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Re: Articles

Posted: Wed May 05, 2021 9:36 am
by civ ollilavad
How about Chang? He has no track record and a terrible start. If we want a RH at 1st base I don't think it's him. Better option would probably be Naylor at 1st vs lefty and a RH bat in RF for Naylor [Luplow, Ramirez]. For the rest of the utility IF job they already have Rosario.

Re: Articles

Posted: Wed May 05, 2021 2:02 pm
by seagull

Re: Articles

Posted: Wed May 05, 2021 4:16 pm
by civ ollilavad
Let's get a little more than one game in AAA for Miller first. And then decide if it's Chang or Bauers he replaces. I'd probably hang on to Bauers despite my general uninterest in him until:

a. Bradley performs well enough in Columbus for a promotion
and/or
b. Bauers disappears into another slump

Re: Articles

Posted: Wed May 05, 2021 9:15 pm
by TFIR
civ - we've all seen flashes of Chang especially this past spring training. Had to give him a shot.

Re: Articles

Posted: Thu May 06, 2021 3:07 pm
by TFIR
What can’t José Ramírez do? 7 signs that 2021 might be his best season yet


By Zack Meisel 4h ago 23
Josh Naylor has been studying José Ramírez.

He watches how Ramírez approaches his duels with each pitcher. He monitors his batting practice sessions. He examines how Ramírez sits at the end of the bench and analyzes the pitcher and how Ramírez cycles through his old at-bats to identify something that can help him the next time he steps into the batter’s box.

Ramírez has been the heartbeat of manager Terry Francona’s lineup for years. He’s the catalyst who ignites late-inning rallies, the power source who supplies timely home runs and the helmet-less energizer who dashes around the bases, putting pressure on the opposition. There’s no better position player for Naylor, or anyone, to admire.

And Ramírez might be planting the seeds for his best season yet.

He has more walks and more extra-base hits than strikeouts
Walks: 15
Extra-base hits: 14
Strikeouts: 13

Twenty-four players have registered 14 or more extra-base hits this season. None of them have fewer strikeouts than Ramírez. Michael Brantley has the second-fewest, with 14. The average among the 24 players is 25 strikeouts.

Among players with at least seven extra-base hits this season, Ramírez is the only one with more extra-base hits than strikeouts.

Six of his nine home runs have either tied the score or put the Indians ahead
And to make it even more impressive: Seven of his nine home runs have come in the sixth inning or later. So when Ramírez supplies power, he’s doing so at the most pivotal moments of the game.

In situations Baseball-Reference deems “late and close,” Ramírez is 6-for-13 with four home runs, good for a 1.947 OPS. In situations Baseball-Reference considers “high leverage,” he’s 10-for-20 with four home runs, good for a 1.672 OPS.

There’s a reason, when asked which of his teammates’ skills he wishes he could duplicate, Naylor replied: Ramírez’s “clutchness.”

“The only difference is the level of concentration,” Ramírez said Wednesday, after he belted a tying solo shot in the eighth inning against the Royals. “At the end of a game, that’s an at-bat you want to be in to win the game and do all you can to win that game.”

His strikeout rate ranks in the 97th percentile in the league
Here are the strikeout rates of the players with eight or more home runs this season:

10.6 percent
12.8 percent
18.5 percent
19.3 percent
21.4 percent
23.1 percent
23.6 percent
23.7 percent
24.2 percent
24.6 percent
25.7 percent
26.6 percent
31.3 percent
36.9 percent

Ramírez (10.6 percent) strikes out less than a third as often as Javier Báez (36.9 percent). Even Mike Trout is responsible for the 26.6 percent rate. It’s really difficult to keep Ramírez’s hits in the ballpark, but it’s even more challenging to send Ramírez back to his dugout without him putting a ball in play.

Why is Ramírez so difficult to strike out? Well, he doesn’t chase pitches out of the zone; his chase rate is 22.3 percent. The league average is 28.4 percent. When he does offer at a pitch out of the zone, he makes contact 75.4 percent of the time. The league average is 58.8 percent.

When he swings, he rarely misses, and he has elite strike zone awareness.

League average whiff rate: 24.4 percent
Ramírez’s whiff rate: 14.8 percent

Pitchers know Ramírez prefers to prey on fastballs, but they still have to throw him fastballs in the strike zone because he won’t indulge them when they try to tempt him with a breaking ball out of the zone.

He is on pace for 50 home runs
Only Albert Belle (1995) and Jim Thome (2002) have reached that number in franchise history. Ramírez’s career high is 39, set in 2018. He was on pace for about 46 last season, had teams played a full, 162-game schedule.

Ramírez always hit for average in the minors but never for power. He totaled 13 homers in 1,539 plate appearances, or one homer every 118 trips to the plate. Since the start of the 2017 season, he has hit one homer every 19 trips to the plate.

His metrics suggest he’s been incredibly unlucky this season
Yes, the guy with the .279/.374/.596 slash line, who has created runs at a rate 66 percent better than league average, has actually been dogged by poor fortune at the plate.

Ramírez’s BABIP (batting average on balls in play) is .238, the lowest mark, by far, of his career. The league average is .284.

There’s a more telling portrait to paint, though. His expected batting average and expected slugging percentage — determined via the quality of his contact — are far superior to his marks in those categories in any other year of his career.

2016
.287
.412
2017
.299
.483
2018
.256
.460
2019
.266
.459
2020
.263
.505
2021
.332
.639
If he keeps that up, he’ll stack up extra-base hits at an even greater rate.

Some of his bad luck is probably related to how often he pulls the ball (54.8 percent, the highest mark of his career and well above the league average of 36.6 percent). Teams regularly shift an extra infielder into the grass in short right field to convert well-struck, would-be singles to right into groundouts.

Ramírez’s pull rate isn’t a bad thing; when he fixated on beating the shift a few years ago, he fell into the worst funk of his career. It just means he’ll have to live with some of the frustrations that defensive shifts can present.

Since 2016, he has been the fourth-best baserunner in the league
Only Billy Hamilton, Mookie Betts and Trea Turner rank ahead of Ramírez in FanGraphs’s all-encompassing baserunning metric.

This season, Ramírez has swiped four bases and ranks in the 80th percentile in sprint speed.

His slash line with runners on base this season is .349/.423/.698
Ramírez’s OPS+ with runners on base is twice the league average. There’s no one else the Indians would want standing in the batter’s box under any circumstance, but especially when they have runners aboard.

“He’s a pillar,” Aaron Civale said. “You can count on that guy to go out there every day and give it his all. And usually his all is a lot.”

(Photo: Nuccio DiNuzzo / Getty Images)

Re: Articles

Posted: Fri May 07, 2021 2:04 pm
by TFIR
Just completed Q and A with Zack Meisel. Takes a bit of following to see who says what.



Zack Meisel discusses the Cleveland Indians’ 2021 season





David B.
2h ago
Andres Gimenez is hitting .172 / .222 / .324 (with abysmal K- and BB-rates) and getting benched against LHP. He has never played a game in AAA. What are the chances that the Indians 1) option him to AAA, and 2) can do so without the suspicion of service time manipulation? Approx. 2 weeks in the minors would get the organization an extra year of team control. But I imagine there has to be some hesitancy given the implications.

4
Aaron M.
1h ago
I’m not against this. He really hasn’t been good in the field either

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@David B. I think it's hard to gripe about service time manipulation if a guy is running a .550 OPS. It probably makes sense to do at some point if he continues this. I don't love that he's platooning anyway. He's 22. Either let him play or, if you're not satisfied with what you're getting, give someone else a chance.

4
Eli L.
1h ago
How bad does the team have to be playing for Jose to be shopped at the deadline? What is Tito's contract situation, he has to be close to done.

Aaron M.
1h ago
After 5 wins in a row and youre asking about that? Smh cmon man. It’s not gonna happen even if they are losing ground by July

3
Eli L.
1h ago
Fair enough, I guess I'm just bracing for the worst


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Eli L. They aren't moving Jose. Tito's contract runs through 2022, unless something has changed.

2
Brett N.
2h ago
Do you think the team potentially believes in Owen Miller defensively enough to bring him up soon to replace Gimenez at SS?

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Brett N. He's played there in spring training and at the alternate site, so I don't see why not, especially since he doesn't have to be the long-term solution there since they have so many other options in the pipeline

4
Chris S.
2h ago
What are the odds the tribe takes a chance on pujols considering the Chang/Bauers 1B platoon has been really poor so far this season.

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
Couldn't Bobby Bradley (or Josh Naylor at 1B and someone else in RF) offer you what a 41-year-old Pujols could?

4
John R.
2h ago
What's the scoop with the media being around the team in person both now and later in the year? Assuming it's still zoom interviews, not travelling right now, but is there any word on if/when that's going to change?

2

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@John R. We're in a weird state of purgatory at the moment. Every team is handling things differently. Some have started to allow or have considered allowing reporters or vaccinated reporters to talk, from a distance, to players during batting practice. The BBWAA is obviously pushing for as much (safe) access as possible. I'd imagine teams with higher percentages of vaccinated players will be more accommodating, but we're still in wait-and-see mode.

2
James S.
1h ago
I’m finding myself more worried about the back end of our rotation than our offense now...is the weak central division pitching biasing my opinion, or is there something to this offense not being as bad as many thought heading into the season?

2
Aaron M.
1h ago
Agree James


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@James S. Without examining the numbers, it seems like they've had a lot of timely hits lately. That can help mask some overall hitting woes. They've had just better fortune of late, too. Naylor and Hernandez, in particular, have been rewarded more. They have some pieces. Hernandez, Ramirez, Reyes, Rosario, Naylor - that's a fine starting point. It's the rest of the lineup that they really need to figure out.

1
Bill Z.
1h ago
Any updated on the lease extension?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Bill Z. They're still negotiating. More to come.

1
Bill Z.
1h ago
Really hope they get it done. Im tired of the moving jokes.

1

Zack Meisel
56m ago
@Bill Z. It's unhealthy for the franchise/fanbase relationship, which is bad enough as it is.

1
Niko S.
1h ago
What is keeping the Indians from moving Naylor to 1B, dispatching Bauers and Chang, and bringing up 2 of Mercado/Johnson/Bradley to rotate in the OF (and 1B with regards to Bradley) with Luplow/Rosario/Rosario/Ramirez. Field play would probably improve and production at the plate couldn’t possibly be any worse without Bauers or Chang in the lineup

1
Josh K.
1h ago


1

Zack Meisel
58m ago
@Niko S. Has to happen eventually, right? I think everyone's seen enough of the first base experiment.

1
Brian A.
1h ago
Are the bats actually starting to awaken from their slumber is is this a fluke. If this team can consistently score runs they could surprise everyone and actually be a playoff contender. I know it’s early but this stretch has shown they have potential. Would be nice to see the window stay open with the changing of core players and avoid a couple down years. I expected .500 baseball this year and two weeks ago I would have still said that.

I’ve also been out of the loop a bit the last week so I apologize if this has been answered. Has Tito released a plan for the fifth starter or is it going to be bullpen days.

2

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Brian A. Teams get hot and cold. That's baseball. They're never as good as it appears when things are going great. They're never as bad as it appears when they appear to be at rock bottom. Guys like Cesar Hernandez and Josh Naylor had too much talent (and bad luck) to slump forever. This won't be a top-5 offense by any means, but as guys get on track and they make the necessary substitutions, they'll emerge from the very bottom.

Hentges is the fifth guy for now. He just may have an opener lead the way for him.

Jacob M.
1h ago
Are the Indians close to the 85% vaccination rate?

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Jacob M. Yeah, they think they're going to get there soon. I know certain people got different shots, so not sure exactly when the post-shot period ends.

1
Steve P.
1h ago
Any chance the Dolan’s change their mind on the team name?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Steve P. No

2
Steve P.
1h ago
Why was Oliver Perez cut?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Steve P. He's nearing 40, they didn't really trust him in high-leverage spots, preferred to go w/ younger options and needed flexibility with guys who could be sent to the minors

1
William F.
1h ago
I think the new 3 batter rule really hurt his usage as well.

1
Zachary A.
1h ago
Meisel, what are the chances they send down Gimenez/Rosario and bring up Owen Miller end of May? Assuming one or both continue to have issues at the plate.


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Zachary A. Gimenez would go long before Rosario. It's possible.

2
David B.
1h ago
What's your impression of Owen Miller? Publicly available scouting reports project an above average hit tool, and it seems like he was hitting everything this spring. Is he a sneaky-good pickup from the Padres, and a 2021 contributor?

2

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@David B. Yeah, I've probably hyped him up too much lately, but his skill set is exactly what this team needs. He makes a ton of contact, has been scorching hot since March. Not sure where he eventually winds up defensively, but that's a secondary concern.

Kevin S.
1h ago
Have you covered an Indians team that has had as much of a shuffling lineup so far as this one? I don't mean that necessarily as a criticism, as there are a number of intriguing players getting opportunities now. But, it's certainly quite the contrast from say 2018 when the lineup was virtually the same every night.


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Kevin S. No, they've always had a platoon or two and have cycled through outfielders, but not to this degree where you have rotations at first base, shortstop and multiple outfield spots. It's dizzying.

2
Bill L.
1h ago
Impressive start by H. Ramirez this week. Seems like he was an afterthought pick up. Is he a complete surprise? Is it too soon to expect him to slot in as the regular CF for now?

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Bill L. He was hitting in the middle of the Marlins' order a year ago, so there's *something* there. Aggressive hitter, good speed. Not sure if he's a regular, but he can at least hold down the fort for a little bit. No reason not to give him an opportunity and see what you have.

1

Zack Meisel
54m ago
Thanks for the questions, everyone. Enjoy the Ohio Cup this weekend.

A ton of great stuff coming your way over the next couple months. Have been working on a bunch of bigger projects lately, and they're finally coming to fruition. Stay tuned.

2
Baric N.
1h ago
besides Logan Allen (rough start yesterday) which Columbus Clippers starting pitchers should i buy a ticket to see?

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Baric N. Eli Morgan, Scott Moss and Jean Carlos Mejía are next in the pipeline. None of them will flash overpowering stuff, but they've all had a lot of minor-league success. Morgan has an elite changeup. Mejía hasn't allowed a home run since the '70s. Moss's minor-league numbers are really impressive.

1
Mike T.
1h ago
Do you think the Indians will still be the Indians in 2022? I understand there is a lot of red tape, but they really can’t afford to push the name change into 2023, right?

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Mike T. I really have no idea. I'd just be purely guessing. The fact that Dolan felt compelled to say it could linger into 2022 makes me think it will.

1
Anna H.
1h ago
The Indians always make a crucial trade or two around the deadline. I’m thinking specifically of trades that acquired Puig, Donaldson, Franmil and even Naylor last year. What position do you think the Indians trade for, and do you have any guesses of players you think could be coming to Cleveland? I know it’s early but we can always speculate.

2

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Anna H. Hoo boy. It's too early to say. There's sooo much parity in the standings right now, so I have no idea who will be buying and selling come mid-July. But, as things stand now, they could use a starting pitcher and and outfielder or two, a first baseman.

Kevin S.
1h ago
@Zack Meisel A Jesus Aguilar reunion would make plenty of sense if the Marlins are sellers at the deadline.

Anna H.
1h ago
Follow up question. Would trading for a guy like Gary Sanchez (only owed 6 mil this year and will be a FA next year) to add run support in the 7-9 hole be something the Indians consider? I know they value defense at that position over offense, but I think a steady mix of Sanchez and Perez would be awesome


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Anna H. I actually wondered if they might target him this past winter. If he could play first base, he'd make a ton of sense.

Sidney C.
1h ago
I have a question regarding the logistics of waiver claims. So Team A DFAs a guy. Does the league then send an email to the president of each team, going from worst to best record, each hour stating it’s their turn to act? Or is it like a draft board and the player randomly pops up when it’s that teams time? If so, how much time do they have?

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Sidney C. Good question. I don't have all of the answers on this, but as I understand it, every team has a window to submit a claim on the player. Then once the time period ends, the team with the worst record is awarded the claim. There's some software the league uses where teams can monitor all transactions.

1
John R.
1h ago
@Zack Meisel Sounds like the mysterious "transfer portal" in the NCAA

David C.
1h ago
Any chance this team takes on additional payroll with a midseason acquisition if they are in contention?

2

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@David C. I think so. It helps that you're only paying two months of a rental's salary.

Nick K.
1h ago
Are there any plans for Quantrill to be stretched out as a starter or is Hentges the go to for the 5th spot?

2

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Nick K. It's hard to stretch a guy out at the major-league level when he's in the bullpen and is needed to cover innings when Hentges/McKenzie can't go deep into games. So, it's Hentges for now because he's stretched out more.

Steven F.
2h ago
What is the percentage you think that the Dolans are lining up to sell the team?

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Steven F. Hard to put a percentage on something like that, but I don't think it's imminent by any means

Nickoli M.
1h ago
Is there any update on Berto’s injury?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Nickoli M. He visited with a hand specialist yesterday afternoon to determine what's next. We'll learn the results of that meeting here shortly.

1
Matthew S.
1h ago
Do you think the way Bieber, Plesac, and Civale handled the shutdown last year (if I remember, they were doing sim starts at local parks and such) gives them a competitive advantage this year? Was reading about how injuries are up, and I feel like those 3 are better stretched out than most others, which could be huge over the course of the season. Or was that pretty standard across MLB?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Matthew S. They certainly weren't the only ones, but to have an entire staff prepare that diligently made a huge difference. Some teams limited their starters to 2-3 innings early in the season last year. CLE's guys were throwing 90+ pitches. So it did allow them to prepare for a full season this year with a bit less hesitation, whereas a lot of teams are nervous about how this might all shake out come Aug/Sept.

1
James S.
1h ago
The name change, stadium lease ending shortly, no long-term contracts on the books. If I were a betting man I'd say it looks like the Dolans are getting ready to sell the team. Has there been any rumors of this that you've heard?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@James S. Nah. See above for more.

1
John R.
1h ago
What would it take for Owen Miller to be brought up/who would get moved around/sent down?

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@John R. Tough to say because he can play 2B, SS and 3B (he also worked at 1B a bit in the spring, but I'm not sure they're comfortable with that at the moment).

Brant A.
1h ago
@Zack Meisel How much history did Chang have playing the position?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Brant A. Very little, but Miller is only playing 2B/SS/3B at AAA. Chang played first throughout the spring.

Brian W.
1h ago
Who's more likely to make an impact on this year's club...Miller or Bradley?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Brian W. It's easier to chart a path to the roster for Bradley, so I guess him. But Miller has more upside.

1
Aaron M.
1h ago
Albert Pujols is available. At first I scoffed at the idea of him coming to Cleveland. But it actually makes some sense. Could be a giambi like signing. Not to mention it would be cool to see pujols in an Indians uniform. Part of me wants to see it, and part of me wants to see what Bauers and more so Bobby Bradley can do.... what are your thoughts?

1
You
1h ago
@Aaron M. This is just me but the fact that Pujols does NOT want to be a bench player kills it for the Tribe and most every team if not all.

Aaron M.
1h ago
He’d definitely play a lot if we had him

John R.
1h ago
@Aaron M. Who's ABs would he take though? He's really only a DH/pinch-hitter at this point, so he's taking Reyes' ABs, which is a huge downgrade...

Anna H.
1h ago
Too bad he won’t sit the pine and help our young guys. He would do wonders for Bobby B

Anna H.
1h ago
And give us similar production to Bauers and Chang while hindering their development? Passsss

Aaron M.
1h ago
Lol it’s called the minors man. They could play there.

Aaron M.
1h ago
He can play first John


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Aaron M. His metrics actually aren't terrible. You could probably talk me into him platooning with a lefty at first base (and I didn't think I would admit that). But I'd also rather see (and I think the team would rather see) the younger, in-house options.

John S.
1h ago
Bobby Bradley hasn't been off to a hot start since they moved to the alternate site. Do you expect him to ever get another chance with the Indians before he's traded/DFA'd?

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@John S. I think he will, I'm just not sure how long of a leash they'll give him. I think they feel like they know what they'll get with him, and there are other, more mysterious players they want to see first.

Brent W.
1h ago
Extremely early in the minors but from all accounts, the hitting has been outstanding in the low levels. Have the Indians changed their scouting/development approach? Or is this just a really good group of hitters that could arrive in two three or four years?

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Brent W. I don't think a couple of days will fuel any grand conclusions... but check back early next week for more on this very topic.

William H.
1h ago
Has Harold Ramirez played any 1st base? And what was the organizations impression of Daniel Johnson's latest stretch in the Majors. Obviously he didn't really produce but is there anything else to take away?

Josh K.
1h ago
Give him a legit chance so he doesn't feel like he has to get a hit within his first 8 ab's

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@William H. Harold has only ever played outfield. Johnson was here for two days. It was ugly, but it's probably a bit unfair to have a guy replace someone on the paternity list, and have them play, knowing they have to try to make a good impression in only two days. I wouldn't make too much of it.

Andrew L.
1h ago
Beiber extension coming this off season? What is his price range now?

1
John R.
1h ago
@Andrew L. Jose extension also?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Andrew L. I was surprised it didn't happen this spring. The way both sides talked about it made me wonder how motivated Bieber is to get something done. Either that, or the team just blew a golden opportunity. He'll get expensive the longer they wait (still worth it, given their lack of financial commitments).

Matthew S.
1h ago
What's the injury status on Eddie Rosario?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Matthew S. As of yesterday, he was fine. Sore knee. Day to day.

1
Michael J.
1h ago
The rotation as it stands just isn't sustainable with about 3.5 regular starters (depending on whether we get 2 or 6 IP out of McKenzie any given day). How do you see the rotation eventually filling out?

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Michael J. They don't have a ton of ready options. Eli Morgan and Scott Moss could help in a few weeks, I suppose. Neither guy is expected to be a huge difference-maker. I'm with you, this seems pretty flimsy. I'm not really sure what the long-range solution is. They really need McKenzie or Hentges to develop in a hurry so they only have to worry about one spot.

James S.
1h ago
Given some of the glaring holes in the lineup (and inconsistent starting pitching), the Indians record thus far has to be considered a pleasant surprise. Do you think they can continue to compete for a division title this year? If they are in position come trade deadline, do you think the Dolans give the green light to be buyers?

1

Zack Meisel
1h ago
@James S. I do think the division is wide open. Injuries to Eloy Jimenez and Luis Robert make Chicago pretty vulnerable, and Tony La Russa's learning curve is not going well. The Twins can't get out of their own way. They have major issues. So, yeah, I think all four teams, KC included, will pester each other all summer. And with as many weaknesses as Cleveland's roster seems to have, there's no reason not to plug at least one hole via a trade.

Matthew S.
1h ago
Yu Chang is struggling, but none of their 1B options all the way down to Lake County are right handed (Bradley, Jones, Marabell, Brooks, Palacios, Naranjo). If Chang got hurt or was to be demoted, who would cover lefties at 1B?

Aaron M.
1h ago
I don’t think anyone is too worried about who would potentially replace Chang. The easy answer is whoever it is, can’t be much worse.


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Matthew S. Naylor

1
Adam B.
1h ago
Who is in the Indians outfield a month from now? Do you expect it to stabilize, or is it just going to be a couple fresh faces from the alternate site to get platooned around?


Zack Meisel
57m ago
@Adam B. They have so many underwhelming options that I think it might just be this way for the season unless someone tears the cover off the ball.

Joe B.
1h ago
Any chance we see Nolan Jones at any point during 2021?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Joe B. Yeah, it's certainly possible. Probably not until at least midsummer, though.

Doug K.
1h ago
Is Sandlin really as good as he's looked so far?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Doug K. The stuff is, and always has been, legit. That arm angle and that slider, good luck. And he's throwing 93-94 and everything moves. Nice piece to add to Wittgren/Shaw/Karinchak/Clase.

William F.
1h ago
McKenzie finally had a good start and will probably continue to be the #4 starter. Any ideas on who the long-term 5th starter will be ??


Zack Meisel
59m ago
@William F. It's fluid. Hentges for now. If he falters, could be Morgan or Moss or Mejia or even Quantrill, though that'd be tricky.

Adam B.
1h ago
If the Indians are buyers at the deadline, what are the types of players they look for? One of the many middle infielders available to shore up SS or 2B if Hernandez doesn't come around? Or will we actually be buying starting pitching for once, if Plesac continues to struggle?

Aaron M.
1h ago
Hernandez is fine bruh


Zack Meisel
59m ago
@Adam B. Hernandez should be fine, and I'm not sure they'd replace a rental with a rental, especially since they have a billion middle infielders they could turn to. Outfielders, maybe starting pitching, maybe a first baseman.

Aaron M.
1h ago
Young team. A vet would be cool. Get Pujols.


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Aaron M. Great idea. The more hitting coaches, the better.

Aaron M.
1h ago
Sigh... fiiiinnnneeeeeeee

Michael M.
1h ago
What offensive upgrades can the Indians expect to make? Please tell me they’ll be willing to...


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Michael M. internally or externally? they have needs in the OF, 1B, maybe SS...

James S.
1h ago
Do the Indians approach Jose about an extension this offseason? If so, what does a realistic contract look for him? Or do you think the team has resigned itself to having to trade him in two years?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@James S. There should be talks. Both sides would entertain a long-term agreement. I really have no idea what the terms would be. He's a bit of a unicorn, and I'm not sure if he'll want to overcompensate for the bargain extension he signed years ago.

Josh K.
1h ago
Any chance Jose moves to SS for this year so Nolan Jones can play 3rd?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
I don't think so. José's having a tough enough time at 3B at the moment. His SS days are over.

Billy R.
1h ago
Do you think the lack of long term contracts indicates a wish for the owners to sell the club? Large reductions in wage bills and contracts often precede a for sale sign


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Billy R. I think it's more representative of a young team and a risk-averse owner. Their ideal situation would be to land a minority owner in the next couple years.

Thomas G.
1h ago
What’s your sense from the org on Amed Rosario sticking long term? Do they see him as an everyday player?


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Thomas G. I think that's still up in the air. One day, he seems like a really impactful guy. The next, he looks totally overmatched.

Josh K.
1h ago
I feel like since you wrote about Jake Bauers running out of time, he's been a bit less terrible. When do you think he's finally DFA'd?

John R.
1h ago
@Josh K. Follow-up - do BB and Chang scuffling right now change the equation? Have to think Naylor to 1st then a shuffle would be the next option at this point...


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@Josh K. Who knows at this point. Chang seems like the worse half of that platoon at the moment, not that Bauers deserves a medal for that. To have the worst 1B production in the league, by a mile, when both guys have the platoon advantage every time they bat... is pretty embarrassing.

John R.
1h ago
Any story on why the Indians decided to use an opener with Hentges' first start, was it just his pitch limit or trying to protect him from the top of the order?

Aaron M.
1h ago
Bc why not. That’s why


Zack Meisel
1h ago
@John R. Both. They knew he'd be limited to 55-75 pitches, so they didn't want the top of the order to chew up the majority of those pitches.

Re: Articles

Posted: Fri May 07, 2021 2:13 pm
by civ ollilavad
dumbest ideas on there are to sign Pujols. Owen Miller is a fine hitter, not a shortstop. Gabriel Arias is the next SS in line. Don't get excited about Mercedes or Bradley unless or until they hit in AAA. In their first 3 games they are a combined 1-23. Throw in Zimmer they're 2-33.

Re: Articles

Posted: Sun May 09, 2021 9:43 pm
by seagull

Re: Articles

Posted: Mon May 10, 2021 8:53 am
by TFIR
Our own Tito, that's who.

Silly article but they got that one right - although really I would take 5 of those and say it could be any of them for #1.

Tito definitely one of them.

Re: Articles

Posted: Thu May 13, 2021 11:25 am
by civ ollilavad
May 12: Indians 2, Cubs 1 (10 innings) -- Under the radar
So much of the focus on the Indians' dominant bullpen has surrounded Emmanuel Clase, James Karinchak and Bryan Shaw -- and rightfully so -- but the relief corps has found tremendous success in getting top-notch innings from all eight guys in the 'pen, including Cal Quantrill. Although he missed the cut to join Cleveland's rotation at the beginning of the year, he's done his part out of the bullpen and extended his scoreless innings streak to nine in the series finale against the Cubs. It marks the second-longest such streak of his career, as his longest was 11 2/3 innings with the Padres.

Re: Articles

Posted: Fri May 14, 2021 4:13 pm
by civ ollilavad
Power Rankings from BAseball America:

1. Chicago White Sox
22-13
Notes:

For all the concerns about manager Tony La Russa’s missteps, the injuries to OFs Eloy Jimenez and Luis Robert and slow starts from 1B Jose Abreu, RHP Lucas Giolito and C Yasmani Grandal, the White Sox own the majors’ best record and best run differential at +66. Give credit to unlikely heroes DH Yermin Mercedes and LHP Carlos Rodon, who show no signs of slowing down from their hot starts. Mercedes is on a six-game hitting streak and leads the White Sox in hits (42), batting average (.382), on-base percentage (.424) and slugging percentage (.591). Rodon looks like a Cy Young candidate with a 5-0, 0.58 record in five starts, including his no-hitter, and has raised the ceiling of an already excellent White Sox rotation. With Rodon leading the way, the White Sox have the lowest ERA (3.20) in the American League (CT).

10. Cleveland Indians
21-14
Notes:

It’s rare for a reigning Cy Young winner to fly under the radar, but that’s what’s happening with RHP Shane Bieber. While RHP Gerrit Cole, RHP Jacob deGrom and RHP Corbin Burnes have received most of the attention on the mound this year, Bieber quietly leads the majors in both innings pitched (55) and strikeouts (85) while pitching to a 2.95 ERA. Bieber has pitched at least six innings in every start he’s made this year, something neither Cole, deGrom nor Burnes can claim. (KG)

21
Last: 7
royals-900x635.jpg
Kansas City Royals
16-20
Notes:

The Royals were one of baseball’s feel-good stories of April, winning 16 of their first 25 games. But nothing feels good right now in Kansas City. The Royals are in freefall, having lost 11 games in a row while the White Sox and Indians heat up. Two of their boppers, Hunter Dozier (50 OPS+) and Jorge Soler (78 OPS+) are struggling mightily, and not even the resurgence of 32-year-old LHP Danny Duffy can single-handedly carry a Royals rotation that has taken some lumps in May. The good news? While the Royals certainly intended to field a competitive team this year—and have time to reverse course—they still have a gaggle of intriguing arms in the minors to keep fans excited. (MC)

25
Last: 24
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Minnesota Twins
12-23
Notes:

The Twins were hurt by the loss of OF Byron Buxton to a hip strain and have suffered from a lack of offensive production aside from Buxton, 3B Josh Donaldson or DH Nelson Cruz, but the real problem is the pitching staff. The Twins have a 5.85 ERA in May in 11 games, including eight losses, and the back of the rotation is looking awfully thin. The bullpen has been even worse. RHP Alex Colome blew three saves in five opportunities and was removed from the closer role, while LHP Caleb Thielbar and RHP Tyler Duffey have posted ERAs above 5.20 after being reliable options in 2020. (CT)

30
Last: 22
tigers-900x635.jpg
Detroit Tigers
13-24
Notes:

Detroit’s lineup has struggled mightily outside of 3B Jeimer Candelario (.284/.356/.396), but even more discouraging is how the Tigers’ young pitchers have performed. LHP Tarik Skubal has lost all five of his decisions and is having trouble throwing strikes (5.3 BB/9). Meanwhile, RHP Matt Manning has allowed six home runs in 11 innings at Triple-A Toledo. The lone bright spot among the pitchers has been 2018 No. 1 overall pick Casey Mize, who has delivered three straight quality starts. (CT) [even though they just swept the ice cold Royals]

Re: Articles

Posted: Sat May 15, 2021 2:52 pm
by TFIR
Forty years after Len Barker’s perfect game, Indians still searching for next no-hitter despite many close calls


By Zack Meisel May 14, 2021 26
During MLB’s shutdown last spring, Duane Kuiper needed a baseball fix. He searched for a game to watch on YouTube, and stumbled across a familiar video.

Kuiper replayed Len Barker’s perfect game, recorded on May 15, 1981, on a chilly, damp night at Municipal Stadium in front of 7,290 (though, as the old tale goes, about 729,000 claim to have been in attendance on that Friday night).

Kuiper marveled at Barker’s mastery of the Blue Jays, the righty’s curveball keeping Toronto’s left-handed hitters off-balance. Kuiper listened to the increasing buzz of the crowd as the outs piled up. He watched Rick Manning haul in the history-making catch in center field, and then outrace everybody to the mound to swarm the man of the hour.

“I watched the whole thing,” Kuiper said. “I even watched the 0-for-3 I took with two strikeouts.”

Barker’s perfect game, the 10th in major-league history at the time (there are 23 now), is the most recent no-hitter in Indians history. The franchise that has claimed five of the past 14 American League Cy Young Awards also carries the burden of the league’s longest no-hitter drought. The team with the renowned starting pitching factory somehow hasn’t tossed a no-hitter in 40 years.

And two nights before the 40th anniversary of Barker’s legendary feat, Zach Plesac nearly flipped the script.

Plesac’s dance with history
Plesac forgot to pack his road cleats for the Indians’ West Coast swing through Seattle and Anaheim. Brandon Biller, the club’s assistant clubhouse manager, texted the right-hander Thursday morning to tell him he was heading to Dick’s Sporting Goods to grab him a pair. Plesac typically wears size 13 1/2, gray, high-top Adidas cleats on the road. The store had only black, low-top options. Biller picked up a size 13 and a 14. They stretched out the 13s. And with two more unblemished innings, those cleats might have ended up in a display case in Cooperstown.

Plesac commanded all four of his pitches, tossing 94 mph fastballs precisely where he wanted them, and mixing in plenty of sliders and changeups and even a handful of his new, spiked curveballs that he picked up from Shane Bieber.

“I felt like it was happening,” Plesac said. “I definitely felt it in the air.”

Plesac, as has become a recent trend, induced plenty of harmless groundballs on the infield. He breezed through seven innings in only 70 pitches. But J.P. Crawford led off the eighth with a liner over the head of shortstop Amed Rosario, and Cleveland’s no-hitter spell lived to see another day.

“I wish I could give (Rosario) just one inch of my height for that,” Plesac said. “No, I mean, shoot, he made it a close play. He was playing in the right spot. The dude just made a good swing.”

Cleveland’s close calls

Carlos Carrasco gets a surprise shower after coming oh so close to pitching a no-hitter in 2015. (Mark LoMoglio / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
The Indians were no-hit twice in the span of 23 days this season – with Plesac, ironically, on the losing end in both instances – and they must survive the next five months to avoid earning the dubious distinction of being the first team ever to be no-hit three times in one season. Yet, despite employing Bartolo Colon and CC Sabathia and Cliff Lee and Corey Kluber and Carlos Carrasco and Trevor Bauer and Mike Clevinger and Bieber in recent years, Cleveland’s no-hitter hex will turn 40 years old on Saturday.

The Padres owned the longest drought before Joe Musgrove silenced the Rangers in April. Cleveland’s spell has reached 14,610 days and 6,259 games.

No one has come closer than Carrasco, who stood one strike away from glory before Joey Butler lined an 0-2 offering just out of the reach of a leaping Jason Kipnis for a two-out single in the bottom of the ninth at Tropicana Field on July 1, 2015. Carrasco applauded the effort of his second baseman, who later apologized for not being taller.

That entire series, Cleveland’s starting pitchers flirted with history. Cody Anderson carried a perfect game into the seventh inning in the opener until Grady Sizemore socked a one-out home run. The next night, Danny Salazar cruised through the first five innings without permitting a base runner.

Carrasco retired the first 19 hitters he faced. Then he walked Butler, who was erased on an ensuing double play. In the ninth inning, he issued a walk and plunked a batter, but recorded a groundout and a strikeout before Butler — who became his teammate that winter — delivered a soul-stinging single. Two months later, Carrasco carried a no-hitter into the seventh in Kansas City. He settled for a one-hit shutout with 15 strikeouts.

The 2015 season was a year of near-misses for Cleveland’s pitching staff. In the final game of the club’s season-opening series in Houston, Bauer spearheaded a no-hit bid. He registered six hitless innings — he did walk five — and Kyle Crockett and Scott Atchison followed with spotless frames. Jed Lowrie, however, belted a one-out homer to left-center off Nick Hagadone in the ninth. Cleveland’s hurlers totaled 16 strikeouts.

Four years later, Bauer authored a similar, early-April performance, as he departed after seven innings, having tallied six walks and eight strikeouts. Jon Edwards and Brad Hand pieced together a harmless eighth, despite a couple of walks and a hit-by-pitch. Hand, though, surrendered three hits in the ninth, as Toronto avoided what would have been a rather messy no-hitter.

On May 13, 2015, Kluber tied Bob Feller’s franchise record with 18 strikeouts (in only eight innings) against the Cardinals. Jhonny Peralta spoiled his no-hit bid with a two-out single in the seventh.

Some other, older near-misses
• On Sept. 18, 2000, at Yankee Stadium, Luis Polonia delivered a one-out single in the eighth, forcing Colon to settle for a one-hit shutout, with one walk and 13 strikeouts.

• On Aug. 8, 1992, during an All-Star season, Charles Nagy allowed a one-out single to Glenn Davis in the seventh. Davis was erased on an ensuing double play, and Nagy ended up with a one-hit shutout.

• On May 4, 1989, a Thursday afternoon against the Royals at Municipal Stadium, John Farrell exited after allowing his first hit, a ninth-inning single.

• On Sept. 2, 1987, Tom Candiotti worked around seven walks and two errors at Tiger Stadium — he allowed two runs (one earned) — and finally served up his first hit with two outs in the eighth inning.

• On Aug. 3, 1987, Candiotti gave up a leadoff single to New York’s Mike Easler in the eighth inning and wound up with a one-hit shutout.

The drought list
May 1981: Cleveland Indians (Len Barker)
April 1987: Milwaukee Brewers (Juan Nieves)
September 1990: Toronto Blue Jays (Dave Stieb, at Municipal Stadium)
August 1991: Kansas City Royals (Bret Saberhagen)
April 1994: Atlanta Braves (Kent Mercker)
July 1994: Texas Rangers (Kenny Rogers)

• Justin Verlander has thrown both the Tigers’ and the Astros’ most recent no-hitters.
• Musgrove’s feat was the first in Padres history.
• The Phillies once went 8,944 games without a no-hitter — May 1906 to June 1964 — the longest spell in league history.

Barker’s memorable night

Teammates swarm Len Barker after his perfect game on May 15, 1981. (Mark Duncan / Associated Press)
Kuiper often signaled to Mike Hargrove if Cleveland’s pitcher was about to throw a breaking ball to a left-hander so Hargrove could hug the first-base line. On some occasions, including the night of the perfect game, Hargrove focused so intently on Barker’s every pitch that Kuiper couldn’t get his attention to supply the heads-up.

“As those games go on, your concentration level gets so high that you can’t hear anything, you don’t notice anything,” Kuiper said. “Everything is dead air.”

Barker, who declined to interview for this story, was in a zone, too. He never reached a three-ball count against a batter. He didn’t record a strikeout until the fourth inning, but at that point, he started leaning on his curveball, and his strikeout total ballooned.

“Those usually start to sink in after about the fourth or fifth inning, when you realize that nobody’s reached (base),” Kuiper said. “And then the crowd starts to let you know if you don’t know. And then things get weird where you stay away from the pitcher and he sits alone in the dugout.”

Kuiper contributed a pair of critical defensive efforts at second base. He made a backhanded snag of a Rick Bosetti one-hopper to start the sixth. The speedy Alfredo Griffin led off the seventh with a grounder toward the hole on the right side of the infield. Kuiper shifted to his left, with his cap falling off as he stretched to corral the baseball, and made a running, off-balance throw from the outfield grass to retire Griffin. Kuiper had knee surgery the previous summer, and felt he still wasn’t as agile as he had hoped, but he found it easier to move to his left.

“When you’re involved in a perfect game, none of that stuff was routine,” Kuiper said. “You don’t want them to be hit too softly because the longer they take to get to you, the more you start thinking about, ‘Am I going to boot this?’”

Down to their final out in the ninth, the Blue Jays summoned Ernie Whitt — who was batting .188 with a .454 OPS — to pinch hit for Buck Martinez.

“I never like guys who are hitting under .200 in that situation,” Kuiper said, “because you almost figure that guy’s due.”

Whitt sent a fly ball to shallow center field. Manning raced in, made the catch, raised his arms, then dashed toward the mound, where players, media members, camera operators and fans circled the man dubbed Large Lenny.

“I still remember the two cops — one had (Len’s) one arm, the other had his other arm,” Kuiper said. “They were escorting him off the field. They were burly guys you just didn’t want to mess with and they protected Lenny all the way into the dugout.”

Barker’s masterpiece moved the Indians to 16-8, as they sat in first place, unfamiliar territory for a team that hadn’t sniffed the postseason since 1954.

“There was a buzz all around the city,” Kuiper said. “It was a big deal when Lenny did this for a team that nobody thought was going anywhere. We weren’t getting a lot of publicity. For at least a week, it put us on the map. It made everybody feel pretty doggone good.”

The Year of the No-Hitter
Four pitchers have already tossed no-hitters this season, and that doesn’t include Madison Bumgarner’s seven-inning “notable achievement.” The Indians and Mariners have been on the wrong side of three of those. Hitting is down across the league; the average slash line is .234/.311/.390. Pitchers are on the prowl.

“I think if it would have been on (Barker’s anniversary), I probably would have gotten more lucky,” Plesac said. “But no, it was insane. The eighth inning was a lot different than the seventh, that was for sure. You could feel the energy, just six more outs.”

Those in Cleveland’s clubhouse, especially the hitters, seem confident that the drought is in danger. A few hours before first pitch on Thursday, shortstop Andrés Giménez guessed Bieber would record a no-hitter at some point. And then Plesac nearly did.

“It can be any of those guys,” Franmil Reyes said. “They’re doing a tremendous job. I’m really, really thankful that I’m not hitting against these guys.”

Re: Articles

Posted: Sat May 15, 2021 3:28 pm
by seagull
No hitters are nice if you're delivering one.

Sucks to be on the receiving end.

Re: Articles

Posted: Sat May 15, 2021 6:49 pm
by TFIR
There is a lot of luck involved and this just reinforces that.

I'll take our pitching just the way it is.

Re: Articles

Posted: Tue May 18, 2021 8:47 am
by TFIR
The many pressing questions surrounding the Indians through a quarter of the season
Image
By Zack Meisel May 17, 2021 33
Bryan Shaw rescued the Indians on Thursday as they nearly turned a no-hitter into a no-way-did-they-just-blow-that-game bout of humiliation. Cleveland stood at 21-14, one game behind the White Sox for baseball’s best record.

The question, at that juncture: Is this sustainable?

The answer, spelled out over three ensuing days of sleepwalking in Seattle: probably not, unless there are some individual improvements and/or roster changes.

That leaves us with many pressing questions about this team as it inches toward the quarter pole of the regular season, the point at which many evaluators agree to abandon the “small sample size” excuse and assess their rosters.

How is this team 21-17?
Name one player who has exceeded expectations thus far.

Shaw. No doubt. The early minutes of his Cleveland sequel have impressed more than his first tenure.

James Karinchak. Sure. Though, Karinchak pitching like he’s from planet Cerberus and was dispatched on a mission to Earth to ravage the souls of major-league hitters isn’t totally out of character.

José Ramírez. Eh. He owns a .925 OPS and is an extra-base-hit machine, but that’s not overly surprising.

René Rivera. He has three hits in 10 at-bats. Yeah, we’re reaching.

There just isn’t anyone whose outstanding performance seems wholly unsustainable. And that makes it difficult to comprehend how this team has a winning record in the first place. The individual parts — plenty of players are falling short of expectations — don’t add up to a team that’s on pace to win 90 games.

So, will the individual parts improve (or be replaced by more capable players) or will this thing come crashing down like a house of cards?

Who are the reinforcements?
Someone asked president of baseball operations Chris Antonetti on Sunday morning if Owen Miller was OK.

“I’m like, ‘I think so. Why, what happened?’” Antonetti said. “They said, ‘He only got two hits last night.’”

Miller went 1-for-4 on Sunday, which sent his batting average tumbling to .477. The slacker is 21-for-44 in 11 games for Triple-A Columbus. And whenever the front office opts to summon a position player from the minors, he seems like a safe bet to debut.

Miller, who ranked second on the team in hits during spring training, has played all four infield spots in Columbus. He told the Indians his best positions are second and third base, so they have worked him at shortstop and first base to increase his versatility, and it just so happens the latter two spots are where there could be immediate major-league opportunities.

How long is this first-base experiment going to last?
The most obvious move would be to replace Yu Chang with Miller. Chang has logged a grand total of one plate appearance in the past 10 days. It’s a waste of a roster spot at the moment, especially considering Chang’s .137/.185/.176 slash line. Even if the club still believes in his big-league ability, it isn’t going to see evidence of that by playing him sparingly and at first base.

Jake Bauers’ slash line sits at .191/.276/.279. Compared with Chang, he’s hitting like Eddie Murray. Compared with about anybody else, he’s hitting like Eddie Murphy.

Bauers and Chang have had the platoon advantage in 108 of 131 plate appearances, but in those 108 trips to the batter’s box, they have combined for a .155/.241/.227 slash line.

Cleveland’s first basemen own a 32 wRC+ (100 is league-average run creation). That would be the worst output for a team’s first basemen — ever. The 1920 Philadelphia Athletics, thanks to a rough year from Ivy Griffin, produced a 43 wRC+ at the position.

Bauers’ metrics are a bit more promising than Chang’s, but the team can’t survive this level of ineptitude at that position. There are a handful of ways to shake things up, since first base is Josh Naylor’s natural position. Miller, Bobby Bradley or Daniel Johnson could all factor into the equation. Nolan Jones has played some first base as well, but he’s sporting a .344 OPS with 20 strikeouts in 36 at-bats at Triple A.


Who’s going to help this guy? (Jennifer Buchanan / USA Today)
Can Ramírez carry the lineup all season?
The array of crimsons and garnets and scarlets on his Baseball Savant page suggest Ramírez has been one of the league’s top hitters this season. And while his .925 OPS and 11 home runs illustrate as much, his metrics — 96th percentile in expected batting average, 97th percentile in expected slugging percentage, 94th percentile in strikeout rate — indicate he’s capable of much more.

He needs help, though. Manager Terry Francona relocated Eddie Rosario to the No. 2 spot in the lineup Sunday to help Rosario see better pitches to hit. Instead, Rosario dropped down a sacrifice bunt in the seventh inning, which led to an intentional walk to Ramírez, which preceded Franmil Reyes’ inning-ending double play. The club’s most daunting threat to erase a one-run deficit, neutralized by a sacrifice bunt by its prized free-agent signing who was shifted to a higher spot in the batting order to spur his turnaround at the plate. Yikes.

“It’s a (left-handed pitcher), he’s struggling. He’s trying to do something to help us win,” Francona said. “I do appreciate the thought. I know it’s coming from a good place. We just don’t want to take José’s bat away.”

Ramírez, Reyes and Jordan Luplow are the Indians’ only regulars with an OPS+ better than league average. Those three and Naylor are the only regulars with an OPS+ better than 20 percent below league average.

The two veterans signed in the offseason to add some lineup stability have yet to produce at the plate.

Eddie Rosario: .206/.266/.328 slash line
Cesar Hernandez: .218/.303/.340 slash line

The two catchers — and, yes, defense comes first at that position — have yet to produce at the plate.

Roberto Pérez: .131/.274/.295 slash line before he underwent finger surgery (He did say the injury affected him at the plate.)
Austin Hedges: .137/.185/.176 slash line

The two newcomers acquired for Francisco Lindor have yet to produce at the plate.

Amed Rosario: .211/.271/.330 slash line
Andrés Giménez: .179/.226/.308 slash line

Giménez had a few days off this week so he could work with hitting coaches Ty Van Burkleo and Victor Rodriguez on eliminating the leg kick in his swing.

“He tends to get a little over-rotated with it,” Van Burkleo said. “So he’s going to go back to what he was doing before he put in the leg kick and just eliminate some of the movement, try to get more connected with the lower half with a little more of a compact swing, just synchronizing the swing a little bit better, and I think eliminating the leg kick will help him.”

How is the team balancing its youth with its bid for contention?
It’s important to remember Giménez, for instance, is only 22 and skipped Triple A en route to the majors last year.

Triston McKenzie is only 23 and hadn’t pitched competitively for two years before he broke into the big leagues last summer. The team’s youth and inexperience will produce some significant ebbs and flows, as we’ve already witnessed.

McKenzie has completed five innings in only two of his six starts. He has issued 25 walks in 28 innings, tripling his walk rate from the first six years of his career.

“I feel like I’m not necessarily doing my job, or I’m kind of doing a disservice to my teammates,” McKenzie said Saturday. “I feel like I’m showing flashes of putting together good starts and then I’m letting them down and walking guys and putting myself in bad positions.”

McKenzie’s metrics are unsightly: When hitters make contact against him, they’re destroying the baseball. He ranks near the bottom of the league in opponent exit velocity, hard-hit rate and, obviously, walk rate. However, he ranks in the 90th percentile in whiff rate. His curveball and slider, in particular, have prompted a ton of fruitless swings.

“I don’t think in Triston’s case that it’s a confidence issue,” pitching coach Carl Willis said, “but again, willingness to attack the zone, particularly when you’re behind in the count. His curveball is obviously a major-league-caliber curveball. His fastball, he can work top of the zone well, and working on getting the ball down and away, which he’s improving. I just think it’s really staying in attack mode and challenging guys and not being fearful of contact. And I’m not saying he is, but it’s tough if (he’s being) careful.”

Shane Bieber, Zach Plesac and Aaron Civale have formed a steady trio atop the rotation. McKenzie and Sam Hentges are learning on the fly at the major-league level. Hentges had a rough 2019 season at Double-A Akron and spent last summer at the Indians’ alternate site. Now, he’s facing big-league hitters every five days.

“There’s no better place to develop than here,” Willis said. “At the same time, there’s no more difficult place to develop than here. I think their mental toughness is huge. But more importantly, and these guys are tremendous, their willingness to learn, their willingness to hear constructive criticism and direction is really, really enlightening. It’s fun to work with these kids and see them figure out things.”

Can the pitching staff keep bailing out the lackluster offense?
The Indians boast the league’s best bullpen ERA at 2.70. Shaw, Karinchak and Emmanuel Clase — who has had command issues of late — have combined for a 1.07 ERA and 68 strikeouts in 50 1/3 innings.

The rotation, the bedrock of the team for years, ranks 13th in the league with a 4.09 ERA. That’s the Indians’ highest rotation ERA since 2012, when they lost 94 games in manager Manny Acta’s final season at the helm. That team’s rotation — Justin Masterson, Ubaldo Jiménez, Zach McAllister, Derek Lowe and either Josh Tomlin or Jeanmar Gómez, with cameos from a beardless, anonymous rookie named Corey Kluber, David Huff and the artist formerly known as Fausto Carmona — generated a 5.25 ERA. This is not that.

Bieber hasn’t been as sharp his past few outings, and though he owns the two highest pitch counts of any starter this season (121 and 119), he insists that’s not an issue. Bieber, Willis and Francona did, however, discuss his workload on Saturday. Bieber has recently struggled to command his slider, and he couldn’t work on it as much as he would’ve liked during his bullpen session a couple of days before his start Sunday because he’d thrown so many pitches in his previous outing.

“We have to be very mindful of it,” Willis said. “He’s so good that sometimes it’s tough when you feel like the game’s at hand. More times than not, when he’s on the mound, the games are close and you ask any starting pitcher in this league, ‘Hey, you got one more inning?’ Well, nobody says no. And then a lot of times when you want to make a move, they’re a little upset because they enjoy competing. We discussed it with him. We trust him and we trust what he tells us in the dugout. But at the same time, he’s 25 years old, one of the best pitchers in the league. It’s our responsibility to take care of him and ensure that he’s going to have the career — long career, successful career — that he should.”

Plesac’s revival has helped offset some of the rotation’s inconsistencies. He has limited batters to a .131/.202/.212 slash line in his past four starts, with only 13 hits allowed in 29 1/3 innings. He has pitched into the eighth inning in three of those games. Plesac and Willis said a slight adjustment with his lead foot — planting it a bit sooner so his hips don’t swing open — has contributed to his recent surge.

He hasn’t needed to rely on strikeouts, either. His ground-ball rate and the percentage of batted balls that opposing hitters have topped have soared this season. As he pursued the franchise’s first no-hitter in 40 years Thursday night, Plesac totaled only two strikeouts in eight innings.

“He has this gift, and I don’t know that it can be explained,” Willis said. “So many times, hitters are swinging at pitches and they don’t really know what they are. They don’t really know what they’re swinging at. Sometimes his slider may profile almost like a changeup. Other times it’s obviously like a slider. His changeup is phenomenal as we all know. You just see a lot of poor contact with Zach. I feel like his spin direction, his axis, how the seams work — hitters take a lot of swings at pitches that they’re not really sure: Is it a slider? Is it a fastball? Is it a changeup? And you just see that poor contact.”