Guardians mailbag: The best Ramirez in franchise history, front office regrets and more
Jun 28, 2024; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Cleveland Guardians third baseman Jose Ramirez (11) celebrates in the dugout after hitting a solo home run in the first inning against the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Peter Aiken-USA TODAY Sports
By Zack Meisel
Jul 9, 2024
CLEVELAND — The most common mailbag question I received last week: Who are the Cleveland Guardians going to add at the trade deadline?
Why, Yusei Kikuchi and Brent Rooker, of course.
Really, there’s no way to know for a couple more weeks. Some team that doesn’t seem like an obvious seller at the moment is going to wind up trading a solid player we haven’t yet considered.
The Guardians will continue to scour the market for starting pitching, but also for other upgrades, since the consensus across the league, for now, seems to be that difference-making rotation help will come with a hefty price tag. One league source said not to expect much movement until after the draft.
Until then, we wait. For now, let’s get to your questions.
Is José the best-hitting Ramírez in Cleveland baseball history? — @DollarDogNick
Well, I think he has surpassed Hanley, Harold and Alex.
On a serious note, Manny was a more prolific hitter in his eight years with the franchise, but José is the more well-rounded player, and has the longevity to make the answer to this question more complicated. Manny spent eight years in Cleveland; this is José’s 12th season with the club, and he’s under contract for four more. By the end of his career, Ramírez could be the most accomplished position player in franchise history, regardless of surname. Or, at the least, the most accomplished position player in the past 100 years. (Tris Speaker and Nap Lajoie posted some gaudy numbers in your great-grandparents’ day.)
Manny Ramirez: .313/.407/.592 slash line (152 OPS+), 236 home runs, 237 doubles
José Ramírez: .278/.352/.502 slash line (129 OPS+), 239 home runs, 343 doubles
José recently passed Manny for third on the franchise’s all-time home run list. With four more, he’ll eclipse Albert Belle for second, leaving only Jim Thome (337) in his crosshairs.
Think about the top three home run hitters in franchise history. There’s Thome, standing 6-foot-4, a big Peoria, Ill., farm boy responsible for Progressive Field’s longest homer, a 511-foot blast that landed on Eagle Avenue. There’s Belle, built like The Hulk, with the muscle to obliterate baseballs and make opposing pitchers cower. And then there’s José Ramírez, who stands 5-foot-9 in spikes and was always the runt on every baseball field in his native Dominican Republic. It’s a nice reminder that superstars in baseball come in all shapes and sizes and from all backgrounds.
If the front office could undo any move (signing, free agency, trade) in the past couple years, which one would it be? — @LeeSuggs189830
It’s the one that Cleveland executives have light-heartedly asked Tampa executives to undo. It’s Junior Caminero for Tobias Myers. Caminero is a consensus top-five prospect in the sport who debuted in the majors last summer shortly after his 20th birthday. Myers spent eight months in the Guardians’ system and totaled 60 (rough) innings.
I’ve heard team officials admit, in words I can’t print here, that they royally screwed that one up, which can happen when trading an 18-year-old. So, uh, maybe don’t do that, especially since Caminero had done nothing in the Dominican Summer League to suggest they should believe in him any less than when they signed him two years earlier.
On one hand, they can’t beat themselves up too much for the Myers side of the equation, as he bounced from the Guardians to the San Francisco Giants to the Chicago White Sox in 2022 and then allowed 30 homers in 137 2/3 innings for the Brewers’ Double-A affiliate last year. But he’s enjoying a solid season for the Brewers in 2024, and if anyone were to unlock his potential, shouldn’t it have been Cleveland’s vaunted pitching factory?
Do you think renovations have played a significant role in the offensive improvements the team is seeing from the same group of players? — @Garrabrant19
Well, first, it’s incredible that they sit only 21 homers behind their 2023 total.
Of the players most responsible for Cleveland’s offensive emergence, Josh Naylor has fared better at home than on the road, but Ramírez’s home/road splits are just about identical, David Fry has slugged a bit better on the road and Steven Kwan could hit well on Neptune. Naylor launched a 93 mph sinker over the row of shrubbery beyond the center-field fence at Progressive Field last Friday; it would’ve been a homer in all 30 parks, with or without a manufactured jet stream.
Is there a wind vortex powering the Guardians to new hitting heights?
Guardians at home: .245/.322/.425
Guardians on the road: .248/.318/.402
Or, let’s use sOPS+, which measures performance relative to league performance for a particular split, in this case home/away results.
Guardians at home: 107 sOPS+ (meaning they hit 7 percent better at home than a league-average team does)
Guardians on the road: 107 sOPS+ (meaning they hit 7 percent better on the road than a league-average team does)
Meanwhile, take a look at the same breakdown for, let’s say, the Kansas City Royals.
Home: .267/.330/.444 (115 sOPS+)
Road: .223/.280/.359 (83 sOPS+)
Should Major League Baseball look into the disparity in offensive numbers at home and on the road for the Kansas City Royals? — @KenCarman
Huh. Hadn’t given that much thought.
On paper, it’s about the same roster as last year, but it’s on track for 25-30 more wins. What’s the main reason? — @HoyasAndNatsFan
It’s also a similar roster to the 2022 group that won 92 games. A young roster can produce a wide range of potential outcomes. We’ve witnessed growth from Kwan, Naylor and Fry, continued excellence from Ramírez and that, coupled with a dominant bullpen, has spawned a contender. If it would have unfolded like this a year ago, no one would have been shocked. But many players on this roster will tell you they needed to learn from last year’s failures to ultimately take steps forward. Who would have envisioned four of the club’s top five hitters would be All-Stars?
Has Steven Kwan’s performance this year made it more likely or less likely that he gets a contract extension? — @FranmilsEyebrow
Probably less likely. It’s certainly raised the price tag for his first round of arbitration this winter, which could give him less incentive to sign a long-term deal. After 2024, he’ll have three seasons of arbitration before he can test free agency. Every year a player inches closer to free agency, it becomes more difficult to sign them to an extension. Every year a player wins a batting title and posts a top-10 OPS, it becomes exponentially more difficult to sign them to an extension. It’ll probably cost the Guardians two or three times what it would have after his rookie season in 2022.
Is there an Andrew Miller-type reliever available? Feels more attainable than a front-line starter with multiple years of control. — @bballcoachdrew
This should be a viable contingency plan, because off days are more frequent in October, so a manager can empty his bullpen in a playoff game without wondering how the group will survive, say, 26 games in 27 days. There’s no better example, of course, than the 2016 Indians, who rode Miller and Cody Allen to the World Series. But that team still needed Corey Kluber to pitch at his peak level to advance that far.
So, ideally, Tanner Bibee would join two or three other dependable starters, whether that’s Gavin Williams, Triston McKenzie, Ben Lively or some trade acquisition. But the front office shouldn’t ignore the option of adding a reliever, either. Some possible candidates: Tanner Scott (Marlins), Carlos Estévez (Angels), Pete Fairbanks (Rays), Jason Adam (Rays), Yimi García (Blue Jays), and Kyle Finnegan (Nationals).
Oakland’s Mason Miller is every team’s top choice, but with five more years of control, the Athletics can hold out for a godfather offer.
Will David Blitzer ever speak to anyone in the CLE media? — @CleSportsFan34
Blitzer has only lurked in the shadows, in part because the Guardians don’t want him to be viewed as some savior waiting to take over. So, we can only assume, then, that he’ll pump up the payroll to $600 million when he controls the franchise in a few years.
Who’s accountable for giving Deyvison De Los Santos back to the D-Backs for the cost of a Nissan, and choosing to go with Ramón Laureano and Estevan Florial instead? — @PaulieB621
Florial was always going to have a leg up on De Los Santos for a roster spot because they traded an actual asset for him in Cody Morris (who is pitching for the Yankees’ Triple-A affiliate). Laureano was guaranteed a spot because he was guaranteed $5.15 million. It only cost the club $50,000 to host De Los Santos for the spring. Maybe the Guardians taught De Los Santos everything he knows, and it’s validation that their hitting development has improved. Maybe, with the right-field wind vortex, he would be challenging Aaron Judge for the league lead in homers.
The reality is, it’s tough to keep a 20-year-old on your roster for an entire season. They knew that going in, which made it a strange selection in the first place, especially with similarly profiling hitters in Johnathan Rodriguez and Jhonkensy Noel (and Florial) already on the 40-man roster. De Los Santos’ slash line for Arizona’s Double-A and Triple-A affiliates this season, by the way: .332/.381/.652.
Given the state of the rotation, do you ever see a world in which they kick the tires on Trevor Bauer, even if it’s Triple A first? — @CLEBrownsfan84
I’ll stress this one, final time: There are 30 MLB teams. If you ranked them in order of likelihood of signing Bauer, the Guardians would rank 31st.
Thinking about the Guardians’ need for rotation help, wondering which teams post-1968 had the weakest starting pitching but still managed to make the World Series? — @mrmuleman
Let’s limit this to the Wild Card era (1995 to present) since it’s more representative of today’s postseason setup. And let’s use FanGraphs’ ERA-minus metric, which measures performance relative to the league standards since, for example, the Guardians’ starting pitching ERA of 4.52 doesn’t look great in 2024, but would’ve been exemplary at the height of the steroid era a quarter-century ago. (We’ll also exclude the shortened 2020 season.)
The worst rotations, by ERA-minus, for a team that reached the World Series in that span:
2006 Cardinals: 109 (meaning their rotation was 9 percent worse than league average)
2014 Giants: 108
2023 Diamondbacks: 107
2015 Royals: 106
1997 Indians: 106
Cleveland’s starting pitcher ERA-minus in 2024 (entering Monday’s action): 115, tied with the 32-58 Rockies.