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Re: Articles

Posted: Tue Feb 18, 2025 11:06 am
by civ ollilavad
It's official: we add to our supply of rehabbing pitchers with John Means, who could be back late this season, or more likely in 2026

Re: Articles

Posted: Tue Feb 18, 2025 12:35 pm
by TFIR
From The Athletic

Cleveland Guardians
B
Offseason grade
Profile
2025 payroll estimate
$96 million
2024 payroll
$104 million

Cleveland had a busy winter, re-signing the rehabbing Shane Bieber, trading away longtime core regulars Andrés Giménez and Josh Naylor and reuniting with Carlos Santana (again) to replace Naylor. But did the Guardians get better, or merely cheaper, in dropping to 25th in payroll at about $100 million? They’re betting on Luis L. Ortiz and Slade Cecconi paying future dividends, and few teams have a superior track record for developing arms.

It was creative and smart to take advantage of Toronto’s pursuit of Roki Sasaki to shed Myles Straw’s contract, but the impact is lessened by reinvesting that savings questionably or not at all. Similar to last offseason’s trade for reliever Scott Barlow, spending $7 million on the 34-year-old Paul Sewald, while a reasonable price for a setup man, seems like an odd splurge for a team with a $100 million payroll.

Re: Articles

Posted: Thu Feb 20, 2025 11:13 am
by civ ollilavad
spending $7 million on the 34-year-old Paul Sewald, while a reasonable price for a setup man, seems like an odd splurge for a team with a $100 million payroll.
Isn't it?

Re: Articles

Posted: Thu Feb 20, 2025 11:27 am
by civ ollilavad
from The Athletic

The Guardians’ most interesting players in 2025, from Steven Kwan to Travis Bazzana [The list will not provide any surprises]

GOODYEAR, Ariz. — For much of the last 30 years, Carl Willis has sprinkled fairy dust on Cleveland’s pitchers. In 1998, he guided a teenager named CC Sabathia through his first professional tests. Nearly a decade after that, Willis steered Sabathia to an American League Cy Young Award. Later, he did the same for Cliff Lee and Shane Bieber.

Now in the twilight of his coaching career, Willis is still helping the Guardians churn out capable starters. Tanner Bibee, born nine months after Cleveland drafted Sabathia, is the latest frontline arm to emerge from the pipeline.

As it stands, Bibee might be the only sure thing — to the extent that pitchers can be sure things — in Cleveland’s rotation. Late last year, as the club surged toward a division title, its decision-makers were distressed about the present and near-future state of its starting pitching.

The Guardians will enter the 2025 season with Bibee at the forefront, and then a bunch of question marks, from Bieber to Gavin Williams to Triston McKenzie to Joey Cantillo to Ben Lively, to newcomers Luis Ortiz, Slade Cecconi and Doug Nikhazy. They even anticipate John Means, recovering from his second elbow surgery in three years, will make it into a game before the season ends.

There’s an array of potential outcomes, and Willis will have a hand in trying to convert some of these mysteries into success stories.

Where there’s mystery, though, there’s intrigue. And there’s plenty of that throughout Cleveland’s roster, not just in the rotation.

What can Cade Smith accomplish after an otherworldly rookie season? Can Andrew Walters follow suit and leverage his wicked stuff into a late-inning role? Can Jhonkensy Noel make enough contact to complement his power? Can Lane Thomas, in a contract year, showcase both his 30-homer and 30-steals ability? Can Trevor Stephan return from Tommy John surgery to eventually lock down a role in a crowded bullpen? Can Bo Naylor flush a forgettable season at the plate? What does Carlos Santana, with help from a personal trainer and chef, have left in the tank as he nears his 39th birthday? Can Bibee deliver on his catchers’ proclamations and contend for a Cy Young Award?

Here are 10 other intriguing players with storylines worth following as camp gets under way:

Steven Kwan
Why he’s interesting: Could Kwan cement himself as one of the best players… in the league? That might sound hyperbolic, but he’s an All-Star who has never not won a Gold Glove Award, figures to threaten for a batting title each year, walks more than he strikes out, and, last season, added power to his repertoire.

The team perspective: They need him to stay healthy. He only appeared in 122 games last season, and injuries might explain why he went from flirting with a .400 batting average in late June to staring up at the .300 mark in September. He rebounded during the playoffs, reminding the world he’s a pest to opposing pitchers.

Gavin Williams
Why he’s interesting: He described his 2024 season as being full of highs and lows, with more lows than highs. It all began with an elbow injury that had him playing catch-up throughout the summer. This is a first-round pick built like a skyscraper who tosses a 97-mph fastball and a couple of secondary pitches that induce a bunch of whiffs. But as manager Stephen Vogt said, “He really didn’t have his fastball at any point last year, and to get the vertical movement on his fastball, it opens up everything for Gavin.”

The team perspective: Williams and Bibee have always been linked due to breezing through Cleveland’s system. There’s a reality in which they’re back on the same level, anchoring Cleveland’s rotation. There are plenty of pivotal players on this roster, but perhaps none who offers the potential impact that Williams does.

Triston McKenzie

Why he’s interesting: His 2022 season, in which he posted a 2.96 ERA across 191 1/3 innings, seems like it happened a decade ago. Injuries derailed his 2023 campaign, and though his elbow remained healthy last year, he didn’t pitch with the confidence of a guy who was, at one point, a trendy Cy Young Award pick. Now 27 years old, can he resurrect his career?

The team perspective: As is the case with Williams, if McKenzie can prove reliable, the rotation could return to its customary role as the team’s backbone. The word “if,” of course, is carrying a lot of weight. McKenzie is competing for a rotation spot this spring, a steep fall from grace for a guy who was on the verge of signing a long-term contract in the spring of 2023. He’ll start the club’s Cactus League opener Saturday.

Kyle Manzardo
Why he’s interesting: Unlike last year, there’s no question about when Manzardo might crack the roster. By October, Manzardo was batting second (and excelling). Now, he’ll get a full season to showcase both his mustache and his ability at the plate.

The team perspective: They need his power and his patience. If he can convince management he deserves daily playing time — not just a guy who serves as designated hitter when a righty’s on the mound — that would be mighty valuable.

Chase DeLauter
Why he’s interesting: A first-round pick and consensus top-50 prospect who has hit at every level and turned heads last spring? Yeah, there’s a lot of intrigue there. But can he stay healthy? DeLauter has totaled only 406 plate appearances since the Guardians drafted him in 2022. He did, however, thrive to such a degree last spring that, even though he wasn’t technically in big-league camp, the team’s brass sat down with him in late March to inform him he wasn’t making the Opening Day roster. One executive said he couldn’t remember such a conference with a player who was never officially competing for a spot.

The team perspective: For decades, Cleveland has struggled to develop homegrown outfielders, especially ones with bats so imposing there’s no need to limit them to a platoon role. DeLauter’s bat could allow him to stand above the Lonnie Chisenhall and Tyler Naquin types, and this is a roster that desperately needs another capable outfielder to pair with Kwan and Thomas.

Juan Brito
Why he’s interesting: As a 22-year-old at Triple A, he recorded an .807 OPS with 21 homers, 40 doubles and impressive walk and strikeout rates. He’s a switch-hitter who makes sound swing decisions, a couple of qualities the Guardians lust after, and though he isn’t known for his glove, he has bounced around the diamond enough to offer some versatility, another trait the club covets.

The team perspective: Well, the Guardians don’t have a second baseman, and while it’s not like them to hand the job to an unproven rookie on Opening Day, there isn’t exactly a group of grizzled veterans angling for the opportunity either. Brito’s competition is Gabriel Arias, Tyler Freeman, Angel Martinez and Daniel Schneemann. Brito seems as intriguing as any of them, given his polished approach at the plate. Said Vogt: “The beauty is, when you have a competition like that, the players will tell you who it is.”

Brayan Rocchio
Why he’s interesting: A guy who didn’t offer much at the plate during the regular season suddenly resembled an All-Star when the calendar flipped to October. Rocchio posted a .614 OPS last season before collecting 11 hits in 33 trips to the plate during the playoffs.

The team perspective: The Guardians sure are banking on a Rocchio breakout in 2025, considering they don’t have an obvious backup plan at shortstop, especially since the club dealt Andrés Giménez to the Blue Jays. Rocchio is a “Best Shape of His Life” nominee, so perhaps that’s a good start.

José Ramírez
Why he’s interesting: He very well could be a future Hall of Famer, that’s why. Ramírez, 32, has yet to show signs of decline. He collected another top-five MVP finish last season and came within a kitten’s whisker of the most under-the-radar 40/40 season of all time (thanks, Shohei Ohtani). Another banner year should make his Hall of Fame prospects more pronounced to the masses.

The team perspective: The Guardians need him like they always do. Ramírez has played in at least 152 games in each of the last four seasons, and they can’t afford for that streak to end in 2025, because there are plenty of question marks after him in Vogt’s lineup.

Shane Bieber

Why he’s interesting: Bieber is targeting a midseason return from Tommy John surgery. He only made two starts last season before his elbow begged for mercy, but in those two starts, hitters couldn’t touch him. It seemed as though he had recaptured his ace form. Will he look anything like that pitcher when he returns to the mound this summer?

The team perspective: What a jolt the rotation could receive in the second half if Bieber’s recovery goes anything like Matthew Boyd’s seamless transition last year. Can’t you already hear Chris Antonetti in July uttering the line, “We feel like a healthy Shane Bieber is a better option than any trade we could make?” It’s probably unfair to expect Bieber to return to excellence without any hiccups along the way, but after Bieber’s first bullpen session this spring, Vogt said, “He looked like he never stopped throwing.”

Travis Bazzana

Why he’s interesting: He gives Cleveland fans another reason to scour minor-league box scores each night. The crop of second base candidates is simply keeping the spot warm for Bazzana, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2024 draft. As he works his way to the majors, he’ll play at affiliates — High-A Lake County, Class AA Akron or Class AAA Columbus — that are all within a reasonable driving distance for Northeast Ohio-dwelling Guardians fans who want to scout the 22-year-old themselves.

Re: Articles

Posted: Thu Feb 20, 2025 11:40 am
by civ ollilavad
Probably a consensus that "There are plenty of pivotal players on this roster, but perhaps none who offers the potential impact that Williams does."

Re: Articles

Posted: Mon Feb 24, 2025 2:24 pm
by civ ollilavad
GOODYEAR, Ariz. -- With the momentum of a career year last season, right-hander Ben Lively was dialed in making his Spring Training debut.

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Sunday in Goodyear, Lively threw 23 of his 33 pitches for strikes over two innings. He mixed in his sinker, changeup and four-seam fastball, and allowed one run while fanning one and walking one as the Guardians were all over the Angels, 14-2.

“All good, just trying to locate everything, not letting it rip all the way,” he said. “Felt good to be out there.”

He also gave a playful wink to being left off the Guardians’ ALDS roster last fall. Word then was as his innings piled up (a career-high 151 in 2024), he struggled, although he was added to the ALCS roster, appearing once in relief.

“I just got to, I guess, throw it harder so there’s no excuses from anyone this year,” Lively said with a good-natured smile. “I don’t want to look tired out there.”

Now that camp is off to a strong start for Lively, who will turn 33 during Spring Training, he hopes camp ends better in 2025. A year ago he spent time on the injured list due to a viral infection he picked up late in Arizona and lost 20 pounds in three days.

“We don’t want any more of that,” he recalled. “I just got crushed and had to work back from that. That was a crazy buildup.”

Lively posted career bests in 2024 in wins (13), ERA (3.81), strikeouts (118) and WHIP (1.25) over 29 starts. He finished second in innings to Tanner Bibee.
“What he really brings to the table, he brings us stability but he’s also such a tenacious competitor,” manager Stephen Vogt said. “Ben brings a ton to our team in the clubhouse and on the field.”

Handling pitchers can vary during Spring Training, says Cleveland catcher Austin Hedges.

“There’s basically two options: Is the guy making the team; is the guy trying to make the team? And you’ve got to call the game differently for them,” Hedges said. “If the guy is making the team, we might try to work on things that we might need later in the year. If the guy is trying to make the team, we’ve just got to get outs.”

Re: Articles

Posted: Mon Feb 24, 2025 2:29 pm
by civ ollilavad
MLB list of the day:

1 dark horse candidate to make each Opening Day roster

Guardians: RHP Luis Frías
Let’s get the important part out of the way first: Frías, closer Emmanuel Clase and newly acquired starter Luis Ortiz are all tight and are all big dudes with dreadlocks. So a game that goes Ortiz to Frías to Clase would be a lot of fun. The 26-year-old Frías, who was signed to a Minor League deal with a spring invite, could conceivably join recent acquisitions Paul Sewald and Jakob Junis as an option to ease some of the burden on the Guards’ big four (Clase, Cade Smith, Hunter Gaddis and Tim Herrin). It’s a numbers game, of course, but the trouble with Spring Training – especially after a deep postseason run – is the possibility of injury issues cropping up, potentially opening an opportunity to someone like the experienced Frías. He had a terrible 2024 with the D-backs and Blue Jays, but the Guards’ pitching factory could untap his best. -- Anthony Castrovince

Not much of a debut Saturday by Frias 2/3 innings 2 hits 2 errors behind him 1 homerun 4 runs 2 earned.
Koby Allard is the dark horse pitcher who had a good debut with 2 near-perfect innings yesterday. no hits but one walk, 4 strikeouts. But don't be fooled; his major league numbers are horrible. Career ERA of 5.99 a mammoth 55 homers allowed in 272 innings

Re: Articles

Posted: Mon Feb 24, 2025 7:32 pm
by civ ollilavad
I can't really copy the text of the Cleveland.com chat but one interesting note is that Hoynes says that Tugboat looked really impressive in some pregame tossing. He thinks Wilkinson may have lost some weight, didn't look all that huge, but he did enjoy watching him work.
I note that he led all our minor leaguers last summer in both strikeouts 174 [second in all of minor league baseball] and batting average against [169]

Re: Articles

Posted: Mon Feb 24, 2025 7:34 pm
by civ ollilavad
We are told that Aleman and Sabrowski are both out with unspecified injuries. Aleman missed 2/3 of last season. Sabrowski has had two TJ operations.
Enright was out but is starting to work out again.

In a shocking surprise, Valera's return to the field is taking longer than recently suggested.

Meanwhile no word about the absence of DeLauter. Another unsurprising disappointment.

Re: Articles

Posted: Mon Feb 24, 2025 10:01 pm
by rusty2
Cleveland Guardians owner Larry Dolan dies at 94
Cleveland Indians owner Larry Dolan, left, talks with catcher Carlos Santana during baseball spring training Saturday, Feb. 26, 2011, in Goodyear, Ariz. (AP Photo/Mark Duncan)
By Zack Meisel

Larry Dolan, who spearheaded the longest ownership tenure in the history of Cleveland’s baseball franchise, died Sunday, the team announced. He was 94.

“We are saddened by the loss of our Dad, but lucky to have him as part of our lives as long as we did,” said son Paul Dolan, Cleveland Guardians owner, chairman and CEO, on behalf of the entire family. “He was a loving husband, father and grandfather who was passionate about his family, work, our community and his love of our local sports teams, including owning the Cleveland Guardians.


Dolan, a lifelong Clevelander who graduated from St. Ignatius High School and rooted for the Indians for decades, purchased his hometown team through a family trust from Dick Jacobs in 2000 for $323 million. The sale price represented nearly 10 times what Jacobs and his brother, David, had paid for the club in 1986.

The Dolans had fallen short in bids to purchase other teams, including the Cleveland Browns. They acquired control of the Indians just as the team was entering a period of transition, as the club shifted from being a perennial American League powerhouse with a nightly sellout crowd into a painful rebuild less than two years after they took the reins.

Still, under the Dolan stewardship, the team has remained mostly competitive, with seven AL Central titles, two wild-card berths and an AL pennant under their watch. The 2024 club reached the ALCS before sputtering against the New York Yankees. Cleveland does own the league’s longest active championship drought, which dates back to October 1948.

Since the start of the 2000 season, Cleveland boasts a regular-season record of 2,046-1,899, for a winning percentage of .519, which ranks seventh in the majors, behind only the Yankees, Dodgers, Cardinals, Braves, Red Sox and Giants.



Dolan’s son, Paul, took over as the control person for the organization in 2013, and a few years later, the family put in motion plans to relinquish its majority ownership stake. They brought aboard Kansas City energy magnate John Sherman, whose minority ownership pact included a path to eventual majority ownership. Sherman, however, divested his interests to instead purchase his hometown Royals.

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After a years-long search for a replacement for Sherman, David Blitzer was approved as Guardians minority owner in June 2022, and he is expected to assume majority control of the franchise in the coming years.

Before the Dolans’ tenure, Alva Bradley held the longest ownership reign in team history. Bradley owned the club from 1927-46 before handing it off to Bill Veeck.

The Dolan family received the Lifetime Achievement honor at the Greater Cleveland Sports Awards in 2020. Their tenure, while regularly met with criticism about stingy payrolls, has been marked by continuity, with front-office pillars Chris Antonetti and Mike Chernoff spending more than two decades and counting with the club. Both have declined opportunities to run other teams’ front offices.

Mark Shapiro, who became Cleveland’s general manager shortly after the Dolans took over, worked in the front office for nearly a quarter-century before moving on to Toronto in 2015. Terry Francona spent 11 seasons as the team’s manager. Pitching coach Carl Willis, who has spent much of the past 30 years helping the organization develop a reputation as a pitching factory, voiced in September that part of his motivation for coaching into his 60s was to try to win a World Series “for the Dolan family,” among others.

“I just want to see it happen,” Willis said.

Dolan’s older brother, Charles, the founder of Cablevision and HBO, died in December. His nephew, James, owns the New York Knicks.

Dolan was president and managing partner at the Chardon, Ohio-based law firm Thrasher, Dinmore & Dolan. He earned his law degree from the University of Notre Dame. He was a board member for The Cleveland Foundation and the Geauga County chapter of the American Red Cross, president of the Christopher Foundation and founder of the Geauga County Public Library Foundation.

Re: Articles

Posted: Tue Feb 25, 2025 11:39 am
by TFIR
Ostriches, butt cheeks and relentless energy: How Austin Hedges became an indispensable MLB teammate
Ken Rosenthal
Feb 25, 2025
Image
After the Texas Rangers acquired Max Scherzer at the 2023 deadline, a number of their players were unsure of how to act, and almost distanced themselves out of respect for the future Hall of Famer.

Catcher Austin Hedges, who joined the Rangers two days later in a separate trade, took the opposite approach.

“He was like, I’m just going straight at this guy’s chin,” former Rangers first baseman Nathaniel Lowe recalled.

Hedges, 32, could not be further from Scherzer in career accomplishments. His .186 lifetime batting average is the second lowest in AL-NL history among players with 2,000 at-bats, according to STATS Perform, ahead of only Bill Bergen, who batted .170 from 1901-1911.

But teams continue to value Hedges for two reasons: his elite defensive skills and his rare ability to connect a clubhouse.

The Cleveland Guardians, after reaching the American League Championship Series, made Hedges one of the first free-agent signings of the offseason, bringing him back Nov. 6 on a one-year, $4 million contract. Never mind that Hedges’ career OPS is .559, and .446 the past three seasons.

The Guardians wanted Hedges’ energy. The confidence he instills in his teammates. And yes, the raucous, fun-loving environment he creates in a clubhouse, the way he did with Scherzer in 2023.

“What does Max want? Max wants to talk trash,” Hedges said. “The best of the best, no one picks on them. These guys are dying for banter, just to be one of the boys.”

Hedges does not remember what he said to Scherzer initially, joking, “I don’t remember half the things I say.” Scherzer believes mutual friends perhaps tipped off Hedges on how to rile him. No matter, Scherzer relished the verbal assault.

“I love that he went for my throat immediately,” Scherzer said.

“He immediately transformed the dynamic of the entire team instead of having Max be on his own separate island,” Lowe said.
Image
Hedges and his Rangers teammates celebrate winning the 2023 American League pennant in seven games over the Astros. (Bailey Orr/Texas Rangers/Getty Images)

With that, the Rangers were on their way. To a wild-card berth highlighted by Hedges’ smashing of an ostrich egg on the final weekend of the regular season, with yolk flying everywhere. To the team’s first World Series title, with Hedges entering the hitters’ meeting before every postseason game in his jockstrap, marking the number of wins needed for a championship with eye black scrawled on his naked butt cheek.

“Without him that year, I’m not sure we become the team we became in the playoffs,” Rangers catching coordinator Bobby Wilson said.

The banter between Hedges and Scherzer lightened a serious-minded Rangers’ clubhouse. The two sat at the head of the table during team dinners, were the ringleaders of fantasy football, the big bettors in cards, Lowe said.

At one point, Hedges lost a sizable amount to Scherzer playing cards. Scherzer proceeded to order several bottles of expensive wine at a team dinner and forced Hedges to pick up the tab.

“Look, this is coming out of your (playoff) share,” Scherzer recalled telling the backup catcher. “Everyone else here is helping you get paid. So these are friendship dues.”

Hedges paid his debt, and then some. In a sport that quantifies virtually every aspect of a player’s performance, his contributions to the Rangers were immeasurable, and left an impact on manager Bruce Bochy.

“I got to appreciate how much a player who is not a star player can impact a ballclub,” Bochy said.

No one in uniform is immune from Hedges’ razzing, not even his coaches and manager.

“Way to catch it, Vogter!” Hedges will yell from the Guardians’ dugout if a catcher mishandles a pitch, poking fun at his manager, Stephen Vogt, a former catcher known more for his offense than defense.

“Swing it, Albie!” Hedges will shout if a hitter takes a bad swing, singling out Guardians associate manager Craig Albernaz, another former catcher who was a career .199 hitter in the minors.

Hedges dishes it out, but takes it, too. If a hitter breaks his bat, someone in the dugout might take aim at the 10-year veteran, hollering, “Swing it, Hedgie!” pointing out Hedges’ own offensive deficiencies.

“That’s good chirp,” Hedges said.

Hedges’ chatter eases tension, keeps players in the moment. The atmosphere he creates, Albernaz said, resembles a college dugout.

“He doesn’t shut up,” Guardians first-base coach Sandy Alomar Jr. said, laughing before adding, “He’s another coach on the field.”

For all his entertaining repartee, Hedges is keenly aware of when to lock in. On days he is not playing, he watches the game intensely, picking up tips on opponents, asking questions of Vogt and his staff, advising and encouraging teammates.

Guardians pitcher Ben Lively recalls growing outwardly frustrated at times last season, and Hedges telling him, “Dude, no, you’re better when you’re calm. Keep it inside.” Shane Bieber, the Guardians’ 2020 Cy Young Award winner, said, “I’ve never met anybody who is so good at providing confidence for others.”
Image
Austin Hedges celebrates the Guardians’ playoff-clinching win over Minnesota with manager Stephen Vogt last September. (Ken Blaze / Imagn Images)

After Major League Baseball introduced the wireless PitchCom communication system in 2022, Hedges developed a novel way to fire up his pitchers. In addition to recording standard voice commands like, “Fastball away,” Hedges made one that says, “F— yeah.”

“You make a good pitch, you get a little, ‘F— yeah.’ And then I call the next pitch,” Hedges said.

Every day, no matter what Hedges might be experiencing personally or professionally, teammates and staff members say he is the same.

“That’s a conscious choice,” Vogt said. “You wake up. You have to make the decision, ‘I’m going to be a good teammate. I’m going to bring energy.’”

Hedges does just that, relentlessly. The Guardians see it as no coincidence they reached the postseason with Hedges in 2020, 2022 and ’24, but missed it without him in ’23. Bochy and pitcher Nathan Eovaldi said without Hedges last season, the Rangers’ dugout was a different, less rambunctious place.

“He’s coffee 24-7, it feels like,” Eovaldi said. “I don’t know how he sleeps.”

Hedges started only five games for the Rangers in the final two months of the 2023 regular season, and played only three innings in the postseason. After joining the team, he would start to get loose and hit in the batting cage in the third or fourth inning in preparation for a possible late entrance. But in September, the Rangers asked him to work on his hitting before games. Bochy wanted Hedges’ presence in the dugout, from the first pitch to the last.

Hedges loved hearing he was making a difference.

“You think this matters?” he thought to himself. “You haven’t seen anything yet.”

Watching Hedges’ antics with the Rangers, outfielder Travis Jankowski barely could believe it was the same uptight guy who also was his teammate with the San Diego Padres from 2015 to ’19.

“He wasn’t the Hedgie he is now,” Jankowski said.

Hedges, who grew up in San Juan Capistrano, Calif., about an hour north of San Diego, was the Padres’ second-round draft pick in 2011. Scouts in Southern California told Baseball America he was the best defensive backstop to come out of the area in at least a decade. By 2014, the publication rated him the Padres’ No. 1 prospect.

Hedges envisioned himself becoming a perennial All-Star for his hometown team. But in those early years, he was overwhelmed by the responsibility of learning how to catch, establishing himself offensively and serving as a bellwether of a rebuilding club.

“He was thrust into a leadership position in the major leagues before anyone else in the game really gets thrust into that,” former Padres manager Andy Green said.

“He put so much stress on himself, it probably wasn’t healthy for him,” Jankowski said.

Hedges does not dispute those assessments.

“At a certain point,” he said, “I don’t know if I even wanted to play baseball anymore.”

Only after the Padres sent him to Cleveland, including him in a nine-player trade during the shortened 2020 season, did Hedges start to see the game, and himself, differently.

“My career changed when I got traded to Cleveland,” Hedges said. “I didn’t really figure out how to look in the mirror and acknowledge what was actually happening until I got out of San Diego.”

Hedges viewed the trade as an opportunity to start over. No one with Cleveland knew him. Adopting a new, more outgoing persona, he “came in hot” trying to make a big first impression with his new teammates. The players and staff responded favorably. He always had been a caring teammate, taking particular pride in his relationships with pitchers. But now, he would hold himself to an even higher standard.

Cleveland initially acquired him to be a backup. But in May 2021, the team’s starter, Roberto Pérez, endured two long stints on the injured list, increasing Hedges’ playing time. He remained the primary catcher in ‘22, then signed a one-year, $5 million contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates in his first crack at free agency. The Rangers, seeking additional catching depth with their starter, Jonah Heim, on the IL, acquired Hedges at the deadline in ‘23 for international bonus pool space.

“When I was in San Diego, nothing was ever good enough for me. There was no such thing as having a good day,” Hedges said.

Now, he never has a bad day. As sparingly as he plays, Hedges always tries to find something to bring value to his team.

“And maybe that something,” he said, “is making sure that one dude every day feels like they’re 10 feet tall.”

Shortly after Hedges joined the Rangers, the team’s offensive coordinator, Donnie Ecker, asked for his assistance in pregame hitters’ meetings.

Hedges, mindful of his woeful offensive numbers, thought the request odd — he wanted the Rangers to help him with his own hitting. But Ecker, recognizing the way Hedges brought people together in a humorous fashion, saw an opening to offer the team a new voice.

Three hours before the hitters’ meetings, Ecker and Hedges would meet on their own, reviewing the message Ecker wanted to deliver that day. Ecker put no limits on Hedges’ creativity. However Hedges wanted to tell the day’s story — through video, graphics or various unprintable acts — was fine with him.

At one point in September, Hedges noticed people on social media posting a fake speech by Dan Campbell, in which the Detroit Lions coach said he ate ostrich eggs for breakfast, drawing strength from “dino (dinosaur) protein.” Hedges adapted the speech to baseball, and the players loved it. Ecker, seeking to extend the bit, then purchased an ostrich egg in New Mexico for about $350 and presented it to Hedges.

Ostrich eggs are the largest of all eggs, about six inches long and weighing about three pounds. Hedges named the would-be ostrich, “Oscar.”

“Nobody believed it was real,” former Rangers catcher Mitch Garver said. “But Hedges treated it like it was everything. He would carry it on the bus. He kept it in the dugout next to all the hitters.”

But when the Rangers lost two games in Seattle to start their final series of 2023 while needing only one win to clinch at least a wild card, Ecker asked Hedges, “How do you feel about sacrificing Oscar for the greater cause?”

Hedges sprung into action, enlisting assistants to join him in dressing in black robes, bringing candles to the hitters’ meeting, playing music from “The Dark Knight Rises.” He capped the ceremony by destroying the egg with a mallet, creating a giant mess.

“I have a video of it on my phone,” Hedges said. “And you hear everybody: ‘Oh, it was real.’”

The Rangers clinched the wild card that day. And Hedges was just getting started.

After the team’s Division Series sweep of the Baltimore Orioles, Bochy sparked the postgame clubhouse celebration, with TV cameras rolling, by shouting, “The only I thing I need to know, Hedgie, what’s the number on your ass right now?”

Hardly anyone outside of the team knew what Bochy was talking about. Bochy lamented, “That wasn’t my smartest move. I should have kept that within the club.” Inadvertently, he revealed The Legend of the Butt Cheek, the countdown to 13 postseason wins taking place in hitters’ meetings on Hedges’ bare behind.

“In typical Hedges fashion, he’d walk in real slow, say, ‘Boys, we got a couple of games to win. Anybody know exactly how many games?’” Lowe recalled. “Then somebody would say the number, he’d turn around and bend over and the number was right there.”

Hedges identified Wilson, the Rangers’ catching coordinator, as the person who applied the eye black most frequently. (“Not something I’m proud of,” Wilson said.) And the hitters were not the only ones who bore witness to Hedges’ posterior.

“Unfortunately, I did see it a lot,” Scherzer said.

With the Guardians last season, Hedges was somewhat more restrained — “The younger groups are a little less silly, more living in reality,” he said. Not that Hedges lived a joyless, fully clothed existence. “Any picture we have of him shirtless (during playoff celebrations), that’s prime Hedges,” pitcher Triston McKenzie said.

The way Guardians outfielder Steven Kwan looks at it, “He’s always the loudest in the room, and he’s always saying really dumb things in the room. So, when he’s the loudest and dumbest, everyone else can be just a little less loud and a little less dumb. And then your regular personality comes out.”

After the 2023 season, the Seattle Mariners‘ Cal Raleigh determined his catching was good, but not good enough. Well aware of Hedges’ defensive reputation, he reached out to his fellow catcher, who happened to live 10 minutes away in Phoenix.

“Some guys don’t want to reveal their secrets,” Raleigh said. “But he was like, ‘No dude, I’m an open book.’”

Hedges invited Raleigh to his home. The two spoke for about three hours, then began working a few days a week on everything catching entails — receiving, blocking, framing. Raleigh, 6-foot-3 and 235 pounds, adjusted his stance, kicking out more as he dropped to one knee to get even lower for framing. He also adjusted his receiving, learning — as Hedges did in Pittsburgh — to grab a pitch as fast and hard as he could rather than rely on soft hands. Again, the goal was better framing.

Raleigh struggled with the new receiving technique in spring training; Hedges recalled him calling in a panic over the balls he was missing. But at the end of season, Raleigh was awarded the Platinum Glove as the best defender in the American League.

“I credit him for a lot of my success,” Raleigh said of Hedges. “There were a lot of things I did last year that I just took right out of his playbook and put into my game.”

So, while Hedges is an incessant talker, he’s also a catching whisperer. As much as his current and former teammates enjoy recounting his shenanigans, they want one thing clear: The foundation of Hedges’ value is his defense behind the plate.

“It gets lost how good of a catcher he is,” Bieber said. “He’s the best catcher I’ve thrown to.”

“His preparation is insane,” Alomar said. “Every single day, he prepares himself like it’s a World Series game.”
Hedges prepares to take some swings before Game 5 of the 2024 ALCS in Cleveland. (Lauren Leigh Bacho/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

Hedges ranks fifth in defensive runs saved for a catcher since Sports Info Solutions began tracking the metric in 2003, despite being 50th in innings caught. He finished 10th in that metric last season and did not even catch 400 innings. Yet, he is constantly trying to refine his skills.

When Hedges joined the Rangers, he asked Wilson to help teach him how Heim threw out of the one-knee stance. Hedges, in turn, changed the way Garver and Heim pored over scouting reports, using heat maps to point out better ways to attack hitters.

With the Guardians, Hedges is a particularly important resource for catcher Bo Naylor, who is entering his second season at 25. Recalling his days with the Padres, when he grew overly stressed trying to memorize scouting reports, Hedges tells Naylor, “All the information is there in the moment if you pay attention.” If a hitter, for example, is late on a fastball, don’t necessarily follow up with a breaking ball even if the report suggests such a pitch in a particular count. Pay attention. Watch the game.

“There’s really no shortage of things he has helped me with,” Naylor said. “Especially on the receiving side, he’s been an amazing example of how consistent hard work in the bullpen, off the machines, making the right moves can go a long way.”

His offensive numbers are an eyesore, among the worst in the game’s history. The Guardians, though, aren’t giving up on Hedges as a hitter.

“The hitting’s in there,” Albernaz said. “It’s in there.”

Hedges agrees. Catching comes naturally to him. Hitting does not. But he hit well in the minors, produced a career-high 18 homers for the Padres in 2017 and was close to a league-average hitter in ‘18. His goal is to be another Justin Turner, emerging as an offensive force in his 30s.

“Honestly, one of the things that gets me out of bed in the morning is knowing that I’ve got to get better at this thing,” Hedges said. “And if I do, it’s going to be the coolest thing ever.”

He works furiously on his hitting, envisioning a day in which he serves as an example for younger players of how things can turn. It’s not too late for that to happen. His defense alone will keep him in demand. And for examples of catchers who enjoyed prolonged careers, he need look only to his own clubhouse. Vogt played until he was 37, Alomar until he was 41.

Yet, people in baseball already talk about the potential for Hedges when his playing career is over. Raleigh predicted, “He’ll be a great manager one day.” Green, Hedges’ former manager with the Padres, said, “I’d love to see him stick in the game. The game would be better for it.“

Hedges said he might rather be a bench coach than a manager, reasoning that as a coach, he could work more closely with players. Either way, he is hardly ready to retire.

“I’ve thought plenty about the end of my career,” he said. “I want to stay in the game. I know that. But I’ve realized I want to play as long as I can. I feel like my value is actually as a player.

“I feel like I’m a translator for the coaches and for Vogt. Vogter can’t come into the clubhouse and deliver a message every day. No one wants to hear speeches. But if he has something that needs to be said, I can say it in his words. When you hear it from a player that is actually out there, it goes a lot further.”

Oh, and Hedges even can offer a pitching perspective, based on his four appearances for the Rangers in 2023 and another for the Guardians in ‘24. His career ERA, over 5 2/3 innings, is a sparkling 3.18.

The Rangers joked he was a three-way player. And Ecker recalled Hedges comparing his $4 million salary last season to Shohei Ohtani’s $2 million annual take, excluding the two-way superstar’s $68 million deferred.

“There’s a reason I’m making twice as much as Shohei,” Hedges cracked.

Batting average means only so much, after all.

Re: Articles

Posted: Tue Feb 25, 2025 2:59 pm
by civ ollilavad
I like that quote: And Ecker recalled Hedges comparing his $4 million salary last season to Shohei Ohtani’s $2 million annual take, excluding the two-way superstar’s $68 million deferred.
“There’s a reason I’m making twice as much as Shohei,” Hedges cracked.
Batting average means only so much, after all.

Re: Articles

Posted: Wed Feb 26, 2025 4:17 pm
by TFIR
Guardians camp scenes: Chicken coops, errant 6-irons and a key starting pitcher
Image
GOODYEAR, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 20: Luis Ortiz #45 of the Cleveland Guardians poses for a portrait during Cleveland Guardians photo day at Goodyear Ballpark on February 20, 2025 in Goodyear, Arizona. (Photo by Mike Christy/Getty Images)
By Zack Meisel
Feb 26, 2025


GOODYEAR, Ariz. — Every morning, the Cleveland Guardians’ spring training clubhouse sounds like a chicken coop.

Emmanuel Clase conducts his daily ritual — during the regular season, it takes place before batting practice — in which he calls home to his farm in Río San Juan, Dominican Republic. Even when music is blaring from the clubhouse speakers, Clase’s chickens compete for audial supremacy.

This spring, Clase sits in a folding chair, chickens clucking away, and Luis Ortiz sits beside him, the two of them glued to the action on the farm.

Ortiz has quickly made friends since joining the organization in a November trade. He arrived in Goodyear on Jan. 7, in part, so he could meet as many people as possible to ease his transition to a new roster.

He grew up with Jhonkensy Noel, who hails from the same hometown, and he has known José Ramírez since they were young. That’s made Ortiz feel welcome months after a trade that blindsided him.

“As a young guy, being traded never crosses your mind,” Ortiz said through Agustín Rivero, the Guardians’ interpreter and assistant coach. “You think you’re always going to be there. But these are the things you can’t control. What I feel is appreciation for this organization because they believe in me to make that trade happen. So it’s a good opportunity for me to keep showing what I can do.”

The Guardians are giddy to find out what he can provide, though, for what it’s worth, Ortiz allowed six runs in his Cactus League debut Tuesday against the Milwaukee Brewers.
In his breakout 2024 season, Luis Ortiz posted a 126 ERA+ over 135 2/3 innings pitched. (Jeff Curry / Imagn Images)

He enjoyed a breakout season for the Pirates in 2024. They initially stuck him in the bullpen, but he told the team’s decision-makers he’d keep putting in work to prove he could excel as a starter. They shifted him to the rotation in July and the move paid dividends. In 15 starts, Ortiz posted a 3.22 ERA. His 1.004 WHIP (walks and hits per inning pitched) would have ranked sixth in the majors if he had enough starts to qualify.

Now, he’ll open the year in Cleveland’s rotation with Tanner Bibee and a bunch of other guys aiming to prove themselves.

“The stuff is real,” manager Stephen Vogt said.

Arriving five weeks ahead of the scheduled report date allowed Ortiz to collaborate with Cleveland’s pitching coaches on mechanical tweaks that Vogt said will “help him clean some things up.”

“Very few people, especially in today’s game, stick with their original organization,” Vogt said. “I remember there were coaches in the minor leagues who always said, ‘The second organization is where you really break out.’ What we’ve created in our industry with how often people are changing teams and things of that nature, anytime you get to start over, it allows you to make adjustments from maybe when you first got drafted or were first coming up. … You can start new habits with a new team.”

Last spring, Cleveland pitchers Erik Sabrowski and Doug Nikhazy played a round at Wigwam Golf Club, a course about 15 minutes north of the team’s complex. And, well, allow them to detail what ensued.

Nikhazy: “I will be as transparent as I can be about this.”

Sabrowski: “It was a terrible shot.”

Nikhazy: “My golf game has come a long way. This was at the very beginning of my golf journey. Erik is my buddy and he’s trying to show me how to play. I’m coming over the top of the ball really hard. He’s about 100 yards in front of me. The pin’s (straight ahead). He’s (up and to the right).”

Sabrowski: “Standing where I shouldn’t have been.”

Nikhazy: “I’m about 200 yards out. I pick up my 6-iron. I’m like, ‘I’m gonna crush this thing.’ I line up, come in, the face closes and it’s a low rocket, tailing toward him. He’s running away from it and it keeps following him. He jumps and it gets him right in the ankle.”

Sabrowski, who was about to embark on his first full season following a pair of Tommy John surgeries: “Add it to the list.”

Nikhazy: “Erik lives by three rules: ‘There’s only one Tiger Woods.’ ‘Someone’s gotta do it.’ And the most important one is, ‘You shouldn’t have been standing there.’ I told him, ‘Erik, if you’re gonna live by these rules, you shouldn’t have been standing there. You know it’s in my game.'”

Sabrowski: “Now I will be behind you.”
Seven months after his golf mishap, Erik Sabrowski cracked Cleveland’s postseason roster. (Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)

Nikhazy: “He’s also a ball magnet. He took a comebacker last year. He got hit by (the catcher) on a throw-down. The ball will find him.”

Sabrowski: “At least it was the back foot. The toughest thing was the mobility. Early on, I couldn’t flex it because it was so swollen.”

Nikhazy: “I came into the training room the next day and he’s getting treatment on his ankle and I’m like, ‘Oh, my God.’ It was permeating throughout the entire facility. ‘Doug killed one of our guys.’ I’m rooting for him tremendously anyway, but I was always making sure. ‘Are you good? Free ankle rubs if you need them.'”

Sabrowski: “It was the one-year anniversary two weeks ago, so I gave him s— for it for the last time. I actually played that course that day and sent him a picture and said, ‘My ankle’s starting to throb for some reason.'”

Sabrowski was sidelined for a couple of weeks. He returned to depth camp — pretty far off the big-league radar — and then seven months later, he was pitching against the Yankees in the ALCS.

“It was amazing,” Nikhazy said. “He’s full of confidence.”

Well, except when his golf partner is about to uncork a 6-iron.

Even if Will Brennan does everything with precision, it’s a tall order to throw out a runner at third base from his perch in right field.

“There are a lot of dynamics that have to go right,” said Brennan, who executed the play to perfection in the second inning of a Cactus League game Sunday. “From the outfield, your margin for error is pretty small. You could catch a seam or have lefty tail. The bounce can go somewhere else.”

Brennan snagged a liner for one out and then fired a one-hop throw to third baseman Will Wilson, who applied the tag on the Los Angeles Angels’ Yolmer Sánchez to complete the double play.

“The catch, obviously, has to happen,” Brennan said. “And then the transition has to be really fast. A lot of runners nowadays are moving, so it has to be a seamless transition into a really good throw and then you still have to be cognizant of hitting the cutoff guy, so it has to be right above his head and hopefully it’s a one-hop. It has to be a really good tag.

“The situation has to be perfect.”

Brennan, angling this spring to seize regular playing time in right field, had nine outfield assists in 2023 and two last year.

“We joked around,” he said, “like, ‘You have to save those for the season.'”

Spring training parking spaces, to some players, are sacred. So when veteran reliever Paul Sewald heard Ramírez asking for the identity of the person who occupied his spot on the second day of camp, Sewald realized he struck a nerve.

“You probably shouldn’t park in the franchise player’s parking spot,” Sewald admitted.

When Ramírez realized it was an honest mistake by a new member of the roster and not someone trying to pester him, Ramírez apologized for making a fuss. He had reason to question the motive, however. Ten years ago, when a 22-year-old Ramírez kept parking in the veterans’ spots, Mike Aviles led a crusade to position Ramírez’s white BMW SUV at shortstop on a back field.

“Maybe that’s why he had a little bit of a fit,” Sewald said, laughing.

Albert Belle visited Guardians camp Saturday morning and then scooted down the street to Goodyear Ballpark to watch Triston McKenzie start the club’s Cactus League opener. Belle caught up with former teammate Sandy Alomar Jr., as well as Cleveland pitching coach Carl Willis, who held Belle to two hits (one homer) in their 12 encounters in the early ’90s.

In August, the Guardians will honor the 1995 team, which won 100 games in a strike-shortened season and stormed its way to the World Series. Belle has been reluctant to visit Progressive Field over the years, fearing that fans are still holding a grudge for how he left for a more lucrative contract with the Chicago White Sox after the 1996 season. In reality, he’d be pleasantly surprised; fans would likely greet him with a rousing ovation. Time heals wounds. Belle ranks third in franchise history in home runs, behind only Ramírez and Jim Thome.

David Fry is a few months from being cleared to join the Guardians roster, so he has spent spring mornings relaying signs during drills.

“I get made fun of a lot because I’ve been wearing my watch more, so I look like a coach,” Fry said. “It’s weird, but I get to do little things here and there that make me feel like a baseball player.”

Fry underwent Tommy John surgery after last season, so when he does return this year, he won’t be able to play the field, a jarring change for a guy who launched his big-league career in large part because of his defensive versatility. Each of the last two years, Fry appeared in games at catcher, first base, third base, left field and right field. In 2023, he even pitched.

“It’ll stink,” Fry said, “but it’s part of it.”

Re: Articles

Posted: Thu Feb 27, 2025 7:33 pm
by TFIR
Gavin Williams’ mechanical tweaks could lead to a breakout season in 2025

By
Eric Samulski



Published February 27, 2025 11:58 AM

GOODYEAR, Arizona, Feb. 27, 2025 — If you’ve read any of my content this offseason, then you know I’m a big believer in Guardians right-hander Gavin Williams emerging as one of the best value picks in fantasy baseball drafts in 2025.

In my article on post-hype sleepers, I mentioned that I believed Williams was a breakout candidate because of the cutter he introduced in 2024 that gave him a swing-and-miss pitch to both righties and lefties that he could also pound the zone with. It was a pitch that caused Nick Pollack of Pitcher List to comp Williams to Garrett Crochet in regards to the fact that both pitchers could potentially thrive with a four-seam/cutter-heavy approach.

However, in that same article I mentioned that some of my concerns with Williams were that his slider, which graded out so well while he was a prospect carving up minor league hitters, had yet to translate to big-league innings and that his fastball, which had the metrics to be an elite pitch, was getting hit much harder by right-handed hitters than it should have been.

Turns out, unsurprisingly, that Williams and the Guardians knew both of those things were issues as well, and they both were linked back to mechanical issues that potentially stemmed from Williams picking up bad habits as he compensated for an elbow injury early in the spring last year. Months of going to physical therapy three times a week has Williams’ elbow “feeling great,” so the young pitcher has now been able to turn his attention back to some of the mechanical issues that popped up last year.

“He’s just working on his delivery to get his fastball profiles back,” said Guardians manager Stephen Vogt. “Last year with the elbow injury, he just wasn’t able to get back to his normal self, so he really dove into some delivery mechanics to get his fastball profile specifically back to where it should be. It was really flat last year, and it’s been showing well so far.”

What Vogt is referring to when he talks about Williams’ four-seam being flatter is that the pitch had almost an inch less induced vertical break (iVB) in 2024. Induced vertical break is a measurement that removes gravity from the equation and tells us how much a pitch moves up or down from a point of zero as it approaches home plate. Four-seam fastballs always have a positive iVB number, with 17 inches being seen as an above-average iVB.

All four-seamers also move horizontally to the pitcher’s arm side as well. When you combine that horizontal movement with the iVB, you see a sense of a pitch’s “total break.” Generally speaking, a four-seam fastball with nine or more inches of horizontal break is considered to have lots of “run” or some people would say “heavy bore,” just meaning it bores in on a hitter’s hands.

In 2024, Williams gained two inches of horizontal movement, or run, on his four-seam fastball and lost iVB, which was not something he wanted to do. In the offseason, the 25-year-old realized that it all stemmed from a mechanical change he needed to make.

“Just staying taller on my back leg,” Williams mentioned. “Last year, I was too deep in the back leg, which makes me spin out of it on my back foot, creating a kind of dead zone, sinker, which wasn’t good for me. Velocity with that kind of movement doesn’t work really in the big leagues. I was just trying to get back to that last year, but I never could figure it out.”

If his first start in spring training was any indication, Williams was able to figure it out this offseason.

His four-seam fastball had almost two inches more iVB, which put him up to an elite 17" and also had over an inch more horizontal movement. Along with his above-average extension, that creates the plus fastball that we saw from him in the minor leagues, and he was able to get a couple of whiffs on the pitch in his two innings of work. (image below courtesy of Kyle Bland and Pitcher List).
Williams Spring Start
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In addition to the new movement profile on his four-seamer, Williams averaged 97 mph, topping out at 98 mph, and struck out three batters in his two scoreless innings. “Gavin looked really sharp,” said Vogt after the game. “Velocity, obviously, is there, but the movement looked like what he used to look like. It had some good vertical movement to it.”

That added vertical movement, plus the mechanical adjustments Williams made in the offseason, should allow him to attack the top half of the strike zone with his fastball more than he was able to last year. “This year is gonna help me out, being more at the top of the zone, where I want to be and where I should be,” said Williams.

His four-seam fastball still had above-average swinging strikes rates last year, but there was a noticeable dip in its performance against right-handed hitters. In 2023, Williams posted a 12.6% swinging strike rate (SwStr%) on the fastball to righties and had a 21.5% PutAway Rate, which measures how often a two-strike pitch results in a strikeout. The MLB average for starting pitchers on a four-seamer was 16.8%, so Williams was far better than average. In 2024, his overall SwStr% on the four-seamer to righties dipped to 10.4%, and his PutAway Rate fell to 14%, which was the 30th percentile among starters. That’s a monumental shift from what he had done in 2023, and getting the movement and location back on his four-seam fastball should pay immediate dividends in Williams’ strikeout upside.

However, the mechanical tweaks Williams detailed also helped him refine his slider a little bit. Last year, he struggled to find the grip and release on his slider and almost seemed to be throwing a cutter at times. In fact, many of the pitch classification sites list Williams as introducing a cutter last year, but the pitcher himself said, “I was throwing a slider last year, but it wasn’t a slider. It’s more of a cutter than a slider.”

That “cutter” was a harder version of Williams’ 88.6 mph slider, which had slightly more drop but less horizontal movement across the zone. Even though the pitch kind of came about as an accident, it was incredibly successful for him. It posted a 17.1% SwStr% and 36% Ideal Contact Rate (ICR), both of which are well above the league average. It was also a pitch that he was able to throw successfully to hitters of both handedness. He commanded it really well in the zone against lefties, posting a nearly 20% called strike rate (league average is 15%), while also having a 17% SwStr%. Against righties, the pitch was in the zone less but got plenty of chases outside of the zone with a nearly 30% PutAway Rate to righties, well above the league average of 17.5%.

Even though Williams wasn’t intending to find himself a new pitch, he may have stumbled onto something that takes his game to another level, and he intends to keep it. He just might not throw it much this spring. “The harder cutter will definitely come back into play. I don’t think probably out here in spring training, just because it won’t move the way I want to, especially the way the air is out here, but we’ll see how it goes.”

One thing we have seen in spring training is that Williams has worked to regain the feel for the slider that he lost last season. In his first outing this spring, he dialed back the velocity of the pitch, as you can see in the chart above, but it had a drastically different movement profile with over seven more inches of drop and six more inches of bite.

“I mean, you know, that was his pitch,” added Vogt. “He didn’t quite have it all last year, and so it’s really good to see the shape back on it today.”

Part of the shape that Williams has been able to get back on his slider is due to a grip change the starter made in the offseason. “I wanted something a little bit bigger,” Williams said. “Having something a little bit bigger and kind of like the same speed [as the cutter] really is going to help out. Yeah, something going right to left is going to be big for me.”

“In bullpens, it’s very, very big. I learned yesterday it’s tightened up in games, so I can use it in both righties and lefties. I used it to both yesterday. Did it on the strikeout pitch to lefty, back foot. Did it for a swing and miss to a righty, so I can do it both ways.”

Considering the cutter is also a pitch that Williams can use successfully against all hitters, the 25-year-old will now come into 2025 with four pitches (four-seam, cutter, slider, curve) that he can use to both righties and lefties, and a changeup that he will mix in to lefties. The cutter will give him two fastball variations that he can throw for strikes, and he’ll also have multiple secondaries that can get swings and misses. All of that, with revamped mechanics to help with his locations, are clear indications that a breakout is coming.

However, in addition to refining his pitch mix, Williams also spent time over the offseason working on his mental approach on the mound. Vogt had mentioned wanting Williams to go and attack the strike zone and go right after hitters. That was something that both men thought Williams did in his first start, and is something Williams spent the last few months working on. “I learned to slow the game down over the offseason. Working on breathing stuff, just being able to slow the game down. Last year, I just got way too ahead of myself, being frustrated with myself and just holding that in. One thing led to another. Now I’m just not really thinking about the negatives and just worrying about more the positives.”

That positive outlook has led Williams to a place where he feels like he’s “in a good spot right now... My confidence is high.” So is mine that this is going to be the year we see Williams take a big step forward.

Re: Articles

Posted: Sun Mar 02, 2025 1:58 pm
by joez
Image



Guardians Insider Offers Update On Shane Bieber

March 2, 2025

By Andres Chavez


The Cleveland Guardians know, at this point, that Shane Bieber won’t take the ball to start on Opening Day for the first time since 2019.

That became a reality ever since it was revealed he had a UCL tear and needed surgery last April.

Most reports had Bieber returning sometime around mid-season, even a bit before.

However, he has made strides recently, so much so that it appears he is primed to comfortably beat that timeline.

We are not saying Bieber will be back in April, but June or even May are real possibilities.

The top right-hander is enjoying a smooth rehab so far,
alongside a couple of fellow righties on the Guardians, at spring training camp in Goodyear.
Guardians Prospective
@CleGuardPro

Cleveland #Guardians RHP Shane Bieber threw his fourth bullpen session on Friday.

Right-handed relievers Trevor Stephan and Nic Enright threw bullpens as well as they work back from injuries.
Bieber surely has some additional bullpen sessions to clear before moving to live batting practice, which would be the next logical step.

However, the fact that we are entering March and he is already close to hitting that milestone is impressive.

It tells us that his body has recovered nicely and that he has been extremely disciplined about his rehab.

Cleveland could have a true frontline pitcher with a career 3.22 ERA and 12 scoreless innings last year back much sooner than they expected.

At this rate, there could be just a few weeks from the start of the 2025 campaign to Bieber’s return.

Nothing is set in stone, and the team won’t rush him, but there are reasons to feel excited about Bieber’s swift recovery so far.


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