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Sunday, July 3, 2011

Around the Farm: July 2

Rob Bryson
(photo: Kinston
Indians)
Around the Farm takes a quick look at some of yesterday's performances by Indians prospects throughout the system. The positions listed below are where the player was playing in yesterday's game.

Luis Valbuena: SS, Columbus: 2-3, 1 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI, 1 BB:


Does it get much better than this for Valbuena? This kid is on fire offensively, seemingly doing something bigger and better every game. Last night, Valbuena belted a game-winning, walk-off homer in the tenth-inning to give the Clippers the victory. He currently has hits in eight of ten games, with six of those of the two-hit variety. His ten-game stat-line is .389/.439/.778. It's really hard to think that the Indians don't have a spot for this kid. Of course, Valbuena has torn up triple A hitting before, and has never been able to carry it over to the bigs.  Maybe the Indians want to make sure that he's the real deal before they pull the trigger again.

Rob Bryson: RP, Kinston: 2 IP, 1 H, 4 K:


Does it get more dominant than this as a relief pitcher? Bryson has been more of an injury concern than anything else since being one of the smaller parts of the C.C. Sabathia deal three-years ago.  When he's been healthy, he's been mostly dominant.  Well, he's been healthy with Kinston this season, and he's been lights out.  In six appearances, he's pitched in 10 1/3 innings, giving up only five hits and three walks, while striking out 14. I can't imagine he's long-term for the K-Tribe.

  • Ezequial Carrera: CF, Columbus: 2-4, 1 R, 1 BB, 1 K, 2 SB (29): Carrera continues to perform at a high level at Triple A. He's scuffled a bit of late, but he has avoided any prolonged slumps this season, which has made him an extremely viable option at the big league level.
  • Jason Kipnis: 2B, Columbus: 2-3, 2 R, 2 BB, SB (11): Kipnis continues to do everything he possibly can to get the call-up that he so richly deserves. I know, I know, he needs the rest of the season to develop his defense. Whatever. He's ready now, he just needs an opening.
  • Zach Putnam: RP, Columbus: 2 IP, 1 K: Putnam was lights out for much of the beginning of the season, but has struggled in three of his past five outings. It's good to see him with a dominating performance.
  • Chen Lee: RP, Columbus: 2 IP, 2 H, 1 BB, 4 K, W (1-0): Lee has been as close to perfection at Triple A in his three appearances as you can get.  Today was a bit of a struggle, giving up two hits and a walk in two innings, but he did strike out four batters.
  • Kyle Bellows: 3B, Akron: 2-4, 2 R, 1 BB, 1 K: Bellows was scorching hot this past week, but had gone hitless in two straight games leading up to last night's game. He regained that heat with a two-hit, two-run performance. While his stat-line is .325/.372/.450 over his past ten-games, his overall stat-line is a much more depressing .206/.286/.300.  Yeah, that's how bad he's been this year.
  • Michel Hernandez: C, Akron: 3-5, 3 RBI: Hernandez is a 32-year old career minor leaguer who has had a couple of cups of coffee in the bigs.  He was signed recently after being released from the Orioles organization. Tonight, he rolled out three hits, including the game-winner in the ninth inning. Welcome to the Indians' organization.
  • Raul Padron: 1B, Akron: 2-3, 2 R, 1 RBI, 1 BB: Like Hernandez, Padron was a recent signee by the Indians after he had scorched the Atlantic League with a .335 average, with seven homers and 30 RBI.  It appears as though the scouts have been working the Atlantic League pretty tough with the signing of Padron and Copeland.
  • Karexon Sanchez: 2B, Akron: 3-5, 1 3B, 1 RBI: I love Sanchez.  He'll never be a major prospect, and he's stunk up the joint for most of the season, but this kid never gives up. He throws in games like today just to make sure he stays on the map.
  • Cory Burns: Closer, Akron: 1 IP, 1 H, S (21): Burns is the current organizational leader in saves...again. He hasn't given up an earned run in 14 appearances and 14 1/3 innings.
  • Tyler Holt: CF, Kinston: 2-4, 1 3B: Holt hasn't done much of anything, so it's good seeing him with two hits and a triple today. It's especially good considering Kinston only had three hits altogether.
  • T.J. House: SP, Kinston: 6 IP, 5 H, 3 R/ER, 3 BB, 0 K, L (5-7): House wasn't horrid in the loss tonight, but was simply outpitched.  Still, these are the kind of down games you want from House.  He's melted down before, so this is much preferable. It's another step in his progression.
  • Kyle Landis: RP, Kinston: 1 IP, 1 K: Landis continues his feel-good story this season. He's only given up two earned runs in 17 2/3 innings.
  • Michael Goodnight: SP, Lake County: 2 2/3 IP, 4 H, 6 R/4 ER, 2 K, 1 HR: Goodnight was one of the best starters in the organizations through the beginning of June, and then things began to fall apart a bit.  Three of his last four outings have been bombs.  Perhaps the big righty needs some time off.
  • Bryce Stowell: RP, Lake County: 2 IP, 2 K: Stowell gave up his first run with Lake County during his last outing, but rebounded nicely with two perfect innings. Stowell may be a bit forgotten right now, but he's the real deal.  If he can stay healthy and rebuild the stamina, he should be back in the relief picture quickly.
  • Bryson Myles: RF, Mahoning Valley: 2-3, 1 R, 1 BB, 1 SB (9): Myles continues to rip apart the NY/Penn league. He's currently batting .339 overall and has an eight-game hit streak. During the streak, he's gone 14-33 (.424) with 10 runs, two doubles, two triples, two RBI, two walks and 1 K.  He's also stolen seven bases.  This kid is top ten talent for sure.
  • Tony Wolters: SS, Mahoning Valley: 1-4, 1 R, 1 HR, 1 RBI, 2 K: Wolters hit his first home run of the season.
  • Alex Lavisky: DH, Mahoning Valley: 2-4, 1 2B, 1 RBI, 1 K: Lavisky can't put anything together, so hopefully this is the start of something. The Indians organization is clearly trying to get him to succeed, letting him focus on his offense as the DH. Now, if he could just string some solid games together.
  • Nathan Striz: RP, Mahoning Valley: Striz struggled with Lake County this season. Today he put all of that behind him with an outstanding first performance this season with the Scrappers.

Follow Tony and the Indians Prospect Insider on Twitter @TonyIPI. Also, his latest book the 2011 Cleveland Indians Top 100 Prospects & More is available for purchase for $20.95 to customers in the US (shipping and handling extra).

Game Recaps 7/2: Valbuena's heroics lift Clippers

Luis Valbuena (photo: Tony Lastoria)
Clippers walk-off against Bats

Luis Valbuena's walk-off homer gave the Clippers a 6-5 victory in ten innings on a beautiful Saturday night in the Arena District.

The Bats wasted no time getting on the scoreboard. With two outs in the top of the 1st, Yonder Alonso unloaded on Clippers starter Corey Kluber for a solo shot, his 10th long ball of the season, to the Wendy's Hamburger balcony in right field, giving Louisville an early 1-0 lead.

The Clippers would then go to work offensively in the bottom of the 1st. Ezequiel Carrera led off the inning with a line drive base hit up the middle. Carrera would then steal second then advance to third on a Jason Kipnis single. The batter, Chad Huffman, hit a tapper near the right side of the mound that Bats starter Daryl Thompson picked up and threw home to try to get Carrera who was coming home. The ball deflected off the glove of Bats catcher Devin Mesoraco, allowing Carrera to score and Kipnis to advance all the way to third. Kipnis would then come in on a Luis Valbuena RBI sacrifice fly, making it all add up to a Clippers 2-1 lead after one inning.

The second inning was another example of offensive success for Columbus. Tim Fedroff led off the frame with a single to right field. The very next batter, Matt McBride, belted his 1st home run with the Clippers this season, driving in Fedroff and increasing the Columbus lead to 4-1.

The Clippers would knock out Thompson in the bottom of the fifth when Jason Kipnis came into score on a two out RBI single by Luis Valbuena, making 5-1 in favor of Columbus.The Bats threatened offensively in the top of the sixth. Dave Sappelt and Yonder Alonso walked to begin the inning. Devin Mesoraco would then hit an RBI double to left field that drove in Sappelt to make it 5-2. The game would then be tied 5-5 on a three-run home run by Jeremy Hermida off the Columbus Dispatch scoreboard. Thankfully, Joe Martinez came into relieve Kluber and kept the ball game tied as Columbus got out of the frame.

In the bottom of the seventh, the Clippers set out to get the lead back. Jason Kipnis led the inning off with a walk. After Chad Huffman struck out swinging, Luis Valbuena walked to put runners on first and second with one out. That brought Jered Goedert to the plate. Goedert struck out swinging, leaving it up to Tim Fedroff. Unfortunately, Fedroff couldn't deliver for Columbus as he grounded to shortstop to end the inning.

The game would move into extra innings. It would be Luis Valbuena hitting the game-winning home run in the bottom of the tenth to give the Clippers a 6-5 victory in ten innings.

The Bats and Clippers will be back at it again Sunday evening. Jeanmar Gomez (8-2) will start for Columbus and will oppose Bats right hander Scott Carroll (6-3) in game scheduled to start at 5:05 pm.

Hernandez's heroics lead Aeros over Seawolves

Michel Hernandez broke a 6-6 tie in the top of the ninth inning with an RBI single that proved to be the game-winning run as the Akron Aeros went on to win game three of a four-game series against the Erie SeaWolves 7-6 Saturday at Jerry Uht Park.

Hernandez went 3-for-5 Saturday with three RBI.

Right-handed pitcher Rob Waite allowed the Hernandez RBI single in the ninth and suffered the loss for the SeaWolves pitching two innings of relief and giving up three hits.

Right-hander Bryan Price record the win for the Aeros tossing 2.2 innings of relief, allowing one earned run on three hits and striking out two while walking none. Righty Cory Burns pitched a scoreless bottom of the ninth inning to pick up his league-best 21st save of 2011. Left-handed pitcher Matt Packer got the start for Akron lasting 5.1 innings, allowing five earned runs on eight hits, walking two and striking out two.

The Aeros (41-41) scored first in the top of the second inning. Nick Weglarz led off with a walk and Kyle Bellows followed with a single. With one out, Hernandez singled to load the bases. Weglarz scored on Raul Padron's walk to give Akron a 1-0 lead.

The SeaWolves (41-40) answered in the bottom of the frame. Bryan Pounds led off the inning with a solo home run to left field to tie the game 1-1. With two outs, Michael Bertram singled and scored on a Bryan Holaday RBI double giving Erie a 2-1 lead.

Akron retook the lead in the top of the third inning. With two outs, Beau Mills singled and Weglarz and Bellows worked back-to-back walks to load the bases. Mills scored on Ben Copeland's walk to tie the game 2-2. Hernandez followed with a two-RBI single to give the Aeros a 4-2 lead.

Erie got a run back in the bottom of the fourth inning on a Packer wild pitch to make it 4-3.

The Aeros added a run in the top of the sixth inning. Padron led off with a single and scored on a Karexon Sanchez RBI triple to make it 5-3.

Deik Scram hit a two-run home run to right field in the bottom of the frame to tie the game 5-5.

The SeaWolves took a 6-5 lead in the bottom of the seventh inning on a Pounds RBI sacrifice fly.

The lead was short lived as the Aeros tied the game 6-6 in the top of the eighth inning when Juan Diaz grounded into double play that allowed Padron to score.

Akron won on the Hernandez RBI single in the top of the ninth inning.

The Aeros will look to split this four-game series with the SeaWolves on Sunday. Akron will give the ball to right-handed pitcher Austin Adams, who is 5-7 with a 3.88 ERA in 2011. He will face left-handed pitcher Jay Voss, who is 3-3 with a 4.02 ERA this season. First pitch is at 6:35 p.m. The game can be heard on Fox Sports 1350 AM or online at sportsradio1350.com. Coverage begins at 6:20 p.m.

K-Tribe Held Scoreless in 3-0 Loss

The K-Tribe ran into a red hot pitcher, as Frederick blanked the Indians 3-0 Saturday night at Historic Grainger Stadium.

Frederick starter Oliver Drake was very good giving up just three hits in 8 1/3 innings of work. Drake (7-3) struck out four and walked two batters. Drake's last start was a complete game, nine-inning shutout. Drake's ERA dropped to 2.24 (third in the Carolina League) after the outing.

Frederick started the scoring in the top of the third inning, as Dale Mollenhauer and Brian Ward led off with a pair of walks. With two outs later in the inning, Mollenhauer was on third and Steve Bumbry at first. Bumbry was suddenly caught in a run down between the bases, but by the time Kinston tagged him out, Mollenhauer had scored from third base.

A walk led to another run in the fourth inning, when Tyler Townsend reached on the free pass with one out. On a hit and run, Townsend advanced to third base thanks to a Miguel Abreu single. Abreu would score when Kipp Shutz followed with an RBI ground out. Back-to-back singles to start the top of the sixth inning by Manny Machado and Townsend set the table for another score in the sixth inning. Machado would score on an Abreu sacrifice fly later in the frame, giving Frederick a 3-0 lead. Kinston starting pitcher T.J. House (5-7) picked up the loss, giving up five hits and three earned runs. He walked three in the loss.

Kinston's bullpen was strong again, as Rob Bryson went two innings, giving up one hit. He struck out four. Bryson has not giving up a run in 10 1/3 innings of work for Kinston this season. Kyle Landis gave up one hit in his one inning of work. He struck out one and lowered his ERA to 1.02. Sean Gleason picked up his Carolina League leading 22nd save for Frederick. Tyler Holt has two of Kinston's three hits, as the outfielder went 2-for-4 with a triple.

Kinston will take on Frederick in a Sunday matinee at 1:30 pm from Historic Grainger Stadium. Clayton Cook will make the start for Kinston. The K-Tribe continues the homestand with a special July 4th game Monday at 6:30 pm. The contest will feature a fireworks show after the game.


Hawks Crush Captains 15-2

Lake County lost the game series to South Bend losing Saturday night 15-2. The Captains lost four of six on the home stand.

Captains pitching combined for nine walks, and seven wild pitches and the defense committed three errors in a night where nothing went well for the club.

Gersen Montilla hit his first homerun of the season in the first inning for South Bend to give the Hawks a 1-0 lead. Ray Willy Gomez added a sacrifice fly for a 2-0 edge.

In the third inning, the Silver Hawks scored four runs; Yazy Arbelo drove in a pair with a double. Gomez scored the fourth run on a wild pitch by Captains' pitcher Mike Goodnight to make it 6-0.

South Bend scored four times in the fourth to open up a 10-0 lead. Luis Encarnacion allowed all four runs, on four walks and two wild pitches. Matt Helm singled in a run and scored on a wild pitch. Gomez added his second RBI of the night. Roberto Ortiz picked up an RBI with a bases loaded walk.

In the fifth inning, Arbelo drove in his third run of the game on a ground out to second scoring Walters who tripled to reach.

Robeto Ortiz picked up his second RBI for South Bend with an RBI ground out in the sixth inning to make it 12-0.

In the seventh inning, Yazy Arbelo finished off a career night hitting his 20th homerun of the season, a three run shot for a total of six RBI on the night and a 15-0 lead for South Bend.

Lake County avoided the shut out putting up two runs in the bottom of the eighth inning. An RBI double by Brian Heere and an RBI single by Nick Bartolone make it 15-2.

Tyler Grren (3-2) picked up the win tossing five innings, no runs on just one hits, no walks and three strike outs. Mike Goodnight (5-7) took the loss allowing six runs, five earned on four hits, walking four and striking out two.

Lake County begins a six game road trip on Sunday night in Lansing at Cooley Law School Stadium at 6:05PM. The Captains will toss RHP Cole Cook (3-8) against RHP Marcus Walden (3-2) for the Lugnuts. Catch all the action on ESPN 970AM or online at captainsbaseball.com.

Scrappers lose game one to Batavia, 8-3

The Mahoning Valley Scrappers tallied eight hits in their game Saturday night against Batavia, but timely hitting and patience at the plate proved a bit too much to overcome as the Muckdogs took the first in a two-game series 8-3.

Joseph Colon (0-2) got off to a rocky start for the Scrappers in the first inning, giving up three runs and getting to the end of the Batavia lineup before recording the third out. Batavia starter Todd McInnis (1-0) gave up a run in his first frame when a Jake Lowery double scored Bryson Myles from second base. Both pitchers settled in after that, but with 81 pitches and four runs surrendered, Colon left the game after just three and two-thirds innings.

Shortstop Tony Wolters hit his first home run of the year off Batavia reliever Eric Binder in the bottom of the sixth and Jake Lowery scored on an Alex Lavisky ground rule double, but those would be the last Scrapper runs of the game. Batavia would add another run in the seventh inning and three more in the ninth.

The second game of the two-game series is Sunday, July 3 at Eastwood Field. First Pitch is scheduled for 5:05pm.

Follow Tony and the Indians Prospect Insider on Twitter @TonyIPI. Also, his latest book the 2011 Cleveland Indians Top 100 Prospects & More is available for purchase for $20.95 to customers in the US (shipping and handling extra).

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Indians sign top Latin infielder

According to reports, the Indians have signed 5'11" 175 pound 16-year old right-handed hitting Dominican shortstop Dorssys Paulino for a reported $1.1 Million. He is the son of left-hander Jesus Sanchez who pitched in the big leagues from 1998-2004 for the Marlins, Cubs, Rockies and Reds. According to Baseball America, he is one of the better infield bats available in this July 2 class who has good size and may end up at second base or third base as he matures. He shows an ability to use the entire field with good bat speed and enough strength to have average power. He also shows a good arm and has good speed. With this signing, the Indians are showing a stronger presence in Latin America as far as being in on the top available talent, a change in strategy from recent years.

I will have more in the coming days on this signing and more in Latin America.

Follow Tony and the Indians Prospect Insider on Twitter @TonyIPI. Also, his latest book the 2011 Cleveland Indians Top 100 Prospects & More is available for purchase for $20.95 to customers in the US (shipping and handling extra).

Around the Farm: July 1

Adam Abraham
(photo: Kinston
Indians)
Around the Farm takes a quick look at some of yesterday's performances by Indians prospects throughout the system. The positions listed below are where the player was playing in yesterday's game.

Ben Copeland: LF, Akron: 3-5, 2 R, 2 HR, 2 R, 1 K:

Welcome to Akron, Mr. Copeland. The Aeros leftfielder was signed by Cleveland when Matt McBride was called up to Columbus on June 28th, and Akron hasn't missed a beat.  Copeland was mashing the ball for the Lancaster Barnstormers, an independent playing in the Atlantic League.  He was hitting .331, with four homers and 19 RBI as their starting centerfielder, and lead-off hitter.  The 27-year old has continued his hot-hitting in Akron, and apparently added power to his game with this two-homer performance.

Adam Abraham: 3B, Kinston: 3-4, 2 R, 2 2B, 1 K:

This kid is officially one to watch.  He's been teetering on the edge of becoming something more than an afterthought prospect all season, and he's finally starting to take the next step.  Abraham is a doubles machine, hitting his 20th and 21st of the season last night, but he doesn't lack in power, as he leads the K-Tribe with 11 on the season.  In his past two games, he's gone 5-7, with two runs and three doubles, and his ten-game stat line is an overly impressive .368/.478/.605.  Abraham may be banging on the door of Tony's top 50 before the season is over.

Bryson Myles: RF, Mahoning Valley: 1-4, 2 R, 1 BB, 2 SB

I said it the day of the draft, and I'll keep saying it until every Tribe fan reading ATF realizes it, Bryson Myles is going to be THE steal for the Indians.  He only had one hit, but was still wreaking havoc on the poor NY/Penn league.  He stole his 7th and 8th bases, and scored two of the three Scrappers' runs.  On one of those stolen bases, he got to third on a throwing error.  He also got on base by getting hit by a pitch.  He scored his second run from first on a double.  Keep him here for now, but boy, you do have to wonder if he makes a move to Lake County prior to the end of the season.

  •  Jason Donald: 3B, Columbus: 2-4, 1 K: The Clippers were completely shut down by Mud Hens pitcher, Duane Below.  Donald still managed a multi-hit game, continuing a mini-streak.  He's 5-13 in his last three games, and over his past ten games is batting .314.  While Donald is being touted as a better defender than Luis Valbuena this season, his fielding stats at triple A don't back that up.  His fielding percentage as short is .955 in only 44 chances, and at third, it's an abysmal .875.
  • Jason Kipnis: 2B, Columbus: 1-3, 1 BB, 1 K: Kipnis ups his current hit-streak to seven games in his early bid to get called up.  Unfortunately for Kipnis, Orlando Cabrera has been hitting the ball (.333 in his last ten games) at the big-league level, likely keeping him in Columbus for the time being.
  • Luis Valbuena: SS, Columbus: Valbuena went Oh-fer last night for only the second time in ten games.  He's still the hottest bat in the Clippers' line-up, and with his versatility, could be the first call-up should the Indians decide to make a move.
  • Zach McAllister: SP, Columbus: 8 IP, 9 H, 3 R/ER, 1 BB, 4 K, L (8-3): McAllister continued his solid season, going eight strong innings, and giving up only three runs. The offense hung him out to dry, scoring only once.  McAllister has only one once since May 20th, but has continued to pitch well in between.
  • Jordan Henry: DH, Akron: 1-5:  Henry has been peppering the Eastern League outfield with hits over the past two weeks.  He's currently on a torrid seven game hit streak in which he's gone 12-30 (.400), with six runs, a double and three RBI.  He's also stole three bases during that time period.  Even more impressive is his ten-game stat-line, in which he's gone .429/.478/.452.  Tim Fedroff-who?
  • Beau Mills: 1B, Akron: 1-4, 1 R, 1 2B, 1 RBI, 1 BB:   Mills has cooled off slightly from his torrid start, but he's continuing to provide production.  Is it first-pick production? Let's give it time.  If he can return to his 2008 form, we could have our #1 pick back.
  • Donnie Webb: RF, Akron: 2-4, 1 R, 2 2B, 2 RBI: Webb has struggled all season, but put it all together last night.  Webb had bog season in 2009, but has struggled since in a utility role.
  • Joe Gardner: SP, Akron: 2 2/3 IP, 3 H, 6 R/1 ER, 3 BB, 3 K:  Gardner grooved through the first two innings, giving up only a hit and a walk.  The third was a different story. Gardner dug his own hole, giving up a lead-off walk and a single.  Then, he was done in by his fielders. After a sac bunt out, a Juan Diaz error plated the first run against Gardner.  Gardner, shaken, then hit the next batter before calming down with a K for the second out of the inning.  A double and a single later, and Gardner would be pulled from the game.
  • Tyler Sturdevant: RP, Akron: 2 IP, 7 H, 5 R/ER, 1 K: Sturdevant had been lights out in his two previous outings in Akron.  Last night, he just had his lights knocked out.  He's much, much better than this performance.
  • Anthony Gallas: LF, Akron:  2-3, 1 R, 1 HR, 1 RBI, 1 BB, 1 K: Gallas hits his first homer for Kinston in a 5-3 comeback victory.  Gallas has been mired in a major slump after mauling the Midwest League, but it's a common story in the pitching-heavy Carolina League.
  • Tyler Cannon: SS, Akron: 2-4, 1 R, 1 RBI: While Cannon certainly isn't at his low A production, he has been coming around of late.  He's hitting .303 over his past ten games, and likely is the best offensive player, overall, on this team right now.
  • Drew Pomeranz: SP, Akron: 5 1/3 IP, 6 H, 3 R/ER, 3 BB, 7 K, 1 HR: The Tribe brass is clearly not in any rush to move up Pomeranz this season.  He's clearly working on his secondary pitches, with his changeup being a top priority.  With struggles in the Akron rotation, it's likely that Pomeranz could move up there right now.  The fact that he isn't shows that the Tribe is being much more patient with this ace than they were with Alex White.  Let's hope it pays off.
  • Francisco Jimenez: RP, Kinston: 2 1/3 IP, 2 H, 2 K, W (3-1): Well, I didn't have the time of day for this kid in the first half of the season, because he pitched like utter garbage.  He's been a new reliever since the break.  This was his third appearance (all more than two innings) without giving up a run.
  • Preston Guillmet: Closer, Kinston: 1 IP, S (19): Ho-hum. Guillmet comes in with another perfect ninth-inning, and his 19th save of the season.  His ERA fell to 1.95 overall.  With Burns in Akron, and Judy in Columbus (well...Cleveland for now), the future of the closer role seems bright should Chris Perez run into trouble.
  • Alex Monsalve: C, Lake County: 1-3, 2 R, 1 HR, 1 RBI, 1 BB: Monsalve continues to be an extremely productive player, and continues to become more-and-more valuable as a catcher in the organization. Right now, he could be making himself into an intriguing trade chip should the Indians decide to make a move.
  • Jesus Aguilar: 1B, Lake County: 2-4, 1 R, 1 2B: Aguilar is just mashing right now for Lake County, and has his average up to .287.  He has six multi-hit games in his past ten and has an insane line: .381/.460/.857.  Yeah, his slugging is flippin' .857 right now.  That alone is higher than almost the entire teams OPS.  As it stands, his ten game OPS is 1.317.  No, that's not a typo either.  Aguilar just could be a monster offensive player in the making.
  • Giovanny Urshela: 3B, Lake County: 2-4, 2 R, 1 2B, 1 HR, 3 RBI: Urshela's three-run blast showcased why the Indians brass is so high on the kid.  While he's struggled for much of the season, there's definitely potential there, especially offensively.
  • Argenis Martinez: 2B, Lake County: 2-4, 1 R, 2 K, 1 SB (8): Martinez continues to carry a hot bat, and is currently riding a five-game hit streak.  He's 11-32 in his last ten games, and is giving the Tribe another potential middle-of-the-infield bat in the low minors.
  • J.D. Reichenbach: SP/RP, Lake County: 6 H, 2 R/ER, 4 K:  Reichenbach continues to be an intriguing watch as a starter after his brilliant performance in a no-hit, spot-start for Kinston.  This was his second start for Lake County this season, and his first win as a starter.
  • Dale Dickerson: RP, Lake County: 1 IP, 1 K, S (2): Dickerson has been outstanding at Lake County this year, and clearly seems to be knocking on the door of a potential closer-role in the future.  He currently has a 1.67 ERA.
  • Tony Wolters: SS, Mahoning Valley: 2-5, 2 2B, 2 RBI, 1 BB, 2 K: Wolters continued his nice summer with a couple of doubles, driving in Myles both times.  I'm not sure who's helping who here.
  • Jordan Smith: DH, Mahoning Valley: 3-6, 1 RBI, 1 K: Smith is batting a hefty .349 since being drafted ninth by the Indians.  Wow, what a draft so far.  I know that it's early, but these early signees are really smacking the ball around in the NY/Penn league.
  • Mason Radeke: SP, Mahoning Valley: 5 2/3, 7 H, 3 R/ER, 2 HR, 5 K: Radeke made his second professional start, and really did pitch well despite giving up two homers.  It's clear that this kid throws strikes (0 walks), and as he figures out how to locate his pitches, he could become dangerous.
  • Cody Allen: RP, Mahoning Valley: 2 1/3 IP, 1 H, 1 BB, 5 K:  Allen was drafted in the sixteenth round by the Tribe in 2010, and again in the 23rd round this season, and it's clear why after this performance.  He's an interesting watch, as he's two season out after Tommy John surgery.  He has four average-to-plus pitches, and his velocity has been up.  Hmmm, another 2011 steal?  Again, it's early, but this 2011 crop could be an incredible bunch, and the top players still haven't signed!
Follow Tony and the Indians Prospect Insider on Twitter @TonyIPI. Also, his latest book the 2011 Cleveland Indians Top 100 Prospects & More is available for purchase for $20.95 to customers in the US (shipping and handling extra).

The Scrapperbook: Week Two

Wishing all of you a safe and enjoyable Fourth of July. May you enjoy fireworks, have a barbecue, and enjoy spending time with family and friends. I would also like to send many thanks to those who are serving in our armed foces for everything they do to keep this country safe.

Where We Stand in Week Two:

Overall Record: 10-5 (5-2 this week) First place, 1 game ahead of Jamestown.

Week Two Games:

25 @ Auburn, W 2-0 (WP: R. Nixon; LP: K. Lopez; SV: K. Petter)
26 vs. State College, W 8-1 (WP: M. Radeke; LP: M. Jefferson)
27 vs. State College, W 2-1 (WP: K. Petter; LP: F. Campos)
28 vs. State College, W 6-4 (WP: C. Allen; LP: R. Singh; SV: E. Tejeda)
29 @ State College, L 2-5 (WP: M. Benedict; LP: K. Wetmore; SV: M. Fienemann)
30 @ State College, W 7-3 (WP: W. Krasne; LP: J. Poytress)
1 @ State College, L 3-4 (WP: E. De Leon; LP: E. Tejada)


The Transactions:

6/27/11: Ryan Battaglia assigned to Mahoning Valley Scrappers from AZL Indians.
6/27/11: Will Krasne assigned to Mahoning Valley Scrappers from Cleveland Indians.
6/29/11: Drew Rucinski assigned to AZL Indians from Mahoning Valley Scrappers.


Week 2 Co-Offensive Players of the Week: Bryson Myles and Jordan Smith

This week, it was an extremely tough choice between Jordan Smith and Bryson Myles and each contributed in their own ways. Myles had a .409 batting average for the week (9-22), scoring six runs, doubling twice, tripling once, and driving one run in. He also stole five bases. Smith had a .379 batting average (11-29), scoring four runs, doubling twice, and driving six runners in. He walked three times and also struck out three times, while stealing one base. They were both offensive machines that powered the lineup.

Week 2 Pitching:

For a pitching staff that lacks high upside prospects, they really held it down this week, allowing 11 earned runs (18 runs) and 46 hits. Quite an improvement from a week ago. The pitching staff lowered their ERA from 4.19 to 2.94, (3rd in the league). They've allowed 110 hits (4th lowest in the league, previously 3rd highest in the league), 45 ER/55 R (5th lowest in the league, previously 2nd highest in the league), 7 home runs (4th in the league), while waking 46 (6th fewest) and striking out 132 (2nd in the league). Very impressed with the adjustments they've made and interested to see if they carry that over to week three.

Week 2 Pitcher of the Week: Kirk Wetmore

This again was also a no brainer. Although he started just one game this week and took the loss for it, by all means, it wasn't his fault and he deserved a better fate. His defense failed to pick him up. He pitched 5 solid innings, allowing 4 hits and a walk. He gave up three runs, none of them earned, and struck out 6. Opposing hitters hit a mere .222 against him this week and are hitting .154 off of him this season. With the bases empty, hitters had a .156 average against him, which lowered to .150 with runners on base. He's really matured this season and has exhibited much better command of his fastball to all parts of the plate.

Looking Ahead to Week 3:

2 vs. Batavia, 7:05 PM
3 vs. Batavia, 5:05 PM
4 @ Batavia, 7:05 PM
5 @ Batavia, 7:05 PM
6 vs. Williamsport, 7:05 PM
7 vs. Williamsport, 7:05 PM
8 vs. Williamsport, 7:05 PM


Week 3 Promotions:

Sat, Jul 2: Youth Jersey Giveaway, Kids Eat Free
Sun, Jul 3: Patriotic Night, Family Fun Day
Wed, Jul 6: DARE Day, Harry Potter Night, Ohio Lottery Winners Are Everywhere, Military Nights
Thu, Jul 7: Superheroes Night, Bennie's Comics and Cards, Buck Night
Fri, Jul 8: Friday Night Fireworks, Cedar Point's PEANUTS Snoopy Character Appearance, FRITOS Family Friday, Business Journal Night, Faith Night, Baseball Shaker Giveaway

Follow Tony and the Indians Prospect Insider on Twitter @TonyIPI. Also, his latest book the 2011 Cleveland Indians Top 100 Prospects & More is available for purchase for $20.95 to customers in the US (shipping and handling extra).

On-Deck with the Captains: Week 12

Record: 4-3 (Overall Record: 32-44)

Game Results:

June 24th - Lake County @ Fort Wayne (Win: Cooper)
June 25th - Lake County @ Fort Wayne (Win: Rayl)
June 26th - Lake County @ Fort Wayne (Win: Dickerson)
June 27th - Fort Wayne @ Lake County (Loss: Goodnight)
June 28th - Fort Wayne @ Lake County (Win: Cook)
June 29th - Fort Wayne @ Lake County (Loss: Cooper)
June 30th - South Bend @ Lake County (Loss: Mahalic)

Transactions:

June 24th - Dwight Childs promoted to Columbus
June 24th - Moises Montero promoted from Mahoning Valley to Lake County

Batting Line-up:

Washington- 9/26 (.346), 5 R, 2 2B, 2 3B, 3 RBI, 3 BB, 5 K, SB
Moncrief- 7/28 (.250), 4 R, 3 2B, 3B, 4 RBI, 9 BB, 11 K, 4 SB
Monsalve- 9/28 (.321), 6 R, 3 2B, 3B, HR, 6 RBI, 3 BB, 3 K, SB
Aguilar- 11/28 (.393), 10 R, 3 2B, 4 HR, 8 RBI, 3 BB, 6 K
Urshela- 5/16 (.313), 3 R, 2B, 3B, RBI, K
Casas- 11/23 (.478), 7 R, 2B, 3B, 5 RBI, 7 K
Rodriguez- 7/32 (.219), 2 R, 4 2B, 2 3B, 2 RBI, BB, 4 K, SB
Martinez- 7/23 (.304), 6 R, 3 RBI, 4 BB, 5 K
Bartolone- 2/15 (.133), 2 R, RBI, 2 BB, 4 K
Heere- 5/22 (.227), 2 R, 2B, 3 RBI, 6 BB, 7 K
Montero- 1/8 (.125), RBI, BB, 2 K
Fields- 2/8 (.250), R, RBI, 2 K

Notes on Offense:

The Lake County bats came out of the All-Star Break swinging. The Captains batted .310 this week with 45 runs scored. They also hit five homeruns.

Catcher Alex Monsalve and Outfielder Jordan Casas have had nine game hit streaks straight snapped on Thursday evening.

LeVon Washington has a modest six game hit streak.

Ronny Rodriguez had his six game hit streak snapped on Thursday.

Hitter of the Week: Jordan Casas, Outfielder

On the Mound:

Cooper- 2 starts, W, L, 8.1 IP, 15 H, 10 R, 2 BB, 4 K, 3 HR
Rayl- 2 starts, W, 12.2 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 15 K
Blair- 1 start, 1.2 IP, 3 H, 4 R, 4 BB, K
Goodnight- 1 start, L, 4.2 IP, 7 H, 3 R (2 ER), 2 BB, 3 K
Cook- 1 start, W, 5 IP, 7 H, 3 R (2 ER), 2 BB, 8 K
Mahalic- 3 G, L, 4.1 IP, 6 H, 6 R (4 ER), 4 BB, 5 K
Encarnacion- 4 G, 5.2 IP, 3 R, 5 BB, 8 K
Striz- 2 G, 3 IP, 3 H, 6 R, 7 BB, 3 K
Sarianides- 2 G, 4.1 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 6 BB, 5 K
Dickerson- 4 G, W, 4.2 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 4 K
Ehlert- 3 G, 5 IP, 3 H, R, BB, K
Reichenbach- 1 G, 3.1 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 BB, 2K
Stowell- 2 G, 3.2 IP, 3 H, R, 4 BB, 6 K

Notes on Pitching:

Left-handed pitcher Mike Rayl was named the Midwest League Pitcher of the Week (week ending on Tuesday).

Over the past four games, the Captains pitching staff have walked a total of 32 hitters! That is an average of eight per game.

Nate Striz walked a career high five batters in a loss to the Fort Wayne Tin Caps.

J.D. Reichenbach will continue to pitch in the Captains rotation. He will be the starter versus South Bend on Friday, July 1st.

Pitcher of the Week: Mike Rayl, Left-handed pitcher

Upcoming Games:

July 1st - South Bend @ Lake County
July 2nd - South Bend @ Lake County
July 3rd - Lake County @ Lansing
July 4th - Lake County @ Lansing
July 5th - Lake County @ Lansing
July 6th - Lake County @ Bowling Green
July 7th - Lake County @ Bowling Green

Game Recaps 7/1: Urshela's homer sparks Captains to a win

Giovanny Urshela (Photo: Lianna Holub)
Urshela Leads Way in Captains 7-4 Win

Giovanny Urshela belted a his seventh homerun of the season, a three run shot, in the third inning on Friday night leading Lake County to a 7-4 win over South Bend.

In the third the Captains loaded the bases, with singles from Argenis Martinez and LeVon Washington, followed by a walk to Alex Monsalve. Jesus Aguilar flew out to shallow right; a throwing error on Roberto Rodriguez allowed Martinez to score from third. Urshela then connected on seventh homerun of the season for Lake County 4-0 lead.

Ender Inciarte lead the fourth inning off with a double for the Silver Hawks. Inciarte went to third on a wild pitch and scored on a Jhoan Pimentel ground out making it 4-1.

In the fifth inning, Alex Monsalve hit fourth homerun of the season to lead things off. Aguilar singled to left, Urshela doubled to left and Casas walked to load the bases. Ronny Rodriguez hit a ball up against the wall in left center for a sacrifice fly for an RBI. Captains added one more on a wild pitch to take a 7-1 lead.

Yazy Arbelo drove in his league high 59th RBI of the year in sixth for South Bend with a double to center cutting the lead to 7-2.

The Silver Hawks added two more in the seventh inning; Roberto Rodriguez hit a solo homerun to right. Chris Jarret reached on a walk and scored on an error by Nick Sarianides and it was 7-4.

JD Reichenbach (4-1) picked up the win in a spot start for Lake County, throwing 5.1 innings allowing two runs on seven hits, no walks and four strikeouts. JR Bradley (2-11) took the loss for the Silver Hawks allowing seven runs on nine hits in just four plus innings, walking two and striking out five.

Lake County and South Bend will wrap up their three game series at Classic Park, Saturday night at 7:00PM. The Captains will start RHP Mike Goodnight (5-6) against RHP Tyler Green (2-2) for the Silver Hawks.

Mud Hens avoid sweep, beat Clippers 3-1

Clippers starter Zach McAllister had a very solid outing, going eight innings and only giving up three runs, but Columbus couldn't get him enough run support as they fell to the Toledo Mud Hens 3-1.

Once again, the Clippers were doing battle with a familiar divisional foe, the Toledo Mud Hens. Tonight was the 8th time in the last 12 days that these two ball clubs faced off against one another.

It was a pitcher's duel early on as Clippers starter Zach McAllister and Mud Hens Starter Duane Below traded scoreless frames for through the first five innings. The game would remain scoreless until the bottom of the sixth. Will Rhymes singled to center to start the inning. Two batters later, Carlos Guillen singled to put runners on 1st and 2nd with one out. Scott Thorman would then deliver with an RBI single, making it 1-0 Mud Hens. The lead for Toledo would become 2-0 when Jeff Salazar hit an RBI single of his own. Fortunately for Columbus, McAllister struck out Danny Worth and got Clete Thomas to pop out to shallow right field to end the inning.

The Mud Hens would add another run in the bottom of the when Scott Thorman once again came up clutch for Toledo with another RBI single to make it 3-0.

The Clippers tried to mount a comeback in the ninth. With two outs, Paul Phillips got the Clippers on the board with a two out RBI double that made it 3-1. But it was too little, too late as Ezequiel Carrera became the last out of the game.

The Clippers will return to Columbus to begin a short two game series with the Louisville Bats. Corey Kluber (4-5) will get the start for Columbus while Darryl Thompson (1-0) will get the ball for the Bats. First pitch is scheduled for 7:05 pm.

Erie Defeats Akron, 11-9

The Akron Aeros allowed 6 runs in the 3rd inning and came back with their own 8-run inning in the 5th, yet eventually fell to the SeaWolves 11-9 on Friday night, in the second game of a four-game series at Jerry Uht Park.

Joe Gardner lasted just two and one-third innings, giving up six runs on three hits, and striking out three. Paolo Espino followed with two and two-third innings of shutout relief. Tyler Sturdevant suffered the loss for the Aeros (40-41) allowing five runs on seven hits, in two innings of work..

Reliever Austin Wood earned the win for the SeaWolves (41-39) tossing two scoreless innings in relief, including a perfect ninth.
Erie exploded for six runs in the 3rd inning off starter Joe Gardner. The big hits were a Rawley Bishop 3-RBI double and RBI singles by Justin Henry and Jeff Kunkel.

Akron responded with their own offensive outburst in the 5th inning. Ben Copeland led off with his first home run as an Aero. Newly acquired catcher Michel Hernandez then walked, followed by a Donnie Webb double. A SeaWolves fielding error by second baseman Brandon Douglas allowed Cristo Arnal on base and scored Hernandez and a Juan Diaz fielders choice scored Donnie Webb. Beau Mills followed with a 2-run double, scoring Arnal and Diaz. After a Nick Weglarz walk and a Copeland single, Hernandez delivered an RBI single, followed by a 2-run double by Webb. The Aeros ended up sending thirteen to the plate and plating eight runs in the inning, making the score 8-6.

The SeaWolves scored another three runs in the sixth inning to retake the lead 9-8 before Copeland hit his second home run of the game in the top of the seventh inning to tie the score at 9-9.

The game remained tied until the bottom of the eighth, when Douglas brought home the go-ahead runs with a two-run double giving the SeaWolves an 11-9 lead.

The Aeros continue their series with the SeaWolves on Saturday. Akron will give the ball to left-handed pitcher Matt Packer, who is 2-8 with a 5.80 ERA in 2011. He will face fellow left hander Casey Crosby, who is 5-2 with an 3.06 ERA this season. First pitch is at 7:05 p.m.

Kinston Comes Back to Beat Myrtle Beach 5-3

Kinston scored five unanswered runs, coming from behind for a 5-3 victory Friday night at Myrtle Beach. The rubber match win gave the K-Tribe (7-2, 45-33) another series win. Kinston has now won 12 of their last 13 series, going 31-11 since May 16th. Kinston will return home to Historic Grainger Stadium for a Holiday Weekend homestand with Fireworks on Saturday and Monday night!

Kinston starter Drew Pomeranz entered the game with the lowest ERA in the entire league at 1.81. The first round draft pick ran into trouble in the second inning when Vinny DiFazio started with a walk. Travis Adair then doubled to move DiFazio to third base. With the infield drawn in, David Paisano snuck a seeing eye grounder through the middle to give the Pelicans a 1-0 lead. With two outs in the inning, Andres James legged out an infield single to drive home Adair. The Pelicans flew out of the second frame with a 2-0 lead. The Pelicans would add a run in the fifth inning when Jared Prince hit a home run to left field. It was the fourth homer of the season for Prince.

Myrtle Beach starting pitcher Robbie Ross came into the game with a Carolina League leading eight wins (8-2). He backed up his dominance keeping the K-Tribe scoreless through six innings on four hits with seven strikeouts and two walks. Despite the dominance of Ross, Kinston made it a game, waiting for the Myrtle Beach bullpen to take over.

Adam Abraham started the seventh by doubling off of reliever Ryan Kelly. Abraham scored on a wild pitch and RBI single from Tyler Cannon. Myrtle Beach short stop Leury Garcia allowed Kinston back in to the game with a fielding error. Justin Toole's grounder could not be handled and both Cannon and Toole advanced an extra base with heads up base running, taking advantage when the ball wound up in left field. Both runners scored thanks to Tyler Holt's two out double down the left field line. The clutch hit tied the score at three.

Anthony Gallas broke the tie with a solo home run to start the eighth inning. The monster shot was Gallas' first homer in the Carolina League, he was called up from Low-A Lake County on June 13th. Adam Abraham helped add to the Kinston advantage by blasting his second double of the game with one out in the inning. He stood at third base after a passed ball charged to Myrtle Beach catcher Vinny DiFazio. Chase Burnette, pinch hitting for Justin Toole, laced a picture perfect RBI single to left field to bring Abraham home.

The advantage was enough for closer Preston Guilmet who picked up his 19th save of the season with some drama thrown in thanks to Burnette. With one out Andres James popped it towards the Pelicans dugout. Burnette was upended by the protective railing as he made the catch. He tumbled over the railing on to the cement dugout floor. After a tense pause, Burnette got up to a cheer of approval and was pushed back on to the field with the help of some Pelicans players. Francisco Jimenez nearly spanned the gap between Pomeranz and Guilmet, departing after yielding a two out single in the eighth inning to David Paisano. Jimenez fired 2 1/3 shutout innings of relief with two strikeouts for the win and Chris Jones retired the only man he saw to end the inning. Pomeranz gave up three runs on six hits through 5 1/3 innings. Pomeranz walked three and struck out four.

Kinston will return home for a Fireworks filled weekend home stand against the Baltimore Orioles affiliate Frederick! Fireworks after the 6:30 pm games on both Saturday and Monday night! 1:30 pm afternoon game on Sunday! T.J. House takes the mound for Kinston on Saturday night.

Scrappers lose in extras, 4-3

Mahoning Valley lost in extra innings to State College 4-3 on Friday night in a game that went 12 innings. After Mahoning Valley rallied for a run in the ninth inning to tie the game by a Bryson Myles walk and then Tony Wolters double, they eventually faltered in the bottom of the 12th inning when second baseman Todd Hankins committed a fielding error with a runner on second and one out.

In his second pro start right-hander Mason Radeke went 5.2 innings and allowed three runs on 7 hits, no walks, and had five strikeouts. The bullpen was great all night throwing six innings and allowing just the one unearned run. Right-hander Cody Allen led the way going 2.1 innings and allowing no runs, one hit, one walk, and had five strikeous.

Offensively shortstop Tony Wolters led the Scrapper attack going 2-for-5 with two doubles, two RBI, and a walk. Designated hitter Jordan Smith went 3-for-6 with an RBI.

Follow Tony and the Indians Prospect Insider on Twitter @TonyIPI. Also, his latest book the 2011 Cleveland Indians Top 100 Prospects & More is available for purchase for $20.95 to customers in the US (shipping and handling extra).

Friday, July 1, 2011

2011 Draft Signings: Peters open to signing

Dillon Peters
20th round pick left-handed pitcher Dillon Peters appears open to signing, although he has not talked to the Indians much since being drafted. He is a summer follow as the Indians want to get some looks at him pitching summer ball, and after that will probably give him an offer near the end of July or in early August. Peters will decide then which opportunity between going pro now or going to the University of Texas gives him the best opportunity to grow as a pitcher and make it to the big leagues.

29th round pick left-handed pitcher Tyler Nurdin likely will not sign with the Indians, or so his coach at Temple College says.

48th round pick right-handed pitcher Blaine O’Brien is trying to prove his worth to the Indians pitching in summer ball in the New England Collegiate Baseball League. He is ready to sign, and eventually he probably will, but the Indians right now have other pitchers they are looking to try and sign first.

Follow Tony and the Indians Prospect Insider on Twitter @TonyIPI. Also, his latest book the 2011 Cleveland Indians Top 100 Prospects & More is available for purchase for $20.95 to customers in the US (shipping and handling extra).

Minor Happenings: Wetmore is a promising lefty

Kirk Wetmore (Photo: Ken Carr)
"Minor Happenings" is a weekly column which recaps the important developments and news in the Indians farm system. While most of the information in this report is from my own research and through interviews I have conducted with organizational personnel, some information in this report is collected and summarized from the various news outlets that cover each team.

Lots of information to get out today in Minor Happenings with some comments recently by Farm Director Ross Atkins on some players who appear to be eyeing a callup to the big leagues. Also, lots of injury updates on players in the system.

In case you missed it I did a piece on Triple-A second baseman Jason Kipnis yesterday and short season Single-A Mahoning Valley outfielder Bryson Myles on Wednesday, so be sure to check them out. I have several other player features and coming over the next several weeks, such as right-handed pitcher Michael Goodnight, right-handed pitcher Zach McAllister, catcher Jake Lowery, outfielder Aaron Siliga, shortstop Tony Wolters, and more.

Enjoy the holiday weekend and be safe! If any of you happen to be in Erie on Sunday, be sure to come to the Akron-Erie game and say hi as I will be attending.

Onto the Happenings...

IPI Minor League Player of the Week
(for games from June 23rd through June 29th)

Kirk Wetmore (Left-handed Pitcher - Mahoning Valley)
1-1, 0.00 ERA, 2 G, 10.0 IP, 6 H, 3 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 14 K, .171 BAA

Kirk Wetmore
The prospects all up and down the Indians system are on fire of late as there never seems to be a shortage of good hitting performances week to week. With offense down in the big leagues but players in the Indians system performing well offensively this is good to see. Especially since in past years when doing this weekly award the pickings would often be very slim.

In the midst of all the offense was a very good pitching performance by short season Single-A Mahoning Valley left-hander Kirk Wetmore. He had a fantastic week, and if not for his defense letting him down in his second start of the week on Wednesday night to the tune of four errors, he may have been even better and a perfect 2-0. With short season ball starting up just two weeks ago, he has made just three starts, but he has looked very good going 2-1 with a 0.00 ERA (3 unearned runs), and in 15.0 innings has allowed 8 hits, 3 walks, and has 15 strikeouts.

Wetmore, 22, was the Indians 11th round pick in the 2009 Draft out of Bellevue Community College in Washington. He pitched in Mahoning Valley last year and struggled going 2-7 with a 6.26 ERA (54.2 IP, 60 H, 31 BB, 44 K) in 15 games. The key to his turnaround in the early going so far this year has been improved command of his fastball where he is more consistently hitting his spots and has really cut his walk rate. The Indians have really challenged him to throw strikes this year develop his secondary offerings, and so far he has answered the call.

Wetmore threw a fastball, changeup and curveball last year, but another big key in his good performance to date is the reintegration of a slider back into his arsenal that he threw in college but had dropped when he initially turned pro. He has done a good job of keeping hitters off balance with all of his pitches, and the command of his offspeed stuff has been much improved.

Wetmore has yet to make it to a full season team, but with the strides he has made this year and if he keeps up this performance it looks very likely that he will finish the year and pitch a meaningful amount of innings at Low-A Lake County or even High-A Kinston.

Honorable Mentions:

Jason Kipnis (2B - COL): .407 (11-27), 10 R, 1 3B, 3 HR, 6 RBI, 4 BB, 8 K, 1.299 OPS
Luis Valbuena (INF - COL): .400 (10-25), 5 R, 2 2B, 3 HR, 6 RBI, 3 BB, 4 K, 1.304 OPS
Beau Mills (1B - AKR): .333 (8-24), 5 R, 2 2B, 1 HR, 6 RBI, 4 BB, 6 K, .975 OPS
Jesus Aguilar (1B - LC): .375 (9-24), 9 R, 3 2B, 3 HR, 6 RBI, 3 BB, 5 K, 1.359 OPS
Alex Monsalve (C - LC): .375 (9-24), 5 R, 3 2B, 1 3B, 1 HR, 6 RBI, 2 BB, 2 K, 1.131 OPS
LeVon Washington (OF - LC): .346 (9-26), 5 R, 2 2B, 2 3B, 0 HR, 3 RBI, 3 BB, 5 K, .991 OPS
Bryson Myles (OF - MV): .455 (10-22), 5 R, 2 2B, 2 3B, 0 HR, 2 RBI, 0 BB, 1 K, 3 SB, 1.227 OPS
Jake Lowery (C - MV): .320 (8-25), 5 R, 4 2B, 2 HR, 5 RBI, 2 BB, 5 K, 1.090 OPS
Robel Garcia (OF - AZL): .467 (7-15), 3 R, 1 2B, 1 HR, 2 RBI, 2 BB, 6 K, 1.263 OPS
Juan Romero (OF - AZL): .350 (7-20), 2 R, 2 2B, 1 3B, 2 HR, 8 RBI, 0 BB, 9 K, 1.183 OPS
T.J. McFarland (LHP - AKR): 2-0, 0.69 ERA, 2 G, 13.0 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 1 ER, 3 BB, 10 K, .111 BAA
Jeanmar Gomez (RHP - COL): 2-0, 2.03 ERA, 2 G, 13.1 IP, 14 H, 3 R/ER, 6 BB, 13 K, .292 BAA

Previous Winners:

06/16 to 06/22: Zach McAllister (RHP - Columbus)
06/09 to 06/15: Scott Barnes (LHP – Columbus)
06/02 to 06/08: Beau Mills (1B - Akron)
05/26 to 06/01: Anthony Gallas (OF - Lake County)
05/19 to 05/25: Tim Fedroff (OF – Akron)
05/12 to 05/18: Steven Wright (RHP – Lake County)
05/05 to 05/11: Cord Phelps (INF – Columbus)
04/28 to 05/04: Chun Chen (C – Akron)
04/21 to 04/27: Chad Huffman (OF – Columbus)
04/14 to 04/20: Alex White (RHP – Columbus)
04/07 to 04/13: Drew Pomeranz (LHP – Kinston)

Director’s Cuts

Indians Farm Director Ross Atkins had some comments this week about a few farmhands in the system:

Drew Pomeranz
On Drew Pomeranz: “With Drew we don’t see Double-A or Triple-A as the things he needs to check off the list as much as the acclimation to professional baseball. Where that happens is not quite as important as checking the other things off his list like controlling the running game, incorporating his changeup at a higher percentage, and most importantly solidifying a delivery that he can call his and he can fall back on when things get tough. With a player of his caliber the things we are thinking of are making sure we maximize player development and make sure we maximize his time in the minor leagues to make sure he doesn’t come back again. We don’t want Cliff Lee and Fausto Carmona stories and him having to come back to the minor leagues again. Now we will take the end result of Cliff Lee, but we don’t want Drew to come back to the minor leagues at some point because he doesn’t have that foundation to go to [where he knows] this is what makes me good and what I need to stick to. We are trying to solidify that. He is with [Kinston pitching coach] Mickey Callaway and they have a great relationship. They are actually from the same home town and have very similar track records with similar amateur careers and have a lot in common and have established a good rapport. Having said all that, I believe Drew is very close to being ready for the next challenge and seeing an upper level hitter and potentially even Triple-A hitters soon.”

On Jason Kipnis: “He really is a threat in Triple-A by all means. Right now he is the best bat in that lineup. He is really performing well taking advantage of hitter’s counts and having great at bats against tough left-handed pitching and great at bats against really all of the pitching he is facing right now. Jason is a very well rounded player and he plays with incredible instincts as he has ten stolen bases and no caught stealings. He has made himself into an average second baseman. Having said that, he has only been there for a year and a half. It is incredible what he is doing at this point, but there is certainly work to be done at second base.”

Jerad Head
On Jerad Head: “He has continued to make himself a better player every year and does so every day. He is probably the toughest kid we have in the organization as he will run into a wall and stay in the game. That’s not a story as he actually did it. He is a very hardnosed player with a lot of feel for the bat with developing discipline. That is the limitation for him as he is an early count swinger and someone who really needs to address that limitation to be a Major League threat. But he will play in the Major Leagues because of his toughness, bat to ball, and his defensive versatility. He is much like Josh Tomlin was in the minor leagues as he is every manager’s and every player development person’s favorite. He is a guy to pull for.”

On Louis Valbuena: “Luis has been great. The most interesting thing with him is how well he has handled some of the younger players going up over him. That can very easily get frustrating for someone with his experience and Major League time and he has not let that get to him and he has remained a professional and performed. The power numbers are there. We’d like to see the discipline numbers be a little bit better and his approach improve. His defense is certainly not a limitation as he can play second base at an average clip, he can go to third for you, and he can stand at shortstop if need be. He is a really good piece to have in Triple-A as depth.”

On Low-A Lake County: “This is an interesting team. We are high on prospects and potential and not so high on performance. There is a lot of youth, athleticism and ability to watch here in Ronnie Rodriguez at shortstop, LeVon Washington in center field, Carlos Moncrief who has made himself a position player prospect, Alex Monsalve is a very interesting player behind the plate, and Giovanny Urshela is one of our best defenders at third base. There are a lot of pieces and players with abilities, now it is just figuring out which one is going to be ale to be a good defender, a good offensive player, a good base runner, and handle the rigors of professional baseball. The tools and abilities are there and now it is really up to player development to help them become complete players and let that translate into performance.”

Infirmary Report

Here are some updates on some of the walking wounded around the system:

Hector Rondon
Right-handed pitchers Hector Rondon, Alexander Perez, and Danny Salazar are all rehabbing well in Arizona from Tommy John surgery last year. Salazar is up to 60 pitch bullpen sessions, Rondon 45-pitch bullpen sessions, and Perez 30-pitch bullpen sessions. Provided there are no setbacks, Salazar will be the first to get into game action in the Arizona Summer League sometime in early August and Rondon should be right behind him. Perez may not be built up enough to get him into Arizona games, so he may not pitch in games until Instructional League in the fall.

Left-hander Robbie Aviles is progressing well in his rehab from Tommy John surgery last July, and is currently throwing two inning sim games in Arizona. He should be pitching in games in the Arizona Summer League probably in the next week to ten days.

Right-handed pitcher Anthony Reyes had another setback with right forearm inflammation and some finger weakness. He recently consulted doctors and will resume a throwing program in about the next ten days.

Right-handed pitcher Connor Graham is recovering well from his shoulder injury and is actually currently already at Double-A Akron but not on the roster. He is continuing his rehab and expected to be activated in the next week or two.

Giovanni Soto
High-A Kinston left-hander Giovanni Soto is still sidelined by a left elbow neuritis and there is no damage to his UCL. He was getting a tingling sensation in his fingers a few weeks ago while pitching in Kinston so was shut down as a precaution so doctors could check him out. He is currently out in Arizona rehabbing, and will be starting a throwing program in a couple days and should be back on a couple of weeks.

Double-A Akron catcher Chun Chen went down recently because of a back spasm and is expected to be back in a week or two or even any day.

Triple-A catcher Dwight Childs broke his right hand last weekend when he took a foul tip off his hand in his first career Triple-A start. He will be out for awhile, maybe even the rest of the season.

Triple-A catcher Luke Carlin was recently put on the disabled list because of a sore right elbow. He is supposedly close to being activated and resuming normal catching duties with the team.

Double-A Akron catcher Juan Apodaca has a broken left toe and will be out for awhile. There is no ETA on when he will be back, but it probably will be several weeks. The Indians signed free agent catcher Michael Hernandez to fill his spot on the Akron roster.

Barnes and Noble

Scott Barnes
Triple-A left-handed pitcher Scott Barnes has really come into his own as a high level pitching prospect for the Indians this season. In his last eight starts for Columbus he is 5-1 with a 1.88 ERA (48.0 IP, 35 H, 16 BB, 55 K), and overall this season in 15 combined appearances between Double-A Akron and Columbus he is 7-2 with a 3.36 ERA (80.1 IP, 68 H, 32 BB, 94 K).

Barnes, 23, has really developed a great understanding of what his delivery does and the command of all of his pitches has taken a step up this year. He has an unorthodox delivery where he turns his back to the batter and really hides the ball well, which creates some deception and makes him tough on left-handers. His success and the strides he has made this year center around his improved velocity where he has been up to 96 MPH, all three of his pitches having good action, and his overall improved maturity as a pitcher.

Barnes may not be a big league option this year, but he is up for roster protection in the offseason and surely will be added to the 40-man roster in November. He is big league starting pitching depth in 2012 and beyond, and if he continues to make strides and perform as he has through the remainder of the season there is no doubt he will be a unanimous Top 10 ranked prospect for the Indians in all sorts of publications next year.

Award Winners

Mike Rayl
The hardware has been handed out to a lot of players of late in the Indians minor league system as three players have recently won Player/Pitcher of the Week honors.

Low-A Lake County left-handed pitcher Mike Rayl was named the Midwest League Pitcher of the Week for the week of June 20-26. The 22-year old made one start and threw six scoreless innings allowing only one hit and striking out eight batters. On the season he is 5-2 with a 1.71 ERA in 12 starts, and in 58.0 innings has allowed 38 hits, 10 walks, and has 63 strikeouts. In 11 of his 12 starts he has allowed two earned runs or less and has allowed a run or less in nine of those games.

High-A Kinston left-handed pitcher T.J. House was recently named the Carolina League Pitcher of the Week from June 13-19. In two starts he went 2-0 with a 0.00 ERA, which included a one-hit shutout in the first game of a doubleheader against visiting Salem on June 13th. Over the seven innings, he walked four and struck out six, and the only hit was a sixth-inning bunt single. He was dominant again in his next start on the 18th allowing five hits and two walks while striking out four over six more scoreless frames against the Hillcats in Lynchburg. On the season he is 5-6 with a 4.16 ERA in 14 starts, and in 75.2 innings has allowed 64 hits, 36 walks, and has 53 strikeouts.

Lonnie Chisenhall
Triple-A Columbus third baseman Lonnie Chisenhall was named the International League Player of the Week for the week of June 20-26. In five games he hit .429 (9-for-21) with 2 HR and a league-best 14 RBI. On the season he is hitting .265 with 7 HR, 44 RBI, and a .779 OPS in Columbus, and in two games with the Indians is 3-for-8 at the plate with two doubles and an RBI.

Short season Single-A Mahoning Valley catcher Jake Lowery was awarded the Jhonny Bench Award on Thursday night in Wichita, Kansas. He left the team to attend the ceremony and receive the award which is given to the best collegiate catcher. In 12 games with Mahoning Valley he is hitting .313 with 2 HR, 10 RBI, and a .951 OPS.

All Stars

On Thursday Double-A Akron had three players selected to the Eastern League All Star game on Wednesday, July 13 in Manchester, NH. Right-handed pitcher Austin Adams, catcher Chun Chen, and shortstop Juan Diaz will represent Akron on the Western Division’s all-star roster. Adams currently ranks 6th in the Eastern League in strikeouts (78), tied for 5th in wins (5), and tied for 2nd in games started (15). Chen is currently tied for 8th in the Eastern League for home runs (8), and his 37 RBI puts him in the top 15 in the league in that category. Diaz is tied for 5th in the Eastern League with 3 triples, and currently leads the Aeros in hits (76), runs (38), and total bases (110).

Also on Thursday, Triple-A Columbus had four players selected to the Triple-A All Star game pitting the International League against the Pacific Coast League on Wednesday July 13 in Salt Lake City, UT. Second baseman Jason Kipnis, infielder Luis Valbuena, right-handed pitcher Zach McAllister, and right-handed pitcher Jeanmar Gomez were all selected to the International League team. The game will be broadcast on MLB Network live at 7:00 p.m. ET.

“Short-Season” Notes

Jerrud Sabourin
Short season Single-A Mahoning Valley right-handed pitcher Cody Allen has been impressive in the early going where in four appearances he is 2-0 with a 1.86 ERA (9.2 IP, 4 H, 3 BB, 10 K). Even though it is still early in the season, he has shown an ability to work ahead of hitters and pitch in tight spots.

Short season Single-A Mahoning Valley first baseman Jerrud Sabourin is hitting .140 with 0 HR, 5 RBI and a .415 OPS in his first 12 games as a pro. He is an undrafted free agent signing who has always sort of taken the underdog role as he did not receive a scholarship offer from anyone out of high school and walked on at Indiana University and ended up having a good four-year career there.

Rookie level Arizona outfielder Juan Romero is doing well in his conversion from third base to the outfield, and is making sort of the same switch that Abner Abreu made early in his career. In fact, both are looking like the same player at the rookie stage of their career’s as Romero shows a ton of power and athleticism but has plate discipline issues. In seven games he is hitting .280 with 2 HR, 9 RBI, and a .966 OPS. Five of his seven hits have gone for extra bases, but he has also struck out in 11 of his 25 at bats.

Rookie level Arizona right-handed pitcher Josh McKeon is off to a solid start where in three games he has gone 6.1 scoreless innings and allowed only 2 hits, 2 walks, and has 6 strikeouts. He has a unique background as he was a catcher early on in college, but recently made the switch to the pitching mound and has just two years experience as a pitcher. He shows some arm strength as he consistently gets his fastball into the low 90s.

Follow Tony and the Indians Prospect Insider on Twitter @TonyIPI. Also, his latest book the 2011 Cleveland Indians Top 100 Prospects & More is available for purchase for $20.95 to customers in the US (shipping and handling extra).

Around the Farm: June 30

Around the Farm takes a quick look at some of yesterday's performances by Indians prospects throughout the system. The positions listed below are where the player was playing in yesterday's game.

Brett Brach - SP, Kinston: 8 IP, 5 H, 3 K.
One of the feel good stories of the season has been the emergence of Brett Brach. He's not an overpowering pitcher who is going to blow batters away and rack up the K count. But in 16 appearances (14 starts), he's pitched a total of 86.1 innings, allowing 63 hits and having an ERA of 2.61 (25 ER/R). He's walked 26 batters and struck out 54, as opposing hitters have an average of .205 against him. Brach has one complete game under his belt, as well.

Mike Rayl - SP, Lake County: 6.2 IP, 2 H, 7 K. The other impressive starter who has been a sleeper has been Mike Rayl. In 13 starts this season, he's pitched a combined 64.2 innings, allowing 40 hits and having an impressive 1.53 ERA (11 ER/13 R). Even more impressive is his strike out to walk ratio of 70 K/10 BB. Opposing hitters are hitting .175 off of him.
  • Ezequiel Carrera - CF, Columbus: 1-4, R, 2 RBI, BB. Night in and night out, Carerra produces and I'm really growing impatient waiting to see him get called up.
  • Jason Kipnis - 2B, Columbus: 1-4, 2B, 2 RBI, K. Kipnis continues to rake and shows no signs of letting up.
  • Luis Valbuena - SS, Columbus: 2-4, R. What more does the kid need to do to get noticed? There's no reason why he doesn't belong in Cleveland.
  • Scott Barnes - SP, Columbus: (W, 7-2) 7.1 IP, 3 H, ER/2 R, BB, 5 K. Barnes has become an intriguing prospect and a potential trade piece if the Indians decided to trade for a bat at the deadline.
  • Nick Hagadone - RP, Columbus: 1.2 IP, 2 K. Nice outing by Hagadone who has rebounded in his past few outings.
  • Jordan Henry - DH, Akron: 3-4, R, RBI, K, SB. Henry is Mr. Consistent and has provided more than the stats can show to the Aeros lineup.
  • Nick Weglarz - LF, Akron: 2-4, R, 2B. Weglarz has been in a deep slump in his last ten games, hitting only .143.
  • Kelvin De La Cruz - SP, Akron: 5 IP, 8 H, 5 ER/R, 8 K, HR. Just when you thought De La Cruz has turned the corner, he has an outing like this. The one impressive thing that came from this outing is the fact that he didn't walk a batter and struck out 8.
  • Adam Abraham - 3B, Kinston: 2-3, 2B, BB, K, SB. The K-Tribe again struggled to get things going offensively, but Abraham's bat came to play.
  • Jesus Aguilar - 1B, Lake County: 2-4, R, HR, 2 RBI, K. Aguilar's power potential is one of the most promising within our organization in quite some time and it's extremely encouraging that he's also been able to hold a .284 average with the power.
  • Bryson Myles - RF, Mahoning Valley: 1-4, 2 R, SB. Myles and the rest of the Mahoning Valley offense continues to dominate opponents.
Follow Tony and the Indians Prospect Insider on Twitter @TonyIPI. Also, his latest book the 2011 Cleveland Indians Top 100 Prospects & More is available for purchase for $20.95 to customers in the US (shipping and handling extra).

Game Recaps 6/30: Brach shuts down Birds

Brett Brach (Photo: IPI)
Kinston blanks Birds 1-0

Brett Brach carried the Indians to a series evening 1-0 victory over Myrtle Beach, Thursday night in South Carolina. It was the K-Tribe’s (6-2, 44-33) Carolina League leading ninth shutout of the season and second 1-0 victory of the season. Kinston is now all alone in first place in the Southern Division’s second half.

Kinston pitcher Brett Brach dazzled, working eight very efficient innings in which he only allowed five hits and struck out three without walking a batter. Brach picked up the win, out dueling Myrtle Beach's Barrett Loux for Brach's (5-5) fifth win of the year.

Former first round draft pick Barret Loux got the start for Myrtle Beach and was in and out of trouble early. Kinston had runners in scoring position in three of the first five innings, but failed to drive anyone home, as Loux struck out 11 K-Tribe batters through six innings. Joseph Ortiz picked up where Loux left off, striking out the side in the seventh. In all, Kinston struck out 14 times. Despite the offensive struggles, the K-Tribe again proved clutch, waiting until the last inning to squeeze a run across.

Adam Abraham led off the inning with a double down the left field line. Abraham's pinch runner, Delvi Cid, was safe at third on an Abner Abreu bunt. Cid then scored on Chase Burnette's looper to center field. Kinston could not add any more in the inning thanks to two stellar plays from Pelicans short stop Leury Garcia. It didn't matter though, as Jose Flores closed out the ninth in dramatic fashion.

Flores induced an inning ending 4-6-3 double play with Pelican's runners at the corners. A microscopic play at first ended the inning to the sounds of boos from Pelicans fans who hoped to see a safe call which would have allowed the tying run to score. Flores gave up two hits and managed the save, his second, in one inning of work. With the win, Kinston avoided losing back-to back games for the first time since May 16th.

Kinston starting pitcher Drew Pomeranz will take the hill for the final game of the series Friday night in Myrtle Beach. Game time 7:05 pm in South Carolina.

Pitching leads to 6-2 win at Toledo

Scott Barnes allowed just one hit in his first seven innings on the hill and the Clippers defeated Toledo 6-2 on Thursday night at Fifth Third Field.

Columbus scored single tallies in the fourth and fifth innings and added four more in the seventh in route to another win.

Toledo starter L.J. Gagnier gave up two runs, lasting six innings. Reliever Matt Hoffman was on the wrong end of the four-run inning.

Ezequiel Carrera and Jason Kipnis each had 2 RBI for the Clippers while Luis Valbuena and Paul Phillips each collected a pair of hits.

The Clippers attempt a four-game sweep on Friday night at 7:05pm. Zach McAllister (8-2, 2.93) will face Toledo lefty Duane Below (7-4, 3.41).

Aeros Winning Streak Snapped

The Akron Aeros saw their six-game winning streak come to an end with a 7-3 loss to the Erie SeaWolves on Thursday night, in the first of a four-game series at Jerry Uht Park. The Aeros faced a balanced attack, as the SeaWolves scored in five of their eight innings.

Kelvin De La Cruz took the loss, giving up five runs on eight hits, and striking out eight in five innings of work. Eric Berger pitched three innings of relief for the Aeros (40-40) allowing two runs on four hits, with two walks and two strikeouts.

SeaWolves starter Jacob Turner earned the win, pitching seven innings and scattering nine hits, while walking two and striking out five. Luis Marte pitched two innings of shutout relief for the SeaWolves (40-39).

Erie started their scoring early as they took a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the 1st inning. Jamie Johnson led off with a double, and after a Gustavo Nunez ground out, Francisco Martinez doubled home Johnson.

The SeaWolves added three more runs in the 2nd inning. Rawley Bishop started the inning with a strikeout. Justin Henry legged out an infield single and Brandon Douglas dropped down a bunt single. Bryan Holaday followed with a 3-run home run, his fourth of the season, making it 4-0.

Akron started their scoring in the 4th inning. After a Juan Diaz ground out and a Beau Mills fly out, Nick Weglarz hit a ground rule double to center, and Karexon Sanchez brought Weglarz home with an RBI single, to make it 4-1.

After the SeaWolves scored runs in the 5th and 6th innings, the Aeros were able to generate some offense in the 7th inning. Karexon Sanchez led off the inning with a walk, and advanced to second on a Donnie Webb ground out. Jordan Henry singled home Sanchez and then scored on a Ben Copeland RBI single, making it 6-3. Erie finished the game’s scoring with another run in the bottom half of the 7th inning.

The Aeros continue their series with the SeaWolves on Friday. Akron will give the ball to right-handed pitcher Joe Gardner, who is 5-5 with a 3.92 ERA in 2011. He will face fellow right hander Brooks Brown, who is 1-2 with an 8.50 ERA this season. First pitch is at 7:05 p.m.

Silver Hawks Rally to Stun Captains

The South Bend Silver Hawks score four times in the eighth inning after being shutout through the first seven innings en route to a 4-2 win over the Lake County Captains on Thursday. The Captains are still tied for first place in the Midwest League Eastern Division despite the loss.

The Captains took the lead in the bottom of the sixth inning when Jesus Aguilar smacked his fifteenth home run of the year, a two run shot, and the Captains led 2-0.

Captains starter Mike Rayl did not get a decision despite working 6.2 scoreless innings allowing only two hits while striking out seven. Rayl has allowed only three earned runs in his last 29.1 innings of work. Joey Mahalic (0-1) took the loss lasting .2 of an inning and allowing four runs, three earned on two hits and walking one.

Silver Hawks Starter Bradin Hagens did not get a decision working three scoreless innings allowing one hit and striking out one. Dan Taylor (3-2) got the win pitching a scoreless inning and Blake Cooper picked up his eighth save working a scoreless ninth inning.

The Captains and Silver Hawks play game two of the series on Friday at 7:00 PM with the Captains sending LHP J.D. Reichenbach (3-1 3.60) to the hill to oppose RHP J.R. Bradley (2-10, 5.11).

Scrappers win again, 7-3

The Mahoning Valley Scrappers won again on Thursday night, 7-3 over State College. They are now 10-4 on the young season.

Seven of the nine hitters in the Scrappers lineup got at least one hit, and were led by right fielder Bryson Myles who went 1-for-4 with 2 runs scored and a stolen base and third baseman Jordan Smith who went 1-for-4 with 3 RBI.

On the pitching side of things, the Scrap Attack was led by starter Robert Nixon who went six strong innings and allowed six hits, three runs, no walks, and had four strikeouts. Lefty Kyle Petter came in late and slammed the door throwing one inning of scoreless-hitless ball and allowed two walks and had two stikeouts.

Follow Tony and the Indians Prospect Insider on Twitter @TonyIPI. Also, his latest book the 2011 Cleveland Indians Top 100 Prospects & More is available for purchase for $20.95 to customers in the US (shipping and handling extra).