
Jay
Feb 12, 2008 Sep 06, 2008 327 18483
Co-author of LetsGoTribe.com.
website: Turtle Studios
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Cleveland Indians
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Indians sever ties with Buffalo
The end of an era, a very successful collaboration between a major league and Triple-A club. It's very nearly a done deal now, and it will be completely done when the Indians or Bisons formally affiliate with another partner.
"In a statement released by the team, the Indians said MLB will inform them on Sept. 15 of available locations for their Triple-A affiliate and that the club will have a 14-day window to negotiate a new deal."
This has been considered an unofficial done deal for some time. We should see an announcement that the Columbus Clippers are severing ties with the Nationals in the next week or so, followed by an announcement affiliating the Clippers with the Indians toward the end of the month.
5 days ago
Jay
25 comments
0 recs
Laffey shut down, Indians call up five others
Even as Josh Barfield comes off the DL and five Bisons become Indians for the rest of the way, Aaron Laffey has been shut down for the rest of the season with a sore left elbow.
The Indians ordered an MRI on Laffey's elbow after he gave up seven runs in each of his last two starts. While no damage was found, the team has opted to end his season at 150 innings — 30 fewer than he pitched last year.
Aubrey returns to the Indians bench and will be awarded an indeterminate number of AB at Marte or Garko or Dellucci's expense. Slocum and Mastny return to the bullpen, joined by Rundles and Meloan, who will make their Indians debuts. Meloan is a promising young pitcher received in the Blake deal.
Meanwhile, unlike the rest of the Indians, Travis Hafner is going to the playoffs — the Eastern League playoffs — continuing his rehab assignment by joining a lineup that includes Matt LaPorta, Wes Hodges and Carlos Santana.
As regular LGT readers know, Laffey needed to be activated by Thursday in order to reach one full year of service time by the end of the season. This premature end to his season ensures that he cannot become a free agent until after 2014, when he'll be 29, and if he spends just five more weeks in the minors, his first year of arbitration will be pushed back from 2011 to 2012.
5 days ago
Jay
19 comments
0 recs
The All-Shoulda-Been-Olympians Team
So I've been thinking it over for the last hour, and it comes down to this.
Grady Sizemore's team isn't going anywhere — the Indians are long-shots to finish as high as third place in their own division and will fare no better in the Wild Card race. And Grady Sizemore himself isn't going anywhere — his youth, talent and long contract all made it extraordinarily unlikely he'd be traded by the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline, and beyond unthinkable after that date.
That being the case, is there really any good reason that Grady Sizemore wasn't competing in the Olympics?
LINEUP ROTATION BENCH BULLPEN 2B Brian Roberts Jake Peavy IF Ian Kinsler Trevor Hoffman CF Grady Sizemore Cliff Lee IF Brandon Phillips Brandon Morrow RF Josh Hamilton Tim Lincecum OF Nick Markakis Mike Adams 1B Lance Berkman Justin Duchscherer OF Nate McLouth Jeremy Affeldt DH Raul Ibañez C Kurt Suzuki Brad Ziegler 3B Ty Wigginton LF Brian Giles C Kelly Shoppach SS Michael Young
IOC President Jacques Rogge came right out and said it today; without major leaguers, there would be no point in bringing baseball back to the Olympics:
"We have Federer, Nadal in tennis, LeBron James in basketball. We have the best cyclists. Ronaldinho is here in football. We want these guys at the Games. We're not saying it should be an entire Major League team, but we want the top athletes here at the Olympics."
This raises the important question, "Who is Ronaldinho?" And also other questions, like:
- Do we really need to hold back from the Olympics every last one of the 1,200 players on the 40-man rosters of all thirty major league teams?
- Would it really be so bad if some players who aren't competing for the playoffs took a little break to compete in the Olympics, August 13-23?
- If there are sixty All-Stars every year, couldn't we put together a hell of a 23-man roster for Team USA, even while excluding players still competing for playoff spots?
- By the time the Olympics start in mid-August, don't we already know which players are still competing for playoff spots, and which ones clearly aren't?
Yes, there are logistical issues, contractual issues, lots of little details to work out. There's the messy matter of officially declaring a team's season lost before it's officially eliminated. There are incentive clauses in player contracts that would be affected, downstream roster and service time and options affected, and eligibility for batting and pitching titles. There are all the issues that already make the WBC messy.
I submit to you that these things could all be worked out without too much trouble. I submit to you that the players would want it. I submit to you that the owners wouldn't lose any significant amount of money, and they all stand to gain immensely by expanding the international marketing of their sport, their Major League, and their players. I submit to you that in a lost season, Indians fans would rather see Grady Sizemore trouncing the Netherlands in the Olympics for two weeks, even if it means that he'll play in only 140 Indians games that season.
So let's set some reasonable ground rules.
- Team selections take place on August 1, after the non-waiver trade deadline, and players report sometime August 5-10. All eight Olympic qualifying countries would be allowed to substitute major leaguers on their rosters, of course.
- Any team within 10 games of a playoff spot can exempt any or all of their players.
- Any team can exempt any player who's been on the DL this season.
- Any team can exempt one additional player just because they want to.
- Any player can exempt himself, of course.
- As an incentive to the teams to send players, any player sent to the Olympics can be traded without passing through waivers, within 24 hours of that player's final Olympic game.
Take a look at the standings as of the morning of August 1, and you'll find that fully twelve teams out of 30 were more than 10 games out of a playoff spot, and three others were also genuinely hopeless.
AL: Orioles, Royals, Indians, Rangers, A's, Mariners.
NL: Nationals, Reds, Astros, Pirates, Giants, Padres.
Also hopeless: Blue Jays, Braves, Rockies. (They can exempt their whole rosters, but we might just sweet-talk them out of Halladay and Holliday.)
Of course by August, Sabathia had already gone to the Brewers, and Bay to the Red Sox, and so on, but literally dozens of great players remained on non-contending teams. The Indians would have exempted Carmona due to his injuries and taken Paul Byrd as their one general exemption, since they would have expected to move him in a waiver deal, and other clubs would have made similar exemptions. Could we still have built an impressive Team USA out of those teams' healthy players? Hell, yes.
We'd need four starters for seven games in the preliminary round, and then two for the medal round. (You'd probably start your #1 guy in Games 1 and 5 and the Gold Medal game, but you'd probalby hold back your #2 guy to Game 4, so he could start the winner-take-all semifinal on full rest. The other games aren't as crucial.) Of course we'd need nine starting everyday players (including a DH), and I imagine we'd go with five bench players and five relievers — with absolutely no roster substitutions, better at least consider a third catcher.
133 comments | 1 recs
A quick look at new Tribe starter Anthony Reyes' mechanics, courtesy of our buddy and Indians fan Kyle Boddy, whose scouting and mechanics blog Driveline Mechanics went live on the SBN network yesterday. Animated photo courtesy of Chris O'Leary, click through for Kyle's analysis.
21 days ago
Jay
9 comments
0 recs
We asked for a bonus. They didn't want to do a bonus and they offered me a Major League contract. I can tell you how it impacted me. It didn't impact me at all. I pitched the same whether I had a $3 million bonus or a $4 million contract.
It may have [increased expectations], but it still didn't affect the way I pitched.
It affected everybody outside of me. The fans, the organization. They act more different than the player does. If a player has a true desire to perform well and pitch well, he should have that whether or not he has a timetable that's been increased. I think it affects the expectations outside of the individual himself. It all starts with the outside people.
It took me a few years to iron out some things that didn't go well for me, and it would've taken a few years whether I had a Major League contract or not. It's not like I was going faster or slower because of my contract. The outcome probably would've been different, but as a pitcher I would've progressed exactly the same from year to year.
Jeremy Guthrie, offering a surprising perspective on his contract and career with the Indians.
21 days ago
Jay
6 comments
0 recs
Game Thread: USA vs. Canada
Hey, guys, just visiting from over at LetsGoTribe. Seeing as how our big-league club more or less sucks and we have several good prospects playing in the Olympics, we've been Game Threading the Olympics for a few nights now.
With the Rockies in a similar situation, I thought y'all might like to join us. I'm also inviting A's fans over at Athletics Nation. You can watch a live online broadcast of the game, so tune in and feel free to come on over to discuss, the game is just getting started ...
23 days ago
Jay
0 comments
0 recs
Open Game Thread: USA vs. Canada
Hey, guys, just visiting from over at LetsGoTribe. Seeing as how our big-league club more or less sucks and we have several good prospects playing in the Olympics, we've been Game Threading the Olympics for a few nights now.
With the A's in a similar situation, I thought y'all might like to join us. I'm also inviting Rockies fans over at Purple Row. You can watch a live online broadcast of the game, so tune in and feel free to come on over to discuss, the game is just getting started ...
23 days ago
Jay
0 comments
0 recs
Indians sign ... everybody
Following on earlier rumors, Baseball America reports that the Indians have signed second-round pick Trey Haley for $1.1 million and 16th-round pick T.J. House for a way-way-over-slot $750,000. More detail on the players' situations is in this update from Hoynes.
The Indians had only one of the first 75 picks yet are now poised to end up with five of the top 75 signing bonuses, after making several "flier" picks in the lower rounds and courting them aggressively. The Indians had already gone far over slot earlier this week to sign three other picks: Bryce Stowell (22nd round, 725K), Zach Putnam (fifth round, 600K) and Tim Fedroff (seventh round, 725K).
Haley was picked #76 overall, at the end of the second round, but received a larger bonus than any of the picks in the supplemental first round, #31 to #46 overall, and the same as #29 overall Lonnie Chisenhall. The other four — House, Fedroff, Stowell and Putnam — were each paid a bonus commensurate with a second-round pick.
The Indians have now signed all of their top 16 picks, plus seven of their next ten picks, paying an estimated $6.5 million in signing bonuses, with the six mentioned above receiving $4.9 million out of that total.
23 days ago
Jay
9 comments
0 recs
Olympic baseball, aka the China Summer League
Some people get all worked up about the Olympics; I can't say I'm one of them, at least not since I was a kid. I couldn't tell you the first thing about the history of Olympic baseball, although I do know that after this month, Olympic baseball is history. So my main interest in these games is as a showcase for a few Indians prospects who are participating.
Team USA features Akron OF/1B Matt LaPorta, 23, centerpiece of last month's Sabathia trade and arguably the Indians' top propsect, period. Team USA also includes Buffalo reliever Jeff Stevens, not quite 25, notorious fruit of the Brandon Phillips trade (not that there's anything wrong with being notorious fruit). Stevens electrified Indians prospect watchers by striking out 102 in 83 innings last season, earning a spot on the 40-man roster, and he continued at that pace in Akron this season before slowing down somewhat upon his promotion to Buffalo.
Team Canada features Kinston OF Nick Weglarz, 20, an excellent slugger prospect having a fine season against older competition in the Carolina League, probably one of our best five prospects at this point. Joining Weglarz is Akron reliever T.J. Burton, 25, more of an organizational solider than a serious prospect at this point.
Like the other Olympic sports, baseball will be broadcast sporadically across NBC's confusing network of networks, and many other events are being streamed online at nbcolympics.com in surprisingly high quality. Here's the schedule of games being broadcast or streamed, featuring Team USA and/or Team Canada:
| Date | Time (EST) |
Matchup | Where |
| Tues Aug 12 | 11:30 p.m. | China vs. Canada | online |
| Wed Aug 13 | 6:00 a.m. | South Korea vs. USA (live) | online |
| 1:00 p.m. | South Korea vs. USA (replay) | MSNBC | |
| 10:30 p.m. | Netherlands vs. USA (live) | online | |
| Thurs Aug 14 | 2:00 a.m. | Netherlands vs. USA (replay) | USA |
| 6:00 a.m. | Cuba vs. Canada | online | |
| 11:30 p.m. | USA vs. Cuba (live) | online | |
| Fri Aug 15 | 2:00 a.m. | USA vs. Cuba (replay) | USA |
| 6:00 a.m. | Canada vs. South Korea | online | |
| 10:30 p.m. | USA vs. Canada (live) | online | |
| Sat Aug 16 | 12:30 p.m. | USA vs. Canada (replay) | MSNBC |
| Date | Time (EST) |
Matchup | Where |
| Sun Aug 17 | 10:30 p.m. | Canada vs. Japan | online |
| Mon Aug 18 | 7:00 a.m. | USA vs. China (live) | online |
| 12:00 noon | USA vs. China (replay) | MSNBC | |
| Tues Aug 19 | 7:00 a.m. | USA vs. Taiwan (live) | online |
| 12:00 noon | USA vs. Taiwan (replay) | MSNBC | |
| Wed Aug 20 | 6:00 a.m. | Canada vs. Taiwan | online |
| 7:00 a.m. | Japan vs. USA (live) | online | |
| 11:00 a.m. | Japan vs. USA (replay) | MSNBC | |
| Date | Time (EST) |
Matchup | Where |
| Thurs Aug 21 | 10:30 p.m. |
Medal semifinal A (live) |
online |
| Fri Aug 22 | midnight | Medal semifinal A (replay) |
CNBC |
| 6:00 a.m. | Medal semifinal B (live) | online | |
| 2:00 p.m. | Medal semifinal B (replay) | MSNBC | |
| 10:30 p.m. | Bronze Medal Game (live) |
online | |
| Sat Aug 23 | 2:00 a.m. | Bronze Medal Game (replay) |
USA |
| 6:00 a.m. | Gold Medal Game (live) | online | |
| 6:00 a.m. | Gold Medal Game (live) |
USA |
25 comments | 3 recs
Red Sox claim Giles, talking trade with Padres
Hey, he's better than Lofton.
You know how this works, right?
1. The two teams can work out a trade.
2. Padres can revoke the waiver and take Giles back, after which he can't be traded this season.
3. Padres can let Giles go to the Red Sox for nothing, making them responsible for his entire remaining contract.
4. Giles can veto any of the above or place his own conditions on allowing it to go forward.
Giles has a limited trade veto clause in his contract. (He actually doesn't become a 10/5 player with full trade veto rights for another 18 days.) He's owed about $2.5 million for the rest of this season and has a $9 million club option or $3 million buyout for 2009. His contract also calls for a $2 million salary bump if he's traded — I assume that that applies to only the remaining part of the season (about 550K if so) and to 2009 if (and only if) the club option is picked up.
He could ask the Red Sox to pick up the 2009 option at $11 million in order to approve the deal. Then again, he could ask them to decline it — collect his 550K trade bonus and his $3 million buyout and go back on the free agent market.
He's posted an 815 OPS this year in Petco, one of the most difficult parks to generate any power numbers, and he's likely to do well in Fenway as a lefty gap hitter. He's 37.
about 1 month ago
Jay
13 comments
0 recs
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