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2013 Cleveland Indians Season Preview

In 2013 Cleveland Indians, 2013 Team Previews on March 25, 2013 at 8:33 pm

Team MVP: Carlos Santana

Santana, entering his age 27 season, has a chance to once again be Cleveland’s most potent offensive force from the catcher position.  The switch-hitting backstop has always shown incredible plate discipline, finishing 2nd in the league in 2012 with a walk rate of 14.9%.  Since his career began in 2010, his 15.4 BB% ranks fifth in the majors among those with over 1,000 plate appearances over that span.  The plate discipline coupled with the power (.195 career ISO) is a unique skill set for a catcher, making a potential peak season from Santana something worthy of salivation.  A great approach paired with a 25-30 home run season and improving defense behind the plate would thrust him into discussions of upper echelon catchers.  With Mark Reynolds and Nick Swisher in the fold to play 1B and DH, we will hopefully see Carlos Santana fully embrace the catcher role, improving his defense along the way.

Team Cy Young: Justin Masterson

I was very tempted to bet on an injury and select Trevor Bauer here, but given the command struggles last season, I need to see it early in the year first.  Granted, the rest of the Indians rotation does not fill fans in Cleveland with confidence.  He is better than his 4.93 ERA showed last season, and ZiPS projects him for a 4.33 ERA and improved control.  He is not an elite strikeout pitcher, but the unique delivery and pounding of the zone with sinkers produces one of the best ground ball rates in baseball.  As somebody that essentially pitches to contact, even if it is to induce ground balls, Masterson will never have an elite strand rate.  When looking over his stats, Masterson’s +5 WAR season in 2011 is the outlier.  Oddly enough, that is the worst strikeout season of his career, but the control was by far the best (2.71 BB/9), the LOB% was better than his career average, and the HR/FB% was, again, the best of his career.  All of those factors lead to a career year, but 2012 showed us, unfortunately for the Indians, that his true talent is not necessarily going to reach that level.

Fresh Face with Impact: Michael Bourn

The Indians added a few impact position players over the winter, and Bourn, to me, is the most important piece.  It gives the Indians a chance to compete with the Angels for the best defensive outfield in baseball, and adding a player off of a +6 WAR season is huge for Cleveland.  Much of that value comes on the basepaths and in center field, skills that do not always stick with players after they turn 30, but even a small dip in either category will leave him at an elite level.  Bourn stole 19 less bases in 2012 than 2011, a significant drop that hopefully does not become a pattern, but if he continues to post a wRC+ of 100 or above, he will be nearly a shoo-in for +4 WAR seasons.  Considering the fact that the Indians outfield combined for 4.2 WAR and a -25.3 UZR rating in 2012, Bourn’s defense and production will be a welcome commodity.

Impact Prospect: Trevor Bauer

Again, I was certainly tempted to gamble on Bauer as this team’s Cy Young pick, so the impact prospect selection defaults to Bauer.  The Free Trevor Bauer and put him in the major leagues immediately talk quickly turned to calls for his imprisonment during a shaky debut.  Rather than imprison him and work on his development, the Diamondbacks elected to actually free Trevor Bauer from their organization, shipping him to Cleveland.  One of these years, we will figure out more details regarding Arizona’s handling of Justin Upton and Trevor Bauer.  For now, I think, or hope, that we have all learned to show a bit of patience when a prospect is walking nearly 5 guys per 9 innings at AA.  I do worry that the Indians disastrous rotation will prevent them from showing the necessary patience with Bauer, but he may just have to figure it out as he goes, striking out plenty of guys and frustrating plenty of owners along the way.  The excitement surrounding Bauer is real, and warranted, so my call for harnessing that eagerness is not a knock on Bauer. It is more of a comment on how, almost always, it will take longer, and happen differently, than we expect.

Biggest Sleeper or Breakout Candidate: Drew Stubbs

I do not think Stubbs is that bad. I really don’t.  I accepted long ago that he was not going to be the break out, power-speed combination that many hoped for, because the strikeout tendencies and approach are simply too maddening.  Ask fans in Cincinnati about Stubbs and they will give you the brutal truth: A .277 OBP for the leadoff man is… well… troubling.  Hate-inducing, in fact.  But I have not entirely written off Stubbs.  I think that the best lineup for the Indians places Stubbs in RF, Swisher at 1B, and Reynolds at DH.  He is never going to be better than he was in 2010, whatever, that is not the issue.  Focus on what he does bring to the table.  He is an incredibly strange combination of a really good baseball player and such a terrible baseball player. I am not even apologizing for that description.  He runs the bases, he has some pop, he brings outfield defense, he strikes out way too much, he does not get on base enough, and, maybe most importantly for 2013, he will not be in the leadoff spot!

To 2013 and Beyond: 

I love the Cleveland lineup.  They have three good switch hitters in Cabrera, Santana and Swisher.  They have solid left handed bats in Bourn, Kipnis and Brantley.  They have great baserunning in the form of Stubbs, Bourn and Kipnis.  They will have the platoon advantage in a huge percentage of at-bats, and the lineup is particularly terrifying for RHPs.  If they so desire, their lineup versus RHPs will feature Giambi at DH, Swisher in RF, and Reynolds at 1B, leaving Reynolds as the only right-handed bat.  They improved the outfield defense in a major way, in turn improving the outfield production, and have the ability to deal Asdrubal Cabrera for a prospect package later in the season with Francisco Lindor waiting in the wings.  I expect Francona and the versatile lineup to have them making some noise, but the best move may be to sell off the expendable, desirable pieces and continue to improve the entire organization.

The pitching staff very quickly quells the excitement gained from fiddling with different lineup combinations.  The possibility that Trevor Bauer joins the team and is the best pitcher is probably more of an indictment of the major league staff than projecting Bauer as a superstar.  There is exciting stuff to monitor in the rotation, like Scott Kazmir’s return to a major league mound as the number 5 starter, but it will likely be Cleveland’s fatal flaw in 2013.

Projected Lineup:

Michael Bourn – CF

Asdrubal Cabrera – SS

Jason Kipnis – 2B

Nick Swisher – 1B

Carlos Santana – C

Mark Reynolds – DH

Michael Brantley – LF

Lonnie Chisenhall – 3B

Drew Stubbs – RF

April 9th, 10th Observations

In 2012 Periodic Musings, April 10th and 11th on April 11, 2012 at 10:33 am
  • My opinion (as if any of this isn’t?): Bryce Harper has a chance to basically be Josh Hamilton without the drug issues to ruin parts of his career. Same skillset. Hate on.
  • Holliday, Molina, and especially Beltran, Freese, sure do seem locked in to start the year.
  • I think Yu Darvish’s struggles may simply boil down to adrenaline and being high strung for his first start. That said, my main concern: when he started to miss the zone onsistently, his only cure for that was throwing fastballs right down the middle. I’m not too concerned… both of his breaking balls are devastating, and if he settles in with command, it’ll be dazzling.
  • Still the most entertaining item of the year: Braves’ fans overanalyzing and acting like they will never win another game.
  • They did finally win one, by the way. Chipper Jones added to his folk tale in the south reputation with a great play on a bunt and a bomb his first game back. It’s almost like he is an angel with a southern drawl sent down specifically to help the Braves beat the Astros on April 10th, 2012. Almost.
  • Tom Milone… I don’t think that will be the last time you something similar to that. You have a good chance to drive statistics like xFIP and FIP absolutely bonkers.
  • Barry Zito… I do think that will be your last time doing that. But still nice to see. He still has small flashes where nobody can hit his curveball.
  • #FreeTrevorBauer and/or #FreeTylerSkaggs will gain more and more steam. Josh Collmenter just isn’t as good as those two, and Bauer is making mincemeat of the minor leagues.
  • Jayson Werth got 4 hits in a major league baseball game on Tuesday. And it was not the most important part of the game, to me. I tweeted it, I’ll say it: Ross Detwiler would be a huge addition if he can have some impact. He was sitting 91-92 and had a few Ks on high fastballs at 93 mph. He worked both sides of the plate to lefties and righties. His curveball, oddly enough, was actually up in the zone on a few of his strikeouts, but it has kneebuckling ability. It was one start, it was the Mets, he only went 5 innings (not stretched out yet), but 2 hits, 1 BB, 6 Ks on 71 pitches (50 strikes) looked great.

Today: Garcia @ Cueto, Lester @ Romero, Shields @ Verlander, Strasburg @ Santana, Gallardo @ Dempster, Johnson @ Halladay… in addition to C.C., Weaver, Lincecum, Masterson being on the mound somewhere out there. Who else is glad baseball is back?

Tonight: I might go see Dylan Bundy pitch. It’s that (if he’s confirmed to be starting) or Josh Johnson/Roy Halladay on tap. There will probably be some Penguins/Flyers NHL playoffs sprinkled in.

2012 Arizona Diamondbacks Preview

In 2012 Arizona Diamondbacks, 2012 Team Previews on February 29, 2012 at 11:14 am

Team MVP: Justin Upton

Until further notice, I don’t even need to post this. Behind only Jose Bautista last season in WAR among right fielder (Fangraphs WAR). I think he can steal 30+ bases (though I don’t know if he will run that much). If he ups the walks and lowers the strikeouts even slightly, he can be NL MVP bound. There are not many players a GM would take over Justin Upton right now.

Team Cy Young: Ian Kennedy

Daniel Hudson could fit in here as well, but neither of those two are aces. They are perfectly fine pitchers, but not completely elite. Kennedy could (i.e. will) regress some this year, as luck was on his side last season (fairly friendly strand rate, which could come back down to earth some), but he does strike guys out (8.03 k/9). A guy I would love to have on my staff, but if you are hoping for 21-4, it could be a sad 2012.

Fresh Face with Impact: Jason Kubel

Impact? Yes, but probably in a slightly underwhelming fashion. Truly, I don’t even know if he should be starting. Gerardo Parra is who I would go with, but it does seem like it is Kubel who will have the first crack at it. The ballpark will help Kubel, and it wouldn’t shock me to see him hit 20 home runs if he stays healthy. Not much to see here.

Impact Prospect: Trevor Bauer (B.A. #1)

I think the DBacks drafted him with the intention of having him in the majors sooner, rather than later, and I think he is better than Josh Collmenter. Excited to see him pitch.

Biggest sleeper or breakout candidate: David Hernandez

It’s hard for an 8th inning guy to “break out,” and short of JJ Putz getting injured, nothing extraordinary will happen for Hernandez this season. However, he does throw hard and strike guys out, which should no doubt continue in 2012. Not expecting a monster, noteworthy season, but he is very important to the Arizona’s success.

Biggest Concern: What will happen with pitching? Granted, if things go well, it could be more of a blessing than a concern. Kennedy, Hudson, Cahill, Bauer, Skaggs is a solid rotation 1-5 with some true upside. I worry about Cahill, and worry that Diamondback fans expect 20 win seasons from Ian Kennedy from here on out. Not intended to be a knock on the staff, but more of an area that I hope performs well for Arizona’s sake.

Projected Lineup:

SS – Stephen Drew

2B – Aaron Hill

RF – Justin Upton

C – Miguel Montero

CF – Chris Young

LF – Jason Kubel (Gerardo Parra)

1B – Paul Goldschmidt

3B – Ryan Roberts

Pitcher’s Spot