Tag: Cleveland Indians

Michael Brantley Injury: Updates on Indians OF’s Recovery from Shoulder Surgery

Cleveland Indians outfielder Michael Brantley missed nearly the entire 2016 season due to a shoulder injury, and that ailment could cost him time in 2017 as well. 

Continue for updates.


Brantley May Not Be Ready for 2017

Thursday, Sept. 29

According to Jon Heyman of Today’s Knuckleball, a source indicated that Brantley could miss significant time in 2017 after undergoing surgery on his shoulder that reportedly involved “re-anchor[ing] the muscle to the bone.”

Brantley missed the start of 2016 due to the injury, and after appearing in 11 games, he went back on the shelf and underwent season-ending biceps tenodesis surgery in August.

Despite reports of a longer recovery, Indians president Chris Antonetti told Heyman the following: “Nothing new on Michael. He underwent biceps tenodesis surgery with an expected recovery time of four months.”

The 29-year-old star hit just .231 with no home runs and seven RBI in 11 games this year following the two best seasons of his career.

Brantley was an All-Star for the first time, won his first Silver Slugger Award and finished third in American League MVP voting by virtue of his .327 batting average, 20 home runs, 97 RBI and 23 stolen bases two years ago.

He followed that up with another superb campaign in 2015, hitting .310 with 15 homers, 84 RBI and 15 swipes.

Brantley entered 2016 on the disabled list after suffering a shoulder injury, however, and missed a few weeks before returning to action near the end of April. He went back on the 15-day DL after just 11 contests because of further issues with his shoulder.

After that, Indians manager Terry Francona placed some blame on himself for rushing Brantley back into the lineup, according to Zack Meisel of Cleveland.com: “I’m kind of kicking myself a little bit. I think we might have gone a little too far, too much, too fast. I didn’t want to do that, and I think we probably did.”

Despite being without Brantley for nearly the entire season, the Tribe reached the playoffs for the first time since 2013 on the strength of a dominant starting rotation.

Cleveland has also received stellar play from other outfielders such as Tyler Naquin, Rajai Davis and Lonnie Chisenhall.

The return of Brantley next season promises to give the Indians a huge offensive boost regardless of when it happens, but until it does, they need Naquin to keep up his high level of play, since he is the closest thing they have to a five-tool outfielder aside from Brantley.

     

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Corey Kluber Injury: Updates on Indians Star’s Quad and Return

Cleveland Indians starting pitcher Corey Kluber is among the most dominant hurlers in baseball, but the former Cy Young Award winner will miss time after going down with a quadriceps injury.

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Kluber Timetable Revealed

Tuesday, Sept. 27

According to Jordan Bastian of MLB.com, the quadriceps strain is expected to keep the pitcher out for seven to 10 days.

Kluber lasted only four innings in his last start before coming out with an apparent groin injury. However, the MRI revealed it to be a different leg issue. 

Bastian broke down what this means for the Indians, who have already clinched the division title: 

The Tribe boasts a spectacular starting rotation featuring several power arms, but Kluber is arguably the best among them, and he is producing to the tune of 18-9 with a 3.14 ERA in 2016.

Expectations were massive for Kluber entering the 2015 campaign after he went 18-9 with a 2.44 ERA, 1.10 WHIP and 269 strikeouts en route to the Cy Young Award in 2014.

Although he was unable to replicate those numbers, bad luck was among the major culprits, as his 3.49 ERA should have been lower when compared to his 2.97 FIP, per Baseball-Reference.com. He also posted a record of just 9-16 despite his strong peripheral numbers, which speaks to how little run support he received in 2015.

In addition to that, he was forced to deal with an injury late in the season, as a hamstring ailment limited him in September. He still managed to make 32 starts, though, and he has proved to be fairly durable over the course of his career.

Pitching is undoubtedly the Indians’ greatest strength, so they may be able to have success even without the 30-year-old veteran in the rotation despite all the positives he brings to the table.

With Carlos Carrasco, Danny Salazar, Trevor Bauer and Josh Tomlin also on the team, Cleveland boasts more power arms than any club in all of Major League Baseball.

The potential absence of Kluber will certainly test the Indians’ pitching depth, but they should still have a great chance to win on most days.

Kluber is the type of ace who sets the Tribe apart from the rest of the league, though, which is why his recovery and return to full health will be so important for Cleveland moving forward.

                    

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Indians Clinch AL Central: Highlights, Twitter Reaction to Celebration

For the first time since 2007, the Cleveland Indians are the champions of the American League Central thanks to their 7-4 win over the Detroit Tigers on Monday.

The victory immediately led to plenty of celebration in the locker room, as Matt Loede of NEO Sports Insiders and Dave Chudowsky of WKYC shared:

First baseman Mike Napoli provided his thoughts while celebrating, per Dennis Manoloff of Cleveland.com:

As the team’s Twitter account noted, the magic number was officially zero:

Following the Cleveland Cavaliers’ triumph in the NBA Finals, the city has apparently turned around its sports fortunes in the past year, as Rep. Marcia L. Fudge noted:

Tom Withers of the Associated Press broke down the season as a whole:

The Indians have been on the cusp of a breakout since 2013, when they made the playoffs but were shut out by Alex Cobb and the Tampa Bay Rays in a 4-0 Wild Card Game defeat.

Horrible starts out of the gate in each of the following two years left Cleveland with huge holes to dig out of, though the Indians finished over .500 in both 2014 and 2015.

The Indians appeared to be facing an uphill climb in 2016 after learning All-Star outfielder Michael Brantley would miss the beginning of the season after undergoing surgery to repair his ailing right shoulder in November.

The front office made some moves during the offseason—signing Napoli and Rajai Davis, most notably—hoping to bolster the lineup until Brantley’s return.

Brantley briefly returned for 11 games before his shoulder flared up again in May, eventually requiring season-ending surgery, but the Indians were in a better place offensively with an All-Star performance from shortstop Francisco Lindor, a breakout season from Jose Ramirez, a return to form for Napoli, continued excellence from second baseman Jason Kipnis and a career year from Carlos Santana.

Ramirez, in particular, drew praise for filling the void Branley’s injury left in the lineup, per T.J. Zuppe of 92.3 The Fan:

One of the season’s best stories took place from June 17 through July 1, when the Indians reeled off a franchise-best 14-game winning streak that they capped off with a 19-inning marathon win against the Toronto Blue Jays:

Seeing the year was going in its favor, Cleveland’s front office became major players at the trade deadline by acquiring Andrew Miller from the New York Yankees to bolster its relief corps.

Adversity hit the Indians starting rotation down the stretch, when Danny Salazar, who earned a spot in the All-Star Game after posting a 2.75 ERA in the first half of the season, battled injuries in August and September that limited him to just eight starts.

Carlos Carrasco’s season ended prematurely when a line drive off Ian Kinsler’s bat hit his pitching hand on the second pitch of a Sept. 17 game against the Detroit Tigers.

After that game, which the Indians won 1-0 on the strength of nine relief pitchers, manager Terry Francona told reporters what he said after Carrasco exited the contest.

“I called [bullpen coach Jason Bere] down there and said, ‘Tell them to put their seat belts on, because they’re all going to pitch, and we’re going to win,'” Francona said, per MLB.com’s Jordan Bastian and Jason Beck.

That’s a fitting quote for this year’s Cleveland team, which has been forced to use a next-man-up mentality since spring trainingand has used it to great success.

One reason the Indians have continued to play at a high level is the bullpen, which has become one of baseball’s best since Miller’s arrival, as MLB showed:

Given the increased importance of relievers in October, as the Kansas City Royals‘ run to the World Series last year demonstrated, the Indians have the right formula to continue the AL Central’s postseason dominance.

It also helps to have a Cy Young candidate such as Corey Kluber leading the rotation and a lineup that has exceeded expectations all year.

The city’s 52-year championship drought ended in June, when the Cavaliers captured their first NBA title.

The Indians will enter MLB’s postseason with a chance to end their 68-year World Series drought and solidify Cleveland’s place as the city of champions in 2016.

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Coco Crisp to Indians: Latest Trade Details, Comments and Reaction

Veteran outfielder Coco Crisp is heading back to his original team, as the Oakland Athletics traded him to the Cleveland Indians in exchange for left-handed pitcher Colt Hynes.

The Athletics announced the deal after the Associated Press (h/t ESPN.com) first reported it Tuesday night. Jordan Bastian of MLB.com reported Crisp will join the Indians on Thursday and be added to the roster on Friday.

According to Jon Heyman of Today’s Knuckleball, the Indians will only pay for around $500,000 of Crisp’s salary, and the A’s are responsible for the rest.

Crisp is hitting .234 with 11 home runs, 47 RBI and seven stolen bases, which represents a solid bounce-back campaign after an injury-plagued 2015 season that saw him hit just .175 in 44 contests.

The 36-year-old veteran possesses some pop, has decent speed and is a slightly above-average defensive player in left field in terms of defensive runs saved, per FanGraphs.

Crisp also has 31 games of playoff experience, including a World Series ring, which he won with the Boston Red Sox in 2007. Cleveland traded the Los Angeles native to Boston in 2006 after three-plus seasons.

While Crisp has enjoyed some decent years since, including time with the Kansas City Royals and A’s, he has never returned to the form he displayed during his final two campaigns with Cleveland. He hit .299 with an average of 16 homers, 70 RBI and 18 stolen bases per year in that span.

Although the Indians aren’t expecting that type of production, Crisp provides outfield depth. Rajai Davis, Tyler Naquin and Lonnie Chisenhall represent a below-average starting outfield to begin with, while Brandon Guyer and Abraham Almonte sit behind them.

Michael Brantley is out for the season due to a right shoulder injury, while Almonte is ineligible for the postseason due to an 80-game suspension he served for performance-enhancing drugs.

That left Cleveland with limited outfield flexibility entering the playoffs, but Crisp helps alleviate that.

He won’t be a difference-maker in winning the World Series, but having a player with his level of big-game experience should be a big help for a young Indians team.

        

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Terry Francona Illness: Updates on Indians Manager’s Status and Return

The Cleveland Indians will be without manager Terry Francona for Tuesday’s game against the Washington Nationals because “he was experiencing chest pains before [the] game,” per Paul Hoynes of Cleveland.com.

Continue for updates.


Francona Comments on Incident

Wednesday, Aug. 10 

“I’ve had this before,” said Francona, per Hoynes. “The same thing happened at Yankee Stadium.” The manager continued:

Remember I had the blood clots and embolism and all that (in 2001)? Well, a couple of years later at Yankee Stadium it felt like almost the same thing. At the time they felt like one of the blood clots had slipped through the screen I have in there and acts and feels like a heart attack. 

It went away, but it put me in the hospital for three days. It was opening day 2005. We took the bus in from (Manhattan) to Yankee Stadium and Millsie (Mills was Francona’s bench coach in Boston as well as Cleveland) had to wake me up and I was drenched in sweat. I put my uniform on. I figured I could fake my way through. Ten minutes later I said forget this something is wrong with me.

Francona added he will have additional tests when the team returns to Cleveland on Thursday. 


Bench Coach Brad Mills to Manage

Tuesday, Aug. 9

The Indians made an announcement regarding the situation:

Francona told reporters before the contest that he was having chest pains, according to Hoynes. Tuesday’s game marked the first of a two-game set in Washington for the American League Central leaders.

Francona managed the Philadelphia Phillies from 1997-2000 and the Boston Red Sox from 2004-11 before joining the Indians for the 2013 campaign. Since then, he has racked up an impressive 320-274 record in Cleveland and reached the American League Wild Card Game in his first season. However, the Indians lost to the Tampa Bay Rays in that contest and haven’t returned to the postseason since.

Francona directed the Red Sox to two World Series titles during his tenure, the first of which came in 2004 and snapped the “Curse of the Bambino.” It was the franchise’s first championship since the 1918 season.

When he returns, Francona has the Indians well-positioned to challenge for a World Series title of their own this season. They led the American League Central over the Detroit Tigers by 2.5 games coming into play Tuesday, although they are only 2-5 in August.

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Brandon Guyer to Indians: Latest Trade Details, Comments, Reaction

The Cleveland Indians announced Monday that they acquired outfielder Brandon Guyer from the Tampa Bay Rays for prospects with just a little over an hour remaining in Major League Baseball’s trade deadline. 

In 63 games this season, Guyer is batting .241 with seven home runs and 18 RBI. 

His acquisition gives the Indians a better depth option in the outfield behind Jose Ramirez, Rajai Davis and Lonnie Chisenhall. Tyler Naquin has been a stellar fourth option, batting .335 in 70 games this season.

But behind him, an early-season injury to Michael Brantley, the struggles of Collin Cowgill that saw him get demoted to the minors and the 162-game suspension of Marlon Byrd on June 1 forced the Indians to rely on a mediocre Abraham Almonte and an inexperienced Erik Gonzalez. 

In a combined 24 games this season, those two have put together a .250 average with one home run and three RBI. 

While Guyer’s numbers don’t suggest much at first glance, his bat could be a big difference-maker when used in the right situations. 

Against left-handed pitchers this season, he’s hitting .344 with a .488 on-base percentage and a 1.082 OPS, which could help improve Cleveland’s already solid .271 batting average against lefties.

On top of that, he’s been hit by a league-leading 23 pitches, as he finds ways to get on base. He spoke about it with FanGraphs’ David Laurila: “I’m just trying to get on for the big boppers behind me. I’ll take one for the team any day.”

For an Indians team that entered Monday with a 60-42 record and a 4.5-game lead over the Detroit Tigers for first place in the American League Central, Guyer’s acquisition is the kind of depth move that could round out the roster as Cleveland prepares for a postseason run. 

    

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

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Jonathan Lucroy Would Give Indians a Major Piece of Championship-Caliber Team

After more than half a century of nothing, the city of Cleveland is nearing a realistic chance of getting two championships in less than a year.

The Cavaliers got it done by winning the NBA Finals, and now the Indians mean business with their pursuit of their first World Series title since 1948. They already have a team good enough for the American League‘s top record, and now it’s circling a catcher who can actually do things.

As Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports was first to report Saturday night, the Indians have an agreement in place to acquire two-time All-Star Jonathan Lucroy from the Milwaukee Brewers. It seems the only thing the deal needs to become official is Lucroy’s willingness to waive his no-trade clause.

Although Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports notes Lucroy has “no apparent reason” not to want to switch sides from a 46-56 Brewers team to a 59-42 Indians team, he does have a leverage play to make. He’s earning $4 million this season with a $5.25 million club option for 2017. He may need the Indians to sweeten the deal for him to say yes.

If the Indians do that, they’ll be out some money in addition to some pretty good prospects. Jon Heyman of FanRag Sports reports young catcher Francisco Mejia is in the deal; according to Rosenthal, so are shortstop Yu-Cheng Chang and outfielder Greg Allen.

Chang and Allen both check in among Cleveland’s top 30 prospects at MLB.com. Mejia, meanwhile, looks like a rising star. He landed at No. 70 on Baseball America‘s most recent top 100, and that may underrate him. The 20-year-old is a switch-hitter who’s currently riding a 42-game hit streak that’s pushed his batting average in 77 games at Single-A and High-A to .344.

But on the bright side, here’s a list of prospects the Indians apparently aren’t giving up, complete with their Baseball America rank:

  • OF Clint Frazier (21)
  • OF Bradley Zimmer (26)
  • LHP Brady Aiken (59)
  • 1B Bobby Bradley (64)
  • LHP Justus Sheffield (69)

The Indians may not be about to rob the Brewers blind, but they’re not going to get looted, either. They would be keeping arguably all their best prospects and getting a guy who can help in return.

Actually, sorry. That should read “can really help.”

The Indians haven’t been hurting for offense this season, entering Saturday ranked sixth in the AL in OPS and fourth in runs. But their offensive attack has come to a screeching stop whenever the catcher is up. They began Saturday getting a .504 OPS from their catchers, the worst in baseball

To this end, trading for Lucroy is like a man on a deserted island being rescued by a luxury cruise ship. The 30-year-old is hitting an even .300 with an .844 OPS and 13 home runs, which is in line with what he was doing at the plate the prior three years.

In between the good hitting was a down year in 2015. Lucroy battled injuries and hit just .264 with a .717 OPS in 103 games, leading to some skepticism about whether he could bounce back. But everything looks good now. He’s been healthy all year and has gotten back to driving the ball. His ground-ball-to-fly-ball ratio has fallen from 1.52 to 1.05, and his hard-hit rate is at a career-best 36.7 percent.

Assuming Lucroy carries this performance over to Cleveland, he would do more than just fill the black hole the Tribe’s lineup has at catcher. His right-handed bat would also help balance out a unit that, Mike Napoli aside, is short on quality right-handed hitting.

Of course, Lucroy could also help the Indians on the other side of the ball.

The other quality he’s known for is his ability to frame strikes. Harry Pavlidis of Baseball Prospectus and Jeff Sullivan of FanGraphs have highlighted how Lucroy has been slipping away from his reputation in that department, but he hasn’t yet become bad at it. Baseball Prospectus’ metrics put his framing right around average. StatCorner’s put it safely above average.

Cleveland pitchers haven’t been living with terrible framing in 2016, but it could be better. StatCorner’s metrics claim Chris Gimenez has been good, but Yan Gomes and Roberto Perez have not. And overall, the three haven’t stolen many strikes for their pitchers. According to Baseball Savant, only the Seattle Mariners and Oakland A’s have gotten fewer strike calls outside the zone than the Indians have.

If Lucroy were joining another pitching staff, this wouldn’t be something for other AL clubs to fret over. But this pitching staff? Different story.

With former Cy Young winner Corey Kluber, Danny Salazar, Carlos Carrasco and Trevor Bauer leading the way, Cleveland starters are already first in the AL with a 3.68 ERA. Though Cleveland’s bullpen would look better with another shutdown arm to pair with Cody Allen and Dan Otero, it’s hardly a liability. Its 3.58 ERA is fifth in the AL.

All told, it’s hard to think of the Indians’ trading for another player who could have as profound an impact on their title chances as Lucroy.

And make no mistake: those title chances are already very good. The Indians’ AL-best record is backed up by the AL’s highest run differential. If you look at the current World Series odds at Baseball Prospectus, the American League favorites line up like so:

  1. Cleveland Indians: 17.9%
  2. Toronto Blue Jays: 8.3%
  3. Boston Red Sox: 8.1%

Assuming the trade goes through, odds are Cleveland’s already high number will go even higher. Any team that can hit and pitch as well as the Indians can is a good bet to go far in October. If he were indeed to improve both areas, it’ll be an even better bet.

The city of Cleveland should wait on scheduling the parade, of course. At least until Lucroy actually approves the trade and it goes through. But for now, there’s nothing wrong if anyone in Cleveland wants to start trying out the phrase “Title Town.”

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

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Jonathan Lucroy Reportedly Vetoed Trade to Cleveland Indians

The Milwaukee Brewers attempted to trade All-Star catcher Jonathan Lucroy to the Cleveland Indians on Saturday.

Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports first reported the news and noted the Brewers would have received four players in the trade. However, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel‘s Tom Haudricourt reported on Sunday that “Lucroy has exercised his no-trade clause and vetoed [the] trade.”

Yahoo Sports’ Jeff Passan, citing sources, reported, “Lucroy wanted Indians to rip up 2017 club option to get him to waive no-trade clause. Understandably, Cleveland said no.” Jon Heyman of Today’s Knuckleball reported that the Indians have “moved on,” adding “there will be be no reworking” of a potential trade.

If Lucroy had agreed to the trade, he would have lost his everyday catching job in 2017. Made no sense to agree,” noted USA Today‘s Bob Nightengale.

Adam McCalvy of MLB.com shared Lucroy’s comments after vetoing the trade:

Heyman previously said “well-regarded young catcher” Francisco Mejia would have headed to the Brewers. Rosenthal passed along a few other players who would have gone to Milwaukee:

Lucroy has bounced back after a poor 2015 season in which he hit .264/.326/.391, though that came with an injury caveat after he suffered a broken toe in April 2015 that cost him 39 games. 

It wasn’t a lost year for Lucroy, though, as Stat Corner metrics graded him as the 10th-best catcher by runs above average on defense (min. 5,000 pitches). Given the defensive demands of his position, the All-Star is a tremendous asset.

There seemed to be some uncertainty about how interested the Brewers would be in dealing Lucroy in 2016. General manager David Stearns told Haudricourt why the team was hoping to keep the 30-year-old.

“We are still open to discussing any number of players on our roster, but as I’ve said from the opening press conference, [Lucroy] is a really good player,” Stearns said. “He provides a tremendous amount of value to the organization. He’s a reason why we can be better next year.”

This year proved injuries were the primary cause for Lucroy’s issues in 2015. He was named to the National League All-Star team in 2016 for the second time in his career after hitting .304/.361/.491 in the first half. 

The Brewers, coming off a 94-loss season in 2015 and with another losing campaign in the works, are trying to contend in a loaded NL Central with the St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago Cubs and Pittsburgh Pirates at the top. 

Rosenthal reported in January the Texas Rangers, Washington Nationals and Oakland Athletics backed off discussions with the Brewers about Lucroy because “they perceived the price to be too high.”

Things changed after the season started and playoff contenders found themselves in the market for an upgrade at catcher. A good defensive backstop who can hit for average, get on base and hit for power is one of the most precious position-player commodities in MLB.

Milwaukee’s farm system is getting better; Christopher Crawford of Baseball Prospectus wrote in December 2015 the Brewers’ collection of prospects “has impressive offensive depth, intriguing pitching and talent to make several teams quite jealous.”

The Indians needed to make a bold move. They are in a position to win their first American League Central title since 2007 and have a starting rotation deep enough to carry them in a postseason series. They landed Yankees reliever Andrew Miller on Sunday, before Lucroy vetoed the deal.

Catcher has been a black hole in Cleveland this year. Yan Gomes, who is on the disabled list with a separated right shoulder, was in a season-long slump before getting hurt. Chris Gimenez has built a nice rapport with Trevor Bauer as his personal catcher, but even a bench backstop has to hit better than .200/.238/.274.

Per FanGraphs, Cleveland’s catchers rank last in MLB with minus-1.2 wins above replacement. The Indians don’t have a large-market budget, which is what would have made Lucroy a perfect addition because of his $4 million salary this season and $5.25 million team option in 2017. 

Adding Lucroy’s bat to the middle of Cleveland’s lineup, especially with the uncertainty around Michael Brantley’s shoulder, would have addressed yet another need the club had. 

Age isn’t a problem for Lucroy at this stage of his career, nor should he be considered injury-prone after playing 300 total games between 2013 and 2014.

Catchers with Lucroy’s offensive and defensive stability who have a team-friendly contract don’t come along often. He’s been an underrated star because the Brewers haven’t been strong playoff contenders since 2011.

     

Stats and contract info per Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted.

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Yan Gomes Injury: Updates on Indians Catcher’s Shoulder and Return

A frustrating season for Cleveland Indians catcher Yan Gomes has gotten worse after he suffered a shoulder injury during Sunday’s game against the Minnesota Twins.

Continue for updates. 


Gomes to DL

Monday, July 18

Per the Indians’ official Twitter account, Gomes will be out for approximately four to eight weeks with a separated AC joint, but surgery is not deemed necessary at this point.

Gomes was injured in the fifth inning of Cleveland’s 6-1 win against the Twins. He was running to first base when a throw by third baseman Eduardo Nunez pulled first baseman Kennys Vargas off the bag, throwing Gomes off a direct path and leaving him extending his leg far out to catch first base. 

Initially, it appeared that Gomes had also injured his knee on the play. He took a tumble to the ground, landed directly on his right shoulder and was taken off the field on a cart with his arm wrapped in a sling. 

The Indians are fortunate in that they had Roberto Perez, who is the primary backup catcher, in the minors on a rehab assignment ready to come off the disabled list. He suffered a broken right thumb on April 30 against the Philadelphia Phillies

Gomes’ injury is the cherry on top of a season in which nothing has gone right for the 28-year-old. He’s hitting just .165/.198/.313 in 71 games. He snapped a 0-for-27 skid earlier in Sunday’s game with a double before getting hurt in his second plate appearance. 

The Indians have fared fine even with Gomes’ struggles, building a 6.5-game lead in the American League Central. The time away could help him clear his mind of things so that he can potentially return in time to help the team make its first playoff appearance since 2013. 

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Joba Chamberlain Designated for Assignment by Indians: Comments, Reaction

The Cleveland Indians designated veteran reliever Joba Chamberlain for assignment Monday, per USA Today‘s Bob Nightengale

Chamberlain provided a statement on Twitter:

Chamberlain has appeared in 20 games and posted a 2.25 ERA. His ERA isn’t a true indicator of his actual performance, though. According to FanGraphs, the 30-year-old had a 3.82 FIP and a 4.25 xFIP. His 4.95 walks per nine innings were also highest on the team among relievers with at least 10 innings pitched.

Nightengale reported Cleveland also designated Tom Gorzelanny for assignment, with T.J. House and Mike Clevinger joining the 25-man roster. It’s unlikely a coincidence that the Indians made these moves only a few days after their 19-inning win over the Toronto Blue Jays on Friday.

Having exhausted all of his bullpen options, manager Terry Francona had no other choice but to bring on starting pitcher Trevor Bauer, who pitched the final five innings. As a result, the Indians had to start Zach McAllister in place of Bauer the following day.

Clevinger and House are both more equipped for a long relief role or an emergency start, depending on the situation.

Another team is likely to add Chamberlain off waivers or wait for him to become a free agent and then sign him. Both MLB.com’s Bryan Hoch and the New York Daily News‘ Mark Feinsand argued for a reunion in the Big Apple:

While he’s no longer the dominant flamethrower he was in his first two years with the New York Yankees, Chamberlain is still a productive MLB reliever.

Following a dreadful 2015 season in which he allowed five earned runs in six games with the Kansas City Royals, Chamberlain has done more than enough to warrant getting another chance in the league.

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