Is the Cleveland Guardians’ sizzling start sustainable?
CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 08: Cleveland Guardians left fielder Steven Kwan (38), Cleveland Guardians center fielder Will Brennan (17), Cleveland Guardians first baseman Kyle Manzardo (9) and Cleveland Guardians right fielder Estevan Florial (90) celebrate following the Major League Baseball game between the Detroit Tigers and Cleveland Guardians on May 8, 2024, at Progressive Field in Cleveland, OH. (Photo by Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
By Zack Meisel and Jason Lloyd
5h ago
For a month, the leather chair at Cleveland Guardians pitcher Shane Bieber’s corner locker at Progressive Field has sat empty, aside from when Austin Hedges seeks a quiet spot for a FaceTime call. José Ramírez, uncharacteristically, can’t resist pitches outside the strike zone. Production out of center field, right field, shortstop and catcher has been lacking, and now Steven Kwan, long the American League hits leader, is sidelined for a month. The team is so desperate for starting pitching that one of its top depth options is a soon-to-be-stretched-out Wes Parsons.
And yet, in the face of the adversity and individual underperformance, the Guardians entered their four-game series in Chicago on Thursday night at 24-13.
The question, then, Jason: Is this sustainable?
Jason: You’re trying to get me killed.
I’ll feel a lot better about this team going forward when Gavin Williams is back on the mound and presumably looking like Gavin Williams. I’m far more concerned about the rotation moving forward than Tyler Freeman’s OPS. I can’t remember the last time I was this concerned about a Guardians pitching staff.
Most of it is out of their control with all of the injuries, but a big reason they chose to hang on to Bieber was because they didn’t want to trade him in December, only to turn around in July and have to find another Bieber/front-of-the-rotation type of arm during the deadline’s price-gouging season. They might be right back in that position anyway.
Triston McKenzie has been a tremendous surprise his last couple of turns. I was concerned about him needing elbow surgery, but his fastball velocity is ticking up, his command seems improved and his slow curve is his best pitch. His health still makes him a major question mark, however, at least right now.
Tanner Bibee has gone through some of the common second-year struggles early, but I still have faith in him.
Zack: Bibee, after his most recent outing: “I think it’s mostly me shooting myself in the foot.”
Jason: I’m not sure you can feel good about Williams until you see him on the mound. I thought he would’ve been back three weeks ago. Those are three terrific, talented young pitchers. But then what?
Stephen Vogt has done an incredible job of piecing lineups together, and the bullpen has been terrific. But I worry about the starters holding it together. September is a long time from now.
Zack: Yeah, let’s start with the rotation, a group anchored by staff ace … uh, Ben Lively? This, to me and, I presume, anyone with eyeballs and a functioning Bally Sports stream, is the greatest threat to the Guardians’ bid to contend. We can examine the lineup momentarily, but for this team to survive the summer, it needs a healthy Williams, a capable McKenzie and a sophomore slump-sidestepping Bibee and Logan Allen.
As things stand, how many Guardians starters do you feel confident will offer you six innings each time out?
Jason: Right now? Maybe 1 1/2. Which is higher than the confidence I have in the Bally Sports stream functioning properly.
Zack: It’s not just the loss of Bieber or the absence of Williams; injuries to Daniel Espino and Joey Cantillo really hurt, too. Allen and Carlos Carrasco and everyone else have such a long leash because the only real depth waiting in Triple-A Columbus is Xzavion Curry. This clearly seems like an area for the club to target this summer, but find me a contender that won’t be sniffing around for starting pitching. It’ll be expensive.
Jason: Jesús Luzardo, who is in the early stages of a rehab assignment, would look pretty great in a Guardians jersey, and the Miami Marlins are quite obviously in sell mode. But they’ll be wise to drag this out to the deadline. Trading for him now to beat the market would be exorbitant, just like it will be in July after demand really builds. Who’s to say they’ll deal him this summer anyway?
Zack: Hey, they did trade for a Marlins starting pitcher, though I don’t believe [checks notes] Darren McCaughan is who you had in mind.
Jason: And who are the Guardians going to deal? Most of their war chest of top prospects from a couple of years ago seem to have lost value. Espino certainly has. Is Brayan Rocchio or Gabriel Arias enough to headline a return on a top pitcher? Probably not. What would George Valera fetch? Are you willing to part with Kyle Manzardo or Chase DeLauter for a top pitcher?
Zack: Well, I think this lineup is going to need Manzardo. Imagine a world in which they could dangle the No. 1 overall pick for a haul. (Kidding aside, Charlie Condon or Travis Bazzana will look great in this lineup next summer.)
The issue is, they still need a bunch of answers on offense, too. Rocchio, Arias, Freeman, Will Brennan and Estevan Florial haven’t exactly solved the club’s shortstop and outfield riddles.
José Ramírez is among Guardians hitters not performing at expected levels. (David Richard / USA Today)
Jason: Here are some OPS numbers for the season entering Thursday night: Steven Kwan .903 (yay!), Josh Naylor .900 (pow!) and José Ramírez .718 (meh). Now put on a hard hat and duck: Will Brennan .697, Estevan Florial .669, Andrés Giménez .668, Brayan Rocchio .620, Tyler Freeman .618, Gabriel Arias .609, Bo Naylor .558, Ramon Laureano .530.
Zack: And yet, the Guardians rank eighth in the sport in runs per game. Maybe it doesn’t have to make sense. This team confounds me.
I don’t think it’s a coincidence that they have a huge lead on the rest of the league in platoon advantage. They’re trying to win on the margins as much as they can. They’ve hit .293/.382/.460 with runners in scoring position, an OPS in those situations that rates 26 percent better than league average. With two outs and runners in scoring position, they rate 40 percent better than league average.
“We’re down and it’s just like, ‘Yeah, we’re probably going to win tonight,’” David Fry said. “No matter what the score is.”
Those stats will eventually come back to Earth. But Ramírez should eventually return to Mars or whatever otherworldly dimension he represents when he does things on the field few others can. Manzardo should fix one of the leaks in the bottom half of the order. I remain bullish on Bo Naylor’s bat, at least from a power and patience standpoint. Brennan’s metrics are encouraging. And, hey, this offense ranks exactly league average in home runs, an Olympic-sized leap for them. This lineup is far from perfect, but also not the team’s primary concern.
Jason: So what happens when they come back to Earth? Then what? I’ll ask you what you asked me: Is this sustainable?
The defense is elite. The bullpen has been outstanding but feels in danger of being overworked. The starters are a concern. The lineup is what it is. I can’t exactly call it a strength. I rattled off all of those OPS figures, some of which are fairly scary, and yet I want to see more. I really like Freeman in center. I’ve always preferred Arias to Rocchio at short but concede Rocchio is growing on me slightly.
I guess what I’m saying is I’d love to finally see Valera in right field in Cleveland in a few weeks if he can finally stay healthy.
Zack: I could see that being directly tied to Florial.
Jason: Do we know for certain Brennan isn’t a starting major-league outfielder? I feel confident in saying his best role is fourth outfielder, but I’m not all the way there yet. I’m stuck somewhere between “these guys haven’t proven yet they’re The Ones” and “no one has been bad enough to cast aside and move on.” The Guardians somehow have four quarters that add up to $2.50.
Zack: The wild part of this is that while they entered the White Sox series on pace for 105 wins — that just seems absurd, given everything we’ve laid out here — they’re also a member of a shockingly competitive division. I’m so proud of the AL Central. We all spent the winter teasing the teams in this supposedly sorry division, but now there are four teams with an eye on first place, and not just because someone has to win it.
So, I think the main takeaway here is that this sizzling start could force the front office to act aggressively in upgrading the roster, something the organization hasn’t done since much of this roster was in high school. This isn’t like last summer, when the Guardians sat near the top of the division but never resembled a team that had plans to catch fire. It’s a lot better to be asking whether something’s sustainable than asking whether something can be jump-started. If the key characters return to their levels — Ramírez, Williams, Kwan, Giménez — then an addition or two in a couple of months might answer our prompt for us with a resounding yes.
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