For Tribe, The Time For A Big Move Is Now

When the Dolan family took over ownership of the Cleveland Indians in 2000, Larry Dolan told his fan base that the team would spend money when it was appropriate.

Many Tribe fans are still waiting for that day.

While we aren’t sure about the money situation, it is time for the front office to go for it at this year’s trading deadline, with the Indians sitting at 57-42 and a 4-1/2 game lead in the American League Central Division.

In the Dolan era, there have been four instances after 2001 where the Indians entered August in a full fledged pennant race.

The 2005 squad had a 51-48 record after 99 games, but remember that was the year the White Sox got off to a hot start, so really at that point in the year, the Tribe was hoping for a wild card spot.

No major moves were made unless you consider dealing Jody Gerut for Jason Dubois a big move.  The Tribe came up one game short at the end of the season.

The closest situation to this year was 2007, the last time the Indians won the division.  They were 58-41 at this point in the season, and GM Mark Shapiro dealt catching prospect Max Ramirez to Texas for Kenny Lofton, who did make an impact the rest of the year and in the playoffs.

Manny Acta’s 2011 team got off to a good start (30-15) and were 51-48.  The Indians made a big deal moving their top two pitching prospects (Drew Pomeranz and Alex White) for Ubaldo Jimenez.

The new pitcher struggled the rest of the year, and the Indians didn’t make the playoffs or even finish .500 for that matter.

In 2013, Cleveland’s most recent playoff appearance, the team was 52-47 and GM Chris Antonetti made one move, getting situational lefty Marc Rzepczynski from St. Louis.

Of course, the team ran a 21-6 record in September to a spot in the wild card game, where they lost to Tampa Bay.

This year is different from the others though.

Only in 2007 was were the Tribe considered one of the best teams in the American League, and at that time, the farm system was a desert in terms of developing solid major league players.

Remember that from C.C. Sabathia to Lonnie Chisenhall, Cleveland’s first round picks were busts.  None of them, save for Jeremy Guthrie (released by the team) ever had a meaningful major league career.

This time, the Tribe system has many young players that organizations’ covet and have some surplus to deal to get back a substantial player who can help the major league team right now.

They also need to gain the trust of the fans in Cleveland too.

This may irritate the legions of people who swallow everything the organization feeds them, but many fans in the area feel like the front office doesn’t make winning the highest priority.

A big move for an impact player will show those fans the Indians want to be the next team from Cleveland to have a championship parade downtown.

And if that sells some tickets in the process, than so be it.

There is no move in major league baseball that guarantees anything, all you can do is increase your chances to get to the World Series.  And we certainly do not want to mortgage the franchise’s future to do that.

The time for the Indians to make a move that does just that is right now.

You just have to pull the trigger.

MW

 

 

Tribe Needs to Start Over on Mound

When Larry Dolan bought the Cleveland Indians, he and his new GM Mark Shapiro made a statement that would change the direction of the franchise.

They were going to build the team around pitching.

How’s that working out for them?

In the last 11 seasons that Shapiro has run the organization, the Tribe has had a few dominant starting pitchers, including three Cy Young Award winners, two won with the Indians (C.C. Sabathia in 2007 and Cliff Lee in 2008), and one elsewhere (Bartolo Colon in 2005).

Since the trades of Sabathia and Lee for little return (that’s a subject for another day), the Tribe has struggled to find effective starting pitching.

A good way to find an effective starter is to look at his hits to innings pitched ratio and his strikeout to walk ratio.  If they’ve allowed fewer hits than innings and struck out twice as many as they’ve walked, then they are good pitchers.

Since trading Lee in 2009, Cleveland has had just two pitchers accomplish this feat, both last season.  They would be Justin Masterson and Josh Tomlin.

So, looking at 15 regular starters (five per year for three years), only two hurlers can be viewed as being solid starters.

Keep in mind that Tim Belcher was the Tribe pitching coach in 2011.

So, the Indians don’t have any pitchers that can throw strikes, and they don’t have anyone with good enough stuff to overcome that.

Going forward, would you blame the front office is they cleared the decks and brought it five new starting pitchers?

Masterson looks to have good stuff, and may be worth salvaging, but does he have the mental toughness to be a starter on a good team?  Certainly his joking with Tigers’ slugger Miguel Cabrera after allowing a home run to him has to raise some eyebrows in the front office.

As for Ubaldo Jimenez, he’s another who doesn’t appear to be mentally tough enough to be a starter on a contender.  Perhaps it is because his mechanics are a mess, so he’s lost confidence, but it’s tough to imagine putting him out on the mound 35 times next season.

Zack McAllister throws hard and for the most part is around the strike zone.  He’s probably the only starter who should be in next year’s rotation for sure.

Carlos Carrasco also has a leg up if he’s healthy.  Remember, he had a very good run last season before his elbow started to hurt, going 4-2 with a 1.90 ERA in June.

The sinker ball theory this organization has trotted out in recent years leaves too much room for error.  Groundballs find holes, and if mixed with walks, allow runs to score.

If you make your living getting guys to hit the ball on the ground, you must have good control.

It’s another failed experiment for the Indians.

Shapiro and GM Chris Antonetti seem to run the Tribe as a 7th grade science project, trying different things that may cost less money and still allow the team to win.

You have to get pitchers who can strike people out.  That’s a tried and true way to win baseball games.

Sure, you can have a sinkerball/control type pitcher who can win, but name pitchers like that who are good on a consistent basis.

Whether they get them in trades, or develop them in the draft, the pitching isn’t going to get better unless the front office gets some guys with swing and miss stuff.

Guys like Colon, Sabathia, and Lee.

It’s another case of the Indians’ organization selling the fans a bunch of fertilizer.

MW

Haslam Says the Right Things

If you live in northeastern Ohio, you have to be impressed with the press conference introducing the Browns’ new owner, Jimmy Haslam on Friday.

Haslam showed enthusiasm and a love of the game, promised the Browns were not moving anywhere (a nod to the paranoid fans), and that he wanted to restore Cleveland’s football team back to our of the elite franchises in the NFL.

He even said a few things that had to make the ticket buyers smile.

First, he never mentioned the name “Steelers”.  He referred to the team he had owned a minority interest in as “the team in the east” or “that other team”.  A cool thing, reminiscent of Ohio State fans never saying the actual name of their rival.

He also talked about how he was glad rookie running back Trent Richardson was on his side now, as Haslam is a Tennessee grad and supporter.

He said in his statement what a class act Randy Lerner was, saying that we know how Randy is, but there’s a major difference already.  Haslam said more in ten minutes than Lerner said in ten years as owner.

Lerner would talk to print reporters, but not the electronic media, so the fans, the people who buy tickets to the games, never got to hear any passion about the Cleveland Browns.  Reporters said he has it, but the public didn’t know that first hand.

They know it after a few minutes of hearing Haslam speak.

It only took those few moments to make the Indians’ ownership the least dynamic of the three professional sports owners in town.

There are a few disturbing things heard on sports talk radio, however, from the people of this area.

It is true that Jimmy Haslam is not from Cleveland, he’s not a lifelong Browns fan.  However, Dan Gilbert was a Pistons’ fan growing up in the Detroit, and no one can doubt the passion he has for this area, and also in making the Cavaliers a winner.

Besides, Larry Dolan said he loved the Indians as a kid, and look at how that is turning out.

Another thing that bothers us is the portrayal of Haslam as a “hillbilly” simply because he is from Tennessee.  People from this area don’t like when folks from New York or Los Angeles make fun of Cleveland, yet they can poke fun at a man because he’s from the south?

You’re better than that, Cleveland.  This man is a billionaire!  He knows how to run a successful business, and one that is based on customer service.  He has learned what people like, and to be sure, he will apply some of those things in marketing his football team.

He’s also honest in saying he has things to learn, and he is going to talk to Robert Kraft to get a tutorial on the NFL.  Based on the Patriots’ success over the last decade, there isn’t anyone better to learn from.  And Haslam was also involved in the Steelers, another well run franchise.

It’s kind of full circle in regards to the Steelers.  When Pittsburgh wanted a fresh start for a horrible franchise (that’s right Steeler Nation, your team was once a complete joke), they hired a former Brown and a native Clevelander in Chuck Noll.

Now with the Browns looking for a similar reversal, they turn to a Steelers’ minority owner.

Jimmy Haslam won the press conference, now he has to have his new football team win games.

JD