Results tagged ‘ Josh Judy ’

Mitchell: Looking ahead to 2012- Bullpen

As we come to the end of the year, we also close out the preview of possible Clippers for next season. It is fitting then, that the last installment is the bullpen, the group tasked with finishing out the game on the mound.

Last season the clippers bullpen had a roller coaster season, being at times phenomenal, shaky, solid, bad and very good. Mike Sarbaugh used 12 different pitchers in save opportunities in 2011. Jensen Lewis got the 1st shot at closing and induced heart attacks, but saved the 1st two games of the year. He blew his other two chances and struggled with his velocity being down and not having the same stuff we’d grown accustomed to seeing. Lewis was released in June.

Josh Judy was on the I-71 shuttle much of the year, but still logged more saves than any Clipper. The Indians seemed to really like Judy in 2010, talking about him as a future closer in the bigs, but with Chris Perez manning that wheel and Vinnie Pestano bursting on the scene last year, Judy may have been deemed expendable. He was recently take off of the 40-man roster and may not make it through waivers. He could also be used as a trade chip.

Zach Putnam is a late-inning arm who had a great 2010 as the 7th inning guy setting up Judy and Pestano, but at times in 2011, he had issues with command. Putnam is a bulldog and has the stuff and temperament to be a closer. If Judy is not in the organization, expect Putnam to get the 1st shot at being the closer in 2012. He is on the 40-man and saw time in Cleveland in September. I would not be surprised to see him on the shuttle in 2012 or even win a job on the Indians staff outright out of Spring Training.

Another likely candidate for the back of the pen is Chen-Chang Lee. Lee has one of the nastiest fastball/slider combos you are going to see. He was as dominating as any pitcher in the IL last year, with 12.4 K/9. He had one bad outing where he allowed 1/2 of all his earned runs and 1/3 of his total walks. The issue with Lee is not his stuff, but his make-up. There is a question of his ability to handle high leverage situations and his willingness to pitch inside. With Judy and Putnam in the Majors, Lee closed out the Clippers Governor’s Cup win, and threw the final 2 innings of the Triple-A Championship game,  Maybe his late season work can be a springboard to success as a stopper.

Nick Hagadone is a guy who has had big expectations attached to his big left arm since being acquired from Boston in the Victor Martinez trade. He reached the majors last season and has a real shot to win a job the start the season. Working against him are the facts that he still has 2 options left and that as of now, the Tribe has 2 established lefties in the pen already in Tony Sipp and Raffy Perez. Hagadone had a somewhat slow adjustment to the Triple-A level, but flourished as the season went along. He is very tall and possesses long arms. Like most pitchers of similar build, his mechanics can get out of whack, but when he is right, he can really do a number on hitters, particularly left-handers, who he held to a .127 BA in ’11.

It is very possible that the Clippers will once again see Paolo Espino misassigned to a bullpen roll. Espino has been the winning pitcher in the deciding game of 3 of the last 4 post season series for Columbus. Let’s look at Paolo’s Start/relief splits from 2011. As a starter for Columbus  he was 2-0 with a 1.73 ERA, 10 K/9 and a 0.69 WHIP. Out of the pen: 0-1 6.75 ERA, a WHIP of 1.81 and a .345 BA. Espino doesn’t have alarming stuff, but he seems to come through in big situations. He is not going to be in the Clippers rotation to start the year barring injury, but he is probably the swing-man. playing the role Justin Germano and Joe Martinez (both gone from the organization) did last year.

Ruben Niebla, the Clippers pitching coach prefers a 7-man bullpen, and that’s what Columbus had typically had all things being equal. That being the case, if four of the above five guys are on the staff, there will be likely 3 others to fill out the bullpen. Kelvin De La Cruz seems like a good possibility. He finished the year with Columbus and it looks like the Indians have committed to converting him to a reliever. He was left on the 40-man when a move had to be made to add Aaron Cunningham, so Cleveland obviously values him. Really, what’s not to like about a 6’5 23 year-old lefty with a mid-90′s fastball?

The remaining spots are up for grabs. Tyler Sturdevant, Matt Lagwell, Eric Berger and Rob Bryson could be in contention. A wild card is Bryce Stowell. Stowell flashed a 100-MPH fastball for the Clippers in 2011 upon his promotion form Double-A, but suffered finger injuries that ended his season early. He spent the entire 2012 season in the lower levels of the minors working through control and other issues as well as a dip in velocity. I’d personally like to see Steven Wright pitch well enough to make the team because there is just something fun about a knuckle-ball pitcher (provided it’s not your job to try and catch him). One player who will not be in the mix is Cory Burns, whom the Indians traded for OF Aaron Cunningham. Burns was Akron’s closer last year, setting a single-season franchise record for saves.

As expected, since this prognostication process started, there have been signings that could have trickle-down effects on the Clippers roster. If Cunningham makes the Indians roster, Zeke Carrera is likely down to Columbus, which pushes someone to Akron. Matt LaPorta seems less and less likely to break camp with Cleveland, which would affect Beau Mills. Andy LaRoche throws another possibility out there as he’s mainly been a 3rd baseman in his career and GM Chris Antonetti says LaRoche is in camp to compete for a big league job, as is Jose Lopez. What happens to Lonnie Chisenhall if LaRoche and Jack Hannahan are both on the team? These questions and more will be answered in Goodyear, AZ come March of 2012. Until then, it’s fun to pass the winter months with this type of discussion.

Cherish the upcoming season, because if the Mayan calendar is right, it will be the last one ever. The countdown to 12/21/12 is on!

Mitchell: Sprinting to the Starting Line

This is the time of year when things really begin to roll downhill for baseball teams on the field and in the offices as well. Ticket sales, advertising, and publicity are going full stream, printing and season preparation deadlines are looming and in Arizona and Florida, rosters are being decided and changing at a furious pace as the squads head into the final fortnight of spring training. Scott and I will be heading the Goodyear later this week and we will bring you updates on the state of the Cleveland and Columbus teams from an eye-witness perspective. For now, here’s some of the scuttlebutt from the desert.

Tony Lastoria tweeted yesterday that Jensen Lewis was placed on waivers. The Ohio native has fashioned a very respectable Major League stat line and if the report is accurate, I would think a few teams will put in a claim on him. Though I didn’t expect to see him in Columbus this season anyway, it would be sad to see him go. Jensen is a great clubhouse guy and hits a tremendous fungo. He is also one of the top dugout play-by-play guys you’ll come across.

Jason Donald went through every test but the Wonderlic to finally reveal that he has a small crack in his left middle finger that may have him out of action up to a month. That means third base is again a competition with non-roster invitee Jack Hannahan as the odds on favorite to win it. The others in the mix are Luis Valbuena and Jayson Nix. Adam Everett injured his thumb sliding into a base head-first and might miss time, so infield roster spots are much more available today than they were 48 hours ago.

Josh Judy and Joe Martinez were optioned to the Columbus roster on Saturday and manager Manny Acta says Martinez will be a part of the Clippers rotation, a place that seems quite crowded right now. Acta cited the fact that injuries are such a fact of life in baseball and with pitching in particular, that it is incumbent upon teams to have a ready supply of Major League ready arms in reserve. Johan Pino was also assigned to minor league camp.

Acta declared Sunday that Grady Sizemore will not start the season on the 25-man roster and when it’s time to see game action after spring training, schedules and weather will have an impact on where he sees time tuning up for the big club. The Clippers start the season on the road for ten days, while the Akron Aeros play seven home games to open the campaign. If Sizemore is ready for games early, Clippers fans might not get a chance to see him, but if he’s a couple weeks behind the rest, and central Ohio isn’t under snow, Sizemore might have a Russell Branyan-esque stint at Huntington Park.

Matt LaPorta is batting just .182 this spring. Of note, he has 8 hits and only one of them is a single (4-2B, 1-3B, 2-HR). He is also tied for the team lead with 10 RBI’s.

The string of injuries for Nick Weglarz continues as the mountainous outfielder injured his knee running the bases late last week. It sounds like the same injury Jordan Brown had last year, but as it’s much farther into camp, he’ll likely miss more of the season than Brown did.

As always, questions and comments welcome at rmitchell@clippersbaseball.com.

More cuts… and desktop wallpaper

The Indians sliced the major league roster to 38 players after optioning RHP Jess Todd to Columbus and reassigning LHP Mike Gosling, RHP Frank Herrmann, RHP Josh Judy, RHP Yohan Pino, CA Damaso Espino, INF Brian Bixler and OF Shelley Duncan to minor league camp.

Most, if not all of those players will begin the season with the Clippers.

Also, Clippers design/graphics guru Yoshi Ando has released his 2010 Clippers desktop wallpaper… get’em while they’re hot:

http://web.minorleaguebaseball.com/multimedia/page.jsp?ymd=20100301&content_id=8636736&vkey=multimedia_t445&fext=.jsp&sid=t445
 

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.