see Bryce Harper and the 2022 National League champion Philadelphia Phillies, when the Phillies come to town in mid-July.

The schedule change will also provide help to teams that play in hypercompetitive divisions. It will not aid teams like the Guardians, who might be playing in the American League's weakest division, the American League Central, in 2023.

The Guardians are coming off a 92-win season in which they won the American League Central with the youngest roster in Major League Baseball. It was their first division title since 2018, but their fourth AL Central championship in seven years. The Guardians hope to defend their throne in 2023, and make a push for their first American League Pennant since 2016.

Here's a look at the Guardians' entire schedule for the 2023 season:

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Oscar Gonzalez Projected To Take Major Step Back In Sophomore Season With The Guardians

[ Some bitter news with mostly the sweet ?!?!? ]


BY TOMMY WILD

SPORTS ILLUSTRATED

CLEVELAND GUARDIANS NEWS, ANALYSIS AND MORE

UPDATED FEBRUARY 05, 2023 12:12 PM


FanGraphs projects Cleveland Guardians outfielders Oscar Gonzalez to struggle in the 2023 MLB season. Oscar Gonzalez was the Guardians' playoff hero last season. He hit the walk-off home run in the 15th inning of the ALWC to send Cleveland to the ALDS. Then in that series, Gonzalez hit a base-hit walk-off that gave the Guardians a 2-1 series lead over the New York Yankees at the time.

The video of the rooftop reaction still gives me chills.

Gonzales had a very solid season including showing up when it mattered in October. He slashed .296/.327/.461 with a .788 OPS in his rookie year. These kinds of numbers would be great for any Big Lague player let alone someone in their first season in the Majors.

However, others don't think this production is sustainable. FanGraphs' ZiPS projections have Gonzalez slashing .263/.293/.438/ in 130 games and 560 plate appearances in 2023. If they are correct, that's a troubling sign of how this season could go. But it's quite the drop-off. If Oscar does come out and play this way then he'll look like a completely different player than he was in 2022 which is a little hard to see happening.

The concerns definitely come from Oscar's plate presence. He nearly never walks and is in the 37th percentile in Whiff% and the first percentile in chase rate. So Gonzalez is either getting a base hit or he's getting out, there's no in-between.

Yes, there's no denying that Gonzalez's plate discipline can be questionable at times but when he does get a hold of the ball he crushes it and consistently finds gaps. It does seem like it's a little premature to think that he'll just completely fall off. Players take their strengths and weaknesses and work on those during the offseason. Oscar most likely already knows that these numbers exist and has been working on it over the winter.

Repeating his .788 OPS won't be an easy task, but having it drop off as hard as FanGraphs does seems a little impulsive.

[Oscar's brief stint in the Domnican Republic this winter kinda bears this opinion out - Gonzalez's appearances were not very impresssive - Let's hope FanGraph is full of poop! ]

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Sunday Notes: Carter Hawkins Compares the Cubs and Cleveland

by David Laurila

February 5, 2023


Carter Hawkins knows the Guardians organization well. Prior to becoming the General Manager of the Chicago Cubs in October 2021, the 38-year-old Vanderbilt University alum spent 14 seasons in Cleveland, serving as a scout, Director of Player Development, and Assistant General Manager. With the Guardians’ well-earned reputation of being a progressive organization with an outstanding pitching-development program, I asked Hawkins a question during November’s GM Meetings:

How similar are the two organizations, and in which ways do they differ?

“I would say the best thing in terms of similarities is that there are a lot of team-first people in both places, as opposed to me-first people,” replied Hawkins. “The obvious market-size difference stands out. There are more opportunities in Chicago to utilize resources — you can have a higher risk tolerance — whereas in Cleveland there is the challenge of having to be very process-oriented to make a decision. If you have a lot of resources, you don’t necessarily have that pressure on you. At the same time, there is no reason that you can’t be just as process-oriented in a larger market.”

The disparity in payrolls is notable. Roster Resource projects the Cubs’ 2023 payroll at $184M, and Cleveland’s at just $91M. Last year those numbers were $147M and $69M.

As for the teams’ respective hitting- and pitching-development processes, Hawkins told me that “the frameworks and models are essentially the same.” Developing arms being a Guardians strength and a Cubs weakness, I was especially interested in whether Hawkins’s current club is copying some of what his old employers have been doing so well.

“I would say the Guardians have done a great job of finding guys and then individualizing their performance plans,” the executive told me. “If you look at a guy like Eli Morgan, he’s a significantly different type of pitcher than Triston McKenzie. They had individualized plans, and with the help of a great coaches and a great process, the Guardians are maximizing their potential.”

The Guardians have a reputation of drafting — and otherwise acquiring — pitchers with plus command, then jumpstarting the quality of their raw stuff. The extent to which that’s true — ditto the extent to which the Cubs are looking to follow that model — is something that neither seems particularly anxious to confirm (or deny). Hawkins did allow that it is a sound strategy.

“I think it’s accurate to say that guys who have good feel, and know how to pitch, project to be performers in the major leagues,” he told me.” From there, helping them get better stuff is the lever we’re pulling.”

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Meibrys Viloria's solo home run

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ANALYSIS & EDITORIALS

Guardians spring training battles: Backup catcher

Who will split time with Mike Zunino?


By Quincy Wheeler Feb 6, 2023, 11:00am EST

As spring training finally arrives at our doorsteps, I wanted to take a look at the few spots on the Guardians’ roster where there is a position battle. Why not start with the most exciting position in baseball? Backup catcher!

While you may sense the sarcasm — given that starting Guardians catcher, Mike Zunino, is coming back from thoracic outlet syndrome surgery — backup catcher may actually be more significant than in prior years.

Catchers are prone to injuries due to the physically taxing nature of the position, anyway, so a solid backup is certainly a need on any team with playoff aspirations. If you’re a mediocre 81-81 team like Cleveland in 2008, you should absolutely give your backup catcher appearances to a 36-year-old with an elite mustache named Sal Fasano. If your plan is to keep the Chicago White Sox at bay for another AL Central title, you probably need to upgrade at the plate even if upgrading from Sal’s soup-strainer is nigh impossible.

The Guardians currently have four primary candidates for the backup catcher position. Let’s consider their statistics so we have a sense of who might be the favorite for the spot and what improvements we could watch for in spring training to recognize movement in the backup catcher leaderboard.

Below, you will see pop-time, exchange time, and arm strength. For context, the average pop-time for catchers in MLB is 2.01 seconds, the average exchange time is 0.73 seconds, and the average throwing speed on tosses to second base is 81.8 mph.

Meibrys Viloria, 26, LHH

Notes: Career 50 wRC+ (48/51 vs. LHP/RHP), 33/8.7 K/BB, career -1 DRS and -5.1 FRM but 3 DRS and 1.3 FRM in 2022, 0 rCERA. 0.74 average exchange time. 1.96 average pop time, 83 mph average on throws.

Analysis: Meibrys Viloria is a younger catcher with some interesting defensive tools, especially in the run game where his good exchange time, above-average pop-time, and strong arm should help with teams trying to take an extra base. He took some significant steps forward as a defender in 2022 in 156 innings, so the Guardians may have seen something they can maximize there.

As a left-handed hitter, Viloria seems like a good placeholder for Bo Naylor should the Guardians decide that Bo needs a little more “seasoning” (let the reader understand) in Columbus. However, he has been essentially half of an average major league hitter for his career and there’s not a lot to dream on in the underlying metrics — in all but one season, he’s consistently outperformed his expected weighted on-base averages (xwOBA).

Viloria would also need to be added to the 40-man roster.

Cam Gallagher, 30, RHH

Notes: Career 76 wRC+ (52/86 vs. LHP/RHP), 19.4/7.7 K/BB%, career 11 defensive runs saved and (DRS) 10.1 framing runs above average (FRM) in 1136 innings, 4 catcher earned run average (rCERA). 2.04 average pop-time to second base on throws, 0.73 average exchange time (lowest in 2022 at 0.68), 78.5 mph average on throws.

Analysis: Cam Gallagher had the dubious distinction of being Salvador Perez’s backup catcher since 2018, and was added to the Guardians organization on a minor-league deal in January.

The draw to Gallagher is obvious — he has been a good defensive catcher for his career and you can rely on him to handle your pitching staff well and prevent balls in the dirt from reaching the screen. However, his pop-time isn’t great and his arm isn’t particularly strong, so I do wonder how well he will handle the run game, particularly with the new pickoff rules and larger bases.

Gallagher is also not a particularly good hitter, though his career 86 wRC+ against RHP actually makes him a decent pairing for Mike Zunino, offensively, since Zunino hits lefties much better than he does right-handed pitching. Choosing Gallagher as the backup would require a roster move, obviously.

I think Gallagher is a depth piece who will only make the Guardians roster if Zunino isn’t ready for Opening Day or if he gets injured.

Bo Naylor, 23, LHH

Notes: OPS vs RHP/LHP in the minors in 2022: .896/.797. Steamer: 106 wRC+, 26.4/11.1 K/BB, ZiPS: 85 wRC+, 30.2/10.5 K/BB. 2.01 pop time, 0.78 exchange, 82.6 average mph on throws.

Analysis: When the Guardians did not find a way to land Sean Murphy in a trade, it became clear that they believe in the long-term value of Bo Naylor as a major-league player. It makes sense because his numbers in the minors make him seem like a reasonable bet to be a 15-homer/15-steal player, which is pretty darn rare for a catcher.

Naylor’s minor league season in 2022 as a 22-year-old was tremendous and his rosy projections reflect that reality. In an ideal world, he would be a partner to split time with Mike Zunino for the majority of the 2023 season. However, Chris Antonetti and Mike Chernoff both mentioned to the media this offseason how half a season of Triple-A isn’t much for a young catcher like Naylor.

Charitably, I would certainly remind everyone that catcher development is complicated so none of us fans and amateur analysts can say for sure that Bo is ready for the majors on Opening Day. Cynically, I can’t help but wonder if keeping him in the minors until a Super 2 deadline passes will be a motivating factor to leave him in Columbus for a bit.

I think Naylor and Zunino will each be catching three games a week for the Guardians by June, but we will likely see one of these other three options for the first two to three months of the season.

Bryan Lavastida, 24, RHH

Notes: OPS vs. LHP in the minors in 2021 and 2022: .954 and .747. Steamer: 87 wRC+, 22.4/7.9 K/BB%, ZiPS: 79 wRC+, 24/7.4 K/BB%. 1.97 pop time, 0.68 exchange time, 78.1 average mph on throws.

Analysis: Bryan Lavastida was the major-league backup for the Guardians while Luke Maile recovered from an injury to begin the 2022 season, so it certainly could happen again, especially as he is already on the 40-man roster.

Lavastida had a difficult year plagued by injuries for the Guardians, but it’s important to remember how young of a player he still is. I was especially interested to see some solid pop and exchange times for him in his limited opportunities with Cleveland.

Also, as Cleveland continues to look to improve against left-handed pitching, Lavastida seems capable of offering a solid effort there, making sure they don’t lose much when Zunino isn’t available to face a lefty. However, I do wonder if the team will feel his 2022 start with the major league team may have harmed his development and so will want to avoid the same path in 2023.

Bottom line

Unless Viloria shows something special to the team during spring training, I suspect that Bryan Lavastida will start as the backup catcher to Zunino until Bo Naylor comes up. However, I wouldn’t be surprised if an old hand like Gallagher gets that first look instead, or if Viloria does as a left-handed stand-in for Bo (these two would, as mentioned above, require a difficult move to get them on the 40-man, however).

I’ll be looking forward to seeing how Lavastida, Naylor, and Viloria hit major-league quality pitching in spring training and may even get the stop-watch out to clock some of their attempts to control the run game.

No matter the spring training results, however, I believe the Guardians should absolutely prioritize winning as many games as possible this season by getting Bo Naylor on the major league team as soon as possible without hurting his development

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller