Indians Contracts Going into 2013

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

Looking forward to next year, the majority of the players will likely be returning through various states of team control. These break down into a couple of categories, with most players being either in their arbitration years or earlier in their careers. Every player currently on the 40 man roster and those on the DL/restricted list are mentioned below.

Pre-Arbitration

Michael Brantley (1), Vinnie Pestano (2), Lonnie Chisenhall (3), David Huff (4), Jason Donald (5), Jeanmar Gomez (6), Jason Kipnis (7), Cody Allen (8), Lars Anderson (9), Scott Barnes (10), Russ Canzler (11), Ezequiel Carrera (12), Cord Phelps (13), Juan Diaz (14), Chris Seddon (15), Frank Herrmann (16), Corey Kluber (17), Zach McAllister (18), Scott Maine (19), Thomas Neal (20), Vinny Rottino (21), Danny Salazar (22), Fabio Martinez (23), Carlos Carrasco (60 Day DL), Nick Hagadone (MiLB Restricted) and Josh Tomlin (60 Day DL) will all be back for 2013 assuming they don't get released or traded prior with the exception of Tomlin who will miss the entire season after Tommy John surgery. 

Arb 1

Tony Sipp (24), Brent Lillibridge (25), Lou Marson (26), Esmil Rogers (27) and Matt LaPorta (28) are all going into their first years of arbitration. 

Arb 2

Chris Perez (29), Justin Masterson (30) and Jack Hannahan (31) are going into their second arbitration seasons.

Arb 3

Shin-Soo Choo (32), Kevin Slowey (33) and Joe Smith (34) are all entering their final years of arbitration. Rafael Perez (60 Day DL) is entering his fourth year of arbitration after missing almost all of 2012 with injury.

Signed through 2013

Asdrubal Cabrera (35) and Carlos Santana (36) are the only two players with guaranteed contracts going through next year. Both are a steal for their level of production and show the value of signing young players to long term contracts. Santana will make $556,000 while Cabrera will pull in $6.5M.

Options

Travis Hafner (37), Roberto Hernandez (38) and Ubaldo Jimenez (39) each have options of varying values. Hafner's is a $13M option with a $2.5M buyout, making it a net difference of $11.5M for the Indians to keep him. Jiminez has a $5.75M option with a $1M buyout (net of $4.75M), while Hernandez has a $6M option with no buyout.

Free Agents

Grady Sizemore (60 Day DL) and Casey Kotchman (40) are the only free agents that have the option of leaving the Indians under their own free will going into 2013.

This article is mostly meant as a reference point and primer for future articles. 

BRB Team Prediction Review

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

Prior to the season starting, the writers at Burning River Baseball made some bold predictions of what would happen during the Indians season. We also made predictions for all of baseball that will be reviewed after the World Series.

Team Leaders Joe Jen Actual
Batting Average Jason Kipnis Asdrubal Cabrera Michael Brantley - .288
Home Runs Carlos Santana Carlos Santana Carlos Santana - 18
RBI Travis Hafner Shin-Soo Choo Santana/Kipnis - 76
Wins Justin Masterson Justin Masterson Justin Masterson - 11
Strikeouts Justin Masterson Ubaldo Jimenez Justin Masterson - 159
ERA Josh Tomlin Justin Masterson Justin Masterson - 4.93




Team Awards Joe Jen Actual
MVP Shin-Soo Choo Shin-Soo Choo Jason Kipnis
Rookie of the Year Nick Hagadone Zach McAllister Zach McAllister
Comeback Player Trevor Crowe Travis Hafner Shin-Soo Choo

The inaccuracy of the predictions has a lot more to do with Indians players not meeting expectations than bad guesses. Going line by line, Kipnis and Cabrera were two of the five players who qualified for the batting title and finished 3rd and 4th in that category among qualifiers. Santana performed as expected by leading the team in home runs for the second season in a row, but still underperformed. Hafner completely disappointed this year, but Choo came in fourth in RBI, just 9 behind the leaders and Cabrera.

Like Santana taking the home run title, Masterson took all three of the pitching triple crown stats, but was very unimpressive in doing so. Only two Tribe pitchers qualified for the ERA title and both were terrible. The Jimenez pick for strike out leader was not far off as he finished just 16 back from Masterson and was the only other pitcher to qualify with at least 162 innings pitched. Tomlin ended up with the highest ERA (6.36) of all starting pitchers despite leading the team in ERA in 2011.

The only correct prediction in the Burning River Awards section was Jen's pick of McAllister for Rookie of the Year. The picks of Choo were as close as can be with Kipnis ending the season in a virtual tie with Kipnis for team MVP. Hagadone removed himself from the Rookie of the Year discussion by punching something and breaking his hand after blowing a game, but this was not a terrible pick. Both picks for Comeback player were based on players who underperformed in 2011, but the winner was a player who was actually above average compared to the rest of the team that year, he was just a lot better this year than last. Crowe was never given a chance on the Indians this year even though the Indians couldn't find a decent left fielder through more than half the season.

Top 10 Indians Left Fielders

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

The second installment of the Indians Top 10 Positional Leaders will feature the best Indians left fielders of all time.The Indians have had a lot of great outfielders over the history of the franchise and while most of them have been centerfielders, there have been a few good ones in left as well, including the second most prolific home run hitter in team history. For more information on any player click on the link on their name for their All-Time Indians Bio. Players will be linked as more bios are added.

10. Al Smith - Years Starting Left Fielder 1954, 1956

Smith only played two years as the Indians starting left fielder, but still accrued more than 1,000 total bases during his time in Cleveland. Smith also played right field and third base during his time with the Tribe, but the appearance of a young star right fielder (Rocky Colavito) kept him starting in left.

9. Mel Hall - 1984, 1986-1988

The 1980's weren't that bad of a time to be an Indians outfielder, with Cory Snyder, Brett Butler and Joe Carter all around by 1986. Hall was probably the worst of this group, but at least played long enough to be considered as one of the better left fielders in Indians history.

8. Jack Graney - 1910-1911, 1913-1917, 1919

Graney is what it looks like when a mediocre player plays an extremely long career (to see what it looks like when a good player plays a long career, check out Charlie Jamieson). Graney played in more games than any left fielder outside of Jamieson, but his .250 average was by far the worst on this list. He is one of the few speed outfielders on the list, stealing 148 bases or about 10 per season.

7. Leon Wagner - 1964-1967

Wagner showed a lot of power for the Tribe, hitting 97 home runs in just six seasons. Only one player ahead of him on the home run rankings did it in less games and most played 300 or more games than Wagner. Wagner did this despite playing in one of the hardest times for the Indians, the years between 1955 and 1994.

6. Tito Francona - 1960-1961, 1963

Francona is one of four players listed between the 1950's and 1960's compared to the single player from 1901-1920 and the zero players listed from 1969-1983. The Indians were lucky to have so many talented outfielders over this time, but they came at a cost. The cost for Francona was Larry Doby, one of the Indians all-time greats. 

5. Dale Mitchell - 1947-1953

Dale Mitchell was a member of the last two Indians World Series appearances prior to the 1990's. He was one of just five players to play on both the 1948 and 1954 teams, but he wasn't very successful in either. During the regular season, he did a lot to help the Tribe get to the postseason with a .312 career average and more than 550 runs scored.

4. Joe Vosmik - 1931-1936

Vosmik was one of the most consistant left-fielders in Indians history, taking over for Jamieson after a decade of great play. Vosmik played next to Earl Averill in center for six years, making this one of the best outfields in Indians history.

3. Charlie Jamieson - 1920-1930

Jamieson started two more seasons in left than any other player on this list and thus leads everyone in at bats, runs, doubles and total bases. He ranks as low as he does because he played in more than 500 more games than the two players ahead of him and still trailed in home runs, RBI, slugging percent and OPS.

2. Jeff Heath - 1938-1940, 1942-1943, 1945

Heath immediately preceeded Mitchell as the Indians starting left fielder and outplayed him in every offensive facet of the game despite a shorter career. Mitchell played in 150 more games, but Heath still had more doubles, triples, home runs, RBI, walks and steals. Heath is definitely one of the most underrated players in Indians history.

1. Albert Belle - 1991, 1993-1996

Belle was the most pure power hitter in the history of the Cleveland Indians. His 242 home runs are second all-time to Jim Thome and his .285 Isolated Power is the highest in team history. Belle spent some time as DH, but was a serviceable left fielder during the majority of his time in Cleveland. Despite a short career, Belle not only ranks as number one on this list, but should be considered highly on the list of top ten hitters in Indians history. Belle's inclusion with Manny Ramirez in right and Kenny Lofton in center makes the Indians outfield from 1994-1996 the best group in Indians history.

Left Fielders Years G R H 2B HR RBI AVG SLG OBP ISOP
Albert Belle 1989-1996 913 592 1014 223 242 751 .295 .580 .369 .285
Jeff Heath 1936-1945 957 546 1040 194 122 619 .298 .506 .365 .208
Charlie Jamieson 1919-1932 1483 942 1753 296 18 492 .316 .406 .380 .090
Joe Vosmik 1930-1936 824 480 1003 206 44 556 .313 .459 .372 .146
Dale Mitchell 1946-1956 1108 552 1237 168 41 402 .312 .417 .366 .104
Tito Francona 1959-1964 835 413 832 153 85 378 .284 .437 .353 .152
Leon Wagner 1964-1968 630 316 581 76 97 305 .265 .437 .332 .171
Jack Graney 1908, 1910-1922 1402 706 1178 219 18 420 .250 .342 .346 .092
Mel Hall 1984-1988 538 244 498 101 49 266 .282 .432 .328 .150
Al Smith 1953-1957,1964 669 432 648 115 67 270 .269 .418 .373 .149

Borderline: Matt Lawton, John Lowenstein, Minnie Minoso, Gene Woodling, Bill Hinchman

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2012 Indians Stat Leaders

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

Every year I make a computer background for the Indians single season leaders. This year 24 stats were split among seven players (four hitters, one starter and two relievers). The overall winner was Shin-Soo Choo with six.

2012 Indians Leaders

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All-Time Indians: Steve O'Neill

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

 

Name: Stephen Francis O'Neill Position: Catcher/Manager            
Tribe Time: 1911-1923/1935-1937     DOB: 07/06/1891            
Accolades: Top 25 MVP (1913, 1922)      
Stats G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI TB BB SO SB OBP SLG AVG OPS ISOP
Best Season (1920) 149 489 63 156 39 5 2 71 211 69 39 3 0.41 0.43 0.32 0.84 0.11
Career 1365 4182 394 1109 220 33 11 458 1428 491 351 30 0.34 0.34 0.27 0.68 0.08
Post Season Career 7 21 1 7 3 0 0 2 10 4 3 0 0.44 0.48 0.33 0.92 0.14
As Manager W L T W%                          
Career 199 168 6 53%                          

O'Neill was the second longest tenured catcher in Indians history (after Jim Hegan), spending over a decade crouching behind the plate in Cleveland. In 1913 O'Neill took over the starting role from light hitting catcher Ted Easterly. He maintained as the starter through 1923, the longest string of consecutive seasons for an Indians catcher without missing a significant time due to injury. Among Indians catchers, O'Neill is first in career hits, doubles and walks and among the top five in runs, triples, total bases and steals.

Arguably the most important time of O'Neill's career came in 1920, when the Indians won their first World Series. In that seven game series, O'Neill played all seven games (one of five players to do so) and his seven hits were only second to player/manager Tris Speaker. Most impressive was the fact that he caught the entire series with back-up catcher Les Nunamaker only receiving two at bats during the series. While you can't give him too much credit, he did call the games for the entire pitching staff in that series that ended with a 0.88 ERA, strongly supported by Stan Coveleski's three complete game performance.

In the mid 1930's O'Neill returned to manage the Indians, running the Tribe for 373 games over three seasons. One of many former catchers to return to manage the Tribe, his .534 winning percent remains among the best by an Indian manager to control the team for more than a single season.

Steve O'Neill died in 1962. He was considered for the baseball Hall of Fame, one year getting 5% of the BWAA vote, but simply didn't have the credentials. He was inducted into the Cleveland Indians Hall of Fame in the inaugural class in 1951.

Steve O'Neill

The Untouchables

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

Indians General Manager Chris Antonetti has said at multiple times this year that no player is safe from trade talks, that every player is available for the right price. I hope he is lying. 

The Indians primary goal is as it should be, to win a World Series championship for the first time since 1948. However, this shouldn't be the only goal. There is a secondary goal, which is to win the Series legitimately, with a team that was grown rather than assembled or purchased. Which team do you think is more proud of their championship, the 2009 Yankees, a team almost entirely purchased, filled with All-Stars gathered from around baseball, or the 2010 Giants, who won with a team mostly of internally developed players like Buster Posey, Pablo Sandoval, Tim Lincecum, Matt Cain and Madison Bumgarner.

By saying that every player is available to at least be talked about, Antonetti is basically saying that no player on the team is better than anything he could bring back in trade. While there are many players that are expendable on this team, a few are not (at least not now) and are not worth any price another team could give. Jason Kipnis and Michael Brantley would be the first two on that list. Both players were paid less than $500,000 for 2011 and are still under team control. The best player in the league, Miguel Cabrera, wouldn't be worth trading Kipnis for as the Indians couldn't afford to pay his salary and they would still lose a player that is more productive for his position. If he isn't worth the best player in the league, how could any other player be good enough to trade for Kipnis. Brantley is worth a slightly smaller amount, but is certainly worth far more than any team would be willing to give for him.

The next level features players who are not untouchable, but are promising enough the Indians would have to blown away by an offer. None of these players should be traded for prospects no matter how good, because they all were great prospects, but have already made it to the majors, taking away the risk of flopping. This list includes Lonnie Chisenhall, Zach McAllister and Vinnie Pestano. Going along with the original point, even trading these players for more valuable players shouldn't be a priority as it would mean more for the Indians to win with these home grown players rather than someone traded for a single season. Using young players like this also increases the amount of years the Indians should be able to contend as they are under control for years still.

With all these players unavailable for trade, the Indians need to have a few players available to move to improve the team. These are veterans whose time under control is ending or young players that are particularly over valued. Chris Perez is the first of these. He should not be traded because of the things he has said or for a low level player, but if the Indians could find a team that over values closers (and a lot do), he should be made available. A player who throws 60 innings a year is simply not as important as one who plays in 162 games. The Indians are very deep in relief pitching from Cleveland through Lake County. Cody Allen proved that this year. Pestano is ready to take over the reigns in the ninth and, while I would prefer to see Perez play his entire career with the Tribe, a starting outfielder, DH or firstbaseman is more important. Joe Smith and Tony Sipp are also in this boat, although they would have less value to other teams, despite the fact that Smith is almost certainly the best pitcher in the group.

There is one more player that needs to be mentioned here and that is right fielder Shin-Soo Choo. Choo is still under control for 2013 (his third year of arbitration), but has Scott Boras as his agent, leading many baseball writers to believe he will be leaving as a free agent as soon as he can. This was so severe that either Boras or some writers started a rumor that the Indians were looking to trade Choo at the All-Star break. Boras is famous for taking players from small market teams (like Alex Rodriguez from the Mariners) and getting them signed for record deals with larger market teams (like the Rangers). Somehow, a lot of his clients end up one the Yankees for some reason or another (they control 6 current or former Boras clients, only one of which came up with the team, Robinson Cano).

Unless the Indians can get something amazing for Choo, they should keep him. He is a top 20 MLB outfielder and seems to like playing for Cleveland. As with the other players brought up in Cleveland, he is worth more to the Indians because of that past loyalty. Any player the Indians got for Choo would not be as good in 2013 as Choo should be. What Antonetti does with Choo this off-season will be very telling of what he expects out of this team next year. More than any of the other players listed, the trading of Choo would signify another rebuilding process.

The Indians don't need to go crazy this off-season. The core of the team is already in Cleveland and they need to add to it, rather than exchange it for an equal or lesser option. Cleveland can't be New York, Boston, Detroit or Miami so they shouldn't even try. Keep the arbitration eligible players and try to add players through free agency or possibly by trading prospects for pros, the opposite of the Indians usual dealings. This team is ready to win now and showed that when they signed Terry Francona over Sandy Alomar, Jr. It's now up to Chris Antonetti and the rest of the front office to fix the holes in this team.

Division Series Recap

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

As always, Burning River Baseball is here with your Indians-centric view of the world.

The Orioles (former Indians: Jim Thome), beat the Rangers (no former Indians) in the first Wild Card single game playoff, then went on to face the Yankees (former Indians: Derek Lowe, Jayson Nix and the fat man) in one of the closest matched ALDS I've ever seen. Each game was within a single run going into the 9th inning and two games went into extra innings. In the end the Yankees came away with the victory with C.C. Sabathia on the mound.

In the other American League match-up, Oakland (former Indian: Coco Crisp) lost in five games to the Tigers (former Indian: Jhonny Peralta). This gives Indians fans another series to root against their Central Division rivals.

In the National League, the Cardinals (former Indian: Ed Mujica) sneaked by the Braves (former Indian: Chad Durbin) on an botched infield fly call, then went on to win a five game series against the Strasburg-less Nationals (no former Indians). Despite missing Steven Strasburg, it was the Nationals relief pitching that killed them in game five, with star closer Drew Storen walking the bases loaded before blowing a two run lead with two outs in the ninth.

The other NLDS match-up featured the Reds (former Indians: Brandon Phillips and Ryan Ludwick) who completely blew the series against the Giants (former Indian: Guillermo Mota) after being up 2-0. Since the Reds were the team picked to follow by Burning River Baseball, we no longer have a dog in this fight. The rest of the playoffs will be for hoping for the Yankees and Tigers to lose. Since they are playing each other it will guarantee a half happy ending.

The best play by a former Indian had to have been this one by Coco Crisp, robbing a Prince Fielder home run in game three against Detroit.

Crisp was also the hero in game five when he ended the game with a walk off single to tie the series and force a game five.

Moving on, the Tigers and Peralta will head to New York to take on the Yankees and the traitor Sabathia. This will be a battle of old money vs. new money, while those with no money are forced to watch at home. The Cardinals will go on to face the Giants in San Francisco for the National League title. If all this seems familiar, it's because it is. Three of these teams won the last three World Series and the other last in the Series in 2006.

Since 1996, the remaining teams have been to the World Series a combined 13 times with 1997, 2005, 2007 and 2008 being the only seasons not featuring one of this year's Division Series winning teams in the World Series. This year will bump that number to 15 times in 17 seasons. One of the only Yankee/Tiger/Cardinal/Giant free World Series was 1997 which featured the Cleveland Indians against the Florida Marlins. That's just to bring things back full circle so you don't forget what this website is about.

2012 Burning River Awards

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

"The Lee Award" for Most Improved Player - Shin-Soo Choo

No Indians had amazing comeback seasons this year, although just like last year, there were plenty of contestants. Instead, the award goes to Choo, who has been a great hitter over his entire career with the Tribe, but fell off a little last season. This year he came back to what he had been in each of his previous seasons, only better. Choo set career highs with 43 doubles and 88 runs scored. He also recorded his third season of 20 or more steals.

2011 Winner - Justin Masterson

"The Super Joe" Rookie of the Year Award - Zach McAllister

The Indians had very few rookies playing prominent roles on the team this year after using a whole slew last season. The only choice for the 2012 ROY is McAllister. In fact, he was not only the best rookie on the team, but the best starting pitcher overall. He had a lower ERA, BAA and WHIP than every other primary starter although he didn't pitch enough innings to qualify for rate stats (placing him around the 11th best pitcher on the team in these stats, unqualified). He did start 22 games, third most on the team, despite not being on the team for opening day. He did fall off a bit during the last month of the season, but still ended up ahead of all the other starters. 

2011 Winner - Vinnie Pestano

"The Steve Olin Memorial Award" for Best Reliever - Vinnie Pestano

The back end of the Indians bullpen was absolutely fantastic this year, helping the Indians win more games than they should have according to Pythagorean Theory. This was primarily three pitchers, last year's winner, Joe Smith, Chris Perez and Vinnie Pestano. Pestano lead all pitchers (who pitched at least 20 innings) in ERA, WHIP and BAA. He also struck out more batters than all but three starting pitchers, 76, good for a 9.77 K/9, also best on the team. Pestano set a new team record with 36 holds, only blowing 3 of 41 potential save/hold opportunities.

2011 Winner - Joe Smith

"The Big O" for Most Outstanding Defender - Michael Brantley

There may be a "Big O" curse as last season's winner ended up being one of the worst defenders on the team in 2012. The ultimate choice was really hard for this season, with two players earning consideration. Casey Kotchman was exactly as expected at first and still remains the top defensive first baseman in MLB history with a .9977 fielding percent. He certainly saved an unknown amount of runs and errors from the wild throws coming from the left side of the infield. He was constantly tested and never failed. Brantley was not tested as much, but when he was, the tests were much harder. Brantley made just a single error all season and was able to make diving catches as well as a few impressive wall climbing grabs. He also had five outfield assists, second most just to Shin-Soo Choo.

2011 Winner - Jack Hannahan

"The Golden Belle" for Most Outstanding Hitter - Shin-Soo Choo

Not only did Choo improve himself this season, he beat out every other Indians player offensively. Choo lead the Tribe in games, at bats, runs, hits, doubles, OBP and SLG. He did all this while batting lead-off for a large part of the season as Manny Acta felt he couldn't trust any other player to get on base to start an inning. He still knocked in 67 runs (Jason Kipnis and Carlos Santana lead the team with 76), despite being moved out of his usual power position into one that asked for more patience at the plate and more speed. He complied with the speed part as well, stealing 21 bases and only being caught 7 times.

2011 Winner - Asdrubal Cabrera

"The Addie" for Best Overall Pitcher - Vinnie Pestano

In addition to the basic statistics mentioned before, a very important part of this award is confidence. The best pitcher on the team should be the one that the team turns to when it needs a win. There were no starters who garnered any confidence this season, not a single one that could change a losing streak into a winning streak. However, the bullpen was as close to perfect as it could have been and this was mostly to do with Pestano and Perez. Whenever these two came into the game, Indians fans just knew it would be a win. The two pitchers combined for seven total blown saves in 131 total games. Pestano was just a little bit better than Perez with 12 more innings pitched and three less runs allowed. 

2011 Winner - Justin Masterson

"The Rose Award" for Best Overall Player - Jason Kipnis

Choo and Kipnis had almost identical seasons offensively. While Choo had more doubles and home runs, Kipnis had more RBI, triples and steals. Choo had better rate stats, but struck out 40 more times. The slight edge that Choo had to take the Golden Belle Award was not enough to surpass Kipnis' superior defense this year. Kipnis' .991 fielding percent was the highest among all regular starters, except for Kotchman and Choo and he plays a much tougher position than either of them. Choo's defense was also more conservative this year, with very few diving plays and only 7 assists compared to 34 over the past three seasons. Kipnis on the other hand, was constantly getting dirty. He also has become a very dependable double play partner for Asdrubal, turning 94 twin killings in 2012.

2011 Winner - Asdrubal Cabrera

Check here for the 2011 Burning River Award recap.

Where We Were: Final 2012 Rankings 16 - The End

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

Continued from yesterday's 1-15:

16. Justin Masterson (2) Below

Masterson would win the award for most disappointing player if there was such a thing. He was so good in 2011 there were Cy Youngs talks going on about him during the All-Star break. This year, he fell off in every part of his game, ending with an ERA of 4.93 and a WHIP of 1.45. He was better than Jimenez in every facet of the game, but he was better last year too, and should have been this year. The biggest problem this season was inconsistency. Masterson would go out and dominate one or two games, then get destroyed the next two. He ended the season 11-15, a very fair record of his actual performance during the y.

17. Russ Canzler (17) Above

If any player made the most of his September call-up, it was Canzler. He had 25 hits in just 26 games, while playing on a fairly consistent basis over the last month of the season. Most of the hits were singles, but 3 were home runs and he did knock in 11 runs. Not only did he play first, but he also did a decent job in left field. The Indians signed Canzler with the possibility of him being the starting first baseman for the entire season, but signed Kotchman shortly after, ending that thought. He ended up spending almost all season wrecking AAA pitching, until he finally got his shot. If the Indians don't make any moves in the off season, Canzler is their best option at first base in 2013.

18. Frank Herrmann (18) Above

Herrmann only pitched about 20 innings in the season, but was absolutely fantastic. He looked like a completely different pitcher, throwing a spiked curveball for the first time and confounding hitters. He allowed just 5 runs and 16 base runners while striking out 14. His rate stats were better than any other pitcher on the team, but they would certainly have come a little closer to normal as he pitched more innings. Either way, he has deserved some more consideration for the 2013 team as he has obviously matured as a pitcher.

19. Lou Marson (19) Below

Marson is a great back-up catcher as he puts absolutely no pressure on Santana for the starting job. Here are a couple of impressive stats about Marson's season. He grounded into the same amount of double plays (10) as he hit extra base hits. He had more steals (4) than home runs (0) and the most important stat of all, he played in 70 games. A .226 hitter played in 70 games.

20. Jason Donald (17) Below

Donald was one of the few hitters to make Marson look good. As a contact hitter, he struck out 40 times and walked just five while batting .202. As a defensive back-up he made seven errors (.926 F%). The most impressive part of his game was his seamless change to extra outfielder late in the season with Lillibridge taking most of the extra infield at bats. While teams always need a versatile player who can help out with off days and baserunning/late inning defense, the Indians do not need Donald.

21. Cody Allen (16) Above

Allen was just drafted in 2011 and blew through the minors this year, finding himself at the top level fairly early in the season. He was amazing at first, not giving up a run in his first month, but regressed some after that, ending with a 3.72 ERA. Allen is another pitcher talked about that may have closer stuff, so he should definitely be returning to the pen in 2013. With the glut of pitchers the Indians already have available for relief duty, they should be able to avoid signing another useless Chad Durbin or Dan Wheeler this off season.

22. Brent Lillibridge (19) Below

Lillibridge is a little bit of an enigma. He was traded twice in the season, coming to the Indians when they certainly weren't looking for another utility player. After coming to the Tribe he looked a lot better than with Chicago or Boston, hitting three home runs in 43 games after having none with either prior team. Overall he was atrocious offensively (.216 AVG), but he was also poor defensively. While playing infield there were multiple times where he fielded an extremely easy grounder and proceeded to launch the ball over the first baseman's head. This seemed to be from more of a lack of concentration than lack of ability, which makes it even less forgivable. There are very few players in baseball that can just relax and nonchalantly play the game, even less that stick around if they try to do that. Lillibridge is not one of those. The worse you are at baseball, the harder you have to try. Players who are trying hard don't lightly toss a ball ten feet over the first baseman's head from around second base.

23. David Huff (23) Above

Huff is a tricky pitcher. He will come out and pitch great his first few times out every year, then start to get worse and worse until you wonder how he could even be the same person. He started this year coming in for Gomez in relief twice and was so good, he was moved to the rotation. There he also pitched well until his last couple of starts. He didn't log enough innings to get to the point where he became a whipping boy, but he appeared to be close, pitching 10.2 innings in his last two starts and allowing 10 runs (4 unearned). Huff is not to be trusted and should not be part of the team next season.

24. Tony Sipp (16) Below

Sipp started the season very poorly. Before the All-Star break he had an ERA of 5.65 in almost 29 innings, this coming down from a 7.71 ERA in April. Part of this was likely improper pitching management as he was almost unhittable (.209 BAA, 1.01 WHIP) against left handed hitters all season, but was not nearly effective (.250, 1.58 WHIP) against right handers. In the past, Sipp has been available for use against multiple batters, such as when there are two lefties sandwiched around a righty, but that is obviously no longer the case. Sipp is now the traditional left handed match-up guy, although there is still value in that.

24. Chris Seddon (22) Above

See McAllister.

26. Matt LaPorta (26) Below

Do a search on the site for LaPorta. This topic has been covered past nausea.

27. Scott Barnes (24) Even

Barnes joined the team in late May as one of the teams most touted pitching prospects. He was terrible during that stint with the Tribe, but was recalled again after Hagadone punched himself out of the league and again as a September call-up. Barnes finished strong, giving him some of the most divergent split stats you will ever see. At home he threw 9 innings, allowing no runs, but on the road he threw 10 innings and allowed 9 runs. His day/night splits are almost the same, giving up a single run during 9.2 innings at night with everything else happening during the day. He allowed all 9 runs in June and July, going perfect as a call-up in September, despite pitching the same amount of innings as the other two months combined.

28. Cord Phelps (27) Below

There was a time when Phelps was considered a rival for the future second base job with Kipnis. That time is long passed. This year he didn't play enough to judge, although he did play well in the minors. The same could be said for Neal and Rottino, so all three can be covered here. When September call-ups were made it was announced that the primary player to look at was Canzler and that these three hitters would only get the few scraps of playing time left over. Combined they had only 84 at bats, hitting two home runs and walking twice as well. Young players tend to press, so the lack of walks is not completely surprising, but if they would think before swinging, they would realize that management values good knowledge of the strike zone rather than a couple of lucky singles. None of the three players was able to make a good impression with their short time with the team, which must be disappointing for them considering that they are all getting pretty old for minor leaguers.

29. Thomas Neal (28) Below

See Phelps.

30. Vinny Rottino (30) Below

See Neal.

31. Corey Kluber (21) Even

See McAllister.

32. Ubaldo Jimenez (8) Below

If Masterson had one to two bad games for every good, Jimenez had three to four. Not only was he ineffective in those games, but things usually got out of hand quickly. When he pitched well (which happened in about 10 games of his 31), he was incredible, throwing a curve ball that dropped from the top of the strike zone to the hitters ankles and mixing in his fastball which still has a little pop. On most days, however, he struggled with control and patient hitters forced him to throw bad pitches just to avoid walks. It is not that Jimenez avoided walks, he allowed more than one every two innings, it is just that he gave up a lot more hits. He will certainly be back next year, despite his 5.40 ERA and 1.61 WHIP, as his price and potential are too good to give up.

33. Jeanmar Gomez (4) Below

Gomez is kind of the opposite of the McAllister group as he actually had expectations coming into the season. Gomez was the strongest pitcher coming out of Spring Training and made the team simply on the merits of that month. He pitched fine enough early on, but as the season went on his problems became more apparant. Shortly after the All-Star break he was removed from the rotation and wasn't reinstated until September, when he was pulled again after just a couple games. One bright point for Gomez is that he pitches very well when used in relief and has the stamina to be a long reliever. 

34. Scott Maine (34) Below

Maine pitched a total of 6 innings in 9 games, a red flag if there ever was one. Three of those games, he gave up 2 runs in an inning or less, including one where he didn't record a single out. This lead to an ERA of over 10.50, a WHIP over 2.60 and a pitcher who should not even be thought of in 2013.

35. Roberto Hernandez (24) Below

Hernandez (the pitcher formally known as Fausto Carmona) was the epitome of disappointment in 2012. He missed over half the season with legal issues, then struggled in his three starts. Hernandez lost all three starts and absolutely deserved to. In his final start he was removed early from the game due to a sprained ankle and never returned to the team. The fact that the Indians didn't push to get him back in the rotation or at least the bullpen shows that they don't expect him to return in 2013.

Still here, just hurt:

Josh Tomlin Below

Tomlin pitched poorly (6.36 ERA) over 21 games before blowing out his elbow and getting Tommy John surgery. Because the injury occured so late in the year, he will be out for the entirety of 2013.

Nick Hagadone Below

Hagadone's biggest issue this year was his temper. Through May he was fantastic, used as a left-hander out of the bullpen and keeping an ERA near 2.00. When it started to fall apart for Hagadone, he couldn't take it, despite the fact (or maybe because of it) that everyone else on the team was going through the same thing. His ERA ballooned over 6.00 and he blew his final game of the year, giving up two runs in 0.2 innings. After that, he blew up his hand by punching something in the dugout, successfully ending his season and his paycheck. He deserves a second chance because he has a lot of talent, but he needs to keep his emotions in check if he is going to be successful in the future. 

Rafael Perez Below

Perez pitched the second least amount of innings on the team, despite being a good pitcher. He injured his elbow early in the season and despite repeated attempts to comeback, missed the entire season. 

Still here, but back in the minors:

Luke Carlin Even

Carlin played 4 games for the Tribe this year and he might as well not have. A throw in from the Cliff Lee trade, Carlin missed all of 2011 because of Manny Acta's infatuation with Marson and was unable to fairly compete for job this year as well. He wasn't even brought up in September with the Indians using Rottino as a third catcher when necessary instead. The fact is that Carlin can't possibly be worse than Marson, so he should have been given a chance each of the last three years and should next year as well.

Juan Diaz Above

Diaz played in five games in the middle of the year, straight up from AA, when Cabrera was day-to-day with a small injury. The Indians decided to go with Diaz rather than Phelps most likely because they knew it was a short term stint with the team and didn't want to interrupt the work he was doing in AAA. I guarantee Phelps would rather have been on the Indians for those five games.

Still here, because no one else would take them:

Aaron Cunningham Below

With a .175 batting average, Cunningham was by far the worst hitter on a very bad offensive team. There should be some kind of award for not only what he did this year, but what the Indians let him do. It's not like Cunningham was an electric outfielder that was so amazing he made up for his shortcomings on defense (like Carrera is). He is just not good at baseball. In fact, he was one of five players released near the end of the season that were so bad, no other team in the league would touch them.

Shelley Duncan Below

If giving 97 at bats to Cunningham was a shame, giving 232 to Duncan was a travesty. Even the one thing Duncan is supposed to be there for, he didn't do very well. Here are a few Indians hitters with less at bats than Duncan who beat his .388 Slugging Percent: Carrera (3.95), Chisenhall (4.30) and Canzler (.398). With all three of these players in the minors and capable of outplaying Duncan at his position (either left field or DH), it makes no sense that he was allowed to flounder in the big leagues for as long as he did.

Dan Wheeler Below

Wheeler only pitched 12 games for the Tribe this year and held an ERA around 9.00 before being relegated back to Columbus. He then spent the entire season in AAA, despite his opportunity to leave and seek Major League employment elsewhere.

Gone nowhere:

Jeremy Accardo Even

Accardo was the best of all the terrible relief pitchers signed prior to this season, but he still wasn't very good. Once the Indians realized the players they already had a home were better than anything that could be found elsewhere, they released the trash, including Accardo. 

Johnny Damon Below

Damon should not have been signed, then should not have been played and finally should have been released far earlier than he was. Somehow, the Indians front office thought that Damon would be a better replacement outfielder for Grady Sizemore than Carrera would be and wasted a considerable amount of time and wins in a meaningless experiment. The fact that no one signed Damon before the season started or after he was released proves that he has nothing left.

Gone somewhere:

Jairo Asencio Below

Signing Asencio during late March was possibly the stupidest decision made all year. He cost a player a roster spot on the 40 man and kept a much more talented reliever, like Hagadone or McAllister from making the team to start the season. He was out of options so Tribe management felt they have no choice but to play him and he made them pay. Asencio pitched 18 games and allowed 17 runs before being released and joining the Cubs.

Derek Lowe Even

Lowe was the only member 2012 Indians to make the playoffs this year, even though when he pitched for the Tribe he was almost guaranteed not to make it through the fourth. The Yankees moved Lowe into long relief, something the Indians should have done about two months before he was actually released.

Jose Lopez Even

Lopez signed with the White Sox after a surprisingly decent time with the Indians. Lopez mostly played third base while the Indians were burying Chisenhall in AAA. During a short time he was so good, he was used almost daily in the lineup, sometimes as designated hitter. Lopez did knock in 28 runs this year, not that bad for a utility who only played a short time with the team.

Where We Were: Final 2012 Rankings 1-15

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

The Indians season is over, so this will be the last Player Rankings of the year. Next season this segment will be changed to be a Player Power Rankings and will be directly coralated to the Player of the Game equation. Today's ranking will differ from the others done this season (April, May, June, July, August and September) as it will list each players highest point on the rankings during this season, followed by an evaluation of their performance in 2012 compared to preseason expectations. The list is still a ranking of each players importance to the team during this past season.

1. Jason Kipnis (1) Even

The one thing keeping Kipnis from a second successful season was his .257 batting average and subsequent .335 OBP. Kipnis should be working on becoming the perfect top of the lineup hitter, which will include getting on base at a very high rate, and he is simply not there yet. A few of the other aspects of the speed game have already been conquered by Kipnis, however. His 31 steals are the most since Grady Sizemore in 2008 and he is only the second Indian to steal 30 bases in the last 12 years. He also lead the team with four triples in addition to his other 36 extra base hits.

2. Shin-Soo Choo (1) Even

Choo lead all Indians in 2012 in OBP and SLG, while still stealing 21 bases. The problem with Choo's season this year stemmed from his change from middle of the lineup hitter (where he belongs) to lead off hitter. In his first three season, Choo hit 14, 20 and 22 home runs, with expectations for him to increase his power as he matured as a player. What happened instead is he was turned into a lead-off hitter, simply focused on setting the table for the following hitters. The problem is that the Indians don't have any power hitters so they need to take advantage of what they do have. Choo did hit another level in hitting doubles with his 43, the most since Sizemore hit 53 in 2006.

3. Carlos Santana (2) Even

Santana lead all Indians with 76 RBI and 91 walks. If based on just the second half of the season, Santana would have far exceeded his expectations. After the All-Star break, Santana hit .281 with 13 home runs and 45 RBI, but his .221 average and 5 home runs before the break really took down his season. The best part of his game is that he walked more than 40 times in each half, although his SO/BB ratio was much better in the second half. Santana understands the importance of getting on base and has a great eye at the plate, which doesn't fail him when he is struggling.

4. Michael Brantley (3) Above

Brantley did everything that could have been asked of him in 2012. In addition to his magnificent defense, he played in 35 more games than last season, getting more hits, doubles, RBI and walks while raising his batting average by more than .20 points. Brantley was everything a dependable centerfielder needs to be, taking just 6 games off all season that weren't for injury. He is the player who should be hitting lead-off for the Tribe, allowing them to move Choo back down in the lineup. He has the perfect skills for lead-off, with a good awareness of the strike zone and ability to get on base. He also hit 37 doubles and four triples, but just 7 home runs, so it is not wasting his power to bat him lead-off, but actually helps as he can move himself along the bases. His one drawback in 2012 was that he was caught stealing nine times in just 21 attempts. This rate needs to be improved for him to be a threat on the bases.

5. Asdrubal Cabrera (2) Even

It is kind of unfair to compare Asdrubal to his 2011 season as it will probably be the best in his career. No one expected him to do what he did then, and no one should expect it from him again. This year was certainly a much more typical season as he hit 16 home runs with 68 RBI, down from 25 and 92 a year ago. What is impressive is that he kept his average around .270 still, and while that might not be good for the AL as a whole, it's great for the Indians. Only Choo and Brantley managed a batting average above Cabrera this year and no one hit over .300. Cabrera's fielding is one place that needs work. While he has excellent range and makes plays that should keep him on Sports Center for years, he also doesn't make plays. Cabrera had 19 errors this year, most in the AL. While some of these errors are caused by his good range, because he can get to balls other players can't, but then can't make a play on them, many have to do with poor throws, or bobbles on what should be routine plays. Kotchman certainly saved him from having even more errors this year. Cabrera will have to work on these fundamental plays if he ever wants to grab the Gold Glove, that he should be able to take.

6. Vinnie Pestano (5) Above

A team's best pitcher should never be in the bullpen, but Pestano is something special. He pitched in 70 games this year and struck out more batters (76) than all but three starters. He also broke the team record for holds (with 36) and pushed it to a new level. If there is one reason Perez got as many save opportunities as he did, it was Pestano keeping the other team from coming back during the 8th inning, setting the game up for Perez. When the two pitched they were unbeatable. Pestano came in for the save or hold 41 separate times and blew a total of three. In just his second season, Vinnie has basically had the greatest two consecutive seasons for any Indians relief pitcher ever. 

7. Travis Hafner (1) Below

Any year that Pronk spends more days on the DL (74) than he does in the lineup (66) it is a recipe for a disappointing season. What is most disappointing is that he still ended up being the 7th most important player on the team despite missing half the season to injury. If you just look at his SLG and OPS, he had a good year, second to just Choo in the first and Choo and Santana in the second stat, but there is a lot more to baseball than that. Hafner hit 12 homeruns (pretty good for his amount of playing time), but just knocked in 34 runs. That's almost to a Duncan level of non-production. For those who think that he didn't get enough chances, Hafner stranded 63 runners in scoring position, more than any other player with less than 460 at bats. Hafner had 219 at bats.

8. Chris Perez (7) Above

Much like Pestano, Perez was almost perfect this year. He is already among the top four closers in Indians history when considering total saves and completion percentage. Although he is outspoken, he gets his job done well and that's all that should matter. With Perez having the 9th locked down, the whole bullpen falls into place with Pestano in the 8th and Smith in the 7th. This provides an almost unbeatable bullpen for any pitcher who can get himself through the 6th.

9. Joe Smith (9) Above

Smith is the third part of the Indians Bullpen Mafia that remains solid since 2011. Like the other two, he is almost unhittable (.213 BAA), but he doesn't strike out as many hitters as Perez or Pestano. Because he wasn't used as exclusively in close games as either of the other two pitchers, Smith actually pitched more games(72) than any other pitcher.

10. Casey Kotchman (7) Below

There were only two things the Indians were looking for coming into this season as the Tribe's biggest free agent pick-up, his famous "greatest defensive firstbaseman in MLB history" glove and a decent batting average, like the one he had last season for Tampa Bay. Kotchman was everything as expected defensively. While he did make a couple errors, he certainly saved more errors from Cabrera and Hannahan than he caused. On the other part, he failed miserably. Kotchman was, by far, the worst Indians regular hitter ending the season with a .229 batting average. While many Indians hitters had a poor first half, most were able to salvage the second half of the year to bring them to respectability. Kotchman was not able to do this.

11. Esmil Rogers (11) Above

Rogers came to the Indians through a mid-season trade with Colorado. He had struggled his whole career with command, despite having electric stuff. As soon as he moved closer to sea level he showed the kind of promise the Rockies must have originally seen in him. With Cleveland, he struck out 54 and only walked 12, definitely far away from having a control problem. In fact, it is a ratio about twice as good as the Indians own Smith. After a long trial period, Rogers become a trusted member of the bullpen and ended up pitching in 44 games. There is no part of Rogers game that can be faulted after he joined the Indians and he should be an important member of the bullpen in 2013.

12. Jack Hannahan (4) Below

After Kotchman, Hannahan was the most disappointing regular starter. Of course, he wasn't supposed to be more than a stop gap while waiting for Chisenhall, but a stupid front office move combined with a hit by pitch made Hannahan the most used third baseman. Not only was he bad offensively, but he was even bad on defense, he one supposed skill. Hannahan commited 14 errors, second most on the team and had a dreadful .949 fielding percent. Offensively, he was worse than replacement level with both Carrera and Canzler vastly outperforming him in their short times with the team.

13. Ezequiel Carrera (13) Above

Carrera only played 48 games with the team, but he should have played much more. Carrera had higher rate stats across the board than Damon, Duncan, Cunningham and Lillibridge, all the other players mainly used in left field this year. This shouldn't even have been a surprise as he played well while with the team last season. He is also a much better defensive outfielder than anyone else on the Indians 40 man roster. While he is prone to a stupid mistake from time to time, these occur a lot less often then the errors caused by lack of ability from the other players. He also brings about an element of speed often missing from Indians teams over the past decade. This year he stole 8 bases, just being caught once and hit three triples, one shy of the team lead, in very limited time.

14. Zach McAllister (7) Above

McAllister is the first of a group of pitchers all used as starters (or long relievers) that came in with no expectations and gave something back to the Tribe. This group includes Seddon and Kluber as well, so rather than write the same thing three times, I'll just put it here once. All three pitchers came into this year with little or no Major League experience and were immediately thrown into a terrible situation where they were asked to take on much more responsibility than they should have. McAllister was asked to be the ace of the staff in his first full year with the two supposed aces struggling, Seddon was forced to bounce between starter and reliever without any notice and Kluber was changed from relief pitcher in 2011 to starter in 2012. All pitchers struggled at times, and all outperformed my expectations of them. All three deserve a chance to make next year's team, with McAllister already earning a spot in the rotation.

15. Lonnie Chisenhall (14) Below

This has to have been an incredibly disappointing season for Lonnie. He came into Spring Training as the favorite for the starting third base job and didn't even make the team out of camp. It wasn't until the middle of the season before he got his first chance, then he was hit by a pitch on his arm, breaking it. After how well he played in his short time with the team last season, it was sad to see him in just 43 games this year. In those games, he did not play well, knocking in just 16 runs, even though he hit five home runs. 

 

The rest of the team rankings will be coming tomorrow, including those players who are no longer with the Indians.