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Wondering How the Indians are Spening Their Money?

For those that were wondering where the money is going on the Indians roster this season, consider the following when it comes to what the following players are making, and where on the club they rank:

1. Jake Westbrook $10 mil per year
- On the DL for the rest of the year after major surgery, and may not be ready to go again till the summer of 2009.

2. Travis Hafer $8 mil per year
- Has never hit the same after getting his new deal, and was struggling before that. Is on the DL with a shoulder issue that really has never been fully disclosed.

3. Paul Byrd $7.5 mil per year - 3-10 this year w/ a 5.53 ERA. Was the subject of a steroids scandal story in the ALCS, and since then he’s been cleared, but has never pitched as well as last season.

4. Casey Blake $6.1 mil per year - Having a solid season, batting .279 with 8 homers and 47 RBI, but likely will be traded before the deadline.

5. Victor Martinez $4.4 million per year - Tweaked his hamstring opening day vs the White Sox, and has not been the same. Lack of power alarming as he’s hitting just .278 with no homers and 21 RBI. Also on the DL.

7. David Dellucci $3.7 mil per year - Has basically been a bust in the two seasons with the team, hitting just .220 with 7 homers and 27 RBI, was hurt a good portion of last season, and will be gone when his contract is up.

9. Masa Kybayashi $3 mil per year - Has had good and bad moments in his first year playing ball in America. Has four saves and an ERA of 3.21. The team has hopes that he may eventually be the closer.

10. Jhonny Peralta $2.5 mil per year - Hitting .250 with 14 homers and 40 RBI. Still blasted by many for his shoddy play at short and lack of big hits, Peralta has never regained his 2005 form when he hit .292 with 24 homers and 78 RBI.

The other two players in the Top 10 not listed are Cliff Lee and Grady Sizemore, two players that have lived up to or even passed expectations for this season.

Vizquel’s Squeeze Bunt in 9th Plates Winner in Tribe 3-2 Loss

Slider and Omar

When Omar Vizquel played for the Indians in their glory days, scoring runs was not much of a problem.  Fast forward to the Indians of 2008, and this edition of the Indians have offensive issues, and once again in Omar’s return to Cleveland those issues reared its ugly head.  The Indians put up a bland two runs on Tuesday night, allowing Vizquel and the Giants to win game one of the two teams three-game set 3-2 at Progressive Fied.

Omar was the story, first with an extended highlight film before the first pitch to getting a standing ovation in his first at-bat, to laying down a perfect bunt that got a huge third run over in the 9th, this night belonged to possibly the most beloved Indian in franchise history.  Oh, he also made a great play in the 9th with the game still in doubt.  Same old Omar.

As for the Indians, it was a bitter pill to swallow as they return home for an interleague homestand that hopefully will keep them fighting in the AL Central.  This was not the way to start it.  They got a first inning run from the bat of Ryan Garko who drove home the run with a two-out single, but from there were shut down till their run in the 9th that got them close, but not close enough.

Three Giants pitchers, starting with Jonathan Sanchez, shut the Tribe down for a majority of the night.  Sanchez went 7.2 innings, allowing one run on five hits, walking two and striking out eight.  Aaron Laffey was okay, allowing one run on 6.2 innings.  He gave up four hits, walked three and struck out one.

The Giants plated a run each in the 8th and 9th for the win, the run in the 8th scoring on a silly throw from catcher Kelly Shoppach trying to nail a runner at second trying to steal with two outs.  The ball came in low, and he was charged an error, at the same time allowing a run to score to make it 2-1.

The ninth inning run off of Masa Kobayashi came when he allowed a walk, a single, then a ground out to put runners on second and third.  Omar then laid down a bunt that Casey Blake couldn’t handle, and it allowed the winning run to cross the plate.  In usual Indians fashion, they had the tying run on first with two outs in the 9th when Shoppach on a full count struck out to end the game.

The loss puts the Indians back at 7 games under .500, at 35-42.  Wednesday night it’s Jeremy Sowers (0-2 6.57) vs Barry Zito (2-11, 6.32) at 7:05pm.

Fading Fast - Latest Indians Setback Puts Them 8.5 Out in Central

Sowers looks on at Bakers homer

I can’t really think of any positives that can come of getting swept by a team that coming into this past series was 14 games under .500. Let’s just say that it may have given GM Mark Shapiro enough indication to pull the plug on the 2008 season and start looking more at becoming a seller instead of a buyer as the trading deadline starts to creep closer.

Last night the Indians storyline against the Colorado Rockies was almost the same as it was the past two nights - allow a struggling pitcher to right himself against a weak Indians offense, allow some no-name like Jeff Baker to hit another homer (third straight game vs the Indians), and have shots to win it with a big hit, but in the end come up short. Sounds like the same recipe for a loss we’ve heard quite a bit this season.

To think that entering this stretch the Indians looked as if they finally may have righted the ship following a 4-2 homestand, now it looks like it’s back to square one. They allowed Jorge De La Rosa, who had a 6.89 ERA entering the game Thursday to strike out 10 Indians batters, allow just four hits, three runs and walk one in six innings. Jeremy Sowers was okay at best, allowing four runs, three earned, 10 hits, four strikeouts in six innings. He takes the loss to fall to 0-2.

The Indians actually had a first inning lead as Ben Francisco hit a two-run homer to make it 2-0. Sowers gave half of it right back in the bottom of the first on a Matt Holliday single to make it 2-1. Colorado then chipped away and built a lead with single runs in the 4th and 5th to make it 3-2. Casey Blake his a solo homer in the 6th to tie the game at 3, but then a Baker homer, and two more Rockies runs in the 7th iced it for the 6-3 win.

After Blake’s homer in the 6th, the Indians managed just one more base runner the rest of the night, and that was Blake again, who doubled in the 9th with one out. Overall three Rockies relief pitchers threw three scoreless innings, allowing just one hit and striking out two. Masa Kobayashi gave up two runs in that critical 7th, and Joe Borowski did throw a scoreless 9th.

Things have gone from bad to worse this week, as the team drops 7 games under .500 at 33-40. They are now a whopping 8.5 back of the White Sox, who beat the awful Pirates again, and 1.5 back of third place Detroit, 4 back of the 2nd place Twins. Could a roster tweaking in terms of deals be far behind at this point?

Tonight the team moves to Los Angeles to take on the Dodgers in the first of a three-game weekend series starting at 10:40pm. Cliff Lee, who’s 10-and-1 with a 2.55 ERA, will start for the Indians. The Dodgers will send out Clayton Kershaw, who’s 0-and-1 with a 3.75 ERA. First pitch at Dodger Stadium is set for 10:40 p.m.

Some Signs of Hope After the Recent Homestand

Grady carried this team the last week

You can take the Indians recent 4-2 homestand vs the Twins and Padres one of two ways - you can look as it as a step in the right direction that the team won two straight series’ and the offense is coming around, or you can simply look at it like they are just staying enough above water for Mark Shapiro and company not to pull the plug on the season and start looking to shop around players like C.C. Sabathia.

On a positive note, after being at and watching the last six games, if you don’t agree that Grady Sizemore is not one the five most exciting players in the game, then you don’t watch a lot of baseball. Sizemore almost lifted this team on his shoulders from an offensive standpoint over the last week, hitting .310 with 5 homers and 9 RBI. Sizemore simply took the offense to another level this week, and picked up the slack when the team needs it with Victor Martinez and Travis Hafner on the bench.

I enjoyed watching the youth of this team get going as well this past homestand, with players like Shin-Soo Choo, Ben Francisco, Franklin Gutierrez and Kelly Shoppach all having a part in winning games at the plate. The team scored 48 runs this past week, an average of 6.8 runs per game. That has got to be an encouraging sign to management and manager Eric Wedge.

Yes, there were moments of frustration, such as Paul Byrd having a poor outing on Wednesday night in the teams 8-5 loss to the Twins. Byrd is one player that has never got on track this season, and in his last five starts is 1-3 and has allowed 21 runs as well as 7 homers. One has to wonder if his time as a quality starter in the Majors is over. Byrd is a class act and has always spoken out when he has had poor outings, but if this team is going to make a run, his pitching simply has to improve, and he’ll be the first to admit that.

The bullpen continues to be the great unknown, as pitchers like Rafael Betancourt, Rafael Perez, and Masa Kobayashi have to be on the verge of giving Wedge an ulcer. You never know how these players will respond in tough situations. In the Saturday night loss, the team got into the 8th with a 3-2 lead, and Perez gave up a homer on the second pitch after a good outing by Betancourt. Then in the 10th, Edward Mujica walked in what was the game-winning run, and then made matters worse by allowing a grand slam.

One beat reporter commented to me that he has no idea what the team sees in Mujica, as he has been terrible this season, allowing three homers in 6 games he’s pitched in, and has an ERA of 9.00. Add to that the 8.31 ERA in 13 innings pitched in 2007, and the reporter who made that comment to me has a valid point, and one that the team should look at.

Overall though, I’d have to say the week had more positives than negatives, and the team did gain a game on the Sox to move within 5.5 of first. With the Rockies, Dodgers, Giants and Reds up next, all teams under .500, this team seems poised to finally tell us once and for all if 2008 is going to be a season of hope, or a season of despair.

Pen Blows It for Laffey Latest 8-4 Setback to Tigers

Betancourt gives up a grand slam

It seems to be that every other year the Indians bullpen is very good.  The problem with that is that means this year is one of those “off” years for the pen, and that fact reared its ugly head again on Saturday as the bullpen allowed six runs in the teams latest setback 8-4 to the Tigers.  Aaron Laffey had done a solid job getting the Indians to a 3-2 lead in the 7th, going 6.2, allowing only a two-run homer to Carlos Guillen.  It was after he left that the wheels simply came off.

Starting with the 8th, Masa Kobayashi allowed two runs in just 0.1, giving up a homer to Marcus Thames, to tie the game at 3, then allowing a double to Mags Ordonez.  Enter Rafael Betancourt, who threw a meatball to Miguel Cabrera who singled to deep left to score Ordonez.  Betancourt, who has continued to take major steps back this season, then allowed another single, a sac to put runners on second and third, and then after an intentional walk to load the bases he struck out Ryan Raburn to give them two outs.

As has happend all year long though, the pen was unable to get that all important third out, and Betancourt again threw one over the plate, this time to Edgar Renteria, who didn’t let him get away with it, putting it out for a grand slam to make it 8-3.  The line on Betancourt, 1 inning, four runs, three hits, one walk and one strikeout.  Last season Rafael was 5-1, three saves, and an ERA of 1.47.  After 27 appearences in 2008, he is 1-3, 4 saves, and has an ERA of 7.27.

While Laffey was the bright spot, the offense did what it could to try and give him a win.  They put up three runs, one on a Franklin Gutierrez fielder’s choice in the 2nd, and then a Kelly Shoppach double to make it 2-0.  Guillen’s homer made it 2-2, but the Indians responded with a Ryan Garko sac fly in the 6th after an error by Tigers pitcher Kenny Rogers opened the door.  It looked as if it would be enough until Masa and Betancourt gave it away.

The loss puts the Indians at 28-34 on the season.  They will throw Jeremy Sowers (0-0, 5.23) vs the surprising Armando Galarraga, who is 4-2 with a 3.76 ERA.  He beat the Indians back on April 16th in Cleveland going 6.2 innings, allowing two runs on one hit.

Byrd Good, Offense Good Enough as Indians Beat Tigers 4-2

Big RBI hit for Gutierrez

If there is one thing that the Indians can take some pride in so far in 2008 - the Tigers are worse than they are.  That fact was proven once again on Friday night at Comerica Park, as the Indians used a three-run fourth and a solid pitching outing from Paul Byrd to top the Tigers 4-2 in the first of a four-game set.  Byrd went seven innings, allowing two runs on just four hits.  He didn’t allow a walk and struck out two.  He made two mistakes, allowing two solo homers, but otherwise had maybe his best outing of 2008.

The offense was paced by Casey Blake and Franklin Gutierrez.  Blake hit a key one-out double in the 4th off of losing pitcher Justin Verlander that scored two to give the Tribe a 2-0 lead.  Gutierrez then came up with a single to left that scored David Dellucci to make it 3-0, enough for the Indians and Byrd.  With the team leading 3-2 in the 8th, Ryan Garko hit a big homer to deep left off reliever Denny Bautista to make it 4-2.

Masa Kobayashi came in and pitched the 8th without allowing any damage, and then Joe Borowski pitched the ninth, allowing one hit, but striking out one and earning his 5th save of the season.  Byrd with the win improves to 3-5 on the season, and drops his ERA to 4.46.

The Tribe improves to 28-33 on the season, dropping the Tigers to 24-36, losers of four straight.  Aaron Laffey (3-3, 3.02) goes tomorrow for the Indians at 3:55pm vs Kenny Rogers (4-4, 5.54).

Finally! Offense Catching Fire as Indians Pound Rangers 15-9

Garko looking good

All season long Indians players and the coaching staff had promised that the offense would start to come around. Even after the team slumped through May, players seemed sure that they would break out and have a big June at the plate. While it’s only been four games, maybe, just maybe, the team was right. Positive signs were everywhere Wednesday night in Arlington, as the Indians trounced the Rangers 15-9 behind a tied season high 17 hits.

High winds and temps in the 90’s made it for a hitters night, as the Indians scored in bunches, putting up innings of 4, 2, 5 and 4 runs. They slammed Texas relief pitcher Elizardo Ramirez to the tune of 9 runs in 2.2 innings. They broke the game open tied 6-6 in the 6th when they put up a 5-spot, then came back in the 7th and added four more to put the game away.

The big night on offense belonged specifically to two players - Ben Francisco, who was 5-for-6 with three runs scored and a RBI, and Ryan Garko, hitting in the four-hole and going 4-for-5 with two runs scored and a career-high 6 RBI. David Dellucci added a three-run homer and Casey Blake was 2-for-5 with a run scored and a RBI.

On the mound Cliff Lee was good enough helped out by the offense to notch his 9th win against just one loss. Lee saw his ERA plump to 2.45 after allowing six runs on nine hits in five innings. He walked two and struck out 8. Rafael Betancourt, Masa Kobayashi and just called up Rick Bauer also pitched in relief of Lee, and the three combined to allow three runs on four hits, all three runs were allowed by Bauer.

The win puts the Indians at 27-32 on the season, still 5.5 back of the Sox in the Central. They have a great shot to head to Detroit on a high note tonight, as C.C. Sabathia (3-7, 4.32) goes for the Tribe against old friend Kevin Millwood, who is 3-3 with a 4.50 ERA. First pitch at 8:05pm.


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