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Saturday, January 7, 2012

Around the Farm: January 6

Eric Berger
Around the Farm (ATF) takes a quick look at some of the daily performances by Indians prospects. This is a special winter ball version of ATF that recaps all the offseason action by Indians players in the Caribbean Leagues.  The positions listed below are where the player was playing in the game.

Here is the rundown of what Indians players in winter ball did yesterday.

Australian Baseball League
  • Andrew Campbell (LF, Brisbane Bandits): 3-for-4, 3 R, 2 RBI, BB, K. Campbell did a little bit of everything and shined once again in a leadoff role. Given a chance to play more regularly he has really taken off of late for his Brisbane team. He was a bench/role player for most of the season and rarely played, but since being inserted into the starting lineup on December 29th he has hit in every game going 11-for-33 (.333) at the plate.
  • Ryan Battaglia (C, Brisbane Bandits): 1-for-4, R, 2B, RBI, BB. That is two productive games this week for the seldom used catcher. He has now played in 5 games this offseason, but is still just 2-for-12 at the plate. On the positive side, both hits are doubles, he has 2 walks, and also 3 RBI.
Dominican Republic Winter League
  • Eric Berger (RP, Gigantes del Cibao): 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K. Berger made his debut pitching in the Dominican Republic with a clean 1-2-3 inning getting two groundouts and a strikeout. He had been pitching in Venezuela this offseason, came home last week, but then agreed to pitch in the playoffs for Cibao.
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, January 6, 2012

Should the Indians extend Asdrubal Cabrera?

Asdrubal Cabrera (Photo: AP)
Asdrubal Cabrera’s agent, Jose Mijares of Octagon, reportedly told a Venezuelan journalist that he will begin contract negotiations with the Indians next week. Mijares made no mention of a long-term deal, saying only that the two sides would exchange arbitration figures and that, “my experience with Cleveland tells me there won’t be any need to go to arbitration.”

Even though Cabrera’s agent is not mentioning a long-term deal it does not mean there is no discussion of one between his client and the Indians front office. Tim Dierkes of MLB Trade Rumors dug into Asdrubal Cabrera as an extension candidate a few days ago so let’s compare Dierkes contract projection to what Cabrera has provided for the Tribe.

Cabrera is coming off his most admired season in 2011. He hit 25 home runs, won the Silver Slugger Award and emerged as a star player for an Indians team bereft of recognizable faces for most casual fans. However, Cabrera also slumped to a .244/.310/.419 triple-slash line in the second half of 2011. A shortstop with those numbers is useful, but is far from a star (or an extension candidate).

To make matters worse, Cabrera rates poorly in most defensive metrics. UZR consistently ranks him below average and if you watched enough games you know Cabrera has a knack for making highlight reel plays, but botching the easy ones. Disgustingly, former Indians whipping boy Jhonny Peralta rates better defensively at shortstop than Cabrera does in many metrics.

On the other hand, maybe Cabrera just started to wear down as they season wore on. After all, he did play in 151 games last year and over the first four months of the season he posted a .289/.344/.486 slash line.

Cabrera’s career numbers are up and down due to injuries and inconsistency. He was called up in 2007 to take over second base in August and his late-inning heroics helped push the Tribe all the way to the ALCS that year (Baseball Reference reports that Cabrera batted .371 in the seventh inning or later that year).

He began 2008 as the everyday second basemen, but lost the job in June after hitting just .184 with 14 RBI in the season’s first 52 games. He raked in Triple-A and was called back up in July and finished the season with a passable .259/.346/.366.

In 2009 he had arguably his most comparable season to 2011 when he played in 131 games and posted the following line:

81 R/ 42 2B/ 6 HR/ 68 RBI/ 17 SB/ .308 AVG/ .360 OBP/ .438 SLG / 114 OPS+

In 2010 he ran into the immovable object Jhonny Peralta and suffered a forearm fracture that cost him almost half of the season.

Of course in 2011 he had his breakout year posting the following line in 151 games:

87 R/ 36 2B/ 25 HR/ 92 RBI/ 17 SB/ .273 AVG/ .332 OBP/ .460 SLG/ 119 OPS+

On close examination his 2009 and 2011 seasons are almost exactly the same except for the surge in power in 2011. Some of those 42 doubles he hit in 2009 finally jumped the fence in 2011 and the 19 extra home runs almost fully account for the difference in RBI totals. Other than power the only difference between the two seasons is a 30 point drop in batting average. In fact Cabrera’s WAR was slightly better in 2009 at 3.8 compared to 3.7 in 2011.

Looking at his career to date Cabrera has had a solid debut in 2007, a rough 2008, a very good 2009, an injury-shortened 2010, and a very good 2011.

So, first and foremost, do the Indians want to extend Asdrubal Cabrera?

Well, the Indians have publicly said numerous times that they like the payroll flexibility that they currently have with no player above league minimum guaranteed any money beyond this coming season. However, Jason Donald is hardly nipping on Cabrera’s heels and it will be years before Francisco Lindor emerges from the farm system. In addition the Indians should probably start using some of that payroll flexibility to build good will with a largely disgruntled fan base by extending the likes of Cabrera, Justin Masterson and others.

Dierkes analyzes the comparable players and contracts thoroughly before eventually settling on $27 million over four years as a comparable offer sheet with the following breakdown: $4.25 million in 2012, $6.5 million in 2013, and $8 million for the first two free agent years. He rightly concludes that the Indians would probably prefer team options for the last year or two, but may struggle to achieve that goal and that a reasonable four-year contract would probably help Cabrera’s trade value.

A four year contract would keep Cabrera under Tribe control through his age 29 season, which would follow the Indians extension model, signing young players early enough to keep the cost down but late enough and short enough that you benefit from what should be their statistically strongest seasons. Keep in mind that through arbitration this year Cabrera will probably make close to $5 million and with another strong season could easily reach $8 million the next and free agency after that.

While the Indians (and many of their fans) are probably leery of signing such an up-and-down player to an extension here are three good reasons why a reasonable Cabrera extension would benefit the Indians:

Clint Barmes 2 yrs at $10.5 MM
Alex Gonzalez 1 yr at $4.25 MM with a $4 MM option
Jimmy Rollins 3 years at $38 MM

All of these contracts were given out this year and while Barmes’ contract is particularly alarming it is Rollins whose recent numbers have been the most similar to Cabrera’s. Factor in the idea that Rollins is on the wrong side of 30 and widely considered to be a player in decline and it is not hard to see a 28 year old Cabrera hitting free agency in his prime and breaking the bank in a way the Indians can’t afford and leaving a big hole at shortstop for the Tribe.

Even though the Indians have gotten burned the last few times they bought out free agency years they can't be shy about locking down their core players. Right now, this window of contention is set to expire after the 2013 season when Shin-Soo Choo, Caberera, Masterson, Travis Hafner, Raffy Perez and Joe Smith are set to become free agents. Some of those players will have worn out their welcome by then (or possibly before), but if the front office can extend Cabrera and Masterson (a Choo extension may not be realistic or intelligent) into at least 2014 that gives the core group three chances to put the pieces together for an extended playoff run.

The front office and the ownership has proven they know when to tear down and rebuild, now they need to show us they know when to lock down a core of talented players and make a playoff run.

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: January 5

Mitch Nilsson
Around the Farm (ATF) takes a quick look at some of the daily performances by Indians prospects. This is a special winter ball version of ATF that recaps all the offseason action by Indians players in the Caribbean Leagues.  The positions listed below are where the player was playing in the game.

Here is the rundown of what Indians players in winter ball did yesterday.

Australian Baseball League
  • Andrew Campbell (DH, Brisbane Bandits): 1-for-4, BB, K, SB. Campbell continues to play well of late and in his leadoff role got on base in 2 of his 5 plate appearances. He has a 7-game hitting streak and while he is only 9-for-36 (.250) in his last 10 games he also has 6 walks and has a solid .357 on-base percentage. Not much more you can ask in the playoffs from such a young, inexperienced player.
  • Mitch Nilsson (C, Brisbane Bandits): 2-for-4, RBI, BB. Nilsson is another guy who is suddenly getting a lot of playing time. He had only played in 10 games and piled up 33 at bats the entire ABL season before last night, but he went out and had his best game by far this offseason getting on base in 3 of his 5 plate appearances and driving in a run.
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).

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Indians Rule 5 Draft Future Eligibles

The Rule 5 Draft is several months away, but here is a current up-to-date listing showing the outlook for Indians Rule 5 Draft eligibles from 2012-2015. This is for every player in the organization. This list will be housed for quick reference in the "Reference" section along the top below the site batter and listed under the "Rule 5 Draft" heading.

Note, this listing only includes about a half dozen international signings over the course of the 2011 season; however, every player signed before 2011 as well as all 2011 draft picks are included.

Last updated: January 5, 2012

2012
2013
2014
2015
Pitchers: Pitchers: Pitchers: Pitchers:
Adams, Austin Blair, Kyle Allen, Cody Chiang, Shao-Ching
Araujo, Elvis Cook, Cole Anderson, Cody Estrella, Edward
Berger, Eric Cooper, Jordan Armstrong, Shawn Garcias, Juan
Brach, Brett Damaso, Juan Aviles, Robbie Lovera, Yeiker
Bryson, Rob De Los Santos, Xavier Cabrera, Luis Lugo, Luis
Cespedes, Ramon Dew, Owen Carmona, Manuel Morimando, Shawn
Colon, Joseph Dischler, Tony Cleto, Jeffry Pineda, Edgar
Cook, Clayton Ehlert, Clayton Curtis, Matt Polanco, Anderson
Dickerson, Dale Encarnacion, Estevenson Davenport, Geoff Puerta, Breily
Espino, Paolo Encarnacion, Isaias DeJesus, Luis Zapata, Jose
Flores, Fernando Goodnight, Michael Encarnacion, Luis
Guerrero, Harold Petter, Kyle Homblert, Rafael Catchers:
Guilmet, Preston Reichenbach, JD Howard, Dillon Aleman, Jose
Haley, Trey Soto, Giovanni Johnson, Jeff Calderon, Kevin
House, T.J. Striz, Nate Joseph, Alexander Haase, Eric
Hubbard, Antwonie Tejada, Enosil Krasne, Will
Jimenez, Daniel Lopez, Jose Infielders:
Jimenez, Francisco Catchers: McKeon, Josh Caraballo, Joel
Knapp, Jason Cervenka, Martin Merritt, Ryan Castillo, Amauri
Landis, Kyle De La Cruz, Juan Morel, Luis Herrera, Juan
Langwell, Matthew Lavisky, Alex Murata, Toru Lindor, Francisco
Lee, Chen-Chang Valerio, Charlie Nixon, Rob Paulino, Dorsyss
Mahalic, Joey Paredes, Alexis Rodriguez, Ronny
McFarland, T.J. Infielders: Radeke, Mason
Packer, Matt Bartolone, Nick Roberts, Will Outfielders:
Perez, Alexander Burnette, Chase Rucinski, Drew Acevedo, Carlos
Price, Bryan Cannon, Tyler Sanchez, Eliezer Miguel, Francisco
Ramirez, Moisses Fields, Aaron Santana, Juan Rincones, Luis
Rayl, Mike Kelly, Jairo Sides, Grant Ruiz, Brian
Sarianides, Nick Martinez, Jorge Sisco, Jake Sanchez, Omar
Stowell, Bryce Thompson, Logan Sterling, Felix Santander, Anthony
Sturdevant, Tyler Wagoner, Jack Soto, Fidias
Valera, Francisco Outfielders:
Wetmore, Kirk Bradley, Marcus Catchers:
Wright, Steven Casas, Jordan Battaglia, Ryan
Dunn, Henry Lowery, Jake
Catchers: Gallas, Anthony Tolentino, Patrick
Chen, Chun Heere, Brian
Childs, Dwight Hernandez, Angel Infielders:
Monsalve, Alex Holt, Tyler Boscan, Manuel
Montero, Moises Washington, LeVon Campbell, Andrew
Nilsson, Mitch Castillo, Leonardo
Perez, Roberto Frazar, Evan
Pickens, Doug Galvez, Fermin
Garcia, Robel
Infielders: Hankins, Todd
Abraham, Adam Jones, Hunter
Aguilar, Jesus MacPhee, Zack
Bellows, Kyle Medina, Yhoxian
DeGeorge, Dan Ramirez, Jose
Fontanez, Kevin Romero, Juan
Frawley, Casey Sabourin, Jerrud
Goedert, Jared Serna, K.C.
Gonzalez, Erik Smith, Jordan
Martinez, Argenis Valdez, Ordomar
Mills, Beau Wolters, Tony
Sanchez, Karexon
Tice, Jeremie Outfielders:
Toole, Justin Barr, John
Urshela, Giovanny Brown, Mark
De Jesus, Victor
Outfielders: Elliott, Cody
Cid, Delvi Lin, Chia-Ching
Copeland, Ben Lora, Felix
Crowe, Trevor Mejia, Joel
Fedroff, Tim Myles, Bryson
Greenwell, Bo Rodriguez, Luigi
Henry, Jordan Siliga, Aaron
Huffman, Chad
Moncrief, Carlos

Follow Tony and the Indians Prospect Insider on Twitter @TonyIPI.

Around the Farm: January 4

Ryan Battaglia
Around the Farm (ATF) takes a quick look at some of the daily performances by Indians prospects. This is a special winter ball version of ATF that recaps all the offseason action by Indians players in the Caribbean Leagues.  The positions listed below are where the player was playing in the game.

Here is the rundown of what Indians players in winter ball did yesterday.

Australian Baseball League
  • Andrew Campbell (LF, Brisbane Bandits): 1-for-5, 2B, K. The ABL kicked off their playoff action on Wednesday night, and after being out of action for almost 4 weeks Campbell has been back in the lineup the last week for Brisbane. He has hit in 6 straight games since being inserted back into the lineup on December 29th though is only 7-for-25 during that stretch.
  • Ryan Battaglia (C, Brisbane Bandits): 1-for-4, 2B, RBI, 2 K, E. Brisbane played two very young and inexperienced players in their first playoff game with both Campbell and Battaglia in the lineup. While Battaglia was productive with a double and RBI, he had a key throwing error in the bottom of the 6th inning that resulted in the last run Perth would score until they got a walkoff run in the 12th inning.
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).

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Offseason Spotlight: Matt Langwell

Photo: Lianna Holub
The Cleveland Indians have a plethora of bullpen options in their farm system that could help the big league team at some point this coming season. Those alternatives have shrunk somewhat after the recent trade of right-hander Cory Burns to the San Diego Padres and losing right-hander Josh Judy to the Cincinnati Reds on waivers, but the bullpen options remain aplenty for the Indians.

With the loss of Burns and Judy it has helped open the door for other relievers in the upper levels of the Indians farm system to come into greater focus as bullpen options. One of those relievers is right-hander Matt Langwell.

A lot of people probably do not know much about Langwell. He was not a high profile draft pick as he was selected in the 11th round of the 2008 Draft out of Rice University, and he has often been overlooked in prospect rankings because he has pitched almost his entire pro career out of the bullpen.

But Langwell, 25, has potential as a middle reliever in the big leagues and has taken the yearly step up the organizational ladder and impressed more and more each season. In 2009 at Low-A Lake County he had a 1.97 ERA, .217 BAA, and 8.9 K/9, and he followed that up in 2010 at High-A Kinston with a 2.41 ERA, .219 BAA, and 9.3 K/9. Last year in 48 combined appearances between Double-A Akron and Triple-A Columbus he went 5-1 with a 3.01 ERA, and in 68.2 innings allowed 62 hits, 5 home runs, 28 walks, and had 71 strikeouts.

Armed with a low 90s fastball and solid slider Langwell does not have the arsenal to blow people away, but he continues to perform year after year and rack up strikeouts because of his consistency.

“I just tried to stay consistent throughout the year,” Langwell said in a recent interview for the IPI. “I had up and down times and just tried working on getting consistent with all of my pitches and being able to throw any pitch in the strike zone in any count. It is about staying consistent and going out and attacking hitters.”

Langwell has made a steady progression every year, and while he will not rank high in prospect lists because he is a reliever (relievers rarely rank well) he is still a bullpen option for the Indians in the near future if he continues to improve. Getting ahead in the count and consistently working the ball down in the zone is a major focus for him.

“When I am ahead in the count I have a lot of success,” Langwell said. “Each year my slider gets more consistent, and [last] year it was the most consistent that it has been so far. Really for me the key is getting ahead of hitters. Whenever I fall behind they are just sitting on my fastball and take advantage of it, so just staying ahead has been the key for me.”

Langwell has made himself into a prospect and may be on the Major League doorstep, and the continued development of his slider will be the key to his future. He spent most of last season working on being more consistent with the speed and break of his slider - his go to pitch – to make it a legitimate big league weapon. That is something Indians Director of Player Development Ross Atkins talked about late last season.

“He is a great story as he had some success as an amateur at Rice and he went into a bullpen role for us a couple of years ago and has really performed well,” Atkins said. “He seems to be getting better and better each step of the way each week and month. His slider will be the separator for him as he has plenty of fastball and can locate it down and away, so now it is a matter of him developing that slider into a Major League weapon. He is absolutely someone who has turned himself into a prospect. Those are our favorite stories when a guy who was on the periphery has put himself on the forefront.”

Langwell has come a long way since his freshman year in 2005 at Sam Houston State when he tore the UCL in his right elbow and had to undergo Tommy John surgery. He completed a year and a half of rehab and then moved on to Rice where he pitched in 2007 and 2008 before being drafted by the Indians.

“I was at a summer league game at the time,” Langwell recalled about the elbow injury. “I just threw one pitch and felt something in my elbow give. I took a month off and then had an MRI and they said it was torn. So I had the surgery and did the rehab and everything. I had about a year and a half to come back for my next season so I took it kind of slow and went through fall ball about a year later and felt good the whole time. Now I don’t even notice it at all.”

Langwell’s elbow was barking a little when he was drafted and signed by the Indians, something he said was the result of throwing a new split finger pitch that year in college. They closely monitored him at short season Single-A Mahoning Valley that year and the numbers showed he was not a very healthy pitcher as he went 1-4 with a 7.47 ERA in 12 games (7 starts).

The next season the Indians decided to make him a full time reliever when they assigned him to Low-A Lake County to start the 2009 season and ever since his career has taken off. He has now completed three straight seasons in a bullpen role and it is something he has grown to like a lot.

“I know that feeling as a starter when you come out of a game with runners on where you get the butterflies in your stomach hoping that the guy can get out of it for you,” Langwell said. “I like being able to come in with inherited runners and get out of a situation for a guy because I know how that guy is feeling on the bench and I want him to feel a lot better about his outing.”

Langwell has survived the proverbial bottleneck that happens in the minors between High-A and Double-A where so many players find it difficult to climb higher in the organization because there are so few spots available in the upper levels. He is expected to pitch at Triple-A Columbus at the outset of next season, and if he does not he should get there quickly.

One thing for certain is that Langwell is now on the radar as Major League relief pitching option.

“Going in you always want to get to the highest level possible for that year,” Langwell said. “I think that so far I have done my job with staying consistent and healthy. I believe I have put myself on the map and now I just gotta go out there and get guys out and we will see what happens after that.”

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: January 3

Fausto Carmona

Around the Farm (ATF) takes a quick look at some of the daily performances by Indians prospects. This is a special winter ball version of ATF that recaps all the offseason action by Indians players in the Caribbean Leagues.  The positions listed below are where the player was playing in the game.

Here is the rundown of what Indians players in winter ball did yesterday.

Dominican Republic Winter League
  • Fausto Carmona (SP, Aguilas Cibaenas): 5.2 IP, 5 H, 4 R (2 ER), 1 BB, 4 K, 1 HR. Carmona actually pitched much better than his line score suggests. He made one real mistake all night serving up a 2-run homer in the 4th inning, but we the victim of some bad defense and relief pitching in the 6th that lead to 2 additional unearned runs. His shortstop booted a ball to start the 6th inning and then after a strikeout, throwing error, fly out, and walk he was removed from the game with two outs in the inning. The reliever who replaced him promptly came in and served up three straight singles thus allowing both of Carmona’s inherited runners to score.
Puerto Rico Winter League
  • Roberto Perez (C, Indios de Mayaguez): 0-for-1, 2 BB.  Perez is a walk machine. There is no question about that after 62 walks in 284 at bats this season at High-A Kinston and 80 walks in 378 at bats in 2010 at Low-A Lake County. He also has 18 walks and 14 strikeouts this offseason in 64 combined at bats between the AFL and Puerto Rico. But he still needs to start hitting as he is just 14-for-64 (.219) this offseason at the plate.
Venezuela Winter League
  • Jose Lopez (3B, Caribes de Anzoategui): 0-for-1, BB, K. After drawing a walk in the 4th inning and getting on base he was removed from the game. That is an odd time to remove a regular from the lineup, especially in the second game of a playoff series. Lopez probably hurt himself during his at bat or from a play in the field in the previous inning. No confirmation why he was removed yet, but it will be interesting to see if he plays on Wednesday night.
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).

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Indians sign Tejeda

Robinson Tejeda
The Indians have announced that they have signed free agent right-handed pitcher Robinson Tejeda to a minor league contract with a non-roster invitation to Major League spring training camp.

Tejeda, 29, has pitched in seven Major League seasons with Philadelphia, Texas and Kansas City. Since debuting in 2005 he owns a career Major League record of 23-27 with a 4.42 ERA in 186 games (53 starts), and in 442.0 innings has allowed 397 hits, 246 walks, and has 371 strikeouts. He was with the Royals the last four years and posted a combined ERA of 3.57 (181.1 IP, 132 H, 98 BB, 186 K) in 123 outings. He posted consecutive seasons with a 3.54 ERA in 2009 and 2010 and his .167 (43-for-257, 4 HR) average against in 2009 was the third lowest total in MLB among pitchers with at least 70.0 innings pitched. His 10.63 K/9 that same season (73.2 IP, 87 K) was the 2nd best mark in the history of the Royals franchise. In his career right-handed batters own a batting average of .221 (190-for-861).

Tejeda split 2011 between Kansas City and Triple-A Omaha and spent five weeks on the disabled list in April and May with right shoulder inflammation. In nine relief outings with the Royals he posted an ERA of 6.14 (7.1 IP, 12 H) before finishing the season healthy at Omaha where he posted an ERA of 3.80 (31 G, 45.0 IP, 40 H, 43 K).

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).

2012 Indians Rule 5 Draft Eligibles

Jason Knapp
Here is a listing of the Cleveland Indians minor league players eligible for the 2012 Rule 5 Draft on December 6, 2012 in Nashville, TN.  For future reference, this listing is linked in the "Reference" tab along the top just below the header.

Last updated: January 3, 2012

Pitchers:
Adams, Austin
Araujo, Elvis
Berger, Eric
Brach, Brett
Bryson, Rob
Cespedes, Ramon
Colon, Joseph
Cook, Clayton
Dickerson, Dale
Espino, Paolo
Flores, Fernando
Guerrero, Harold
Guilmet, Preston
Haley, Trey
House, T.J.
Hubbard, Antwonie
Jimenez, Daniel
Jimenez, Francisco
Knapp, Jason
Landis, Kyle
Langwell, Matthew
Lee, Chen-Chang
Mahalic, Joey
McFarland, T.J.
Packer, Matt
Perez, Alexander
Price, Bryan
Ramirez, Moisses
Rayl, Mike
Sarianides, Nick
Stowell, Bryce
Sturdevant, Tyler
Valera, Francisco
Wetmore, Kirk
Wright, Steven

Catchers:
Chen, Chun
Childs, Dwight
Monsalve, Alex
Montero, Moises
Nilsson, Mitch
Perez, Roberto
Pickens, Doug

Infielders:
Abraham, Adam
Aguilar, Jesus
Bellows, Kyle
DeGeorge, Dan
Fontanez, Kevin
Frawley, Casey
Goedert, Jared
Gonzalez, Erik
Martinez, Argenis
Mills, Beau
Sanchez, Karexon
Tice, Jeremie
Toole, Justin
Urshela, Giovanny

Outfielders:
Cid, Delvi
Copeland, Ben
Crowe, Trevor
Fedroff, Tim
Greenwell, Bo
Henry, Jordan
Huffman, Chad
Moncrief, Carlos

Follow Tony and the Indians Prospect Insider on Twitter @TonyIPI.

Monday, January 2, 2012

Tribe Happenings: New year, but Indians face same issues

Shin-Soo Choo's poor season actually
helps the Indians chances to keep him.
(Photo: AP)
Some news, notes, and thoughts from my Indians notebook…

The “developmental” label

About this time last year amid contract extension talks between the Indians and his client Shin-Soo Choo, super-agent Scott Boras made what was perceived as a slight when he called the Indians a “developmental team”. His belief was that a team in a rebuilding stage was less of a lure to attract new players to play or to keep players from leaving. This was his roundabout way of saying a long term extension for Choo with the Indians was extremely iffy.

Even though the comment may have been of the backhanded variety, what Boras said about the Indians was exactly right. Whether he implied it or not, the Indians and other small to mid-market teams like them are in a way farm systems for the bigger market teams where the smaller markets feed the good players to the big markets once those players reach or near free agency.

The Indians’ front office often gets slammed for some poor decisions they make, and rightfully so, though I think considering the climate they work in they have had done a solid job. The unfortunate reality is in the last few years they have had to make the tough decision to trade their best players because of a ridiculous financial climate where there is no way a team like the Indians can go toe-to-toe with the big boys in free agency to try and retain their players. They learned this lesson the hard way in the past with the likes of Albert Belle, Manny Ramirez and Jim Thome.

Because of the way the game works today teams like the Indians will continue to be a developmental team for the bigger market teams. Boras was spot on about that. The Indians will have the true stars for five to seven years before they either leave via free agency or are traded before they become free agents. I hate to say it, but that is likely what will happen down the road with any of the current players such as Carlos Santana, Jason Kipnis, Asdrubal Cabrera, Justin Masterson, and so on.

This flies in the face of what I wrote in a column recently of how I think the Indians need to dig deep and find a way to retain their players. I still stand by that belief in that it is the only way to improve attendance because it would help restore faith in a fan base that distrusts the organization immensely. But having said that, I also understand that the Indians are limited in what they can do until this broken system gets fixed somewhere down the line.

Choo is a prime example of how things can change at a moment’s notice and how suddenly a player fits in well with a “developmental team”. Last offseason Boras and Choo had all the bargaining power coming off two straight very good seasons where he hit .300 or higher, had 20 or more homers, 86 or more RBI, and over 20 stolen bases. But fast forward a year later and now the Indians have the bargaining power after Choo struggled through a forgettable 2011 campaign where he was limited to just 85 games because of a hand injury, hit just .259 with 8 homers, 36 RBI and .733 OPS, and got in trouble off the field with a DUI.

As funny as it may sound, but Choo’s subpar season actually helps the Indians’ chances of retaining him long term. It is still a long shot, but now that some warts have been exposed Choo may no longer merit a big long term deal. He still has time the next two seasons to repair and improve his market value to get that mega contract two offseasons from now, but at the moment his drop in value helps the Indians. As a perennial All Star or one of the top players at his position he would be unsignable, but as just a good player with some question marks he suddenly becomes more retainable for the Indians.

Welcome to the new world of Major League Baseball. A world where for the small to mid-market teams they have to hope a player is good but not THAT good in order to keep them.

Not a PR move

There are a lot of skeptics out there that believe the Indians contract offer to outfielder Carlos Beltran was just a token offer in order to look like they are doing something this offseason. That they never intended to sign him and that they got into the contract discussions as nothing more than a public relations move.

First off, the Indians are not about doing things from a spending standpoint as a public relations move. They are an organization that operates in secrecy where they do not make the moves they are working on behind the scenes known to the public. They do not share much of what they are doing with anyone.

Anytime you see the Indians tied to a rumor on a free agent it is almost always coming from the agent, and if it is a rumor about a trade it is very likely coming from the agent again or the other team they are talking to in the trade. Now, they will respond accordingly when asked about a leaked rumor, though usually in a very vague manner or just deny it.

The Beltran interest was not leaked by the Indians as that was the agent doing it in order to create a market for his client. It is Free Agency 101 where the agents use the rumor mill to create interest in their client and thus get them more money. Had the agent not leaked it we probably would have never known the Indians ever made any attempt to sign Beltran. This is the case for several other free agents the Indians have already talked to this offseason that have already signed with other teams or are still free agents.

There are lots of past and present long term offers the Indians have made to players – some very good players from what I have heard - which have yet to see the light of day and probably never will. If the team wanted to use contract offers as a form of public relations, then why not leak any of those?

So with that, the idea that the Beltran negotiations were merely a public relations stunt by the Indians is a bit farfetched. The offers to Josh Willingham and Beltran were legitimate offers to try and bring them to Cleveland on a deal they thought was fair and fit right into the current blueprint of the team. Nothing else. There was no false interest where they had no intention to sign either of them and simply just wanted to get their name in the papers.

Setting the record straight

A lot of people call Indians owner Larry Dolan cheap and wish he would sell the team. His tenure as owner has certainly been a rocky one with lots of fan favorites being lost in free agency or getting traded, and the team has underperformed on the field.

But the cheap comment is something that I think is taken a bit too far. Dolan owns the top five payrolls in franchise history, and going a bit further owns 10 of the top 13 payrolls in franchise history. During former owner Dick Jacobs’ tenure as owner the team eclipsed the $60 million payroll threshold just once, while under Dolan they have been at $60 million or higher seven times.

Dolan is spending more than Jacobs ever did and doing so with less revenue as he does not have the annual playoff revenue stream to pull from, major corporate backing, no Browns, and most importantly a sold out ballpark every day. It is just a different game today than it was 10-15 years ago. The Indians made $40-50 million in payroll go a lot farther in the 90s because the economic landscape of the game had yet to make a seismic shift.

I’ll dig a little deeper into the free agency aspect and contracts the Indians have had under the regimes of Dolan and Jacobs with a feature piece shortly after the New Year, but in a nutshell, from a spending aspect the Indians have really not been any different now than they were 10-15 years ago. What has changed is everything around the Indians with the local economy and then the rapidly growing financial disparity in the game between the big market teams and everyone else.

Right-handed options

The offseason has now pushed into January and there is less than eight weeks until pitchers and catchers report for spring training. With time running out on the offseason the Indians still have a glaring need for right-handed bats.

They are expected to address that need before the start of the season with a trade or free agent pickup, but at the moment their internal options at first base or as a right-handed bat off the bench are thin with just Shelley Duncan, Matt LaPorta, Jose Lopez, Aaron Cunningham, Thomas Neal and Jared Goedert.

The way things stand right now the Indians would probably have to go with a Duncan and Carlos Santana platoon at first base if the season started today. That may not be a bad thing, but it is not the preferred way to go about it for next season as Santana is still more valuable to the team behind the plate and Duncan is more valuable as a right-handed bat off the bench and not used regularly.

Cunningham is a new player the Indians acquired in a trade a few weeks ago, but his role appears limited as a fourth outfielder. Lopez probably will not make the team unless an injury crops up in spring training, and even so he is not an option to play every day.

LaPorta could still factor into things if injuries occur, but right now the best thing for him is to probably have him spend the first two or three months of the season at Triple-A Columbus to get him on track. Goedert and Neal will also likely start the year in Columbus, though of all the right-handed hitting options listed Neal is probably the only one who could someday be an everyday option.

The Indians are very limited with their internal alternatives to fill not only their right-handed bat need but their first base void as well. All of the alternatives are role players at the moment and they need to find someone they can plug in as a stop gap for at least the 2012 season.

I still say someone like Derrek Lee would be an ideal fit at first base because of the contract he could be signed to and the value he brings in leadership, his defense, and a bat that is in decline but still productive.

Winter ball update

Things are winding down in winter ball as the regular season in Venezuela wrapped up on Friday night. The only regular season action remaining is out in Puerto Rico, Colombia, and Australia, while the Dominican Republic and Venezuela are now into their postseasons.

Fausto Carmona struggled in his second offseason outing out in the Dominican Republic on Wednesday. He pitched four innings and allowed two runs on five hits, two walks and had two wild pitches. He worked around the seven baserunners and wild pitches by limiting the damage to two runs, but it was a typical Carmona outing. So far this offseason his performance in just two games has been strikingly similar to his inconsistent 2011 season.

Asdrubal Cabrera’s offseason is done after his team was eliminated from the playoffs. He finished up his time in Venezuela hitting .246 with two homers, 10 RBI and .771 OPS in 17 games. He left the game on Thursday in the 4th inning and did not play in his team’s season finale on Friday, so he apparently suffered some kind of injury, though from what I have heard he is okay.

First base prospect Jesus Aguilar’s offseason is also finished. He had a very nice offseason showing where in 38 combined games between the Arizona Fall League and Venezuela he hit .305 with six homers, 23 RBI, .944 OPS. The power is no doubt there, but what really shined for him this offseason was his improved plate discipline where he drew walks at a much higher rate yet his power numbers at the plate were not affected.

Some other performances of note in winter ball this offseason: Ezequiel Carrera (.270, 2 HR, 13 RBI), Jose Lopez (.310, 5 HR, 24 RBI), Felix Pie (.273, 4 HR, 21 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).

Final: 2011 Released Players

Here is the final listing of the players in the Cleveland Indians minor league system that were released over the course of the 2011 calendar year. This listing can be found in the "Transactions" section under the site header for future reference.

Note: This is from info I have received throughout the year from the Indians and their affiliates. Not all releases are made public or are mentioned, but close to all (if not all) are included below.

Last updated: December 31, 2011

2011 Released Players

Omar Aguilar (RHP)
Juan Aponte (1B/C)
Trent Baker (OF)
Yan Caripa (RHP)
Ben Carlson (1B)
Frangy Colon (RHP)
Matthew Cusick (2B)
Dan DeGeorge (INF)
Richard Delgado (INF)
Jesse English (LHP)
Joel Fledi (OF)
Fernando Flores (RHP)*
Greg Folgia (OF)*
Fermin Galvez (1B)
Ryan Gardner (RHP)
Casey Gaynor (RHP)
Justin Germano (RHP)
J.D. Goryl (RHP)
Connor Graham (RHP)
Brian Grening (RHP)
Abel Guerrero (LHP)
Wes Hodges (1B)
Jeremy Johnson (RHP)
Alex Kaminsky (RHP)
Chris Kersten (1B)
Andrew Kinney (1B)*
Nick Kirk (LHP)
Matt Lawson (INF)*
Ernesto Leon (RHP)
Juan Marte (OF)
Doug Mathis (RHP)
Preston Mattingly (OF)
Alexander Morales (RHP)
Ryan Morris (LHP)
Oswell Munoz (RHP)
Taka Nakamura (RHP)
Vidal Nuno (LHP)
Enrique Pacheco (RHP)
Orlando Pereira (RHP)
Jose Polanco (RHP)
Julio Ramirez (RHP)
Luis Ramirez (OF)
Nate Recknagel (1B)
Anthony Reyes (RHP)
Alejandro Rivas (RHP)
Ron Rivas (SS)
Dave Roberts (RHP)
Kevin Rucker (OF)
Amiro Santana (RHP)
Diego Seastrunk (C)*
Andrew Shive (RHP)
Jason Smit (OF)*
Kyle Smith (INF)*
Kyle C. Smith (RHP)
Matt Speake (RHP)
Joel Torres (OF)
Travis Turek (RHP)*
Alejandro Villa (LHP)

*- Voluntarily retired

Sunday, January 1, 2012

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year to all the fans, players, and staff of the Cleveland Indians!

The Indians definitely made some headway with a great, exciting start to their 2011 season before fading later in the year, but have set a good foundation to build upon for possible success in 2012 and beyond.

With the flip of the calendar to a new year the Indians have a blank canvas to work from this coming season. With that comes lots of new hopes and dreams, and considering the Indians are expected to contend in 2012 those hopes will be pretty high.

With a new season also means another year to follow along with the IPI as we report and dissect all the developments with the Cleveland Indians from the minors to the big leagues. That's part of the fun of a site dedicated not only to the big league team but the minor league affiliates as well as there are lots of highs and lows all season and a variety of things to follow, so it makes for a fun roller coaster ride all year.

From a personal standpoint, I know I am very happy to kiss 2011 good-bye. It was a rough one with the cancer diagnosis and then spending nearly two-thirds of the year limited with post-surgery issues that only in the last week have finally just cleared up. So 2012 could not come any sooner for me! With the change to the new year and officially the beginning of a new season of Indians baseball I have some big news to (finally) announce later this month. More on that later.

In the meantime enjoy the day, have fun with your families, and watch some football. For those that have children, hug them a little tighter, tell them you love them, and just laugh and play with them. Happy New Year everyone!

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).