Second Half Starts With Series Win

 
The Cleveland Indians started the second half by following the mantra of their skipper, Eric Wedge, that is win series.  The Tribe took two of three against the Royals and now enter a three game set against the White Sox just a half game behind the Tigers and two games ahead of Seattle in the wild card race.  The Indians are just one game behind the Red Sox and Angels for the best record in the AL.  Amazingly, the game the Tribe lost against Kansas City was with its ace, C.C. Sabathia on the hill.
 
The three game set featured a great series by Ryan Garko.  Garko had the game winning single in the ninth Friday night, hit a two run homer to bring the home team within a run at 5-4 on Saturday, and belted another dinger yesterday in a 5-3 victory.  Garko is now batting over .300 with 11 HR’s on the season.  Which makes one wonder why he is batting sixth behind Jhonny Peralta in the lineup.  I realize Garko sits when Paul Byrd pitches, with Victor Martinez playing first and Kelly Shoppach behind the dish, but he is a better contact man than the shortstop.  In fact, I was shocked than KC manager Buddy Bell walked Peralta intentionally Friday night to get to Garko with the game on the line.
 
I am convinced that the Indians won’t be an elite offensive team until they can upgrade the 5th spot in the order.  And yes, I know they rank second in the AL in scoring.  This is not a knock on Peralta, but he is not in the same class as a guy like Carlos Guillen with Detroit or Justin Morneau with the Twins.  He’s not really a power hitter, although he will hit 25 homers this year, nor is he a classic RBI guy.  The reason is two fold.  First, he strikes out way too much, and he is vulnerable to the breaking ball.  Yesterday, STO’s Jim Donovan pointed out that the Tribe SS swung and missed six times in a game!  Peralta is a solid player, and has rebounded from last season’s disaster, but wouldn’t you feel better about the lineup if was hitting sixth or seventh?
 
It has been reported that Eric Wedge has joined the wheel of contract extensions by signing a three year deal.  Many would say the team should wait until the end of the year to see if the ballclub qualifies for the post season, but with the core players pretty much being signed for the future, it only seems right that the skipper will go along for the ride.  Although Wedge’s strategy comes into question at times as all managers’ do, his game to game approach is a good one.  When you think about it, each game is a different one, and should be treated as such.
 
Another thing to watch is the performance of Casey Blake.  Blake has had a solid season, but it seems like he’s remembered that he’s Casey Blake.  He’s hitting just .235 over the last month, and Saturday night made a terrible decision and throw which cost his team a run.  For all of the talk of him being reliable and a heady player, the evidence against this notion is growing.  His success rate on steals is deplorable, and he has a history of not hitting in the clutch.  He also makes a lot of tough plays defensively, but will blow the routine one.  He’s a average player, that’s all.  The Tribe might just need more going forward.  Unfortunately, the organization (or maybe the manager) has given up on Andy Marte.
 
With three with the White Sox and four with the Rangers coming up, the Tribe has to beat up the below .500 teams, because there aren’t many games remaining against those types of teams.  Following those series, the Indians take on the Red Sox and the Twins.  The schedule doesn’t get easier heading down the stretch either.  Also, don’t forget the trading deadline is just 15 days away…
 
MW
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

That's Two

 
The signing of DH Travis Hafner to a four year contract extension means the Dolan ownership has now inked two of the key players who were about to test free agency in 2007 and 2008.  Only the most ardent critic of the spending habits of the Tribe ownership can still be disgruntled.  However, it typical "woe is us" fashion, there still are people who won’t be happy unless the Indians extend a huge offer to keep C.C. Sabathia here for a long time. 
 
At the beginning of the season, we wrote that the Indians had three great players:  Hafner, Sabathia, and Grady Sizemore.  Certainly with his season this year, you can put Victor Martinez in that class as well.  Ownership has tied up three of those guys through 2010, with Hafner and Sizemore inked through 2012.  This means the Tribe’s three best hitters will be in the lineup for three years after this one.  What more can the fans ask for?  The name of the game is keeping your great players, and certainly ownership has done that.
 
With the year Sabathia is having, he would be a fool to sign a contract extension now or after this season for that matter.  If he puts up 20 wins this season, he puts himself into a new stratosphere altogether.  Don’t be surprised if he goes through 2008 without a new deal in place and tests the market.  He also will likely wait and see what happens with Johan Santana and the Twins before signing, because with another big year next season (which helps the Indians, by the way), he will be worth just slightly less than the Minnesota southpaw. 
 
As for Hafner, I’m convinced his first half performance is an aberration and he will put together big numbers in the second half.  Remember, he still has 57 RBIs in spite of his troubles, and he still leads the AL in walks.  I think he got out of sync because he was getting pitched around early in the year, and he expanded his strike zone.  The past few weeks he have started to see glimpses of the old Hafner, he even hit one out in Detroit to left center against a lefty.  He likely will still end the year with 30 HR and over 100 RBI, an excellent year by any standard.
 
Everyone complained that the Dolans would not pay any one player over $10 million per year.  That myth has been debunked with the Westbrook and Hafner signing.  Now, the critics will ask if they will pay anyone $15 million per season, which they will probably have to do to keep C.C. in the fold.  Here a possible scenario for you to chew on.  After the 2008 season, let’s say Adam Miller has established himself as a major league starter.  GM Mark Shapiro could afford to deal Westbrook for prospects, freeing up over $10 million per year to use to keep Sabathia.  Thus, inking the big lefty to an $18 million deal would only cost the ballclub an additional $8 million per year.  That’s the beauty of having a productive farm system.
 
This team will be together for the long haul, the key pieces all in place (except for Sabathia) through 2012.  The front office and the ownership have done their job.  Now it’s up to the players to do it on the field, and fans to show up and watch a contending team with a promising future as well.
 
KM
 
 
 

A QB Question?

 
The Cleveland Browns start training camp at the end of this month, and even though they haven’t played a game in seven months, there is a debate as to who will start the opener at quarterback for the team against the Steelers.  It would behoove Romeo Crennel to make that decision early in camp, preferably after the second exhibition game, so whoever it is can gain some continuity with the rest of the first unit.
 
The candidates are veterans Charlie Frye and Derek Anderson, and rookie first round pick Brady Quinn.  It would be in the rookie’s best interest not to be thrown to the fire right away, so privately the coaching staff is hoping the former Notre Dame star holds out, so they can justify to the fans why he’s not a candidate to start.  They will tell everybody that Quinn simply missed too much camp time to be a viable starter. 
 
Quinn’s agents are going to use the tactic that since he was a top 5 pick on most draft boards, including the Browns, he should be paid like a top five pick.  Unfortunately, the truth is, he was the 22nd pick, and the Browns will try to slot Quinn’s deal around the same as last year’s 22nd choice.  This difference of opinion will likely lead to the former Irish signal caller not being in camp on time.  At best, he will get into the training facility just prior to the first exhibition, er, pre-season game.
 
That leaves the two veterans with little experience.  By all reports, Anderson has looked better in the mini camps, probably because he has a stronger arm and a quicker release.  Remember, the offensive line protected better last year when Anderson was in there because they knew where he was, in the pocket.  Frye’s mobility backfired when he ran himself into sacks at times.  The former Akron QB also seems to lock in on Braylon Edwards and Kellen Winslow Jr., which helps the defense cheat on those two targets.  Anderson seemed to find Joe Jurevicius more than his counterpart, a good thing since Jurevicius has the best hands on the team.
 
This has the potential to be a real quarterback derby, not the usual staged ones.  You know, the ones where the head coach has already predetermined the starter, but talks as if he hasn’t.  It is in Romeo Crennel’s best interest to play the guy who is playing the best.  If that’s Anderson, I have no doubts that he will start against Pittsburgh.  However wins the job has to hit the ground running, because if the Browns don’t get off to a good start, the crowd will start to call for Quinn.  The longer the veteran plays well, the more the rookie can sit, watch, and most importantly learn. 
 
The pre-season will mean much for the 2007 Cleveland Browns.  For Charlie Frye and Derek Anderson, it will be put up or shut up time.
 
JD
 
 
 
 
 
 

Bats Take Break One Day Early

 
The Cleveland Indians head into the All Star break in second place in the AL Central, but the leader in the wild card race by 2 games over the surprising Seattle Mariners.  Unfortunately, they head into the break as losers of four of their last five on a road trip to Detroit and Toronto.  The Tribe lost the rubber match of the series north of the border by losing 1-0, as the Indian hitters started their vacation a day early. 
 
They say a team’s warts come into view in defeat, and if that is the case, the bullpen needs to have a large dose of Compound W applied to it.  Eric Wedge’s lack of confidence in his relief corp was evident in all three games against Toronto.  In the first game, Cliff Lee struggled and was removed trailing 6-5 after four innings.  However, the up and down Fernando Cabrera gave up two more tallies immediately, and the Indians could not recover, losing 8-6.  Even in the next day’s 9-4 win, Wedge used Rafael Betancourt for two innings in a game his team was winning by five runs because he has no confidence that anyone else could hold the lead, even one that large.
 
That meant when Wedge called on Betancourt again to try to preserve a scoreless tie in the series finale, he was coming off a two inning stint the day before.  The fact he had to be used in a 9-4 game affected the next game.  The Tribe skipper wanted to end a three game losing streak on Saturday, so he went with all three (Perez, Betancourt, and Borowski) of his reliable relievers.  Unfortunately, he only has three, perhaps four if you count Tom Mastny, who had to pitch two innings Friday in a game the Tribe lost. 
 
By the way, the talk shows were filled with people ripping Wedge for pitching to all star Alex Rios with first base open in the ninth.  Had he walked Rios, Frank Thomas would have been the hitter with runners on first and second and one out.  Thomas has hit over 500 home runs and is going to the Hall of Fame.  If Thomas would have come through with the key hit, these same idiots would have blasted Wedge for walking someone to pitch to a Hall of Famer.  You just can’t win in these situations if you’re a big league manager.  I think the Tribe skipper made the correct move.
 
Over the weekend, Wedge hinted that changes would be made in the bullpen over the All Star break.  Edward Mujica almost certainly will be sent back to Buffalo.  It would not be surprising to see the front office give up on Cabrera as well.  Aaron Fultz will return from the disabled list, and you keep hearing the name of Jensen Lewis from the broadcasters and by Peter Gammons.  Don’t be shocked if the former Vanderbilt righty is in the bullpen Friday night against the Royals. 
 
I think everyone would like to get another professional hitter.  Having Jhonny Peralta hitting fifth is not the ideal spot for a guy who strikes out that much.  I also think it’s a crime that Grady Sizemore whiffs as much as he does.  He’s too good a player to be striking out 175 times per year.  He needs to swing the bat, he takes far too many called third strikes.  That said, the area that needs the most improvement as we head down the stretch is the bullpen.  It just cost us two games in Toronto because it is not deep enough.  Giving up a spare outfielder and a minor league arm for a proven set up man or closer, would be a good investment in the Tribe’s post season future.
 
MW
 
 

The Difference is Contact

 
The Tribe dropped two of three at Comerica Park to the Tigers with ace C.C. Sabathia getting hammered in a 12-3 loss yesterday.  No need to panic, though as the Indians still have a one game lead heading into the last series before the All Star break against the Toronto Blue Jays.  They are still playing .600 ball as their record is 51-34 through 85 games. 
 
The Tiger offense was relentless yesterday as they belted three homers off the Tribe all-star left hander.  In fact, the Tigers lead the American League in runs by a large margin over the Yankees and Indians.  Cleveland ranks 3rd in the league in walks, while Detroit is ninth, so the Tribe is the more patient team.  However, the Tigers are batting .290 as a team compared to the Indians .273 mark.  The biggest reason is the Kitties don’t strike out as much as Cleveland hitters.
 
Both team have three batters who rank in the top 10 in the league in strikeouts.  Ironically, both team’s leadoff hitters are in this group.  In fact, Grady Sizemore leads the AL and Curtis Granderson is second.  The other two Indians are Jhonny Peralta and Casey Blake, the other Detroit players are Craig Monroe and Brandon Inge.  Here lies the difference.  Blake hits second normally for Cleveland and Peralta hits fifth.  The two Tigers bat eighth and ninth.  The lack of contact hitters with some pop in the middle of the order hurts the Tribe offense at times.
 
The Indians also have two more hitters who rank in the top 50 in striking out, Travis Hafner and Josh Barfield.  The Tigers do not have anyone else who is listed in this grouping.  Thus, Cleveland has five hitters in the top 50 in the AL in not making contact.  The Tribe ranks 2nd in the AL as a team in whiffs, behind only Tampa Bay.  The Tigers rank 9th.  Detroit’s 3-4-5 hitters, Gary Sheffield, Magglio Ordonez, and Carlos Guillen not only make contact, but they drive the ball.  Cleveland’s heart of the order, Victor Martinez, Travis Hafner, and Jhonny Peralta are prone to fanning, Martinez not included. 
 
There is no question the Tribe’s method is to wear out pitchers, taking a lot of pitches, working counts, battling with every at bat.  There’s a reason most starters don’t last seven innings against the Tribe, they make starters work, and work hard to get outs.  It’s a good approach, good enough for Cleveland to be one of the AL’s best hitting teams.  It does point out the need for one more professional bat for the Indians, a high average hitter with power.  I understand those guys don’t grow on trees.
 
That’s the difference in the two teams on offense.  The Tiger attack is similar to that of the Yankees when they had their great teams in the late 90’s, led by Paul O’Neill, Derek Jeter, Bernie Williams, etc.  They hit for average and power.  Those teams had great success offensively in the post season.  If the Indians play in October, it may become important for them to change their approach slightly to make more contact. 
 
KM
 

Decision Time for the Cavs

 
Since losing in the NBA Finals a few weeks ago, there has been tremendous anticipation as to what the Cleveland Cavaliers will do to take the next step and win the title.  However, the draft passed without GM Danny Ferry making any moves, and now the free agency period is starting.  The Cavs have only their mid level exemption to use on the free agent market, so the wine and gold will have to be judicious and creative in making the team better heading into the 2007-08 campaign.
 
The Cavs made qualifying offers to their own restricted free agents, Anderson Varajao and Sasha Pavlovic, which gives the team the right of first refusal on any contract either sign in this period.  It has been rumored that Varajao will receive a five year, $40 million offer from Memphis when firm offers can be made.  Together with Drew Gooden, the Cavs will be spending about $16 million per year on the power forward position if they match the offer to Wild Thing. 
 
It says here that Ferry needs to match it, and then look to find a taker for Gooden.  Let’s face it, Varajao’s game fits more with Mike Brown’s philosophy, that’s why the Brazilian gets the bulk of the playing time down the stretch of games.  Also, even though Gooden has been in the league longer, he’s still an inconsistent performer.  That sort of thing drives coaches crazy.  Also, Gooden’s contract would allow the team to bring in a bigger salary player in a deal.  Ferry would then have to find another big man to back up Zydrunas Ilgauskas and Varajao, but they could find a veteran big man to take that job.
 
The Cavs also are talking to free agent Morris Peterson, late of the Raptors, as a shooter.  Peterson would ideally replace Donyell Marshall’s role in the offense.  However, I can’t see using the entire exemption on MoPete unless Ferry can move some of the dead weight at the end of the bench making big money (Snow, Marshall, Newble, Jones).  If the only big personnel move this team makes is signing Peterson, it doesn’t make me feel all warm and fuzzy about next year’s prospects, since the team would still be banking on the improvement of young players to make gains.
 
Ferry also needs to address the point guard spot.  Clevelanders may not want to hear it, but here’s hoping the wine and gold stays away from Earl Boykins.  The former Central Catholic star is 32 years old, a defensive liability, and likes to dominate the ball.  With LeBron James here, that would be a problem.  A guy like Steve Blake would be a good fit here.  Blake isn’t a strong defender, but Mike Brown has upgraded that part of the game with everybody on the roster, so Blake could improve.  Blake is a distributor and can make the open shot if it’s there.  Since he’s an unrestricted free agent, there will be plenty of competition to get the former Nugget. 
 
It has been rumored that Mike Bibby has been in town recently, which would lead to speculation that a trade with Sacramento is being considered.  Bibby had an off season in 2006-07, but was battling some injuries which affected his game.  However, what the Cavs would have to give up in such a deal might make this a less desirable option.  Another possibility at the point is Sarunas Jasikevicius, who considered the Cavs when he came to the NBA a couple of years ago, but signed with Indiana instead.  He finished the year with Golden State, barely getting off the bench there.  The cost to get him would be minimal.
 
JK

Tribe Thoughts at the Half Way Point

 
The Cleveland Indians ended the first half of the season with a 49-32 record, good enough to lead the AL Central Division by a 1-1/2 over the Tigers.  Even though they endured injuries to starting pitchers Cliff Lee and Jake Westbrook, struggling offense from the corner outfielders, and consistent work from just two relievers, the Tribe is on pace to win 98 games this season.  What do they have to do to get to the post season?  Is there any help coming from the farm system?  Here’s one man’s opinion.
 
What do they have to do to make the playoffs.  The first thing is staying healthy, particularly the starting pitching.  A rotation of Sabathia, Carmona, Westbrook, Lee, and Byrd should provide a quality start, and a chance to win, every night.  There are too many teams around baseball that can make that claim.  Lee has been back to the 2005 version that past three or four starts, and Westbrook has looked strong his first two starts since returning to the mound. 
 
The bullpen needs some work though.  Skipper Eric Wedge can only count on Joe Borowski and Rafael Betancourt for quality outings at this point.  Left hander Rafael Perez has pitched well, but hasn’t really worked in pressure situations.  Tom Mastny started well, but has struggled recently.  Fernando Cabrera is a coin flip from night to night.  The current plan is to start using Adam Miller out of the ‘pen to provide some help, but this is the primary area of need for the 2007 Indians.  Another solid arm like an Eric Gagne or Akinori Otsuka would be a great help.  GM Mark Shapiro could use Cabrera as bait.  His stuff is off the charts, but his ability to throw quality strikes is questionable.  He is the type of guy that teams covet.  Especially teams building for the future.  Outside of two months in 2005, Cabrera hasn’t done the job in Cleveland, so it wouldn’t be a shame if he was dealt.
 
The production in the corner outfield spots is troubling, but the squad is playing .600 ball without huge numbers from these spots.  Jason Michaels is hitting like the player the Tribe acquired before last season.  The smaller playing time seems to agree with him.  Trot Nixon’s production is getting more miniscule as the season goes on.  However, young guys like Franklin Gutierrez and Ben Francisco have done okay in their brief looks, and both provide good defensive and add a little speed to the roster.  Still, getting another solid bat, preferably a left handed hitter, would strengthen the line up. 
 
The bullpen is still the bigger need.
 
Help from the farm?  Besides the players we have mentionned previously, the only other possibilities are veteran reliever Matt Miller and 3B Andy Marte.  Marte has belted 9 HR in 138 at bats in Buffalo, but his batting average is just .246.  He will not return to Cleveland until September 1st unless there is another injury.  Within the system, 21 year old SS Asdrubal Cabrera is raking at Akron, and should be moved to Buffalo fairly soon.   The youngster, picked up last year from Seattle in the Eduardo Perez deal, is hitting .336 with a OPS of 915.  He has always been considered a glove man, but he’s swinging the bat extremely well. 
 
Another player under the radar is 3B Wes Hodges at Kinston.  A 2nd round draft pick last year, the 22 year old is batting .324 in the Carolina League.  Hodges had an injury coming out of college, otherwise he would have been a first round pick.  He will probably move to Akron soon, and could make Marte a tradable commodity to help the big club.  Another reliever to watch is 23 year old Jensen Lewis, now at Buffalo.  Lewis started the year in Akron, and went 2-0 with a 1.85 ERA and 49 strikeouts in 39 innings.  He has a 1.04 in 8 frames at Buffalo.  If the Tribe is looking for another option in the bullpen, Lewis could get a call.
 
MW

Another Night, Another Hero

 
The Cleveland Indians are having one of those classic Jacobs Field home stands.  Tuesday night, they scored five in the ninth to beat the A’s capped by a Kelly Shoppach home run.  Thursday afternoon, Jason Michaels’ three run shot turned a 3-1 lead into a 4-3 win, and last night, the recently recalled Ben Francisco got his first major league hit in his first big league start, and in the ninth, he belted the game winning dinger in a 2-1 win over the Devil Rays.  The Tribe is now 28-12 at home this year, one of the best home marks in the game.
 
The other good thing that came out of last night’s action was the performance of Jake Westbrook.  The righty looked impressive in seven frames against a Tampa squad who has a few good hitters in their lineup.  Westbrook has now pitched 14 innings allowing just 4 earned runs in his two starts since coming off the disabled list.  He gives Eric Wedge a reliable starter in the rotation to go along with C.C. Sabathia, Fausto Carmona, and Paul Byrd.
 
Don’t be surprised if a pair of Millers join the Tribe’s relief corps soon.  Matt Miller recently was reactivated off the disabled list at Buffalo, and you know that Wedge is more confident in him than Edward Mujica.  Since Miller has pitched in back to back games this week, look for him to be activated on Sunday, or at least before the Indians head to Detroit for a big three game series next week.  The other Miller is uber prospect Adam Miller, who the front office said will be used in relief since coming back from his finger injury.  He could be another power arm in the bullpen that Wedge and Mark Shapiro are looking for.
 
It was funny to hear that Oakland dealt Milton Bradley to the Padres for minor league pitcher Andrew Brown.  This is the second time Brown has been traded for the contraversial outfielder, the first time was when the Dodgers traded him and Franklin Gutierrez to the Tribe.  It’s not often you get traded twice for the same player.
 
Here’s another thing I don’t undertstand.  (I know there are many).  Guys who torment the Indians like Jack Cust, Mike Sweeney, etc.  Why doesn’t the scouting staff simply burn the reports on these guys.  They obviously do not work.  The scouts provide a game plan on how to work these hitters, but they continue to rack up base hits against our pitching.  Wouldn’t we be just as well off just telling them what the pitchers are going to throw?
 
Three more with the Rays remain before a huge three game set against the Motor City Kitties.  The All-Star rosters will be announced on Sunday and Victor Martinez and Sabathia appear to be shoo ins for the honor.  It will be interesting to see if Grady Sizemore, Fausto Carmona, or Rafael Betancourt also gets picked.  Sizemore would seem to have the best shot.  After Detroit, it’s on to Toronto for three and then a much needed rest for most of the team.  It’s been an eventful and successful first half for Cleveland baseball fans.
 
KM

Shoppach The Hero!

 
For one night, the magic of the late 90’s was back at Jacobs Field.  Trailing 5-3 going into the bottom of the ninth, the Indians rallied with five in their half of the inning, all scoring with two out, to beat the Oakland A’s, 8-5.  This returns the favor from the last game played in Oakland when the A’s put up a five spot to beat the Tribe on a Jack Cust home run. 
 
Kelly Shoppach was the big hero with the pinch hit three run dinger that decided the game, and there were other heroes as well.  Travis Hafner had his second extra base hit in two nights with a double to the gap to tie the game, and Eric Wedge deserves kudos for pinch running Ben Francisco for Victor Martinez, representing the tying run.  There is no way Martinez would have scored on Pronk’s double.  The Tribe’s extra base hit punch has returned at least in the first two games against the A’s.  Monday night, they had four doubles plus a Hafner tater, and last night they belted two homers to go along with three more doubles.  When the Indian bats are going well, they are a doubles machine.
 
There are some reasons for concern, however.  Tom Mastny’s struggles continued as he allowed a go ahead run in the seventh.  The righty has been failing more often than not over the last month which gives Eric Wedge only one option to set up in Rafael Betancourt.  That is unless Rafael Perez can do the job.  Perez continues to impress, throwing two scoreless innings last night, including getting out of a first and second, one out mess that Mastny left him.  The lefty is tough on left handed hitters, but also has done well against righties too.  He merits a long in the set up role.
 
Trot Nixon’s struggles continue as well.  Nixon went hitless again last night, and could lose his spot in what Wedge has set up as a three man rotation in LF and RF with Jason Michaels and Franklin Gutierrez.  With southpaw Lenny DiNardo on the hill tonight for the A’s, the latter two will be in the lineup anyway.  But, Wedge might give Ben Francisco a look see if Nixon doesn’t start producing.  The veteran has been such a good presence in the clubhouse that I doubt Cleveland will release him.  His back might start bothering him, though.
 
For those looking at the momentum factor, let me remind you that the Tribe’s mini slump in June came after a five run rally in the ninth to beat the Tigers on June 1st.  It’s been said many times that momentum in baseball is tonight’s starting pitcher.  Fausto Carmona carries the title tonight, which isn’t a bad thing.  With a day game looming on Thursday, it wouldn’t be surprising to see Mike Rouse’s name in the lineup today or tomorrow.  Jhonny Peralta and Josh Barfield will need a day off with a game scheduled every day until the All Star break.
 
In the meantime, GM Mark Shapiro is looking for bullpen help.  The conversion of Adam Miller to the ‘pen for the balance of the season might start to take place to give the team another power arm in relief.  Now that would be an anticipated debut!  There is no question that is the biggest weakness that needs to be addressed.  Of course, if Fernando Cabrera could show a little consistency, the bullpen would be much better.  I’m guessing management is starting to run out of patience with the big right hander.
 
MW

There No "O" in June

 
The Cleveland Indians are not swinging the bats in June.  This was very much in evidence over the weekend in Washington where the Tribe bats were asleep for all but the ninth inning of Saturday’s game when Victor Martinez’ three run homer salvaged one game against the lowly Nationals.  Outside of that one mighty swing, the Indians scored one run in each game against a pitching staff which was just raked over the coals by the Tigers earlier in the week.  Someone should pick up an alarm clock for the bats.
 
Despite the sleeping bats, the Indians are still 10-12 in the month of June.  The offense reminds people of last year’s edition, scoring large numbers in some game, and struggling to cross the plate in others.  The biggest culprit?  The lack of extra base hits.  The Indians are usually a doubles machine, but since June 1st have hit just 30 two baggers in 22 games.  Their opponents have banged out two per game in the same period.  Ryan Garko, Travis Hafner, and Trot Nixon all have just two extra base hits for the month.  It appears the team has become too patient at the plate, taking a lot of strikes instead of driving the ball.  Look at yesterday’s game when Jason Simontacchi fanned six Tribe hitters in six frames.  This is the same pitcher who was bombed in his previous start on Tuesday night. 
 
The left handed hitters in particular are troubled.  Hafner is SLUGGING .227 for the month with just two doubles, and Nixon is at .188.  In terms of average, both are below the dreaded Mendoza line, Pronk at .197 and Trot at .146.  Among the right handed swingers, Garko has followed up a great month of May with a .164 average and two home runs.  The failure to get any offense out of this trio is causing the lack of pop.  Hafner and Nixon both hit into key double plays in the National series, the former’s with the bases loaded.
 
These are the times when the manager earn his money.  Manager Eric Wedge needs to bunch the players who are hitting together and hide or limit the playing time of those who are not.  Josh Barfield is hitting .338 in June, Jason Michaels is at .341.  Victor Martinez remains consistent at .329 in June.  Wedge needs to start giving Michaels more time while he is swinging the bat well.  Although Michaels has platoon tendencies, he is hitting righties better than Nixon at this point.  Since the right handed hitters don’t have the pop of the lefty swingers, the skipper should be playing some small ball, using the bunt and the hit and run a little bit since the three run bombs won’t be as plentiful.
 
The Tribe lead the division by 4-1/2 games early in the month, and now trail the Tigers by two games.  Where the Indians’ bats have gone cold, Detroit’s have gone white hot with seven hitters sporting OPS of over 900.  Michaels, Martinez, and backup catcher Kelly Shoppach are the only Indians in that lofty range.  However, it’s a long season and the Tiger bats won’t stay that hot for the rest of the season.  Nor will the Tribe sticks stay this cool. 
 
When a team goes through this kind of period, it has to get great starting pitching and manufacture some offense to get through it.  The fact the Indians are still 10-12 for the month is a good thing.  But, the bats need to get going, a task made more difficult by playing the A’s in a four game series this week.  Oakland has one of the game’s best pitching staffs.  Look for Michaels and Gutierrez to play the outfield regularly to get more defense in play to help the hurlers, and also because Gutierrez is swinging the bat well.  Eventually, Hafner will start hitting.  His track record is too good to expect anything else. 
 
The key is to finish strong going into the All Star break.  With the Tigers and a huge series looming on the Fourth of July, the Tribe will need to start hitting.  Hopefully, they can create a few runs against Oakland.  Sometimes doing the little things leads to bigger and better things.
 
KM