Indians trade Eric Berger to Houston

Written by Mike Melaragno on .

The Cleveland Indians traded AA starting pitcher, Eric Berger (he of the infamous mustache) to Houston today in exchange for catcher Chris Wallace. This was a move that was made in response to the lack of catching depth in Akron and Columbus due to the injuries to Lou Marson (neck), Carlos Santana (thumb) and  Alex Laviski (toe).

According to the Houston Astros media guide, Chris Wallace grew up in the Houston area and attended the University of Houston. The Astros drafted him in the 16th round of the 2010 draft. He's never been considered much of a prospect, snagging the 30th place (according to Baseball America) in the organization going into 2012. Whenever you are drafted that late, the odds are against you of becoming a viable everyday player.

As a power-hitting catcher in the Houston system, Wallace produced at a decent .251/.330/.397 level in 2012, mainly at AA Corpus Christi. According to scouts, he strikes out too much, and his upside isn't high. As a result, he was passed on the Houston depth chart by catching prospect Carlos Perez and thus making him available. Still, Wallace looks like a good piece of a typical AL lineup, even if it's as a backup or twice-weekly role from the bench. He can also play a little first base, which would give Terry Francona even more flexibility on defense.

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Series Preview: Red Sox at Indians 4/16-18

Written by Mike Melaragno on .

Boston Red Sox (8-4) at Cleveland Indians (5-6)

Series 5, Games 12, 13 and 14
Progressive Field (2012): 0.899*, Pitchers park. 

Series Overview
The Red Sox make their only trip to Cleveland for 2013. It should be a fun series, as the Red Sox seemed to have re-tooled after last season. A new manager and a revamped bullpen can do wonders for any organization...

Closer Joel Hanrahan is day to day because of a sore right hamstring that may be contributing to throwing off his mechanics on the hill, according to new manager John Farrell. Expect Andrew Bailey to receive the call to save out a game or two. It has been 11 days since rookie phenom Jackie Bradley Jr. had his last hit, a second-inning single in the Rogers Centre off Blue Jays pitcher Josh Johnson. Entering Tuesday’s game, Bradley has gone hitless in 20 at-bats since then, his average falling to .097 (3 for 31).  According to ESPN Stats and Info, only four American League players (25 plate appearances or more) have a lower average.
 

The weather looks okay for the series. I do not expect any rain-outs.

Tuesday, April 16 7:05 EDT (STO)
Ubaldo Jimenez (0-1, 6.97 ERA)  vs. Felix Doubront (L) (0-0, 5.40 ERA)

According to scouts and videos I have watched via youtube, Doubront has a deceptive over-hand delivery. He has a three-pitch mix that includes a fastball in the 91-93 mph range. The pitch runs in on left-handed batters therefore breaks a lot of bats. His change-up is above-average with a chance to be a good major league pitch. He throws is in the low-80s and gets good downward action. He also flashes a high-70s curve. This pitch still needs work but could become average.

Wednesday, April 17, 7:05EDT (STO)
Justin Masterson (3-0, 0.41 ERA) vs. Alfredo Aceves (0-0, 6.75 ERA)

Aceves, in the rotation for an injured John Lackey (biceps), pitched effectively enough in his last start to earn a win. It was Aceves' first start since June of 2011 and it was a solid outing for him. Lackey will miss at least a couple of starts, so Aceves will continue to occupy his spot in the rotation. Aceves is an interesting guy, as addressed here.

Masterson should be the AL Pitcher of the Month, as his 0.41 ERA is very impressive. A bad matchup for Masterson will be Will Middlebrooks, as the Boston third baseman is very good at hitting sinkers.

Thursday, April 18, 7:05EDT (STO)
Zach McAllister (1-1, 2.19 ERA) vs. Jon Lester (L) (2-0, 1.42 ERA)

Thus far in 2013, Lester, much like the Indians, has already outdueled and beaten some former Cy Young Award winners: CC Sabathia, R.A. Dickey, and David Price who he beat last Saturday in a duel at Fenway Park, which Red Sox fans were treated to a 2-1 Red Sox win in 10 innings. The southpaw lowered his ERA to 1.42, which is more than seven runs lower than it was after three starts in that 2010 run when Lester himself finished fourth in the CY Young award race. According to ESPN Stats and Info, Lester has thrown his cutter 31 percent of the time this season, his highest rate in the last five seasons. Hitters are slugging .250 off Lester's cutter, the lowest since the aforementioned 2010 season.
 
Nick Swisher is hitting .326/.429/.587 with two homeruns and six doubles in 46 at-bats against Lester.

 

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Chicago White Sox Wrap-Up 4/12-14

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

Game 1: 4/12 - Chicago White Sox 0 - Cleveland Indians 1
Player of the Game: Justin Masterson (2), 10.44 POG Score
The Indians started the series off strong with a complete game shut out by Justin Masterson, who is now 3-0 with just a single run allowed this year. There was little offense by either side (just 8 total hits by both teams), but the Indians were able to group two of those together in the ninth inning for an exciting walk off win. Michael Bourn hit a one out double and Nick Swisher singled him in from third with two outs to win the game.

Game 2: 4/13 - Chicago White Sox 4 - Cleveland Indians 9
Player of the Game: Nick Swisher (2), 7.03
The bats came out a day after the two Central Division rivals combined to score just a single run. The Indians lead the scoring with three home runs (Yan Gomes, Mark Reynolds and Nick Swisher). Starting pitcher, Zach McAllister was strong as well, giving up just a single earned run that crossed the plate after reliever Bryan Shaw gave up a home run to Alejandro De Aza. The win moved the Indians to .500 on the year

Game 3: 4/14 - Chicago White Sox 3 - Cleveland Indians 1
Player of the Game: Michael Bourn (1), 3.80
The Indians won the series, but lost the finale as the bats went silent yet again. Michael Bourn lead off the game with a home run, but the Indians were kept off the boards from then on. Brett Myers threw his best game by far in 2013. He allowed just two runs on a home run to give up the lead in the sixth inning. Vinnie Pestano then failed for the first time of the year, giving up a solo home run to Alejandro De Aza (remember him?) for his first run allowed of the year.

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Series Preview: White Sox at Indians 4/12-14

Written by Mike Melaragno on .

Chicago White Sox (4-5) at Cleveland Indians (3-5)
Series 4, Games 11, 12 and 13
Progressive Field (2012): 0.899, Pitchers park.

Series Overview
In my opinion, the White Sox are the best team in the central division this season. I have taken some heat for declaring this as the Tigers, on paper, seem to be the behemoth of the American League. From top to bottom, the White Sox have the ingredients to make the playoffs and go deep in October. Chris Sale, who will throw Saturday, knows how to truly pitch, even when tired.  Now, if he could actually be strong enough to maintain his best stuff for a full season, he’ll be in annual Cy Young conversations. Paul Konerko continues to be as smart a power hitter as you’ll find, with an undervalued great, short swing. With a short compact swing, it is unlikely he will have a regression year. Alex Rios played hard, attentive, composed and smart last season. He also possesses all the athletic skills to continue that upward track.  Jake Peavy stayed healthy enough to earn trust as a solid number two starter. Adam Dunn rebounded last season to reach the acceptable bottom performance levels of a three true outcome hitter, and I bet he’ll stay just about there again. Much like the Indians, their bullpen is pretty stacked.  It’s a very strong part of the White Sox.  If Jesse Crain or Matt Thornton fail in a defined 8th inning role, manager Robin Ventura is not afraid to try a Matt Lindstrom, or a Donnie Veal. Nate Jones can throw as well and Hector Santiago as a long reliever is a luxury.
The White Sox are a team that is poised and built to win the world series this season. A good showing from the Indians this series will boost my confidence level in the team moving forward.
The weather looks a little better this weekend although still very cool, damp, and mushy. We should get all three games in though.

Friday, April 12, 7:05 EDT (STO)
Justin Masterson (2-0, 0.69 ERA)  vs. Jose Quintana (L) (0-0, 11.25 ERA)

Masterson looks like the ace everybody thought he would be this season through his first two starts. The only concern has been his command problems, particularly with his fastball. Considering his WHIP in 2012 was a hefty 1.45, the seven walks so far this season are something to keep an eye on. Signed as a six-year minor league free agent last winter, Quintana was very good in a nine-start, 2.77-ERA, 1.17-WHIP performance in for Double-A Birmingham. This earned him a trip to The Show last May, where he continued his dominance to the tune of a  1.25 ERA in his first eight appearances (six of which were starts) into a more permanent rotation spot once John Danks was lost for the year. Quintana relies upon command to succeed as his stats show, thrived to a 2.04 ERA behind a 3.70 strikeout-to-walk ratio before the All-Star break, but slipped to 5.01 when his K-to-walk rate was 1.38 after it. He is a pitcher who must hit his spots but with the free-swinging Indians, he could certainly give them headaches.

Saturday, April 13, 4:05EDT (STO)
Ubaldo Jimenez (0-1, 6.97 ERA) vs. Chris Sale (L) (1-0, 1.84 ERA)

Sale's command did not include its typical pinpoint control in his last start against the Mariners, as he served up a two-run homer in the first inning off the hot bat of Mike Morse, marking his first extra-base hit allowed of the year.  A former member of the back-end of the bullpen, Sale's arsenal seemed suitable to starting: His fastball still averaged 91.7 mph and could touch 97, his slider remained as filthy as ever, and he leaned more on his change-up to handle the larger share of right-handed hitters he faced. It's that skill set which presents him an excellent chance at a repeating as a dominate starter, even an ace, as a starter this season.
 
Sunday, April 14, 1:05EDT (STO)
Brett Myers (0-1, 12.19 ERA) vs. Jake Peavy (1-1, 5.56 ERA)
 

Myers was supposed to start last Wednesday's game, but the Indians opted to just use him to eat innings Tuesday, sparing the bullpen which is a key element in Terry Francona's managerial philosophy. He has now surrendered 14 earned runs over 10.1 innings this season. Myers pitched the final 5.1 innings of Tuesday night's game, giving up seven earned runs on 11 hits, after starter Carlos Carrasco got pounded for seven earned runs before being ejected after throwing at Kevin Youkilis in the fourth inning. Peavy's previous start this season was awful, giving up six earned runs on nine hits and one walk while striking out seven over 5.1 innings Tuesday against the Nationals as he was facing perhaps the most dangerous lineup in baseball. This start has skewed his overall numbers slightly, as his first start of the season was excellent.  Look for him to bounce back Sunday against the Indians as no current Indians batter has had much success against him, with the exception being Jason Kipnis who has two home-runs off Peavy in only eight at-bats.

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It's a Kipnystery!

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

Going into the season, Jason Kipnis was expected to be one of the most important players in the Indians' offense, a table setter, integral to the success of the entire lineup. He earned the job as the number three hitter after a fantastic 2012 season that saw him bat .257/.335/.379 in his first full Major League season. In general, it was expected that with another year of seasoning and playing in an improved offense those numbers would improve as he started to hit his expected potential. Instead, over the first week of the season he has struggled with a line of .138/.161/.251. 

He has played in 7 of the Indians first 8 games and was batting third until the last game against New York, when he switched places with Asdrubal Cabrera and batted second. It is hard to pinpoint exactly where his problem is stemming from. He doesn't seem to be swinging at bad pitches, but he has walked just once in the first week and struck out ten times.  When he has made contact, he has shown some power. Three of his four hits are doubles, two of which were deep to the outfield and he has flown out near the wall on multiple occasions, robbed by some good defensive plays.

It's possible his struggles have been mostly to do with bad luck like that. His BABIP (Batting average on balls in play) is a paltry .200 (compared to a career rate of .292), despite keeping a line drive rate around 20%, the same as his career before this year. He also has a perfect Ground Ball/Fly Ball ratio of 1.00, meaning he hasn't changed his batting style thinking he was a power hitter and flying out to the outfield constantly. He also has grounded out into just a single double play, so he hasn't been costing the Indians a lot of extra outs on his ground balls.

All things considered, there doesn't seem to be much to worry about with Kipnis. His defense has been stellar to this point and he is one of the few infielders to avoid the error bug to this point. His all important line drive rate is staying consistent. He has likely just been unlucky, hitting the ball right at people, something that will certainly even out in time. His three doubles (second on the team) are proof that his power is still there. Kipnis did change his swing a little in the offseason, but he is still hitting the ball at the same ratios as past seasons. He will likely turn things around shortly as long as he continues to play the same way he is now. The worst thing he could do now is to press and allow his struggles with the bat to effect his glove, or to start swinging at pitches outside the strike zone because he isn't hitting safely with what he's swinging at right now. He is a young player and slumps are magnified at the beginning of the season. An athletic, scrappy player like Jason Kipnis will always end up succeeding in the long run.

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4/9 Game Recap: Yankees 14 - Indians 1

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

Roster Updates: With injuries to both Lou Marson (15 Day DL, cervical [neck] strain) and Carlos Santana (DTD, left thumb contusion), the Indians have decided not to bring Jason Giambi off the DL just yet, instead adding both Yan Gomes and Omir Santos to the 25 man roster. This brings the number of Indians on the active roster to 25 as Gomes will be the starting catcher for the next few days with Santos the back-up.

Player of the Game

It seems like nobody wants to win this award anymore, but it has to go to someone. Today, Asdubal Cabrera hit his second solo home run of the season in a 1-3 effort, knocking in and scoring the only run of the game. For this, he wins his first Player of the Game of 2013 with a score of 3.07.

Feathers Up

Carlos Carrasco made his first start in over a year and showed he is still the same type of pitcher. He was very successfully in inducing ground balls early on. Poor defense hurt him, but he was able to induce double plays in each of the first two innings to cover for the Indians two errors (one of which was made by Carrasco himself).

In an interesting move, Terry Francona decided to use tomorrow's scheduled starter, Brett Myers, rather than multiple relief pitchers to throw the last 6+ innings. The move made sense as the Indians had moved back the rotation to make a place for Carrasco, so this was Myers day to pitch anyway. Because of that, Zach McAllister will be able to pitch tomorrow with normal rest. It also took a game that was already lost and made the best of it, wasting just two pitchers instead of four or more. Wasting Myers in a loss isn't much of a loss in itself as he has already given up 11 extra base hits and 14 runs in his 10+ innings pitched.

Feathers Down

The Indians had a greatly reduced lineup on the field tonight from a combination of the catcher injuries and a left hander on the mound. Michael Bourn was given his first game off of the year and Lonnie Chisenhall was held out as well. Combine that with an offense that has been spotty so far this year and you have a recipe for a low scoring offense.

Going into the series if there was one hitter the Indians didn't want to beat them, it was Robinson Cano. Despite very little offense around him, the Indians were unable to pitch around him in either of the first two games. Cano hit his third home run of the series against Carrasco today.

Fresh off a suspension he earned two years ago, Carrasco hit Kevin Youkilis with a pitch immediately after Cano's home run. The hit was obviously intentional, so he was ejected without warning. Of course Carrasco had already given up seven runs, so maybe the home plate umpire was just trying to help Terry Francona out. Brett Myers (tomorrow's projected starter) was needed to come in for relief, throwing the Indians rotation into flux and possibly shortening the roster if he gets suspended again.

Final Score: Cleveland Indians 1 - New York Yankees 14

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4/8 Post Game: Yankees 11 - Indians 6

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

Player of the Game

With one at bat, Mike Aviles took the Player of the Game award from this miserable baseball game. As a late game defensive replacement, Aviles got one chance and hit a two run home run for a score of 4.50. Ubaldo Jimenez had the second worst game of any Indian this year with a final score of -7.63 for his 6 runs allowed in 4.1 innings.

Feathers Up

The Indians took advantage of some lucky bounces and good base running to come back and tie the game in the first inning after falling behind by three. Asdrubal Cabrera was safe on a ball that hit second base, sending Michael Bourne to third (he walked to lead off the inning), then Bourne scored on a Jason Kipnis sacrifice fly. Nick Swisher had a solid single to left, followed by a Michael Brantley infield single that got lost between first and second. Swisher scored the final run of the inning on a Mark Reynolds sacrifice fly.

Carlos Santana walked twice and singled in his first three at bats today, leading him to reach safely in eight straight at bats going back to yesterday afternoon. In that span he hit three singles, two doubles, a home run, walked twice, knocked in three and scored three times. His streak was ended with a strike out in the eigth inning.

Feathers Down

Travis Hafner came back to Cleveland today, making his first appearance at Progressive field as a member of the visiting team. He made he presence felt during the game as well, hitting a three run home run to give the Yankees the lead in the first inning (his 100th career home run in Cleveland). He later hit a single to knock in the Yankees fourth run as well.

This may become a theme all season with Ubaldo Jimenez, but as always when he can't throw strikes early in the count, he always gets beaten with his fastball. The fact is that 90 MPH isn't blowing anyone away, so when a batter knows it is coming, they hit it far. This was the case with Hafner's home run and will continue to be the case until Jimenez starts throwing more strikes to lead off the at bat.

Jimenez continued another trend as well and was terrible at controlling the run game. Vernon Wells stole a base in the first and Carlos Santana had no chance of throwing him out, although he was ultimately stranded at the end of the inning. The steal that hurt was the catcher, Chris Stewart, taking second with two outs in the fourth inning. Jimenez never attempted to keep Stewart on first and he was safe at second before Santana had a chance to even throw the ball. He then scored on a bloop single to center by Brett Gardner.

Carlos Santana was removed from the game in the ninth inning after being hit on the wrist by a pitch while catching. The Indians were already a man short as they are waiting for Jason Giambi to return from the disabled list tomorrow. Lou Marson came into the game, despite having a neck injury that occured during the Rays series.

Final Score: Cleveland Indians 6 - New York Yankees 11

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Burning River Radio Episode 4

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

Joe and Mike recorded another episode of Burning River Radio for your listening pleasure:

On this episode they discuss the Indians first week of baseball, including Ubaldo Jimenez's first start, Mark Reynolds power streak and Trevor Bauer's Indians debut. There is also an in depth discussion on the difference a manager can make in the game and how to quantify it. The show finishes up with a thorough trashing of the New York Yankees, just in time for the Indians home opener.

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Series Preview: Yankees at Indians 4/8-11

Written by Mike Melaragno on .

New York Yankees (2-4) at Cleveland Indians (3-3

Series 3, Games 7, 8, 9 and 10
Progressive Field (2012): 0.899*, Pitchers park.
*Park Factor compares the rate of stats at home vs. the rate of stats on the road. A rate higher than 1.000 favors the hitter. Below 1.000 favors the pitcher.

Series Overview
 
The New York Yankees help open up Progressive Field for the first time this season for a four game series. However, these are not the typical Yankees we are used to fearing. Alex Rodriguez, Curtis Granderson and Mark Teixeira will all miss an extended period of time due to injuries. For at least a little more than a month, the Yankees are going to have a lot of money and a lot of star power on the disabled list, something the organization has not had to deal with a lot. The team still stands to earn a playoff birth, as all three of these players will return this season. Thankfully, it will not be this week in Cleveland.

It would be easy to dismiss this as an argument that the Yankees are going to be okay because they’re the Yankees. Given how often the Yankees have wound up playing in October, one now expects them to be there, but that isn’t the main point. The Yankees won’t be okay because they’re the Yankees; the Yankees look like they’ll be okay because they still have quality players, and neither Granderson nor Teixeira should be out all season long.
 
It was interesting to see Ben Francisco crack the Yankees opening day lineup at DH when the Indians did not have room for him on their roster. With Travis Hafner and Francisco on the Yankee roster, its nice to be able to say to a Yankee fan "...the Yankees are the triple-A team for the Indians!" 
Sort of.
The weather for this series looks awful, a cold rain every night.
 
Monday, April 8, 4:05 EDT (STO, WKYC, MLBN)
Ubaldo Jimenez (0-0, 1.50 ERA)  vs. Hiroki Kuroda (0-1, 13.50 ERA)

In his first start of the season, Kuroda suffered a bruised right middle finger after he was hit by a line drive through the middle hit by Shane Victorino in the second inning of a 7-4 loss to the Red Sox. Kuroda faced three more batters, hitting two of them and walking the third, before he was removed from the game. He threw 36 pitches in a bullpen session on Friday and said he was "...not 100%." But he will make the start, so we'll see. The current Indians have not had a lot of success against Kuroda; Michael Bourne and Mark Reynolds have the most at-bats (26) and are .192/.192/.231 and .192/.222/.308 respectively. Michael Brantley does have a home-run against him.

Tuesday, April 9, 7:05EDT (STO)
Carlos Carrasco (0-0, 0.00 ERA) vs. Andy Pettitte (L) (1-0, 1.13 ERA)

The consensus among most fans and writers was that Carrasco would head to Columbus after serving a six-game suspension to start the season, but with the injury to Scott Kazmir, Carrasco will step in to make his first big league start since 2011. Carrasco had a decent spring, posting a 6.00 ERA and a 6.5 K/9 in five games (four starts) this spring. From what we have seen of him in the majors, Carrasco has improved his control/command from when he pitched in the minors. He only had one season (2010) when his BB/9 was below three when had at least ten starts in the minors. Carrasco has already had two seasons with a BB/9 below three since reaching the majors. Let's hope that trend continues. He missed the entire 2012 campaign recovering from September 2011 Tommy John surgery.
 
Wednesday, April 10, 7:05EDT (STO, ESPN 2)
Brett Myers (0-1, 12.60 ERA) vs. Ivan Nova (0-1, 7.71 ERA)
 
Myer's debut with the Indians did not go exactly as he had planned; he allowed four homers and failed to record a strikeout. Myers will obviously have to turn things around after a mediocre spring and bad first start. Ivan Nova's curveball and slider are among the league's best. According to ESPN Stats and Info, opponents batted just .200 against them last season and struck out 130 times, the third-largest total in baseball. He did not face the Indians last year, and most hitters on the roster do not have many at-bats against him. Carlos Santana has hit a HR against him.
 
Thursday, April 11, 7:05pmEDT (STO, MLBN)
Zach McAllister (0-1, 3.00 ERA) vs. Phil Hughes (0-1, 6.75 ERA)

McAllister looked good Friday night in Tampa despite getting the loss. He threw 66 strikes in 103 pitches and did not walk a batter over six innings. Third baseman Mike Aviles had a two out error on a grounder in the fifth which led to the pair of unearned runs. But McAllister came back for a perfect sixth to close out his evening. Hughes is an extreme fly-ball pitcher, with his 50.8 percent rate in 2012 and 48.9 percent rate from 2010 to 2012 combined both being the highest in baseball. Hopefully, the wind is blowing out towards right.
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4/7 Game Recap: Indians 13 - Rays 0

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

Roster Update: Prior to today's game, last night's starter, Trevor Bauer was sent back down to AAA Columbus. He was not going to pitch another game this time around for the Indians, so sending him down now limits his days on the active roster to one, keeping him under Indians control for a longer time. In related news, Carlos Carrasco's suspension ended last night after it was reduced to five games from six. He is eligible to play at any point, but isn't scheduled to start until Tuesday. The Indians roster currently stands at 24 and with Lou Marson day-to-day, it is essentially 23. It is strange that the Indians didn't recall either Yan Gomes or Chun Chen as a reserve catcher for the next few days until Jason Giambi is added to the roster on Tuesday.

Player of the Game

What a difference a day makes. Last night, Nick Swisher took the Player of the Game with a score of 0.41. Today, everyone who played, except Swisher, beat that score. There were really only three players competing for today's award when all was said and done and Mark Reynolds beat out all comers. In five at bats, walked, hit a double and mashed two home runs. His 4 RBI and 3 runs scored helped him to a POG score of 10.26. Justin Masterson threw 7 innings (the most by any Indians starter this year) of shut out baseball, striking out eight and earning the win, but finished with a POG score of just 9.44. His score was the second best of any Indians player this year, but wasn't good enough for the award today. Carlos Santana came in third with the third highest score of the year, 9.33 with his personal record five hit game.

Feathers Up

It took six games, but Michael Bourn stole his first base as an Indian, taking third in the first inning after doubling off David Price. Bourn got a great jump and stole the base without a throw. Bourn also hit his first home run as an Indian late in the game, although he is not expected to that as often.

Mark Reynolds has done exactly what the Indians signed him to do as he hit his third home run of the season today against Cy Young pitcher, David Price. The three run shot went out to straight center, 404 feet from home plate. Later, in the top of the seventh, Reynolds hit his fourth home run of the year off Kyle Farnsworth, the first hit and run given up by Farnsworth this year. His four home runs would be more impressive had Will Middlebrooks not hit three today alone.

The offense as a whole was on fire today, making the last two shut outs look like a mockery. Carlos Santana was in the thick of everything today as he went 5-5 with two doubles and a home run, raising his batting average to .500 on the year. In addition to his and Reynolds' great games, Lonnie Chisenhall hit his first home run of the year, a three run shot in the fifth inning. Overall, four different batters scored twice including both reserve players who started today, Mike Aviles and Ryan Raburn. Every batter (except Nick Swisher) reached base at least once and six batters had multi-hit days.

Justin Masterson had great results in his Opening Day start, recording a win in six innings against Toronto, but he looked much more dominant today against the Rays. He did a much better job throwing his fastball for strikes and he was getting a huge break on his slider. In this game he threw one more inning, struck out three more batters and most importantly, walked one less. He also had less hitters counts, leading to fewer hits and one less run scored.

Almost as impressive as scoring 8 runs off Price, the Indians scored their final two runs against last year's top closer, Fernando Rodney. Reynolds hit a double in his last at bat and Santana followed with his fifth hit and second home run of the year. Chisenhall ended Rodney's day with another extra base hit into the left field gap.

The Indians were not just the only team to face both of the previous years Cy Young Award winners in the first week of the season, they were the first team to beat both of those pitchers.

Feathers Down

I brought it up many times last year and will say it again. If a player is not good enough to be in the starting lineup, he can't be good enough to bat third when he does play. Today, Ryan Raburn started in left field in an effort to get an extra right handed bat in the lineup and batted in Jason Kipnis' normal three hole. Raburn probably shouldn't have made the team at all, and definitely shouldn't be batting in the top half of the lineup.

Even though it was not necessary for the win, it would have been nice to see Justin Masterson get a chance to pitch a complete game. Complete game shut outs are almost non-existent for the Tribe now, despite a long history full of them. Even chances are rare, so when a starter gets through the 7th inning without allowing a run, he needs to take advantage of it.

Final Score: Cleveland Indians 13 - Tampa Bay Rays 0

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