What I’m hearing about the Guardians: Tanner Bibee, Nolan Jones, Triston McKenzie
Aug 12, 2022; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Cleveland Guardians designated hitter Nolan Jones (33) hits a single against the Toronto Blue Jays in the seventh inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-USA TODAY Sports
By Zack Meisel
March 24, 2025Updated 3:41 pm MST
A batch of thoughts on a slew of recent Cleveland Guardians developments…
The Nolan Jones trade
Let’s rewind 28 months, to when the Guardians dealt Jones to the Colorado Rockies for infield prospect Juan Brito. They coveted Brito, as evidenced by the fact that they had to stick him on their 40-man roster even though he was in A-ball. They were willing to reserve a spot for a player several years away from the majors.
They also felt they had sufficient corner outfield depth to withstand Jones’ departure. Steven Kwan had secured left field, and they had Will Brennan, Oscar Gonzalez, Will Benson and George Valera to vie for right field.
Whoops. Jones enjoyed a ravishing rookie season in 2023, and other than Kwan, the Guardians’ outfield was a mess.
OK, back to the present. The Guardians still like Brito, who will begin the year at Triple A but seems poised to unseat Gabriel Arias at some point this season. Now they have Jones, too.
Front office executives make the rounds at the end of spring training each year, sorting through who will and won’t make each club’s Opening Day roster, trying to find some odd men out who might fit their puzzle. The Rockies, prioritizing other outfielders, made Jones expendable, since he’s out of minor-league options.
The Rockies gauged the Guardians’ interest in trading for him. The Guardians felt Jones offered a higher ceiling than Brennan, who was slated to share right field with Jhonkensy Noel. Prized prospect Chase DeLauter’s struggle to stay healthy added to their motivation. Colorado asked for Freeman, and Cleveland was confident it had enough depth in the middle infield/utility spots. The deal materialized quickly since the Guardians didn’t need to complete as much background work given their history with Jones.
In fact, the Guardians had already informed Brennan he had made the Opening Day roster, a message they had to later rescind. Brennan will begin the year at Triple A.
Freeman’s hit tool is why he was a second-rounder and a top prospect. Perhaps he’ll find plenty of space in the Coors Field outfield to deposit singles and doubles. Regular playing time should help, too. In Cleveland, though, he had a limited ceiling. Even if he would have wrestled away some playing time from Arias, his long-term fit was likely as a utility player, with Brito and top prospect Travis Bazzana on the horizon. Furthermore, he was blocked in center field by Lane Thomas, for at least this season.
So, the Guardians flipped him for a familiar face (and a close friend).
Guardians top prospect rankings, per MLB Pipeline:
2019: 1. Triston McKenzie, 2. Nolan Jones, 3. Tyler Freeman
2020: 1. Nolan Jones, 2. Tyler Freeman, 3. Bo Naylor
2021: 1. Nolan Jones, 2. Triston McKenzie, 3. Tyler Freeman
Jones maintained relationships with a slew of Cleveland coaches, including Grant Fink (Cleveland’s new hitting coach, who worked with Jones in the minors), outfield coach J.T. Maguire, defensive coach Kai Correa and special assistant Tom Wiedenbauer.
What can Jones provide? He’ll strike out at a high clip, but he typically boasts an elite walk rate and has a ton of power. He also can steal bases when healthy, and he has boasted the strongest outfield arm in the league since he became a major leaguer. That’s a tantalizing skill set, which makes this a risk worth taking.
That prolific rookie season wasn’t simply a product of the Colorado altitude, either.
2023 at home: .306/.398/.530 slash line
2023 on road: .288/.380/.554 slash line
(For what it’s worth, he also crushed lefties in 2023, which had been a departure from the norm for him.)
The Guardians do have concerns about whether Jones can stay healthy and rack up 400-450 plate appearances. Back and knee injuries derailed his 2024 season.
“We are going to have to manage his workload appropriately,” general manager Mike Chernoff said.
The Tanner Bibee extension
Bibee had some leverage entering the 2021 draft. Based on intel from scouts, he was ticketed for the fifth or sixth round. He was a college junior at Cal State Fullerton, but with a lost COVID season, he was a 22-year-old who was ready to go pro.
He wasn’t thrilled with his amateur production; he anchored a rotation during a few of the program’s rare seasons without an NCAA Tournament appearance. He said his heater was “flat” and his breaking balls looked too alike.
But as the draft approached, he did hold a bit of power. No team was going to overextend financially to attract him to their organization, so he could split organizations into two buckets: those he would sign with and those he would avoid. The Guardians made the nice list. They were known for converting college starters with so-so stuff into capable big-leaguers.
It was a perfect marriage. Bibee started throwing harder, refined his secondary offerings and, poof, less than two years after the Guardians took him with the 156th pick, he made his debut.
He finished second in the AL Rookie of the Year voting, which earned him a full year of service time and sped up the timeline on extension talks. The two sides chatted last spring, but the Guardians’ offer would guarantee Bibee about half of what he ultimately secured a year later. Bibee was disappointed at the lack of progress in the negotiations, but he gained more leverage with a strong sophomore season in which he evolved into the heart and soul of the rotation.
“Everyone wants to be that guy that the manager looks at and hands the ball to,” Bibee told The Athletic this spring.
Manager Stephen Vogt handed him the ball on short rest against the Yankees in Game 5 of the ALCS, Cleveland’s final game of 2024. He’ll hand him the ball again Thursday for their first game of 2025.
The two camps held off-and-on conversations for several months before settling on the final details. Bibee, league sources told The Athletic, will receive a $2 million signing bonus, plus annual salaries of $3 million in 2025, $4 million in 2026, $7 million in 2027, $10 million in 2028 and $21 million in 2029, plus either a $21 million salary in 2030 or a $1 million buyout.
It’s understandable if your first thought is that the Guardians will trade him before that salary balloons in 2029. Keep in mind, by then, there will be a new collective-bargaining agreement (A salary cap? A salary floor? Revamped revenue sharing/TV deal setups?) and new ownership in power in Cleveland. Who knows what the landscape will be? For many teams, $21 million for a frontline starter is a bargain.
As it stands, Bibee can hit the free-agent market before either his age-31 or age-32 season. If he’s still a durable starter, he can land another lucrative deal.
With any player, especially this early in a career, there are plenty of risks and rewards to weigh. Bibee was set to earn about the league minimum in 2025, in the neighborhood of $760,000. After this season, he would have been eligible for three seasons of arbitration. He’ll likely be worth more to the Guardians in the next few years than the salary he’ll earn, but that’s a result of MLB’s pay structure. It takes a while for young, productive players to get what they deserve.
And for pitchers, the grim reaper is always lurking, scalpel in hand.
Bibee only needs to look a few lockers away for examples. Shane Bieber resisted long-term offers from the Guardians in the past, but in his contract year, he suffered a torn elbow ligament. He signed a short-term deal with Cleveland to rebuild his value before he again tries to cash in on a free-agent deal. Triston McKenzie was in talks with the Guardians on a long-term deal in the spring of 2023 before he suffered a shoulder injury and then an elbow injury. He’s still searching for his 2022 form.
Bibee no longer has to worry about the financial ramifications of suffering an injury. He has $48 million guaranteed — and, in all likelihood, $68 million — just three and a half years after being an unheralded draft pick.
The Triston McKenzie saga
There’s one example the Guardians can (and should) point to as they attempt to resurrect McKenzie’s career through hoping, praying and wishing while flicking pennies into the fountain at the mall.
Carlos Carrasco — who, by the way, at the age of 38, will open the season in the Yankees’ rotation — always had the stuff, but couldn’t put it all together. He debuted in 2009, briefly pitched in the big leagues in 2010, had a pedestrian 2011, missed 2012 following elbow surgery, struggled in 2013 and, after a rough start in 2014, shifted to the bullpen.
The directive was simple: In a relief role, there’s no time to waste. You’re throwing 25 pitches, not 95, so go attack every hitter you encounter.
For three and a half months, it worked. Carrasco returned to the rotation in mid-August and logged a 1.30 ERA in 10 starts to close out the season. He never looked back. He became a consistent workhorse, a Cy Young Award candidate, the Robin to Corey Kluber’s Batman.
Can McKenzie follow that blueprint as he begins the season in a relief role?
He’s healthy, for one. He was healthy last year, too, but he admitted he wondered whether he should have had surgery to repair the tear in his elbow, and he wasn’t pitching with confidence. It didn’t help that in 2023 a handful of doctors offered varying advice when he sought opinions on how to navigate his injury.
That’s all in the past now, though McKenzie still didn’t look sharp this spring. The Guardians are hoping a role change will offer him a boost similar to the one Carrasco received more than a decade ago. His mid-90s fastball velocity this spring was encouraging. The Guardians want him to throw his curveball and slider for strikes so he isn’t as predictable. If he can mix in more secondary pitches for strikes, hitters won’t be able to sit on his fastball and whack it the way they did in 2024.
Hitters vs. McKenzie's pitches in 2024
Fastball
0.303
0.652
10.3%
Curveball
0.176
0.341
37.3%
Slider
0.143
0.143
37.6%
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