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Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Winter League Wednesday Round-up

Arizona Fall League

The much anticipated AFL kicked off yesterday with Indians farm hands playing for Surprise Rafters. In their opening game the Rafters lost 10-3 at the hands of the Peoria Javelinas who were led by Yankees pitcher Phil Hughes allowing only 1 hit in 5 scoreless innings with 5BB and 7Ks.

3B Wes Hodges was batting 3rd in the Rafters order and finished the game 0-for-4 with a K and grounded into a double play. INF Josh Rodriguez was playing 2B and batting 9th in the order and ended the day with a 1-for-3 line with a walk.

RHP Neil Wagner made an appearance out of the Rafters pen, entering the game with 2 on and 2 out in the 4th inning before stranding both runners on his way to 1.1 perfect innings of relief with 1 strikeout.

There was no place in the starting lineup for 1B Beau Mills and OF Stephen Head. Head is on the "Taxi Squad" for the Rafters, meaning he will only be activated on Wednesdays and Saturdays.


Hawaii Winter Baseball

Indians farmhands continue to ply their trade for North Shore Honu. Since the last update on Sunday the Honu have gone 0-2 to drop their overall record to 2-6 on the young season.

Player Updates (10/05 - 10-07): -

LHP Matt Meyer - Made 1 appearance since the last update (10/05) working a scoreless inning with a pair of strikeouts. For the season, Meyer sports a 7.36ERA (3.2IP, 7H, 3ER) with 1BB to 4Ks.

LHP Shawn Nottingham - Has not made an appearance since the last update and still carries a 9.00ERA (4IP, 4ER) on the young season.

LHP Heath Taylor - Made his second appearance of the year (10/05) getting stretched out to 3.1 innings of work without allowing a run. Taylor is off to a strong start to the Winter season and is yet to allow a run in 5.1IP (4H, 0BB, 4K).

C Adam Davis - Appeared in both Honu games since the last update going a combined 0-for-4 with 2BB. Davis has an .083 (1-for-13) average through his first 5 games played.

3B Dustin Realini - Realini has not appeared in a game since the last update and is still looking for his first hit on the winter season having gone 0-for-13 in 4 games.

INF Ron Rivas - Rivas made his Winter ball debut yesterday (10/07) playing 3B and batting 9th. He finished his first game 0-for-4 with 2K.

OF Matt McBride - Since the last update McBride has spun off back-to-back multi-hit games and continues to play every inning for the Honu in LF. McBride was 2-for-4 with an RBI on 10/05 and 2-for-5 with 2 2B and 2RBI on 10/07 to give him 4 straight multi-hit games overall. For the season McBride is now hitting a healthy .345 (10-for-29) and is displaying his doubles power with 5 of his 10 hits going for extra bases.

Elsewhere, LHP Kaimi Mead made his 3rd appearance for his hometown Honolulu Sharks on 10/07 working 2.1 scoreless innings to lower his overall ERA to 3.86 (7IP, 7H, 7R, 3ER, 3BB, 4K).

The next update will be on Sunday when, hopefully we should have some Caribbean roster news to announce.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

2008 Arizona Fall League Preview

by: Gotribe31

Today is October 7th, and the Arizona Fall League (AFL) kicks off at 12:35 Arizona time. The Indians prospects will join those from the Orioles, Royals, Dodgers and Rangers to comprise the Surprise Rafters, one of six AFL teams. Before we get into who the Tribe sent to the AFL this year, a quick primer on who can and can't be assigned to the AFL:

• All Triple-A and Double-A players are eligible provided they are on Double-A rosters no later than August 6.

• One player below the Double-A level is allowed.

• Foreign players are allowed as long as the player is not on his native country's protected player list.

• No players with more than two years of credited Major League service as of August 31 (including Major League disabled list time) are eligible except a team may select one player picked in the most recently concluded Major League Rule 5 draft.

• To be eligible, players on Minor League disabled lists must be activated at least 45 days before the conclusion of their respective seasons.

Each organization sends seven players to the AFL to make up the six teams fighting for the AFL championship. With that in mind, lets take a look at the seven players the Indians decided to send down, and what the organization is likely looking for out of them.

Beau Mills - 1B

The Indians lone rep from below AA (see 2nd bullet above) is coming off a great 2nd half in the Carolina League that saw him surge to an MVP award. He finished with a line of .293/21/90, while posting .373/.506/.879 OBP/SLG/OPS. The Carolina League is known as more of a pitcher's league than a hitter's league, so Tribe brass had to be happy with that line out of the 21-year old slugger. Mills is one of two slugging 1B on the Rafters roster, along with Baltimore prospect Brandon Snyder (who also plays some 3B). He should get plenty of AB's between 1B and DH, and will be facing the best pitching of his young career. The AFL will be a great opportunity for Mills to carry over his 2nd half success, and will go a long way towards showing Mills true status as a prospect. If he pounds AFL pitching the way he did Carolina League pitching, it would be a great sign for both his development and ceiling. Mills is my #4 prospect in the organization right now, and could solidify that high ranking with a solid AFL campaign. Attempts to reach Mills to ask if he valued the Tony Award he was given as Indian Minor League Offensive Player of the Year over his Carolina League MVP trophy were unsuccessful.

Wes Hodges - 3B

Hodges put together a solid season offensively manning the hot corner at Akron in 2008, going for .290/18/97 to go with his .354/.466/.820. His defense however, still leaves something to be desired. His defensive skills have never quite matched up with his high athleticism, but that's what the AFL is for! Hodges will get plenty of extra ground balls in workouts and games, which is just what the doctor ordered. The Indians would also like to see him work on his plate discipline, as he struck out 109 times against only 44 walks in 2008. Hodges will be 24 next year, and with only Andy Marte between him and a big league job the Indians are really hoping he forces the issue with his bat. Hodges had some injury issues coming out of Georgia Tech, and it will be good for him to get in the extra AB's against quality pitching in the AFL. I have him as my #6 prospect right now, and we could see him in Cleveland as soon as next season.

Tony Sipp - LHP

Sipp is an intriguing prospect that is bouncing back from Tommy John surgery. Tony has reported extensively on Sipp's rehab, sharing with us just how hard the lefty has worked to get back to where he was before the injury. Sipp has two plus pitches in his fastball and slider, and is working on a changeup as well. He strikes people out at an extremely high rate, and projects to a potential closer down the road. Sipp only threw 33 2/3 innings in his rehab season, so I fully expected him to be sent to the AFL to pitch some more and prove he is fully healthy. Sipp is my #10 prospect, and I fully expect to see him in the Cleveland bullpen sometime next season after starting in Columbus. He still has all 3 of his options remaining.

Josh Rodriguez - INF

Rodriguez was coming off of a breakout 2007 season in Mahoning Valley and Kinston, where he went 20/20 and really established himself as the Indians top middle IF prospect. Big things were expected of the 23 year old this year in Akron, but he struggled to the tune of .241/7/49. His stolen bases dipped from 21 to 12, and OPS was a paltry .694. I didn't get to see Rodriguez play this year, so I can only speculate on the reasons for his step backwards as a prospect. He did have to split his time between 2B and SS due to an organizational need at 2B, which could have had a negative effect at the plate. If Rodriguez put together a season in Akron similar to his 2007, we'd be talking about him as a sleeper to break camp with the club at 2B and allow Peralta to slide to 3B. Instead, the Indians are scouring the market this off-season for an infielder. Playing in the AFL will allow Rodriguez to focus on 2B, as the Rafters have three other quality shortstops on their roster. Here's hoping that will allow him to focus at the plate and gain some positive momentum headed into the off-season. He has the talent and the right attitude, so a good 2009 is not out of the question and would put him right back in the midst as a top-15 prospect. As of right now though, it's difficult to have him in the top-20.

Chuck Lofgren - LHP

Which Chuck Lofgren will we see in the AFL? The pre-2008 guy who was listed in Baseball America's Top 100 prospects, or the Tony Award winner for Most Disappointing Indians Prospect in 2008? By all accounts, Lofgren's struggles are a combination of mechanical and mental issues, and there is nothing physically wrong with him. As a catcher, I can testify that southpaw pitchers can sometimes be a little nuts, which helps as well as hurts them. He is still left-handed, and he still throws in the mid-90's, both talents that never get stale in the baseball industry (see Orosco, Jesse). He has been a starter his entire career, but was moved into the Akron bullpen towards the end of 2008 due to his struggles. His 2-6, 5.69 ERA line is tough to look at, but in only throwing 85 2/3 innings in Akron, his arm should feel fine. The AFL gives Lofgren a shot to start putting some shine back on his prospect star. A top-10 guy entering 2008, Lofgren's struggles have pushed him out of the top-20. But again, lefties who throw in the mid-90's don't exactly grow on trees, so a solid AFL campaign followed by an improved 2009 could have us talking about Lofgren again in a hurry.

Erik Stiller - RHP

Stiller is a 6'5", 200lb right-hander out of Princeton. Stiller was a great find by Shapiro and the scouting staff, as they signed him as an UDFA after the 2006 draft. He began 2008 in Kinston, but was quickly moved into the bullpen in Akron where he finished with a 3.19 ERA and striking out 55 batters in 56 2/3 IP. Stiller throws in the mid-90's, and his stuff will only improve as he fills out and puts some more weight on his frame. Look for him to work on all four of his pitches in the AFL, and he could be a dark-horse candidate for a call to Cleveland sometime in 2009. Stiller is a top-20 prospect for me at this point, which is pretty good for a UDFA.

Neil Wagner - RHP

Wagner split time between Kinston and Akron this season with success at both levels. The 21st round draft pick can crank it up to 98 MPH from the right side, and the Indians think he slots in as a late-inning guy. He will be expected to work on his secondary pitches in the AFL, because they are still a work in progress. No matter how hard Wagner can throw, he won't be able to get big league hitters out with fastballs alone, and both he and the Indians know this. The AFL will be a great opportunity for him to work on his slider and changeup. If he can develop one or both of those pitches, he would move up the board but as of right now I have him as a top-30 guy in the organization.

Stephen Head - 1B

I know what you are thinking…this guy said each team sends seven players…Head makes eight! Head (along with Jamie Hoffman and Russ Mitchell of the Dodgers) is a "taxi squad" player. No, not like the Paul Brown taxi squad. Taxi squad players in the AFL are active only on Wednesdays and Saturdays. Head was a 2nd round draft pick out of Ole Miss who put together solid numbers at AA this year despite not breaking camp with the Aeros and spending time on the DL after he did join the club. Head went .290/13/49 in only 106 games this year, and is headed to the AFL to get some more AB's to make up for the time he lost to injuries this year. Head has had an up and down career as a prospect, and the Indians still feel he can contribute at the major league level. Additionally, he is dealing with a position switch from 1B to the OF, so it will be good to get him some more time out there so he can feel more comfortable at the plate going into next season. Versatile and athletic with projectable power, Head is somewhere in my top-30 with a chance to make a big leap if he can stay healthy for an entire season.

Other issues around the AFL:

Last I have heard, the Indians are still trying to find a way to send newly acquired Michael Brantley to the AFL without pulling another player back. Brantley was slotted by the Brewers to go to the AFL, but now that he has officially become the PTBNL, his status is in limbo. Anyone who has an update, please let me know!

Top catching prospect Matt Wieters will join the Indians prospects on the Surprise Rafters this year. The kid can flat-out hit, and will likely be in Baltimore sometime next year.

The Yankees are sending Phil Hughes to the AFL to throw some more innings after injuries derailed his 2008 campaign.

Brewers prospects Angel Salome and Mat Gamel are headed to Arizona; Tribe fans will recall their names being kicked around in preliminary CC discussions. I was hoping Alcides Escobar would get sent as well, but no dice.

Blue Jays top prospect Travis Snider is on the Phoenix Desert Dogs roster. Snider had a cup of coffee with the Jays at the end of last season, and looks like he will be an absolute stud down the road. Only 20, he'll be one of the younger players in the AFL.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Lewis Named AL Player of Month, Kinston Has Four All-Stars

Cleveland Indians pitcher Scott Lewis has been named the September recipient of the American League Rookie of the Month Award presented by Gillette.

Lewis made four starts in September and went 4-0 with a 2.63 ERA in 24.0 innings pitched. The 25-year-old left-hander permitted 20 hits with six walks and 15 strikeouts and held opposing hitters to a .222 batting average. In his Major League debut on September 10th at Baltimore, Scott tossed 8.0 scoreless innings of three-hit ball with three strikeouts in the 7-1 victory. The 8.0 shutout innings by Lewis was the second-longest starting debut since 1956 by an Indians pitcher without allowing a run. Only Luis Tiant’s complete-game shutout in 1965 tops Lewis. The West Covina, California native hurled 6.0 shutout innings in his next start on September 15th against the Minnesota Twins, and allowed just three hits with two walks and five strikeouts in the 3-1 win. The 14.0 scoreless innings streak to begin his career was the longest by an Indians pitcher since 1969. Lewis, who was selected by the Indians in the third round of the 2004 First-Year Player draft out of The Ohio State University, closed the month with victories against the Detroit Tigers on September 21st and at the Chicago White Sox on September 26th, pitching 5.0 innings in each of the two starts.

Other rookies receiving votes included Kansas City Royals infielder Mike Aviles (.301, 31 H, 3 HR, 13 RBI); Boston Red Sox outfielder Jacoby Ellsbury (.344, 31 H, 20 R, 7 SB); and Texas Rangers catcher Taylor Teagarden (.341, 14 H, 5 HR, 16 RBI).

As part of Gillette’s involvement, fans, for the first time, had a voice this season in selecting the Rookie of the Month winners by voting each month at www.mlb.com/gillette. The online fan vote represented 20% of the overall vote with the remaining votes coming from team baseball writers and Club broadcasters.

Gillette, the presenting sponsor of the American League Rookie of the Month Award will donate $5,000 in the name of Scott Lewis to the Club’s official charity.

K-Tribe Puts Four Players on Baseball America’s High A All-Stars

K-Tribe catcher Carlos Santana is Baseball America’s High A Player of the Year, leading a group of four Kinston Indians who earned the post season honors. Beau Mills, Nick Weglarz and Hector Rondon fill out the group. Kinston had more players make the end of year squad then any other team in High A. The All-Star group is selected from all three High A Leagues (Carolina, California, Florida) by the staff of Baseball America.

Carlos Santana earns High A Player of the Year honors after starting the year at Inland Empire (Dodgers) in the California League and finishing with the K-Tribe. Santana hit a combined .330 with 20 home runs and 115 RBI in High A this season. His 122 runs scored where the most in all of Minor League baseball.

Kinston first baseman Beau Mills was selected as the designated hitter for the High A All-Stars. Mills hit .293 with a Carolina League high 21 home runs and 90 RBI. Nick Weglarz was selected as one of three outfielders, hitting .272 with ten home runs and 41 RBI. Kinston starting pitcher Hector Rondon is one of four starting pitchers selected for the post season honor. Rondon went 11-6 with a 3.67 ERA, striking out 145 batters in 145 innings.

Bryson Surgery, Radio Show Update

Just a quick update on right-hander Rob Bryson, but from a source close to the situation he is scheduled to have surgery this Wednesday October 8th. The surgery will be to repair a torn labrum, and is an in and out procedure where he will have the surgery and be out of the hospital in less than a day. Bryson most likely will miss all of the 2009 season where he will be at the new Goodyear complez rehabbing and getting prepared for spring training 2010 when he should be 100% or near 100%. There is an outside shot Bryson could make a few rehab appearances late in the season in the Arizona League (the new rookie team replacing the GCL team for obvious reasons).

Also, just a reminder that Michael Brantley and his agent Josh Kusnick will be on my radio show this Thursday at 9:30pm ET. The direct link to Thursday's show is below:

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/TheClevelandFan/2008/10/10/Smoke-Signals-Cleveland-Fan-Live

Josh will answer questions from me and he will also take calls from any fans who want to call in to speak to him. Phone number to call is 646-716-8012. Brantley himself will also be on, but will be doing an on-air interview and will not be taking calls from the fans. As a reminder, for those that cannot listen live, the show is podcasted and can be downloaded and listened to at anytime by visiting the links I provided above.

Looking Back

by: jellis121

Well, it’s now the start of the slowest time of year for most baseball fans – unless, of course, you’re a fan of one of the 8 teams that made the playoffs. For the rest of us, though, nothing will happen in the next month or so with our favorite teams, so I wanted to take this time to dig back into the past.

The baseball draft is one of the most interesting drafts, because it has more possible outcomes than any other draft. In a baseball draft you can miss by drafting the wrong player or by drafting the right player but then failing to sign them. Most fans out there know all about the Indians’ less than stellar draft record, but let’s look back on the great picks that slipped through the Indians fingers.

I wanted to go back to 1998 for two main reasons: first, it would give a nice, even ten year period to look back on, and second, 1998 was the last time the Indians drafted a player in round one who made an impact – by which I refer, of course, to CC. From 1998, however, I am not familiar with any player past Matt White, the 15th round pick; no other players worked out. The next year, 1999, was arguably the worst draft of the decade and generated no one who qualified. The 1999 draft was so bad the best two players the Indians drafted Jason Davis and Fernando Cavrera were DFAed. The only other player to make the majors from that draft, Kyle Denney, is best known because he was shot on the Indians bus and saved from serious injury because he was wearing high cheerleader boots. So let’s turn to 2000...

2000

In general, another so-so draft - the most successful player the Indians signed from it was Ryan Church, who the team later traded for the great Scott Stewart. The Indians did strike gold with back-to-back picks late in the draft. In the 30th round they drafted RHP high school pitcher from New Hampshire named Brian Wilson; three years later he was a 24th round pick by SF; 5 years after that he’s an all-star closer. Sure, he isn’t an upper tier closer but still would have been an arm to help the pen this year. Then the Indians drafted another high school kid in round 31, this time a first baseman named Conor Jackson. The Indians also had the chance to draft Jackson again three years later but instead chose the recently departed Brad Synder one pick before Zona chose Jackson. I would argue Wilson is the bigger miss as the pen has been a mess and thus far Jackson’s numbers are very similar to Garko. If you don’t believe me, check out the numbers.

2001

The Indians had six picks in the first 100 picks and zero made it to the majors. JD Martin will some day, but, still, it was an ugly draft. In what will also be a common theme, the Indians gave away their best signed player. This time it was a college OF named Luke Scott who went in the great deal with Willy Taveras for Jeriome Robertson. Overall, none of the draft picks that the Indians failed to sign from this year were significant.

2002

The best player the Indians again gave up on was Jeremy Guthrie. For the record, that makes four drafts in a row where they gave up on the best player they had signed before he got a real shot. Though Guthrie was so bad in AAA I don’t think we can blame them. This draft also yielded Brian Slocum, who probably won’t be back next year. The biggest impact from this draft – well, aside from Matt Whitney’s knee - had to be Ben Francisco. He has shown he’s a major leaguer; at worst, he should be in the league for the next decade as a 4th OF on a good team. The big miss this year came in round 33 when the Indians drafted a high school pitcher from Cincinnati named Jensen Lewis, although the Indians did eventually fix this error three years later when they made him a 3rd round choice.

2003

This year is the year of the injury. The Indians took two dynamic players – Michael Aubrey and Adam Miller - and both have shown to be made of glass. It proved a solid draft with nice later picks like Garko, Laffey, and Kouzmanoff. The only miss I can see from 2003 is a very minor one: in the 36th round the Indians drafted a 3B from Kansas named Jared Goedert. This would have been a bigger deal last year, but Goedert is looking like after a down year his spec value has taken a hit.

2004

2004 was an underrated draft for the tribe. Two of the first three picks landed the Indians major league starting pitchers in Scott Lewis and Jeremy Sowers. After Lewis the team landed Chuck Lofgren who had mental issues this year but nonetheless has a lot of talent - he was the Indians 2nd best spec according to BA a year ago. The tribe also landed two solid back-up catchers in Torgeas and Gimenez. With their 45th round pick the Indians took a very talented player late, but this year they actually signed him and I think that Tony Sipp will end up being the best player from this draft class. This, sadly, is the only example of them drafting the costly risk player and signing him. As much as I love Sipp, I would gladly have not signed him if the Indians could have kept who they drafted the next year in the 42nd round.

2005

For my money, this is the best draft the Indians have had - pretty amazing when you consider the top three picks have not really worked out. Trevor Crowe looks like a 4th OF, at best maybe a career AAA guy. John Drennen has stalled and looks like the highlight of his career will be hitting a HR off Roger Clemons when Clemens was rehabbing in A-ball. The third round pick was Stephen Head who has a heck of a glove as he is the best defensive first baseman Cleveland has in the system. He had a rebound year, but still at best he’s a back-up. The next three picks are where the Indians made their money in this draft: Jensen Lewis, Nick Weglarz, and Jordan Brown. All 3 players were in BA’s top ten specs last year. Lewis has proven it in the majors. Weglarz has the patience, power, and left handed bat that remind many people of a young Thome, and Brown is the steady unassuming hitter who will be a starter for some team in this league some day. The draft was also boosted thanks to some nice picks like Ryan Edell, Roman Pena, and Neil Wagner. Sadly, though, this draft is also the most painful one. In the 18th round, the Indians drafted Desmond Jennings - not a name everyone might know, but he was 69th in BA’s top 100 specs in baseball last year. It was his 2nd or 3rd time on that list; he’s a very athletic player, former QB. He had some injury issues this year, but would have been second on the Indians top ten list at the start of the year. The really painful one came in round 42 when they drafted an undersized fire baller out of the University of Washington named Timothy Lincecum. There were concerns that with his size he would be an injury risk. My mind might be failing me, but I believe his situation was a lot like Bryce Stowells'. (Note: I am not comparing them as players, merely their situations.) I believe Lincecum played in the summer league and did very well and that his bonus demands weren’t too crazy. I distinctly remember reading Keith Law or some one like that being shocked about how little effort the Indians made to sign Lincecum. Next year he’s the #10 pick in the draft and some teams were still scared off by his size. Still, go ahead and day dream what it would have been like if the Indians had signed him - I know I do, often.

As painful as this trip into the past might have been at times, the upside is that the Indians seemed to have learned from it. I stopped with 2005 because the Indians started signing a lot more of their late round players after this point. They have taken noticeably more risks and signed players like Ryan Miller and Mike Pontius, both of which took a little more to sign. This year’s draft they really made sure to lock up as many players as they could, and we can only hope that from now on we won’t see anymore misses like Brian Wilson or, worse, Tim Lincecum.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Brantley, Agent To Appear On My Radio Show

Okay, Josh Kusnick (Brantley's agent) will be on my radio show this Thursday at 9:30pm ET. The direct link to Thursday's show is below:

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/TheClevelandFan/2008/10/10/Smoke-Signals-Cleveland-Fan-Live

Josh will be on for a few segments and Paul and I will ask the obvious questions pertaining to the Indians trade for Brantley and other things, and the phone lines will be open for anyone who wants to call in to speak to Josh and ask whatever they want. Phone number to call is 646-716-8012.

Michael Brantley himself will also be on, but as an FYI will not be taking calls from the fans (only his agent). As a reminder, for those that cannot listen live, the show is podcasted and can be downloaded and listened to at anytime by visiting the links I provided above.

Also, I am going to post a lengthy article on the trade and a get-to-know-him piece sometime this week. If anyone has any specific questions you would like asked to any of Michael or Josh, please post them here or e-mail me at tlastoria@gmail.com. I want to be sure to ask everything and anything that is on the mind's of the fans.

Winter League Sunday Round-up

It's time for the second installment of our Winter League Roundup. The Winter season is still to get into full swing, but Indians prospects have been in action in Hawaii.

Hawaii Winter League

Indians prospects are playing for the North Shore Honu in Hawaii, who have gone 2-2 since the last update on Wednesday (2-4 overall), with one game ending in a 6-6 tie on October 1st after both teams had agreed to finish after 7 innings due to depleted pitching staffs.

Player Updates (09/30 - 10/04):

LHP Matt Meyer - Made 2 appearances; allowing 1ER off 3 hits in 0.2IP on 09/30 and working a scoreless inning with 2Ks on 10/03 to lower his overall ERA to 10.12 (2.2IP, 3ER) in 3 games.

LHP Shawn Nottingham - Allowed 1ER in 1IP on 09/30 and worked 2 innings on Saturday (10/04) allowing 2ER off 3 hits and 2BB. His ERA sits at 9.00 for the Winter season (4IP, 4ER) in 3 appearances.

LHP Heath Taylor - Made his only appearance of the Winter League season in the tied game on Oct 1st. Worked 2 scoreless innings, allowing 1 hit with 2Ks.

C Adam Davis - Appeared in 2 games, going a combined 1-for-7 with a 2B. On the season is batting .125 (1-for-8)/.300/.250/.550

3B Dustin Realini - Made 3 starts for the Honu, combining to go 0-for-9 with 2BB. For the season, Realini is yet to notch a base hit; going 0-for-13.

SS Ron Rivas - Has not played yet.

OF Matt McBride - McBride continues to play LF and bat 5th for the Honu, having appeared in 6 of the Honu's opening 7 games. In his 4 appearances since the last update, McBride has hit .286 (4-for-14) with 2 2B, 3RBI and 4BB. On the season McBride is hitting .300(6-for-20)/.444/.450/.894

Also, Indians 2008 18th round draft pick LHP Kaimi Mead is playing for his local team Honolulu Sharks having been invited to do so by the league. Mead has made two appearances for the Sharks combining to allow 7 runs, 3 earned in 4.1IP to give him a 5.79ERA.

Arizona Fall League

Just a reminder that the AFL kicks off this coming Tuesday (10/07) with Indians farmhands playing for Surprise Rafters. Again, as a reminder, Indians participating this year are: -

LHP Chuck Lofgren
RHP Erik Stiller
RHP Josh Tomlin
RHP Neil Wagner

1B Beau Mills
3B Wes Hodges
SS Josh Rodriguez

OF Stephen Head

Newly acquired OF Michael Brantley was scheduled to play in the AFL before being sent to the Indians by the Brewers to complete the CC Sabathia trade. It remains to be seen if Brantley will still be able to participate; all teams have a set allotment of the number of players they can send to the league and the Indians have used their full allocation. The Indians do not want to replace a position player currently in Arizona with Brantley, so it is possible they are in the process of attempting to receive special dispensation for Brantley to play due to the unusual circumstances of his situation.

Caribbean Leagues

Rosters have not been finalised for the 4 Caribbean Leagues, as soon as they are we will post the full listings. But, to remind you of the schedule for the upcoming Caribbean Leagues: -

Mexican Pacific League - October 11th
Venezuelan Winter League - October 14th
Dominican Winter League - October 15th
Puerto Rican Winter League - November 6th

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Some Random Brantley Thoughts


Due a family funeral taking up a lot of my time both Friday and today, I will not be able to get into Michael Brantley very much until Monday or Tuesday when I hope to post a lengthy article. I am in the midst of burning up the phone lines and e-mails getting info on him, and hope to have a much deeper report on him by then.

That said, here are some quick random thoughts on Brantley:

• First off, I am much happier about getting Brantley than I would have been about getting Taylor Green. I’ve been saying that all along in our message board forums here on this site and on TheClevelandFan.com. Brantley is the superior prospect, at least in my eyes, and offers up something this organization is severely lacking which is a bona fide top of the order threat with plus speed and elite-level plate discipline. This guy is a tough out and a royal pain in the you know what for pitchers.

• He brings three intangibles to the system the Indians really like: plate discipline, speed and athleticism.

• I know a lot of people get hung up on power and all that, but we need some table-setters and guys who consistently put the bat on the ball too. He already is a gap hitter and his power is always going to be below average, but he’ll run into some more home runs down the road as he matures and could be a 40-50 extra-base hit guy.

• The Indians feel he is a good center fielder and is a middle-of-the-diamond player as well as a top of order option they have lacked. Brantley is expected to play either left field or center field at the big league level, and at this time will settle in at center field where the Indians like him. Going forward, the Indians want to see him solidify his development and improve defensively with his routes to the ball in the outfield.

• What kind of player is Brantley? At worst, he is a good fourth outfielder for a major league team. As far as every day player ability goes, he certainly has it. His floor looks like that of a Randy Wynn, a middle of Juan Pierre (little less speed, but much better plate approach), and a ceiling of Kenny Lofton (his career to this point is virtually a mirror image to Lofton’s, and at three years younger).

• One person I was able to talk to about the Sabathia trade said he likes both LaPorta and Brantley a lot. When considering their ceiling potential, they mentioned that the Indians quite possibly may have very well got their 2000's version of Belle/Lofton in the trade.

• Amazingly, Brantley is on the same timetable as Matt LaPorta, the other big name player received in the C.C. Sabathia trade. He is already at an advanced level for his age, and is on a quick path to the big leagues. Both Brantley and LaPorta will open next year in big league camp in spring training and along with Trevor Crowe will be your starting outfield in Triple-A Columbus (wow, that team is going to be LOADED).

• Brantley only played in four games in July because of an injury to his right ankle, so the Indians did not get to see a lot of him in the early going. The Indians were impressed by what they saw of him when he returned from the injury and did their medical due diligence before announcing the trade to be sure he checked out okay physically. In the end, the Indians had multiple looks of both Brantley and Green and had multiple scouts check them both out many times, and they chose Brantley.

• The rumor about the player to be named portion of the deal hinging on whether the Brewers made the playoffs or not ended up being true. Props to the Plain Dealer’s Paul Hoynes for that one, and it appears that with the Brewers getting into the playoffs it allowed the Indians to make the choice and get the guy they wanted all along. And, this is why it took so long for the player to be named. The list had just two players as originally speculated, with the other player indeed being Taylor Green.

• Brantley was originally announced as one of the Brewers’ players who was to attend the Arizona Fall League (AFL), but was pulled back and it should be decided in the next day or so if he will still go. At the moment all of the Indians spots in the AFL are committed already and they will not pull anyone. They would have to pull Wes Hodges or Beau Mills to get him on the roster since replacement is position for position, which they are not doing, so they may very well look to get some sort of exception due to the rare nature of this deal.

• For those upset about the loss of the two first round draft picks we will not get for losing Sabathia in free agency, to me this is absolutely a non-issue. I take LaPorta straight up for those two picks. In a second. Heck, I even take the combination of Brantley and Bryson (pre-injury) over those two picks.

• Oh, and for those wondering, Brantley does not need to be rostered this offseason.

Right now, this does not look like a great trade at the moment, but it certainly is not a horrible trade by any means. In the interim, I'd give it a solid B or a B- because we could of have maybe had a little more. Time will truly tell how great or bad this trade was.
Photo courtesy of Tony Farlow, MiLB.com

Friday, October 3, 2008

Indians Acquire Brantley

More on this later, but here is the press release:

CLEVELAND, OH --- The Cleveland Indians today announced the club has acquired OF MICHAEL BRANTLEY from the Milwaukee Brewers. The acquisition of Brantley completes the July 7th deal between Cleveland and Milwaukee that sent LHP CC Sabathia to the Brewers for OF/INF MATT LaPORTA, LHP ZACH JACKSON & RHP ROB BRYSON.

Brantley, 21, spent the entire 2008 season at Class AA Huntsville of the Southern League where he posted an on-base percentage of .395 with 80 runs scored, 17 doubles, 2 triples, 4 home runs and 40 RBI in 106 games. He also stole 28 bases in 36 attempts and compiled a batting average of .319 (134-420). He was tied for 6th in Southern League in runs (80) & steals (28), was 7th in batting average (.319) and 12th in on-base % (.395) despite an ankle injury that limited him to 4 games in July. He had nearly twice as many walks (50) as strikeouts (27) and ranked second in the entire minor leagues w/a strikeout per plate appearance ratio of 17.7 (27K in 479 PA).

The versatile Brantley appeared in 62 games in center field and 21 games at both left field and first base. He was named to the Southern League mid-season and post-season All-Star Team and was named in Baseball America as the Best Baserunner and having the Best Strike Zone Judgment in the Southern League. The 6’2”, left-handed hitter compiled virtually identical on-base percentages off both right-handed (.397) and left-handed pitching (.390) while hitting .351 (53-151) for the season with runners on base. After the season he was named the 19th best prospect in the Southern League by Baseball America.

Brantley owns a career minor league on-base % of .399 with 53 2B, 7 3B, 6HR & 157 RBI in 383 games (.311BA, 433-1392) since being selected in the 7th round of the 2005 draft by Milwaukee out of Ft. Pierce Central High School (FL). In his minor league career he has 199 walks compared to just 142 strikeouts (1K per 11.5PA) and has stolen 103 bases in 132 attempts (78%). In 2006 at Class A West Virginia he was 3rd in the South Atlantic League with a .402 on-base % and in 2007 between A West Virginia & AA Huntsville he stole 35 bases and drove in a career-high 53 runs in 115 games. He is the son of former big leaguer Mickey Brantley, who played with the Seattle Mariners from 1986-89.

Bryson Has Surgey, Player To Be Named Update


Well, some this is not a good way to start the offseason:

Rob Bryson likely out all of next year with a torn labrum

Here is basically the important part of that article:

As for the rest of Bryson's year, he joined Cleveland's low Class A team, Lake County (Ohio). He pitched 121¼3 innings in seven games and was diagnosed with a torn labrum. He will have surgery Wednesday.

Bryson spent time on the disabled list in August, rehabilitating the arm, but did pitch as late as Aug. 29, striking out two in one inning.

"My first day back on the mound everything felt fine," Bryson said. "But in the days after that, I felt pretty sore."

The surgery will keep Bryson off the mound for six to nine months or possibly more. Bryson said that a labrum tear is "something that just happens over time," and that it's torn enough to where it's become painful.

"I just want to get it taken care of as soon as possible," Bryson said about next week's surgery. "That way, I can recover as soon as possible. They told me rehab will be six to nine months. But pitching competitively, I probably will not be back on the mound in a game situation for at least a year."

Ouch.

Gotta say the Indians may have some egg on their face with this one. Knowing the severity of the injury and risk involved, I am not sure I understand what the reasoning was behind rushing him back to pitch a few innings at the end of this season after he initially came down with the injury in late July. And even Bryson was notably concerned when they were initially messing around with bringing him back. From
an article on him in late August:

...when talking to him this past Thursday he was relieved the injury was not as bad as he thought. Although he was sort of surprised he has not just been shutdown for the last few weeks of the season, Bryson says he is excited to get back out on the mound and start competing again.

In a nutshell when I said "surprised" it was a nicer way of saying he was a little frustrated, concerned, and at a loss for words why he was being rushed back.

Granted, this may have been normal procedure to shut a guy down when it is just a partial tear like it was originally diagnosed. So it could have happened to any team I guess. And in no way should Shapiro be raked over the coals for acquiring him. He was healthy when we traded for him, and you can't predict injuries. It is unfortunate, but there is no one to blame here except a bout of bad luck for Bryson and the Indians and maybe to some degree the Indians medical staff and/or decision makers for forcing him back a little too soon.


In any case, Bryson’s 2009 season is all but wiped out already, and given the nature of the injury his career has now been put in serious jeopardy. Torn labrum and rotator cuff injuries are just not something many, if any, pitchers came back from 100%.

That Player To Be Named

Looks like we will finally see the end of all the speculation with the player to be named in the Sabathia trade as reportedly the deadline for the Indians to complete the trade and pick the player is this coming Monday October 7th.

This is one of the craziest deals I can ever remember, and it will be very interesting to see who ultimately is the player to be named. All along Taylor Green and Michael Brantley have been the two players said to be on the short list the Indians were considering, and some speculation has mentioned players like Lucroy, Escobar, Cain, Salome, and so on. But, from a tip I received on Thursday a member of the Brewers front office has said that Escobar is NOT available. Another source said that the Indians have indeed decided on Brantley, but they are currently going over his medical and making sure he is sound before making the official announcement on Monday.

Stay tuned. We’ll see how this shakes out, and there are bound to be yet more twists in this ongoing saga over the weekend.

By the way, if Escobar truly is off the table, I want Brantley.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Minor Happenings: The 2008 Tony Awards

Well, another minor league season has come and gone covering the Indians farm system, and with that it is time to put the wraps on the season with the third annual Minor League Tony Awards. While this is the final edition of Minor Happenings for this season, look for intermittent editions between now and the spring on TheClevelandFan.com to recap all the developments and news over the course of the offseason, and daily updates on my blog the Cleveland Indians Minor League Insider all offseason.

Also, with the 2008 season coverage now complete, work has already begun on the 2009 season as I have started to put together my Top 100 Indians prospect rankings for next year. I'll start to unveil the Top 100 in late November or early December and countdown the list from #100 to #1 by the time spring training starts. I will be issuing a book again with the prospect scouting reports, rankings, depth charts, and more goodies sometime in December. For more details on that, check out
my blog for updates throughout the offseason.

Thanks to everyone for reading, and again, a special thanks to Ken Carr and Carl Kline for all the help with the photos this year.

Offensive Player Of The Year

The Nominees: Abner Abreu (3B - GCL Indians), Lonnie Chisenhall (SS - Mahoning Valley), Trevor Crowe (OF - Akron), Chris Gimenez (C - Buffalo), Wes Hodges (3B - Akron), Beau Mills (1B - Kinston), Cord Phelps (2B - Mahoning Valley), Carlos Santana (C - Kinston)

The Skinny: Chisenhall (.290, 5 HR, 45 RBI, .794 OPS) and Phelps (.306, 2 HR, 22 RBI, .811 OPS) had great campaigns at Mahoning Valley to start their careers and should be two bats we talk about in the system a lot the next few seasons as they move along in their minor league careers. Santana flat out raked in 29 games at Kinston after being acquired in the Casey Blake trade hitting .352 with 6 HR, 19 RBI and a 1.043 OPS. He also won the California League MVP, a league he didn't even play in for the final five weeks of the season! Gimenez showed an advanced approach at Akron this year (52 BB, 33 K) and had an excellent 1.024 OPS in 55 games before moving up to Buffalo. Crowe was arguably the best player in minor league baseball for the month of June when he was unconscious and hit .400 with 4 HR, 24 RBI and had a 1.100 OPS. Mills (.290, 21 HR, 90 RBI, .880 OPS) was Beau Millsthe Carolina League MVP, and after a slow first half start (.222 AVG, .714 OPS in April) he hit .327 with 12 HR, 43 RBI and a .962 OPS after the All Star break and finished the season ranked in the top five in the league in many categories. Hodges set the Akron franchise single-season RBI record and was a steady offensive performer all year (.290, 18 HR, 97 RBI, .821 OPS). Abreu piled up 11 home runs in just 51 games.

And the Tony Award goes to: Beau Mills

While they deserve consideration for the award, Chisenhall and Phelps only played half a season and to win it they would have needed to put up eye-popping numbers because of the low amount of games played and they just didn't do that. The same goes for Santana who only played a total of 31 games in the Indians system this year. He may have the best overall numbers (.321, 21 HR, 117 RBI, .999 OPS), but considering two-thirds of his playing time was in another organization it is hard to give him the award over someone else who was with the Indians all year. Gimenez and Crowe were just not consistent enough all season and aside from a one month hot streak both put up pedestrian numbers at best the rest of the time. Hodges excelled with driving in runs, but his poor finish where he hit .238 and had a .728 OPS after the All-Star break were a hit to his final numbers and caused his prospect standing to tumble some.

Mills on the other hand was impressive just about all season. There were some concerns the Indians reached when they took him with their first round pick last year, but he has now cemented himself as one of the top first base prospects in all of minor league baseball. His excellent power is showcased on a nightly basis as he put up 21 home runs in the pitcher friendly Carolina League, and his 34 doubles show that there is more power to come. There is no question Mills is a top five prospect in the Indians system and has a power bat the team needs. He is an impact bat on the horizon for the Indians possibly as soon as sometime in 2010.

Pitcher Of The Year

The Nominees: Kelvin De La Cruz (LHP - Lake County), David Huff (LHP - Buffalo), Scott Lewis (LHP - Akron), J.D. Martin (RHP - Akron), Hector Rondon (RHP - Kinston), Josh Tomlin (RHP - Kinston)

The Skinny: De La Cruz dominated the South Atlantic League circuit where in 18 starts he was 8-4 with a 1.69 ERA before a call up to Kinston in July. In 27 combined starts he was 12-6 with a 2.98 ERA, which is outstanding for a big 20-year old power-armed lefty in his first full season pitching at three different levels. Huff went 5-1 with a 1.92 ERA for Akron earlier this season before moving up to Buffalo in June where he continued to roll going 6-4 with a 3.01 ERA in 16 starts. His combined ERA of 2.52 at Akron and Buffalo led the entire system, and his 143 strikeouts ranked second. Lewis missed most of the first half of the season recovering from a lat injury he suffered at the end of spring training, but when he came back he was impressive going a combined 8-4 with a 2.40 ERA in 17 starts at Akron and Buffalo. Martin was 100% healthy all year, finished strong, and had an outstanding season going 12-3 with a 2.41 ERA in 35 combined appearances at Akron and Buffalo. Rondon took part in the Futures Game andDavid Huff at age 20 dominated hitters two to three years older than him in the Carolina League going 11-6 with a 3.60 ERA and a system best 145 strikeouts. Tomlin jumped firmly onto the prospect scene and showed his versatility pitching as a starter or reliever by going 10-5 with a 3.04 ERA in 41 appearances at Kinston (one spot start at Buffalo).

And the Tony Award goes to: David Huff

Early on through the first two months of the season it looked like this would come down to Huff, De La Cruz and left-hander Ryan Miller. However, Miller faded the final three months of the season and De La Cruz struggled in his first taste of advanced Single-A at Kinston (3-2, 6.44 ERA, 8 starts). Martin got off to a rough start in April (2-1, 6.38 ERA, 7 games), but finished strong going 5-0 with a 1.15 ERA in 13 appearances (5 starts) after the All-Star break. Tomlin mostly pitched out of the bullpen early on as a long man and spot starter, and Lewis missed almost half the season.

In the end, this really came down to Huff and Rondon. Rondon got off to a rough start in April (0-2, 5.57 ERA, 5 starts), but was money the rest of the way. Huff (11-5, 2.52 ERA) was just amazingly consistent all year from April through August going 1-1 with a 2.78 ERA in six April starts, 4-0 with a 1.08 ERA in five May starts, 2-1 with a 3.46 ERA in five June starts, 2-2 with a 2.25 ERA in six July starts, and 2-1 with a 3.57 ERA in five August starts. Huff returned from an arm injury which shut him down for the second half of the 2007 season and managed to stay healthy all year, give his team a chance to win every night, and has now jumped into the mix this spring to be one of the Indians five pitchers to open the season in the starting rotation. He is now the top left-handed pitching prospect in the system.

Comeback Player Of The Year

The Nominees: Trevor Crowe (OF - Buffalo), J.D. Martin (RHP - Akron), Tony Sipp (LHP - Akron), Steven Wright (RHP - Akron)

The Skinny: Crowe used a hot June (.400 AVG, 1.100 OPS) to hit a combined .302 with 9 HR, 41 RBI, 18 SB, and .867 OPS in 84 combined games at Akron and Buffalo, compared to last year where in 133 games at Akron he hit .259 with a .659 OPS. Martin only made nine starts last year at Akron and went 2-3 with a 4.25 ERA before an elbow injury shut him down for the season, but this season he made it through a season for the first time in almost forever and went 12-3 with a 2.41 ER in 35 combined appearances at Akron and Buffalo. Sipp did not pitch at all last season after being shutdown with elbow issues at the end of spring training and then undergoing Tommy John surgery last July. He did not return until late-June this year, and in 24 combined appearances for the Gulf Coast League Indians, Kinston and Akron Sipp went 0-3 with a 2.67 ERA. Wright had a disappointing Trevor Crowedebut last year going 7-9 with a 5.67 ERA in 27 combined starts at Lake County and Kinston, but he surprisingly returned as a starter again this year and rebounded well to go 6-7 with a 3.66 ERA in 28 combined starts at Kinston and Akron.

And the Tony Award goes to: Trevor Crowe

Martin had a very nice year, particularly in the bullpen where he showed some value and versatility. He stayed healthy all year, put up great stats, and his curveball is back to the dominating pitch it was prior to his 2005 Tommy John surgery. Sipp's velocity is all the way back, and his secondary stuff has returned to pre-injury levels. In 33.2 innings this year he held the opposition to a .193 batting average and had just 11 walks to 46 strikeouts. He is an impact reliever for the Indians bullpen as soon as the start of next season. Wright has proven to be a strong, durable starting pitcher as he has made 55 starts over the last two seasons. His 119 strikeouts were the fourth most in the system this year, which may be a surprise to some fans.

But of all the comebacks this year, none was greater than Crowe's. As a former first round pick, many people were down on the talented outfielder after his poor season last year when he needed a late season charge to bring his numbers up to below average levels (.259 AVG, .659 OPS); however, Crowe's strong finish last year where he hit .310 with an .838 OPS from July 1st to the end of the season ended up being a precursor to a rebound season in 2008. Crowe's return this season was highlighted by a significant jump in the power department where he went from 35 extra-base hits in 518 at bats last year (.353 SLG) to 41 extra-base hits in 344 at bats this season (.485 SLG). Crowe's approach at the plate and speed is something the current Indians lineup is sorely lacking, which is why his resurgence was so important. He cemented his standing as a Top 10-15 prospect in the system where at the start of the season there were questions about that, and now he could be the Indians first option they turn to in the minors next year when a need for an outfielder arises.

Biggest Breakthrough

The Nominees: Matt Brown (OF - Lake County), Kelvin De La Cruz (LHP - Lake County), John Gaub (LHP - Lake County), Josh Judy (RHP - Lake County), Niuman Romero (INF - Kinston)

The Skinny: This listing is for the players who made the biggest jump from where they were in their prospect rankings to start the year to where they are now. De La Cruz put up a good 2007 campaign where he went 5-4 with a 3.11 ERA in 15 combined starts for the Gulf Coast League Indians and Mahoning Valley Scrappers, and followed that up with an excellent year mostly at Lake County this year where he was 8-4 with a 1.69 ERA in 18 starts before his callup to Kinston. His 136 strikeouts were third best in the organization. Romero had an out-of-nowhere year to hit .296 with 6 HR, 53 RBI, and a .753 OPS. Judy (12-1, 3.26 ERA, 88.1 Kelvin De La CruzIP, 97 K) and Gaub (1-1, 3.38 ERA, 64 IP, 100 K) piled up tons of strikeouts in the Lake County bullpen. Brown was Lake County's top offensive contributor all season and finished first in the entire organization with a .308 batting average and also chipped in with 8 HR, 75 RBI and a .789 OPS.

And the Tony Award goes to: Kelvin De La Cruz

Romero went from an organizational player on his last legs in the organization (.242 career average) to a player who could now carve out a career as a super utility player. Judy and Gaub are legit relief pitching prospects in the system, particularly Gaub who from the left-side had a ridiculous 14.06 K/9 rate. Brown is a former college player so was a little old for the South Atlantic League, but even so his numbers to go along with a solid approach at the plate and a howitzer for an arm in right field makes him intriguing going forward.

The difference here is De La Cruz went from a Top 20 prospect with a lot of unknowns, to a clear Top 10 prospect who is now viewed around baseball circles as one of the top impact left-handed starting pitchers in the lower minors. Many fans did not even know who "De La" was until a month into the season after he had racked up some impressive outings to start the season. At just 20-years of age, he has the size (6'5", 200 pounds) and pitches (plus fastball and slider) to be a dominant starter down the road. He is often referred to as "Carmona Left" because of his strikingly similar build to Carmona at such a young age, his Dominican roots, his talent, and the movement and velocity he gets on his pitches.

Biggest Disappointment

The Nominees: Cirilo Cumberbatch (OF - Kinston), John Drennen (OF - Kinston), Chuck Lofgren (LHP - Akron), Chris Nash (1B - Lake County), Josh Rodriguez (SS - Akron), Sung-Wei Tseng (RHP - Kinston)

The Skinny: Cumberbatch went from a promising prospect after a solid 2007 campaign in Lake County (.299 AVG, .808 OPS) to flat out disappearing after he hit .236 with a .589 OPS in Kinston. Josh Rodriguez had a sensational 2007 season in Kinston where he hit .262 with 20 HR, 82 RBI, 21 stolen bases and had an .811 OPS, but followed that up this year in Akron by only hitting .241 with 7 HR, 49 RBI, 12 stolen bases, and a .694 OPS. Lofgren had a solid season last year in Akron going 12-7 with a 4.58 ERA as a 21-year old, but in his return to Akron this year he only went 2-6 with a 5.99 ERA. Nash had a nice breakout campaign last year to hit .303 with an .805 OPS in 63 combined games at Mahoning Valley and the Gulf Coast League, but battled through injuries all year this season and played only 76 games and hit .230 with 5 HR, 39 RBI and had a .642 OPS for Lake County. Tseng went fromChuck Lofgren 6-9 with a 4.05 ERA last year in 26 starts at Kinston to 0-8 with a 6.04 ERA in 39 combined appearances between Akron and Kinston this year. Drennen had a solid season last year in Kinston hitting .254 with 13 HR, 77 RBI, and a .727 OPS, but only hit .235 with 3 HR, 39 RBI and a .631 OPS in a return trip to Kinston this year.

And the Tony Award goes to: Chuck Lofgren

This award could have really gone to any one of Lofgren, Rodriguez, or Drennen depending on how you look at it. Drennen's fall this year was painful to watch, and he looks like he may be on the outs in the organization and gets one final shot in Akron next year to show himself. Rodriguez's numbers were all down across the board, most notably his home run total which dropped from 20 to 7 this year. Cumberbatch and Tseng were no doubt disappointments, but they were further down the prospect pecking order than the rest of the players on this list. Nash's problems stemmed from a lingering shoulder injury that he could never quite get over all season and affected his performance.

Lofgren is the unfortunate winner of this award mostly because of the forgettable season he had and his standing as a prospect coming into the season. He struggled with his command (52 BB in 85.2 IP), and seemed out of sorts for most of the season with his mechanics and also was reportedly bothered by some personal issues. Coming into the season his average prospect ranking was 4th among four renowned sources, and should be in for a big slide this offseason in all of those rankings. That all said, it should be noted that Lofgren is still only 22-years old, is left-handed, throws in the mid-90s, his stuff is still very good, and his problems are mechanical and can be fixed.

All-Minor League Indians

Note: This is not a top prospect listing by position, but a listing based on performance in 2008. Also, players picked up in the July trades are not included here due to their limited time in the organization.

1st Team

Catcher: Chris Gimenez - 109 games, .304 AVG, 24 2B, 2 3B, 9 HR, 45 RBI, 75 BB, 93 K, .873 OPSMatt Brown
First Base: Beau Mills - 125 games, .293 AVG, 34 2B, 3 3B, 21 HR, 90 RBI, 54 BB, 105 K, .880 OPS
Second Base: Cord Phelps - 36 games, .306 AVG, 10 2B, 2 3B, 2 HR, 22 RBI, 15 BB, 24 K, .881 OPS
Shortstop: Lonnie Chisenhall - 68 games, .290 AVG, 20 2B, 3 3B, 5 HR, 45 RBI, 24 BB, 32 K, 7 SB, .794 OPS
Third Base: Wes Hodges - 133 games, .290 AVG, 29 2B, 3 3B, 18 HR, 97 RBI, 52 BB, 105 K, .821 OPS
Left Field: Nick Weglarz - 106 games, .272 AVG, 20 2B, 5 3B, 10 HR, 41 RBI, 71 BB, 78 K, .828 OPS
Center Field: Trevor Crowe - 84 games, .302 AVG, 28 2B, 4 3B, 9 HR, 41 RBI, 42 BB, 72 K, 18 SB, .867 OPS
Right Field: Matt Brown - 122 games, .308 AVG, 26 2B, 3 3B, 8 HR, 75 RBI, 35 BB, 62 K, .789 OPS
Left-handed Starter: David Huff - 11-5, 2.52 ERA, 27 starts, 146.1 IP, 112 H, 29 BB, 143 K, .209 BAA
Left-handed Reliever: John Gaub - 1-1, 3.38 ERA, 34 games, 64.0 IP, 44 H, 32 BB, 100 K, .195 BAA
Right-handed Starter: Hector Rondon - 11-6, 3.60 ERA, 27 starts, 145.0 IP, 130 H, 42 BB, 145 K, .239 BAA
Right-handed Reliever: J.D. Martin - 12-3, 2.41 ERA, 35 games, 89.2 IP, 79 H, 21 BB, 79 K, .241 BAA

2nd Team

Catcher:
Wyatt Toregas - 97 games, .259 AVG, 17 2B, 0 3B, 14 HR, 60 RBI, 32 BB, 52 K, .782 OPSSteven Wright
First Base: Jordan Brown - 109 games, .281 AVG, 30 2B, 3 3B, 7 HR, 51 RBI, 35 BB, 67 K, .754 OPS
Second Base: Niuman Romero - 108 games, .296 AVG, 22 2B, 1 3B, 6 HR, 53 RBI, 34 BB, 55 K, 10 SB, .753 OPS
Shortstop: Carlos Rivero - 108 games, .282 AVG, 27 2B, 1 3B, 8 HR, 64 RBI, 36 BB, 84 K, .753 OPS
Third Base: Abner Abreu - 51 games, .251 AVG, 16 2B, 4 3B, 11 HR, 37 RBI, 9 BB, 52 K, .827 OPS
Left Field: Darling Read - 70 games, .281 AVG, 19 2B, 4 3B, 13 HR, 47 RBI, 23 BB, 79 K, 25 SB, .900 OPS
Center Field: Tim Fedroff - 23 games, .319 AVG, 6 2B, 1 3B, 0 HR, 12 RBI, 10 BB, 20 K, .789 OPS
Right Field: Stephen Head - 106 games, .290 AVG, 24 2B, 2 3B, 13 HR, 49 RBI, 24 BB, 75 K, .780 OPS
Left-handed Starter: Kelvin De La Cruz - 12-6, 2.98 ERA, 27 starts, 130.0 IP, 110 H, 62 BB, 136 K, .229 BAA
Left-handed Reliever: Tony Sipp - 0-3, 2.67 ERA, 24 games, 33.2 IP, 23 H, 11 BB, 46 K, .193 BAA
Right-handed Starter: Steven Wright - 6-7, 3.66 ERA, 28 starts, 147.2 IP, 139 H, 34 BB, 119 K, .248 BAA
Right-hander Reliever: Josh Tomlin - 10-5, 3.04 ERA, 41 games, 109.2 IP, 88 H, 17 BB, 112 K, .223 BAA

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Winter League Wednesday Round-up

And you thought the Baseball season was over? Well, not for a myriad of prospects throughout the game who will ply their trade in leagues in Hawaii, Arizona and Latin America over the coming months.

The participants are a combination of top prospects being tested against more advanced competition, minor leaguers with specific areas of their game to work on or looking to get more playing time after missing part of the season through injury and also established Major Leaguers, specifically in Latin America.

As usual we'll be bringing you regular updates (every Wednesday & Sunday) on the performance of all Indians minor leaguers throughout the Winter.

Hawaii Winter League

The Hawaii Winter League got under way on September 27th with Indians minor leaguers playing for North Shore Honu.

Indians on the roster for the Honu are: -

LHP Matt Meyer
LHP Shawn Nottingham
LHP Heath Taylor

C Adam Davis

INF Dustin Realini
INF Ron Rivas

OF Matt McBride

That's right! Matt McBride is indeed playing the outfield, having played in LF for the full 9 innings of each of the Honu's opening 2 games. The move from behind the plate would seem to make sense; McBride has an advanced bat and missed a large chunk of the 2008 season after undergoing shoulder surgery. Even when he returned from injury he spent a lot of time as the DH for Kinston, Lake County and the GCL Indians. Add to that the depth at catcher in the upper levels of the minor leagues and this could be a way of fast-tracking McBride's bat to the Major Leagues.

North Shore have lost their opening two games by scores of 12-3 and 6-3 with Indians prospects experiencing mixed results in the early going. McBride (2-for-6, 2B, 2RBI, 2BB) is of to a solid start with the bat, Realini (0-for-4) and Davis (0-for-1) have only appeared in one game each and Rivas is yet to play.

On the pitching side, Nottingham (1IP, 1ER) and Meyer (1IP, 2ER) have got off to shaky starts, whilst Taylor hasn't appeared in the Honu's opening two games.

Arizona Fall League

The AFL gets underway on Tuesday October 7th with Indians farmhands playing for Surprise Rafters. The AFL is considered to be the league with the "best-of-the-best" of prospects throughout the minor leagues; being assigned to the AFL should be seen by a player as a real show of confidence from the front office.

Indians participating this year are as follows: -

LHP Chuck Lofgren
RHP Erik Stiller
RHP Josh Tomlin
RHP Neil Wagner

1B Beau Mills
3B Wes Hodges
SS Josh Rodriguez

OF Stephen Head

To demonstrate the level of prospect in the AFL, the Indians donning the Rafters uniform will be team mates for the Fall with consensus #1 overall prospect in Baseball Matt Wieters.

Other things to note about the AFL this year is that Captains pitching coach Ruben Niebla will serve as pitching coach for the Rafters - a massive tribute to the great work Ruben has done with the Captains this year. Also, Indians manager Eric Wedge will join Philadelphia Phillies SS Jimmy Rollins as the 2008 inductees into the AFL Hall of Fame.

Caribbean Leagues

A number of prospects as well as Indians major leaguers will be taking part Winter leagues throughout the Caribbean and we will also be regularly updating you on their progress as well as the full rosters as and when they are released. The seasons in the specific leagues get underway as follows: -

Mexican Pacific League - October 11th
Venezuelan Winter League - October 14th
Dominican Winter League - October 15th
Puerto Rican Winter League - November 6th