Who's in the Tribe Lineup for 2009?

 

Last night, the Cleveland Indians drove a nail into the Minnesota Twins’ coffin with Victor Martinez’ three run home run off of Joe Nathan in the 11th inning, giving the Tribe a come from ahead and then from behind 12-9 win at Progressive Field.  It was the Tribe catcher’s 2nd dinger since his return from the disabled list at the end of August, and reiterated how much the Indians miss a healthy Martinez in the lineup. 

 

Last week, we looked at pitchers who have sewn up a spot on the 2009 roster and today; we will look at the everyday players.  One can safely say that Grady Sizemore will be the starting CF on Opening Day 2009, and that might be the only position that is set in stone.  However, there are several players who will be in the lineup, but no one is sure where they will play.  These players would be Victor Martinez, Jhonny Peralta, Asdrubal Cabrera, Shin-Soo Choo, and if healthy, Travis Hafner.  What position they will play is still up in the air.

 

It is no secret that GM Mark Shapiro would like to get an infielder, focusing on a 2B or 3B.  If the player plays the keystone spot, then Peralta will move to 3B with Cabrera going to SS.  If Shapiro gets a third baseman, then things get murky.  There is no question that Cabrera is the Tribe’s best defensive SS, but there has been no mention of Peralta being moved to 2B.  That is the move I would make.  Peralta may have below average range at SS, but he should be fine at second.  The only question would be making the pivot on the double play, especially with your back to the base runner. 

 

As for the outfield, Sizemore and Choo have two of the spot covered, which leaves a gaping hole in one of the corner spots.  Franklin Gutierrez is intriguing as a fourth outfielder that can hit lefties (.300/.345/.500 over the last three years).  As for Ben Francisco, is it me or the more I see him, the less I think he is a potential starter in the future?  That means this team needs an everyday corner outfielder.  That guy could be Matt LaPorta midway through the season, but there is no way he will break camp with the big club.  And I think everyone would agree that David Dellucci is not an option either.

 

I will reiterate my position on Kelly Shoppach, who has had a marvelous second half.  He is the most tradable commodity the team has, and I would bet against him having this type of season in ’09.  It is time to maximize his value.  Victor Martinez is a solid catcher, but the team needs to get a solid backup for next year. 

 

Ryan Garko has suffered through a terrible 2008 season, but based on his track record, I would try to keep him on the roster, although I would look for a player to challenge him for the job.  And simply put, the biggest key for the Tribe offensively is to get Hafner back to the type of player he was from 2004-06.  In fact, even a decrease in production to 25 HR, 100 RBI’s would be acceptable. 

 

That leaves the ballclub with a hole in the outfield, either 2B or 3B, and perhaps 1B, which is almost half of the lineup.  My candidate to fill the hole at the hot corner is Adrian Beltre of the Mariners, who is on the last year of his contract, and Seattle is looking to dump payroll.  Away from Safeco Field, Beltre is a .273/.320/.479 hitter the last three years.  What’s even better is he is not a windmill at the plate, striking out about 100 times per year in over 500 at bats.  He’s also a good defender. 

 

In the outfield, I would be persuaded to get a stopgap guy knowing LaPorta is on the horizon.  However, I don’t want a guy like Pat Burrell who fans 150 times per year.  If you could get a younger guy who can play everyday, remember that LaPorta’s natural position is 1B.  Again, I would be looking for a “professional” hitter who hits around .290 with 20 HR per year power.  Shoppach could be the bait to get that type of player.

 

Here are the players I don’t think will be in the organization when camp opens in Arizona in February:  Andy Marte, Josh Barfield, Francisco, and David Dellucci.  Garko could be added to that group if he is needed as a throw-in in a bigger deal.  Jamey Carroll would be welcomed back as a utility man because he plays solid defense, and does the fundamental things at the plate.

 

MW

 

Literally, Time Costs Browns

 
For the past several years, Time Warner sportstalk host Les Levine has offered his skills as a time manager to the Cleveland Browns.  Hopefully today, GM Phil Savage will place a call to Levine and give him the gig. because a contributing factor to last nights’ 10-6 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers was the horrible use of the clock by the coaching staff.  This problem, and the Browns habit of picking up stupid penalties have the squad sitting at 0-2 as they head to the road for two straight contests.
 
The handling of the clock at the end of the first half was abysmal to be kind.  After completing a pass to set up a third down and 1 at the Pittsburgh 12 yard line, the Browns should have used their last timeout of the half.  At that point, Derek Anderson should have gone to the end zone with a pass, and even if it failed the Browns would have been staring at a 29 yard field goal to cut the halftime deficit to 7-3.  Instead, Anderson raced the offense to the line of scrimmage and successfully converted a quarterback sneak.  The down side was it left Cleveland just 8 seconds remaining. 
 
Then, DA compounded his error by throwing a short pass (which would have required a run by the intended target into the end zone) which was picked off by Troy Polamalu.  Thus, the Browns, who could have had at least three points with good clock management, scored none.
 
I have no problem with the field goal with three and a half minutes remaining in the game to make the score 10-6, with the proper first half clock management, the score should have been 10-9, but if Crennel had gone for the first down and failed, or the Browns had tied the game at 10, the defense still would have needed the stop the Steelers to have a chance to win the game.  However, clock management was the issue again.
 
Crennel called his first time out with 3:16 remaining, had he saved it, the Steelers would have likely run the clock down to 2:40 before running another play.  Of course, the next play was the 19 yard pass to Heath Miller which advanced the ball to the 50 yard line, a play that took 19 seconds, which would have put the time at around 2:20 remaining.  Willie Parker ran for four yards which would have brought the game to the two minute warning, but the Browns still would have had three timeouts left, and likely would have got the ball back with about 1:30 left instead of :26. 
 
Besides the clock gaffe, how many penalties did the team get for lining up in the neutral zone?  How many passes did Braylon Edwards drop?  I believe it was two, which brings his total to six for the season.  Perhaps he is trying to drop two balls for every gold medal won by his friend, Michael Phelps. 
 
The Browns did stay consistent with the running game, trying to get Jamal Lewis going, but they did get predictable on the fourth quarter drive, running Lewis on first down three times on the scoring drive in the fourth quarter.  Also, I agree with Kellen Winslow in wondering why he wasn’t on the field for the last :26, seeing that he is the team’s best offensive player.
 
On defense, Shaun Rogers was a man once again.  My favorite play was him driving Parker into the ground for a loss in the second quarter.  The team did get three sacks, but they lacked aggressiveness when they had the Steelers pinned back inside the five yard line, rushing just four on a 2nd and 8 from the Pittsburgh 3 yard line which resulted in a 33 yard pass to Hines Ward which changed the field position.
 
The Cleveland Browns now have a must win on the road next week against Baltimore.  They are a better team, but they must eliminate the dumb penalties, dropped passes, and put pressure on a rookie QB in Joe Flacco.  If they lose to the Ravens, who are coming off an unscheduled bye week due to Hurricane Ike, their season is over before it started.  Then, they will have nothing but time to think about how they could have handled the clock better against Pittsburgh.
 
JD

Who Will Pitch for the '09 Tribe?

 

The Cleveland Indians come back home tonight for their last home stand of the season.  It has been a disappointing season to be sure, as the goal now is finishing above the .500 mark instead of going to the World Series.  You can tell the campaign has been a challenge by seeing that Brian Bullington and Scott Lewis will start two of the first five of these games at Progressive Field.  However, please remember the old baseball adage:  Don’t take seriously things that happen in April or September.

 

With that in mind, how many of the players thrust into playing time because of the injuries and trades have played themselves on to the 2009 roster?  Among the pitchers, Anthony Reyes should have a spot in the rotation assuming his elbow problems are minor.  Eric Wedge has said he hopes to get the right-hander a few more starts before the end of the year, which should mean it’s not serious.  Reyes has shown a plus fastball in his starts, and ESPN’s Jayson Stark reported at least one scout is kicking himself for not advising his team to take a chance on Reyes.

 

Zach Jackson looks like he has good stuff, but isn’t polished enough to have assured him a spot in ’09.  He certainly has been able to keep the Indians in games, but he seems to struggle to minimize the damage when he gets into trouble.  He usually allows one big inning per start, which is enough to cost him the game.  Jeremy Sowers has been inconsistent at best.  He has moments where he pitches very well, such as back-to-back games against the Twins where he fired five perfect frames, but when it goes bad, it goes really bad.

 

That would leave as starters Cliff Lee, Fausto Carmona, and Reyes, with the other two spots up for competition.  I would expect Mark Shapiro to sign a veteran starter to stabilize the rotation.  That would leave one spot open with the candidates being the aforementioned Jackson and Sowers, David Huff, and Scott Lewis, who threw himself in the mix with his outing on Wednesday night.

 

In the bullpen, the guaranteed spots would seem to go to Rafael Perez, Rafael Betancourt (based on his track record and his much better second half), Masa Kobayashi, and Jensen Lewis. Neither Juan Rincon nor Brendan Donnelly has shown much since being added to the bullpen in the second half of the season.  That would leave three spots open for next season.

 

One of those spots could go to a closer, but I agree with former GM John Hart, closers fall out of trees.  That is to say, I would not ante up big dollars to sign a closer who has washed out some place else.  Francisco Rodriguez will be too expense, and his mechanics are a mess, meaning a team that signs him will be not getting value in at least two years of a possible five year deal.  That doesn’t sound like the Indians.  Rather, I would go to spring training with Jensen Lewis and rookie Adam Miller vying for the role.  Miller has had arm problems as a starter, but throws in the mid 90s, which would give the Tribe a power closer for the first time since Jose Mesa’s heyday.  Remember, Jonathan Papelbon didn’t have experience as a closer before he started saving games for the Red Sox.  He was a set up man for a half year before taking over the spot in 2006. 

 

At the very least, Miller could start the year in the set up role, and take over the spot later in the season if he is successful.  Of course, as we learned from Steve Karsay and Betancourt, being a good set up man, doesn’t make you a good closer.  However, I am tired of seeing guys who have to be perfect to succeed (see:  Borowski, Joe and Wickman, Bob) in the closer role. 

 

I would also like to see another southpaw in the bullpen, and Rich Rundles could be that guy.  He has a funky, sidearm delivery that could make him effective against left-handed hitters.  That delivery makes him a perfect situational lefty. 

 

Next week, we will look at the everyday players to determine who has a spot on the 2009 Tribe, and who might be on the outside looking in.

 

KM

We Have Some Questions…

 

Every once in a while, there are a variety of things a person needs to get off his/her chest.  This is one of those times.  We have some questions and comments we would like to make to the managers, coaches, and front office personnel of the major sports teams in Cleveland, Ohio.  So, without further adieu, here is what we would like to ask.

 

1).  We aren’t the only people that want to know this, but Romeo Crennel:  What were you thinking when you kicked that field goal against Dallas, trailing 28-7 with ten minutes to go?  You needed three yards for a first down, your defense couldn’t stop a high school team, and you were still down three scores after Phil Dawson made the kick.  It made absolutely no sense.  I’m no fan of Chiefs’ coach Herm Edwards, but he was right when he famously said, “You play to win the game!”  There are no moral victories in the NFL.

 

2).  Eric Wedge:  What is the fascination with hitting Franklin Gutierrez in the #2 spot in the order, or in the leadoff spot if Grady Sizemore is resting?  There is no rule that says the CF must lead off.  The object of the leadoff batter is to get on base.  Gutierrez has an on base percentage of .286, meaning he doesn’t get on base 73% of the time.  Of all the Indians currently on the roster, only Andy Marte has a worse OBP.  Gutierrez shouldn’t hit above the 7th spot in the order when he plays.

 

3).  Rob Chudzinski:  Why throw the ball downfield on third down and four yards to go early in the second half last week?  The defense is struggling and the best thing to do is keep them off the field by playing ball control.  I realize you are an aggressive offensive coordinator, but sometimes you have to keep that in check for the good of the team.  Keeping the defense off the field, especially in last week’s game is the smart thing to do.

 

4).  Indians’ GM Mark Shapiro:  Was it necessary to have Travis Hafner do a rehab assignment in the middle of the Eastern League playoffs?  The roster were expanded, so Pronk could have swung the bat for the Indians instead, or he could have been sent to Mahoning Valley, who were still in their regular season.  It seems cheap to alter the minor league playoffs by sending an established big leaguer to play.  Bowie Manager Brad Komminsk was angry, and I have to say I don’t blame him.

 

5).  Cavs’ Coach Mike Brown:  Will this be the year you finally cut the minutes of LeBron James?  Every year, the coach says he has to keep The King’s playing time down to around 38-40 minutes per night, but it never happens.  The coach has to make a commitment to this from the first regular season game.  Remember coach; you are the one who controls this.  Also, allowing the team to play through some tough stretches will only make the wine and gold better.  The byproduct is a fresher James come playoff time.

 

These are just some things I wonder about, and would love to ask these guys if I could get them in a casual atmosphere.  They may just have reasons that they would rather not discuss in public; at least I hope that is the case.

 

MW

 

Can We Stop Someone, Please!

 

First the good news regarding yesterday’s 28-10 loss by the Cleveland Browns to the Dallas Cowboys.  First, the defeat wasn’t as bad score-wise as last year’s opening day loss to the Steelers.  Second, I doubt the team will trade Derek Anderson this week, as they did last year with Charlie Frye, and third, both the Chargers and Colts lost at home this weekend, so Romeo Crennel can commiserate with Tony Dungy and Norv Turner about their 0-1 records.  That’s it for the good news…

 

The Browns’ defense yesterday was a sieve.  The combination of no pass rush and soft coverage in the secondary equals a big day for any passer, let alone one with the weapons that Tony Romo has.  It is difficult to gauge if the Browns can stop the run, because quite frankly, why would anyone try to run the ball with the inexperienced secondary the team has, and the lack of a pass rush to protect the linebackers, safeties, and cornerbacks. 

 

There is no truth to the rumor that Steelers’ Coach Mike Tomlin is considering using one of his non-active roster spots next week on the punter.  He may not need one if the defensive scheme and performance doesn’t improve.

 

Romeo Crennel has always coached a 3-4 defensive scheme going back to his days with the Giants and Patriots, but you have to wonder if it is the correct lineup for the Browns.  The team’s linebacking corps is weak, with only Kamerion Wimbley an above average player at this point.  Meanwhile, the defensive line has players familiar with the 4-3 set up, such as Shaun Rogers and Corey Williams.  Also, Shaun Smith, Robaire Smith, and Louis Leonard look like they can play.  Having a defensive front of Rogers, Williams, Smith, and Smith might prove to be better than having three linebackers on the field who are below average.

 

Offensively, the Browns looked like a team whose starting quarterback played two quarters in the pre-season games.  The timing between Anderson and his receivers were off, although they did put together a time consuming drive of almost nine minutes to tie the game in the second quarter.  WR Braylon Edwards dropped four passes in the contest, including a long one, which should have been a touchdown.  However, Edwards had a better day than Donte Stallworth, who pulled a leg muscle in warm-ups and missed the game completely.

 

Jamal Lewis played and ran well, although he had some big games when the Cowboys were in full pass defense figuring the Browns would throw.  But, he didn’t re-aggravate his hamstring, so that’s a good thing.  He should be even better for Pittsburgh next week.

 

Another thing that bothers me are the repeated comments from players saying they weren’t ready to play.  This is not the fault of the coaching staff!  I’m sure Crennel and his assistants coach the team to win.  This is strictly a heart issue for the players.  First, they are professional athletes, this is their job!  Secondly, you only play one game a week, how can you not be ready to play.  Baseball players have six games per week and basketball players three to four games in a week, you can understand one of those guys not being ready to go, but not an NFL player. 

 

This team needs to make a quantum leap forward to defeat the Steelers next week.  Last year, the Cleveland Browns made that leap.  If the defense cannot show tremendous improvement, the brown and orange will need to score over 30 points per contest to win a game.

 

JD

A Playoff Season for the Browns?

 

Sunday is the day that football fans on the North Coast have waited for since the beginning of the year.  The Cleveland Browns play their regular season opener at home against the Super Bowl contending Dallas Cowboys.  The campaign is looked upon with great anticipation since the brown and orange had arguably their best season since coming back to the NFL in 1999.  Of course, the zealots that follow the Browns feel last season’s improvement will be followed up with similar results in 2008.  That may not be the case.

 

It is very possible that the Browns could be a better team in 2008, but have a worse record.  The prediction here is 9-7, but that could win the division.  The biggest thing is how this team plays within the AFC North.  If they can win four of the six division games, and one win must be against the Steelers, they will make the playoffs by virtue of winning the division.  Let’s face it; the AFC North is not exactly filled with the Lombardi Packers or the Steelers of the 1970’s.

 

The Bengals are in chaos.  Chad Whateverhisnameis is still promoting himself, and their defense is still suspect.  They also just released their starting running back, offensive tackle, and cornerback from last year to cut payroll.  They still have Carson Palmer and T.J. Houshmanzadeh, so the offense will put up some points, but many experts are predicting Marvin Lewis to lose his job after another losing season in ’08, and I can’t say I disagree with that assessment.

 

The Ravens are in rebuilding mode as well.  They will be starting a rookie quarterback, Joe Flacco, on Sunday.  Granted, it will be difficult for Flacco to perform worse than Kyle Boller has over the past few years, but he will still have growing pains.  That leaves the Steelers and the Browns as the main contenders for the division crown.  Many Browns’ fans are worried about the schedule, but remember that based on last year’s records, Pittsburgh has the league’s toughest slate.  So, both teams have the same problem.

 

The “woe is me” crowd is losing sleep about the difficulty of this year’s schedule, but really so much can happen throughout the season that could make the slate easier.  The NFL is a league of attrition, for the most part; the teams with the best records have the least amount of injuries.  Therefore, a December game that appears to be tough now may not be when it is played due to several key players being on the sidelines.  Of course, that could happen to the Browns too, as witnessed in the pre-season games.

 

The Cleveland Browns are not an elite team as of yet.  They have weaknesses at linebacker and in the defensive secondary.  They haven’t built up the depth that goes with being an upper echelon team in the AFC.  However, they are good enough to win the AFC North.  The Steelers are the same as the Browns, although losing All-Pro guard Alan Faneca leaves them with a weakened offensive line.  Their defense is questionable as well.  If the Browns succeed within the division, they will celebrate a division title and a playoff spot in 2008.

 

JD

The Importance of Lewis

 
In the NFL, there are only sixteen regular season games.  That means that one game is equal to ten major league baseball games in terms of percentage of the schedule.  It also means that every game is important.  For that reason, the Cleveland Browns’ opener against the Dallas Cowboys definitely has significance.  It would be great for the brown and orange to start 1-0.  However, that game pales in importance to the one on week two of the schedule when the Steelers visit the lakefront.

 

In order to win the division and not rely on complicated tie breakers to make the playoffs, the Browns need to win divisional games, particularly against Pittsburgh, to whom they have lost nine straight games, several of them in excruciating fashion.  The opportunity to beat the Steelers is obviously much greater at home.  Therefore, it is more crucial to win in week two against the black and gold, than it is to defeat Dallas in the opener.

 

With that in mind, if there is any doubt on the health of running back Jamal Lewis, an error should be made on the error of caution, and he should skip the opener on Sunday.  A hamstring injury is one that can linger, and if holding Lewis out of this week’s game will increase the strength of the muscle from 75% to 95%, then so be it.  Because in many ways, Lewis is the most important person on the offensive unit.  The Cleveland Browns simply cannot be without him for a six-week period and still expect to make the playoffs.

 

Sure, the offensive line was the key to last year’s 10-6 season, particularly tackle Joe Thomas and guard Eric Steinbach handling the left side.  However, let me remind you that Lewis’ back ups are Jason Wright and Jerome Harrison, meaning the team is in a heap of trouble if the 1000-yard back misses the bulk of the season.  Without the threat of Lewis and the running game, it is more difficult for coordinator Rob Chudzinski and QB Derek Anderson to throw the ball downfield effectively.  It is much tougher to play quarterback in the NFL when you are constantly in 2nd and 10 and 3rd and 8 situations.

 

Therefore, the safe play is to have Jamal Lewis sit out against Dallas if he is anything less than 90%.  One only has to go back to the city’s baseball team to see the impact of a bum hamstring.  Would the Indians’ season be different if Victor Martinez had gone on the disabled list after opening day?  Maybe not, but if the muscle was healthy, Martinez could have shown some power early in the year, instead of going without a homer until last night.  He played in four games with a good leg before getting that first dinger.

 

This is not to say it doesn’t matter if the Browns lose on Sunday afternoon.  It would be great to defeat a Super Bowl contender, and open the season with a 1-0 record.  It is saying that it is more important to have a healthy Jamal Lewis for a division game.  The AFC North should come down to the Browns and Steelers.  The Bengals are starting a rebuilding process, and the Ravens are starting a rookie QB in week one.  Here’s hoping that Phil Savage and Romeo Crennel look at the big picture if the star running back isn’t 100% this Sunday.  The team simply cannot afford to lose #31 for any length of time.

 

JD

A Tale of Two (or Three) Lefties

 
For the most part, it has been good if you are a left handed pitcher who has worn a Cleveland Indian uniform this season.  Although Zach Jackson’s fielding performance yesterday would have people disagreeing with that statement.  In reality, Jackson was a victim of some questionable strategy and one extremely bad pitch to Adrian Beltre in giving up six runs in five innings in the 6-4 loss to the Mariners yesterday.  Why you would choose to pitch to Ichiro Suzuki (no one name baseball players here, that’s a soccer thing) with first base open is beyond me.
 
Tonight, southpaw Cliff Lee becomes the first Indians’ hurler in 28 years to even try for his 20th victory of the season against the White Sox.  No pitcher wearing a Tribe uniform has won this many games since, of course, Gaylord Perry did it in 1974.  Up to then, it was a regular occurrance.  Perry’s 20 win season in ’74 was the third such season by a Cleveland pitcher in past five years, following Perry’s own 24-16 mark in 1972 which earned him the Cy Young Award, and Sam McDowell’s 20 win campaign in 1970.  To go back a little farther, Luie Tiant won 21 games in 1968. 
 
Rafael Perez has been the Tribe’s best relief pitcher in 2008, with a 3.35 ERA and 76 strikeouts in 69-1/3 innings this season.  In the second half of the season, he has been back to the dominant guy who was a shutdown set up man in 2007.  He has been used heavily since the All Star break, and here’s hoping skipper Eric Wedge uses him more sparingly the rest of the year, because it would be a crime to have him hurt his valuable left arm in a season that means nothing.
 
And yesterday, former ace C.C. Sabathia fired a one-hitter against the Pirates for his ninth consecutive victory since the deal that sent him to Milwaukee in early July.  Sabathia is now a combined 15-8 for the season. 
 
The win was controversial because the one hit was a squibber a little more than half way to the mound that C.C. picked up and dropped in the fifth inning.  If the big lefty had given up a hit already, there wouldn’t be a question that it was a hit.  So, the Brewers are challenging the scoring decision in an effort to make Sabathia the first man to fire a no-hitter the day after he pitched.  It would be a bad decision if they did.
 
We will never know how the pitcher would have held up to the pressure of entering the eighth and ninth innings of a game without allowing a hit.  That’s part of throwing a no no, having to deal with the crowd screaming, your teammates not talking to you, etc.  I’m sure the Sabathia critics will assert he would have crumbled under the pressure. 
 
Besides this sort of thing has happened before.  In 1981, Bert Blyleven had a no hitter going into the eighth inning of a game against Toronto when a ball was lost in the lights and dropped by LF Larry Littleton.  The play was ruled a hit, and the Dutchman did not get the no no.  You cannot change the scoring decision on something this important a day after the fact.  For his part, Sabathia didn’t complain, just his manager Ned Yost, who has been running up the southpaw’s pitch counts, was whining.  It was a great game for C.C., but it was his first one hitter.
 
KM

0-4 Reverts to 0-0 For Browns

 

The best thing about the NFL pre-season is that it’s over.  The only thing you really need to know about last night’s game against the Bears is that when the starters for both teams went to the sidelines for good in the second quarter, the Browns were ahead 10-0.  Romeo Crennel wanted his starters to play “decent” and they did as they were told.  The rest of the game involved a lot of players who will be on the waiver wire by Saturday afternoon, so at that point we should look at individual performances rather than the score.

 

Keep in mind that the Patriots were 0-4 in the pre-season, and the Colts were 1-4.  The Detroit Lions finished up at 4-0.  Certainly, we are not putting the Browns in the same class as New England and Indianapolis; they have not accomplished anything close to what those teams have.  But, it does show that the pre-season record has little to no bearing on the talent level on a football team.  No one thinks Detroit is going to the Super Bowl, so you cannot predict a 4-12 record for the brown and orange based on these games.

 

NOTE:  We use the term “pre-season games” tongue in cheek, because that’s what the almighty NFL calls them.  They are exhibitions, and we feel bad for those who were forced to pay full price for tickets to last night’s game, where they viewed players who will never wear an NFL uniform again play the majority of the game.

 

Brady Quinn looked better than he did in his previous start, taking the team on two scoring drives in his brief appearance.  WR Travis Wilson, trying to hold on to a roster spot, caught six balls for 57 yards, but dropped a possible touchdown pass from Ken Dorsey, which could jeopardize his inclusion on the final roster.  The offensive line performed much better as well, particularly the right side, which had problems against the Lions.  Unfortunately, Rex Hadnot left the game with a knee injury, which could put his availability for Dallas in doubt.  With Ryan Tucker on the PUP list to open the season, which would mean Seth McKinney may open the season at right guard.

 

This weekend, the roster has to be reduced to 53 players.  Some cuts may be made as early as today.  After that, Monday is a huge day for the Browns as they find out how many of the wounded will be ready to practice.  It’s safe to assume Derek Anderson and Braylon Edwards will be ready to go on Monday, but the team needs Jamal Lewis and Sean Jones for the Dallas game.  However, if we learned anything from the Indians, if they aren’t ready, it’s better to hold them out and have both available for the last 15 games of the season.

 

As far as people’s comments about the “Berea Country Club”, that’s a matter of perception.  If the Browns have a good season, and play well at the end of the year, Crennel will be praised for preserving his team in the summer.  If they have a poor season, he will be chastised for not working them hard enough.  No matter what happens in this season, this much is true…what happened in these four games means absolutely nothing.  When the Browns take the field on September 7th at Cleveland Browns Stadium, their record will be 0-0, not 0-4.  And if they make the playoffs, no one will remember the pre-season record.

 

JD

 

Red Hot Tribe Talk

 

This just in…The Cleveland Indians are red hot, having won nine in a row and 15 of their last 18 games.  They moved into third place in the AL Central with last night’s 10-4 victory over Detroit, which was won by southpaw Cliff Lee.  The remarkable Mr. Lee ran his record to 19-2 on the season, and will look for his 20th win Monday against the White Sox at Progressive Field.  When he gets #20, he will be the first Cleveland pitcher in 34 years (Gaylord Perry) to reach that plateau.  That said, here are some thoughts on the suddenly hot Tribe: 

 

·          There has been a lot of talk about Kelly Shoppach being the everyday catcher in 2009, with Victor Martinez playing more at 1B.  Here’s something to ponder…in his career, Shoppach has 562 at bats and has struck out 208 times!  That’s a Russell Branyan like pace.  It’s another reason I would look to deal Shoppach in the off-season assuming Martinez’ elbow is sound.

 

·          Speaking of strikeouts, I would like to see the ball club put an emphasis on contact in the off-season.  The Tribe ranks third in the AL in whiffing this season (behind Oakland and Texas), and ranks just 10th in walks received.  It is difficult to play situational baseball, which a good team needs to do in late innings, when the lineup is filled with guys who strikeout.

 

·          There is talk that the Tribe will move Jhonny Peralta to 3B in the off-season, but here’s another thought…what about 2B?  Peralta is strong which would help him on the pivot, and his strong arm would be an asset on relay throws.  As it stands now, there will be an opening at either 2B or 3B, so maybe it comes down to whether the front office thinks more of Wes Hodges or Josh Barfield.

 

·          Question:  If you could only keep one of these three players:  Ben Francisco, Shin-Soo Choo, or Franklin Gutierrez, which one would you keep?

 

·          Statistical oddity:  Ryan Garko’s power numbers are down drastically from last year (.483 slugging percentage in 2007 vs. .371 in 2008), but he has knocked in 69 runs in 412 at bats this season compared to 61 in 484 at bats last season.

 

·          Consider me among those who would prefer the Indians select OF Michael Brantley as the player to be named later in the C.C. Sabathia trade.  Brantley is a speedy outfielder that has a .395 on base percentage at Class AA Huntsville.  He has also stolen 28 bases, and walks more than he strikes out.  He is reportedly more of a LF than a CF, but that’s okay because Grady Sizemore plays for the Tribe.  He could be the leadoff hitter who pushes Sizemore into the middle of the batting order.

 

·          Jensen Lewis has stabilized the back of the bullpen for now, but I would like to see prospect Adam Miller get a shot at closing in spring training.  Miller has had some arm problems, so working an inning at a time might be a help.  Plus, he throws in the mid to high 90’s, which is preferable for a closer.  Remember, Jonathan Papelbon was a rookie when the Red Sox gave him the gig.

 

Don’t kid yourselves; the Indians are not back in the race.  However, it is better to win that to lose these games, and it gives some of the players the experience of playing winning baseball.  Also, it would be nice to finish over .500 and in third place ahead of Detroit as well.  It appears Victor Martinez will rejoin the club Friday night when they take on the Mariners.  Hopefully, Travis Hafner is close behind.

 

MW