Because being a Cleveland fan is tough.



Monday, May 27, 2013

Cleveland Indians lose 4-2 to Reds after Votto's 8th Inning HR


(AP) CINCINNATI — Joey Votto hit a tiebreaking home run in the eighth inning, lifting the Cincinnati Reds over the Cleveland Indians 4-2 Monday in the opener of their intrastate matchup.

Votto won this interleague game with his ninth homer, tagging left-hander Nick Hagadone (0-1). The reliever was called up from Triple-A earlier in the day when closer Chris Perez was put on the disabled list with a sore right shoulder.

Shin-Soo Choo led off the Reds' eighth with a single and moved around on a passed ball and Zack Cozart's sacrifice bunt. Votto followed with an opposite-field shot into the seats in left.

Choo, traded from the Indians to the Reds in the offseason, also hit a leadoff homer in the first.

Jason Giambi tied it in the Indians' eighth with a long pinch-hit homer. The solo shot was estimated at 467 feet and caromed off the batter's background in center field. His ninth career pinch-hit homer ended his 0-for-24 slump and was third homer of the season and first since April 20.

Jonathan Broxton (2-1) got two outs in the eighth. Arodis Chapman pitched the ninth for his 13th save.

Reds starter Mike Leake one earned run and five hits in 7 1-3 innings, striking out seven. He left with a no-decision after giving up Giambi's homer.

Ubaldo Jimenez, 3-0 in five previous career starts against Cincinnati, gave up four hits and two runs in seven innings.

Choo, sent to the Reds with infielder Jason Donald and cash for outfielder Drew Stubbs and infielder Didi Gregorius in December, led with his 10th homer of the season.

The Indians took advantage of an error by another former Indians player, Gold Glove second baseman Brandon Phillips, to tie it in the fourth.

Jason Kipnis singled and took third when Phillips mishandled Nick Swisher's grounder. Carlos Santana's sacrifice fly made it 1-all.

Cozart led off the sixth with a double that just nicked the outside of the left-field line, advanced on Votto's groundout to second and scored on Phillips' sacrifice fly.





Read more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2013/05/27/2614331/vottos-hr-in-8th-lifts-reds-over.html#storylink=cpy

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Winning the Lotto, Weak Drafts and Draft Strategy

The Cleveland Cavaliers struck gold Tuesday night in New York City, winning the 2013 NBA Draft Lottery. However, unlike some previous drafts, there is no unanimous choice for the first pick in the draft. The good news? The Cavaliers are familiar with tough draft decisions.

In 2011, many questioned GM Chris Grant's decision(s) of Kyrie Irving and Tristan Thompson. Irving was an All-Star in just his second NBA season, but its easy to forget that pundits like Bill Simmons wrote articles bashing the Cavs for not taking Derrick Williams and Brandon Knight at one and four.

Tristan Thompson was even more of an unexpected pick, and the organization caught waves of criticism over not taking European prospect Jonas Valanciunas. However, Thompson is appearing to be a very solid young NBA big, finishing in the top 10 in the NBA in rebounds last year. Thompson also garnered votes for the Most Improved Player award last season.

The point is, in a draft that was considered weak by most analysts, Grant managed to get two very good young players for the Cavaliers. So, while this draft has been dubbed as another "weak" class, there is no reason to think there will not be a phenomenal young player added to the Wine and Gold heading into next season.

(I am really tired of the "weak" draft class label. First, people scream this before EVERY draft and claim that the next year's draft will be super-awesome. Next, there is no such thing as a weak class. Every draft class has solid NBA players. There is no reason that a team at the top of the draft should not get a quality basketball player. Sometimes teams fail to do so, but that is a greater indication of a poor front office than a weak draft class. *Ends Rant*)

The question now is what should the Cavs do with the first overall selection. The initial reaction is that the decision boils down to Nerlens Noel or Otto Porter, the classic best player available vs. biggest need argument.

Kentucky freshman Nerlens Noel was rated by most services as the best high school prospect in the country. Unfortunately, he suffered a gruesome ACL tear in February against Florida. Noel is expected to make a full recovery and is still largely considered the best overall player in the draft class.

Otto Porter had a breakout season for Georgetown, averaging 16.2 points and 7.5 boards per game for the Hoyas. Porter will probably never be a superstar in the NBA, but seems to be a safe pick as he was arguably the most well-rounded player in college basketball last season. Additionally, he would fill the glaring hole at the SF spot for the Wine and Gold.

So, we now know the picks the Cavs possess looking ahead to the draft. For the next month, while most fans bite their nails watching playoff basketball, Cleveland fans get to do the same discussing the number one pick.

For now, all that Cavaliers faithful can say is: In Grant We Trust.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Nick Gilbert does it again! Cavs win NBA Lottery


NEW YORK (AP)

What's not to like? Being in the lottery every year.

Nick Gilbert expects the Cleveland Cavaliers are through with it, and if so he sent them out a winner again.

The Cavaliers and their owner's son beat the odds for the second time in three years, winning the lottery Tuesday night to give them the No. 1 pick for the June 27 NBA draft.

Two years after charming viewers by responding to a question about being on stage by saying: ''What's not to like?'' the bowtie-wearing son of Dan Gilbert wore a stern look before this one. He said he expected he was done coming here and that he believed the Cavs would be in the playoffs next season.

Then they got a great jump on that goal, earning the first pick even though they had only the third-best odds to do so.

And 16-year-old Nick Gilbert delivered it, just as he did in 2011, when the Cavs used the pick to take eventual Rookie of the Year Kyrie Irving.

''Kyrie is a hell of a player ... but this also felt almost as good,'' Nick Gilbert said. ''That was the first time. This is the second time, but man does it feel good to get the first pick this last time. Get that last player to give us a push.''

The Orlando Magic fell back one spot to No. 2, while the Washington Wizards vaulted from the No. 8 spot to third.

Ten years after winning the lottery that landed them LeBron James, the Cavaliers picked up another opportunity to help speed up the rebuilding process since his departure to Miami in 2010.

James' exit shook a franchise that had become a perennial contender with the Ohio native, but the Cavs aren't thinking about that now.

''It's so long ago already. I knew it is only three years but in NBA years it's like dog years. It seems like it is 15 or 20 years,'' Dan Gilbert said. ''We've been just so focused on building the team the last few years, I can't look back. There is nothing you can do. I am just happy about today.''

The potential No. 1 pick this year, Kentucky freshman Nerlens Noel, is no James. But he could be a nice addition for the Cavs once he's recovered from a torn ACL - if they keep the pick. They also have Nos. 19, 31 and 33 for new coach Mike Brown, who they rehired after firing Byron Scott following a 24-58 season.

''We were hoping regardless of what pick we got that this would be our last lottery,'' Dan Gilbert said. ''We thought originally after everything had to be reset that it would be a three-year process. You never know. It could be four. We thought three years, but having No. 1 and 19, we've got a pretty good chance of this being the last one for a while.''

Dan Gilbert and the rest of the Cavs entourage - all wearing wine-colored bowties as well - celebrated their latest victory, which came with 15.6 percent odds after they finished with the NBA's third-worst record at 24-58.

When they won the lottery in 2011, the Cavs had the eighth best odds.

''For everyone in Cleveland who has supported us through these three years, I think this is for them,'' Dan Gilbert said. ''Is that right, Nick?''

''It feels good,'' said Nick, who was born with Neurofibromatosis (NF), a nerve disorder that causes tumors to grow anywhere in the body at any time.

Not even having four-time winner Pat Williams on stage and 25 percent odds could get the No. 1 pick for the Magic. The team with the best odds hasn't won since 2004, when Orlando won for the third time with Williams representing them and drafted Dwight Howard. The franchise hadn't been back since 2006.

''We had such a nice run up here, over the years. Yeah, we came to win, so when they turned Cleveland over it was like ''How did that happen? Absolutely! How did that happen?'' Williams said.

''We had a better shot, a better percentage. ... I think the Lord was looking out for that little guy from Cleveland.''

Even heading back to their Hornets name couldn't change the luck of the Bobcats, who were lottery losers for the second straight year. Hours after owner Michael Jordan announced they were planning to get back the original nickname of the Charlotte franchise, the Bobcats fell from No. 2 to the fourth spot.

Last year, Charlotte had the best odds of winning after the worst season in NBA history but fell back one spot to second.

The lottery sets the top three teams, and the remainder of the 14 teams finish in inverse order of their record.

Phoenix will pick fifth, followed by New Orleans, Sacramento, Detroit, Minnesota, Portland, Philadelphia, Oklahoma City, Dallas, and Utah.

The Thunder got the Raptors' pick as payment of a previous trade because it didn't move into the top three. Bryan Colangelo represented the team on stage on the day the Raptors announced he would stay on as team president but they would hire a general manager.

Guards Ben McLemore of Kansas and Trey Burke of Michigan, the college player of the year, and Georgetown forward Otto Porter Jr. are considered other top available players.

With uncertainty at the top, this is another year when the No. 1 pick could've been a high school player if eligible. Kansas-bound prep star Andrew Wiggins may have been the choice, but the age limit requiring players to be 19 years old and a year out of high school will remain unchanged at least until the players' association has a new executive director to replace the ousted Billy Hunter.

The union would like the limit to be lowered or scrapped entirely, while the NBA has expressed interest in raising it to 20. It's on a list of ''B-list'' items from the 2011 collective bargaining negotiations that the sides still plan to discuss.

Here is the entire order of the lottery portion of the first round, as determined by Tuesday night's selections:



1. Cleveland Cavaliers

2. Orlando Magic

3. Washington Wizards

4. Charlotte Bobcats

5. Phoenix Suns

6. New Orleans Pelicans

7. Sacramento Kings

8. Detroit Pistons

9. Minnesota Timberwolves

10. Portland Trail Blazers

11. Philadelphia 76ers

12. Toronto Raptors (will go to Oklahoma City Thunder)

13. Dallas Mavericks

14. Utah Jazz

Return of the Charlotte Hornets



CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- Michael Jordan wants to ''bring the buzz back'' to Charlotte.

The Bobcats owner said at a press conference Tuesday evening he's changing his team's name to the Charlotte Hornets beginning in 2014-15.

Jordan said he submitted an application to the NBA board of governors earlier Tuesday informing them of his decision and is optimistic the board will approve the name change when they convene in July.

''Let's bring the buzz back, and bring that energy back on the basketball court and make this city proud again,'' Jordan said.

Charlotte will remain the Bobcats next season, but if all goes as planned Jordan anticipates his team will become the Hornets the following season.

Jordan said his organization is giving the fans what they want.

''We spoke to our season ticket holders and fans, and overwhelmingly you guys wanted the Hornets name back,'' Jordan said. ''And we went out and brought the name back.''

NBA deputy commissioner and COO Adam Silver previously said it would take about 18 months for the Bobcats to change their name, but pointed out the fact that the league owns the rights to the name Hornets could help speed up the transition process.

Silver said in the April interview the name change would be ''an enormously complex process and a very expensive process for the team. From everything to the uniforms, to the building, to the letterhead to the signs on the offices - ''all of that has to be taken into account.''

Pete Guelli, Charlotte's executive vice president and chief sales marketing officer, estimated the cost of changing the name to the Hornets at about $4 million. He added, however, that the decision wasn't based on money and that ''nothing was going to keep us from going down this road because this is what the fans wanted.''

Jordan knows that it will take more than just changing the name of the front of the jersey to turn his struggling franchise around - it will take talent. The Bobcats are 28-120 over the past two seasons, the worst record in the league.

''Ultimately we still have to play the game at a high level, which is what the Hornets did for a long period of time,'' Jordan said. ''Changing the name does not guarantee that we're going to be a playoff-contending team. We still have a lot of work to do to build that. I'm not walking away from that. It is what it is.''

He said it's too early in the process to know if the team will keep the Hornets' teal and purple colors.

The NBA's Hornets resided in Charlotte from 1988-2002 before then-owner George Shinn moved the team to New Orleans following a financial dispute with city officials over replacing the Charlotte Coliseum. Shinn wanted a new arena with additional luxury suites.

The New Orleans Hornets, now owned by Tom Benson, recently changed their name to the Pelicans.

Charlotte was awarded an expansion team in 2003 and then-owner Bob Johnson named the team the Bobcats. The venture was a financial disaster for Johnson, who lost millions before selling majority ownership to Jordan in 2010.

Even with Jordan at the helm, the Bobcats have never come close to matching the popularity of the Hornets, a team which sold out 364 straight home games, a streak that stretched nearly nine full seasons.

Since 2010 three Charlotte area residents have been leading a grass roots movement to persuade Jordan to bring back the popular Hornets nickname.

John Morgan, an elementary art teacher in Monroe, N.C., started a campaign on Facebook three years ago called ''We Beelieve'' after watching the Bobcats lose to the Orlando Magic in the franchise's only postseason appearance. Disappointed over the lack of energy in the arena, Morgan began longing for the days of Larry Johnson, Alonzo Mourning and Muggsy Bogues.

He wanted the Hornets name back and began gathering signatures to support his cause.

Shortly thereafter, brothers Scotty and Evan Kent took the effort a step further and created a website called ''Bring Back the Buzz.''

Eventually the three men pooled their resources for one common goal.

''It's amazing,'' Morgan said earlier Tuesday after reading reports of the pending name change. ''It feels like I'm walking on a cloud.''

While the Hornets name had no meaning for the city of New Orleans, it does have significance to native Charlotteans.

According to the Mecklenburg Historical Association, British general Lord Charles Cornwallis called Charlotte ''a hornet's nest of rebellion'' after city residents drove the British out of the area in 1780.

The tenacious moniker has become a source of pride for the city for more than two centuries. Charlotte Mecklenburg County police officers still wear a patch with a beehive stitched on their uniforms.

Browns waive Eric Hagg

League sources are now confirming an Adam Caplan report that the Browns have waived safety Eric Hagg.

Hagg was drafted in the 7th round of the 2011 NFL Draft out of the Nebraska where he garnered all Big-12 accolades. He started four games last season, including a career-best day in Oakland where he was credited with 7 solo tackles. Hagg appeared in 22 contests for the Browns, compiling 30 tackles and one fumble recovery.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Looking ahead at the Indians' schedule

Today the Indians wrapped up a 4-game series sweep of the Seattle Mariners. The red-hot Tribe have won 18 of their last 22 games and are 21-7 since April 20th. The Indians are currently first place in the AL Central, holding a 2.5 game lead over the Detroit Tigers.

So, what does the schedule look like for Cleveland moving forward?

Well, the schedule gets a little bit more difficult for this next stretch of the season. Over the next 25 games, the Indians are facing series against the Tigers, Red Sox, Reds, Rays, Yankees, Rangers and Nationals. Yikes.

Up to this point in the season, the Tribe has done a good job beating up on weaker opponents and holding their own against the top teams. So even if they cool off over the next stretch of games, as long as the Indians continue to hold serve against strong opponents, Cleveland will continue set the pace atop the AL Central standings.

Walkoff in Extra Innings gives Indians sweep over Mariners


(AP) CLEVELAND -- Yan Gomes hit a three-run homer in the 10th inning and the Cleveland Indians, twice revived by Seattle's fielding errors, beat the Mariners 10-8 on Monday to complete a four-game sweep.

Gomes, who also homered in the second, drove a 3-2 pitch from Charlie Furbush (0-3) over the wall in left, giving the Indians their fifth straight win, third walk-off over the Mariners in four days and most improbable victory of what is becoming a special season.

As Gomes reached the plate, he was mobbed by teammates following the comeback that became necessary after Cleveland's bullpen gave up homers in the eighth, ninth and 10th innings.

It was the Indians' first four-game sweep of Seattle since 1981, and the rally gave Cleveland its 18th win in 22 games.

Joe Smith (2-0) won despite giving up a go-ahead homer to Justin Smoak in the 10th.

Ryan Raburn hit a three-run homer for Cleveland, which opened a 2 1-2 game lead over Detroit in the AL Central.

The Mariners got a tying homer by Kyle Seager in the eighth and a go-ahead shot by pinch-hitter Endy Chavez in the ninth but couldn't close it out because of their own miscues.

The Indians were an out away from losing in the ninth when Seattle closer Tom Wilhelmsen dropped an underhanded toss while covering first, allowing the Indians to tie it 7-7.

After Smoak homered in the 10th, the Indians were three outs away from losing when the Mariners helped them again.

Michael Brantley singled and Drew Stubbs followed with a bunt that Furbush, seeking his first career save, fielded but bobbled. The left-hander rushed his throw to first and would have had Stubbs -- umpire Tim Timmons called him out -- but Smoak dropped the ball.

Gomes then delivered his game-winning homer as the Indians improved to 21-7 since April 20.

The final three innings bordered on the absurd as the Mariners took the lead only to give it away with their bone-headed plays.

Wilhelmsen's error in the ninth not only cost the Mariners a certain win, but it allowed Cleveland closer Chris Perez to escape a loss after he gave up the homer to Chavez in the ninth. It was another bad outing for Perez, who gave up back-to-back homers in the ninth on Saturday but wound up getting a win.

With Seattle trailing 6-5 in the eighth, Seager homered off Vinnie Pestano, who recently came off the disabled list, into the Mariners' bullpen for his fifth homer.

The Indians took a 6-5 lead in the seventh off Yoervis Medina without hitting the ball beyond the infield grass.

Seattle starter Hisashi Iwakuma was tagged by the Indians for five runs in four innings, but the right-hander settled in and retired the final seven hitters he faced and got a no-decision. He gave up seven hits and struck out six in six innings.

Iwakuma won his previous three starts and came in with the AL's second-lowest ERA.

Indians starter Scott Kazmir didn't get out of the fourth as the teams combined for 10 runs and 14 hits through four innings before the game slowed to a crawl.

Raburn and Gomes hit back-to-back, two-out homers in the second, when the Indians caught a break to take a 4-2 lead.

With Carlos Santana on with a one-out double, Mark Reynolds just missed a homer, flying out to the track in left. Brantley walked and Raburn fell into an 0-2 hole and appeared to take strike three, but plate umpire Laz Diaz called Iwakuma's pitch a ball to give Raburn new life.

He made the most of it, connecting for his fifth homer to make it 3-2. Gomes followed with a shot onto the pedestrian porch in left.

The Mariners scored two in the third to tie it, with Morales hitting an RBI single and Kyle Seager scoring Michael Morse grounded into a double play.

Seattle, which entered the game just 1 of 23 with runners in scoring position in the series, made the most of their first two chances and took a 2-0 lead in the first -- their first one of the four-game series -- on an RBI double by Kendrys Morales and Morse's run-scoring single.

What to think about Shabazz Muhammad

Rumors came out of the NBA Combine this week that Shabazz Muhammad's draft stock was falling, and falling fast. Once thought to be a potential target for the top pick in the 2013 NBA Draft, many experts have Muhammad going outside the top 10, some even questioning his status as a lottery pick.

One analyst mentioned that the only thing keeping Muhammad at the top of the draft was his name, which has been hyped since he was a high school superstar, drawing comparisons to a young Kobe Bryant. Across basketball circles, one train of thought is that based upon Muhammad's year at UCLA, he has not actually done much to deserve the high selection many predict he will receive.

However, I disagree with way of thinking.

Let's flashback to last NBA season. Entering the year, Harrison Barnes was the odds-on favorite to be the number one overall pick after he returned to UNC for his sophomore year, even though he was likely to be a top-5 pick. Barnes did not have a bad year, but he did not blow anyone away like many expected. Essentially, Barnes failed to meet unrealistic expectations for the season and experts dismissed him as overrated, backing away from him as an potentially elite NBA player.

The problem with phenoms like Barnes and Shabazz is that we expect every great high school player to be the next Kevin Durant or Lebron James, and if they fall short of those high expectations they are failures. That isn't logical at all.

Shabazz Muhammad has the potential to be a very productive NBA player, but he needs to in the right situation and he cannot be forced to be "the guy." If you are drafting Shabazz to carry your franchise on his back to a title, you are doing it wrong.

Here is how Shabazz helps you as a team, or specifically, how he helps the Cavs:

At 20 years old, he already has an NBA frame at 6'6, 221 pounds with a 6'11 wingspan. He has a tireless work ethic. Stories developed out of UCLA that Muhammad constantly pushed his teammates, and had no issue with calling out guys who were taking shortcuts. He excels in catch and shoot situations. He also moves very well off the ball

The knock on him offensively is that he cannot create his own offense. But if you are the Cavs, you should not care if he can create his own offense, because as long as Kyrie and Dion are on your team, you should not need to rely on Muhammad to run the offense or create off the dribble.

So in essence, his weakness will be hidden by our other young talent. Finding fits like this and gathering complementary talent is exactly how success is achieved by winning teams.

His defense was cause for concern at times while at UCLA, but it was not for lack of talent. At times he appeared to disappear on that end of the floor. That is on coaching, and Ben Howland got fired for a reason.

Muhammad was cited as one of the most impressive players at the combine during defensive drills. In a healthy organization, character issues can be masked. And under a defensive-minded coach like Mike Brown, young players will learn the importance of playing with intensity on that end of the floor.

So, does this mean I would take him over Nerlens Noel or Otto Porter? Probably not. But if the ping-pong balls don't bounce our way on Tuesday and we end up at 5 or 6, I think there is a strong case for Shabazz as our pick.

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Streaking Indians blank Mariners 6-0


(AP)

CLEVELAND -- Cy Young himself wouldn't want to mess with the Indians right now.

Justin Masterson struck out a season-high 11 in seven shutout innings and Michael Brantley hit a three-run homer and drove in four runs off Felix Hernandez as Cleveland toppled yet another former Cy Young Award winner on Sunday with a 6-0 victory over the Seattle Mariners.

Brantley connected in the second inning off Hernandez (5-3), who failed to go at least six innings for the first time this season.

The Indians, who improved to 17-4 since April 28, are 7-1 this season against Cy Young recipients. They've knocked off Hernandez, R.A. Dickey, David Price, Roy Halladay, Cliff Lee, Bartolo Colon and Justin Verlander. The Indians are taking pride in knocking off trophy-winning pitchers.

"We just take it as a challenge," Indians first baseman Nick Swisher said. "We've got that scrappy-type and gritty-type of team. It may not always be pretty, man, but somehow we're going to find a way to get it done. We just love coming to the ballpark right now.

"Things are rocking," Swisher said.

Before the game, Brantley said the Indians talked about taking down another trophy-winning pitcher.

"We're loose and we're not holding nothing back," Brantley said. "Everybody has smiles on their faces. We just want to make sure we enjoy this. We're playing great baseball right now and we just want to keep it up."

Staked to an early lead, Masterson (7-2) was dominant for the second straight start. He allowed three singles, easily outdueled Hernandez and ran his consecutive scoreless innings streak to 19. He shut out the New York Yankees 1-0 on four hits in his previous outing.

"From the very first pitch of the game he came out firing," Indians manager Terry Francona said. "He was not only firing, but he was pitching. He was using both sides of the plate. He was using a two-seamer, four-seamer, throwing breaking balls to both sides of the plate. He kept going up, down, in, out. He worked ahead."

The AL Central-leading Indians are a baseball-best 20-7 since April 20.

"We've got a good thing going in here," Swisher said. "We've got a lot of confident, excited guys and we're going out and proving that."

Following walkoff wins in the first two games of the series, Cleveland took the drama out of this one early, building a 5-0 lead after two innings against Hernandez.

The 2010 Cy Young winner, who left his previous start after six innings with back stiffness, came in with the league's lowest ERA (1.53) but it rose to 2.07 after he gave up six runs and eight hits in five innings. Hernandez struck out eight, including the final three batters, but he was wasn't on his game - and neither were the Mariners.

Seattle was only charged with one error, but the Mariners made several mental mistakes that helped the Indians.

"You're going to have games like that when a couple of things happen and you make a couple of mistakes," Mariners manager Eric Wedge said. "That's what happened to us. It was one of those days for Felix and one of those days for us."

It's not like Masterson needed much help.

The big right-hander overpowered the Mariners, who couldn't catch up to his 97 mph fastball and only had two runners reach second base against him. The Indians were hoping Masterson could develop into their ace, and so far this season he's been the dependable front-of-the-rotation starter they desperately needed.

"His stuff is dominant," Francona said. "He's been consistent, but consistent at a level with his velocity, breaking ball, ability to hold runners. He's just done everything."

Pitching with a six-run lead, he got stronger as the game progressed. He struck out five of the last six batters he faced and fanned seven in the last three innings.

Last season was a struggle for Masterson, who went 11-15 with a 4.93 ERA.

So what's he doing better?

"Everything," he said, laughing.

Brantley's three-run homer with two outs in the second gave the Indians a 5-0 lead over Hernandez.

The right-hander, who needed 35 pitches to get through the first, retired the first two hitters on groundouts before Michael Bourn singled and went to third on Jason Kipnis' base hit to center. Brantley then drove an 0-1 pitch into the Indians' bullpen in center for just his second homer.

It was a stunning development against Hernandez, who came in having allowed just four earned runs in 44 innings over his past six starts.

In the eight starts against the Indians, the former Cy Young winners have a collective 8.21 ERA.

A fundamental gaffe by Hernandez allowed the Indians to add a run in the fourth. With Mike Aviles at second after a double, Drew Stubbs topped a ball into the dirt that catcher Jesus Montero fielded in front of the plate and threw to first for the out. Aviles never slowed coming around third and scored easily because Montero got caught up the line and Hernandez failed to cover home.

"That's just beautiful right there," Masterson said. "Those are the type of things you want to see, and that's what defines this team and makes it so special."

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/05/19/v-fullstory/3405631/indians-blank-mariners-6-0.html#storylink=cpy

On the Cavs, Draft-Day Trades and Veterans


With the NBA lottery coming up on Tuesday, and the Cavs possessing four picks in the 2013 NBA Draft, there is much speculation as to what GM Chris Grant should do on draft night.

A recurring cry from certain media and segments of the fan base is that the team needs to package their pick for a proven commodity. They claim that the time to win is now and the Cavs need veteran leadership more than an unproven rookie.  All of this is part of a grand scheme to lure Lebron away from South Beach in the summer of 2014.

However, I happen to find myself in the group of Cavs fans who have no desire to mortgage this franchise’s future upon Lebron James. We tried that once. It didn’t work out so well.

(This is not to say that I would not take back the best basketball player on the planet without hesitation, just simply that I do not buy for a second that James has any interest in returning to Cleveland.)

I not buy into the notion that we need to win for Lebron. But furthermore, I do not see how trading for a veteran puts Cleveland in a position to win championships when guys like Kyrie Irving and Dion Waiters hit their prime.

I decided to take a look back at some of the draft day trades from the past, where teams swapped vets for their high pick. The results were astoundingly lop-sided, as the team trading the pick virtually always lost. Let’s take a look at a few:

  • Pau Gasol for Shareef Abdur-Rahim, 2001 by the Atlanta Hawks. Gasol, taken third overall, blossomed into one of the best big men in the NBA playing in Memphis and Los Angeles. The Hawks never appeared in the playoffs with Abdur-Rahim.

  • Rudy Gay for Shane Battier, 2006 by the Houston Rockets. Gay, taken eighth overall, is not quite an NBA superstar, but is a talented wing in the NBA. Gay has been arguably the second-best player from the draft class behind LaMarcus Aldridge. Battier was not terrible in Houston, but the Rockets never made it out of the first-round and Battier was never more than a role player.

  • Nene for Antonio McDyess, 2002 by the New York Knicks. Nene developed into a very serviceable starting center during his time in the league after being the seventh selection in the 2002 NBA Draft. McDyess, on the other hand, averaged 8 points and 6 rebounds per game. He only appeared in 18 games for New York, starting just six times. He was later traded to the Suns.


These are just a few of many regrettable draft-day trades in recent memory.

The Cavs should look to grab a young talent that could fulfill a role 2-3 years from now rather than rush to win games this season. The team should have a chance to make the playoffs this year, but there is no need to risk the long-term viability of the franchise in order to win an extra few games this season. 

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Cleveland drives home another walkoff win



CLEVELAND (AP) -- The Cleveland Indians are finding ways to win these days even when something goes wrong.

Jason Kipnis scored the winning run in the ninth inning when Brendan Ryan's throw pulled catcher Jesus Montero off the plate, sending the Indians to a 5-4 victory over the Seattle Mariners on Saturday.

Cleveland pulled out the win after closer Chris Perez allowed two-out solo homers to Raul Ibanez and Justin Smoak that tied the score in the top of the ninth.

''We made it more exciting than it needed to be, but there is something to be said for being resilient,'' Indians manager Terry Francona said. ''Rather than feeling sorry for yourself when you get punched in the gut, we came back to win.''

Kipnis, who won Friday's game with a three-run homer in the 10th, sparked the winning rally with a leadoff single against Oliver Perez (1-1). He moved to third on Asdrubal Cabrera's double and Nick Swisher was walked intentionally to load the bases.

Mark Reynolds then hit a sharp ground ball that forced Ryan to make a diving stop, and he was unable to get the forceout at home.

''That was a very uneventful walkoff, but a win is a win,'' Reynolds said. ''I just tried to put the ball in play somewhere. When I hit it I said to myself, 'please get through,' then it was 'please make a bad throw,' and Then 'please get there.' ''

Reynolds hit his 12th homer and finished with three RBIs as the Indians won for the 16th time in their last 20 games.

''That's baseball,'' Reynolds said. ''We were like, 'Oh well, let's go win it in the ninth. If not, we've got a good bullpen.''

After Kipnis scampered home to end the game, Mariners manager Eric Wedge came on the field to discuss the call with home plate umpire Mike Winters. He quickly went back to the dugout.

''The throw beat him, but Monty came off the plate early,'' Wedge said. ''You have to stand on the plate. You have to, but he came out a little bit early. We got the ground ball we wanted - Ryno made a great play - but we didn't get it done.''

Chris Perez (2-0) retired the first two hitters before Ibanez homered to right, cutting the lead to 4-3. Smoak then homered to center on a 1-1 pitch.

''The one to Ibanez was a mistake,'' Perez said. ''I missed my spot terribly. The one to Smoak, I was trying to throw it on the corner but I missed high. It's frustrating, but it's not one of the worst games I've ever had.''

It was Perez's second blown save in eight chances this season and wasted a strong start by Zach McAllister, who allowed two runs and six hits in 7 1-3 innings.

Reynolds singled in a run in the first against Joe Saunders and drove a 3-2 pitch over the 19-foot high wall in left field in the fifth. Reynolds, signed as a free agent in December, is tied for the AL lead in home runs.

Michael Bourn and Kipnis each singled in a run in the sixth, but Ryan belted a two-run homer in the eighth to keep Seattle in the game.

Saunders allowed four runs and 11 hits in 5 1-3 innings, continuing his road woes. The left-hander is 0-4 with an 11.25 ERA in five starts away from Safeco Field this season, compared to 3-0 with an 0.94 ERA in four home starts.

Asked about his problems pitching away from home, Saunders said, ''I'm gonna sacrifice a chicken before my next road start. ... This is just kind of a fluky thing.''

The Indians and Mariners exchanged baserunning blunders in the middle innings.

Montero hit a leadoff single in the third and moved to second on Ryan's base hit with no outs. But Montero strayed too far from second when Endy Chavez took a strike while squaring around for a bunt attempt. He was tagged out in a rundown and McAllister retired the next two hitters.

Cabrera committed his own baserunning mistake after he led off the fifth with a single. Ibanez caught Swisher's high fly ball in front of the wall in left. Cabrera, thinking the ball was going to be for extra bases, was doubled off first.

The Indians chased Saunders in the sixth. Mike Aviles started the inning with a double and remained at second when Yan Gomes singled through the left side. After a sacrifice and with the infield playing in, Ryan fielded Bourn's ground ball behind the mound but his throw home was too late to get Aviles. Kipnis then blooped a single to left that scored Gomes.

Smoak led off the eighth with a double and scored when Ryan connected for his first homer of the season. Rich Hill recorded the final two outs of the eighth for Cleveland.

Indians Walkoff Win

(AP)

Cleveland - Jason Kipnis had made a habit of hitting first-inning home runs this season. On Friday night, he tried something different.

Kipnis hit a three run homer with two outs in the 10th inning off Lucas Leutge to lead the Cleveland Indians to a 6-3 win over the Seattle Mariners.

The home run was the seventh of the season for Kipnis. The first five came in the first inning before he homered in the eighth in Wednesday's win over Philadelphia. His walkoff shot Friday came on an 0-1 pitch and capped out a two-out rally that began with a walk and an infield hit.

"This was outstanding," said Kipnis, who was mobbed by his teammates at home plate. "This was one of the more fun nights I've had on a baseball field."

The Indians have won 15 of 19 and are 10-2 at Progressive Field since April 30. Vinnie Pestano (1-0), activated from the disabled list before the game, worked around a one-out walk in the 10th.

The game drew a crowd of 34,282, a total boosted by a postgame fireworks show and $1 hot dog promotion. The Indians are last in the majors in attendance despite being 18-7 since April 20. The biggest crowd of the season since the home opener was not lost on Cleveland's players.

"That was awesome," Kipnis said. "I was just as amped up as they were rounding first base. You never want to put too much emphasis on different wins, but we knew we had a big crowd. To get a win in front of them and to get it like this in front of them, hopefully it brings some back, because we had a lot of fun tonight."

The Indians posted their third walk-off win of the season and are 4-0 in extra innings.

"There were no words coming out when I was rounding (the bases) and screaming," Kipnis said. "It was just sounds, just gibberish screams."

Added Indians manager Terry Francona: "Watching the guys jumping all over each other is fun."

Drew Stubbs, who homered in the fifth, drew a walk off Luetge (0-1). Stubbs broke for second with a 1-2 count on Michael Bourn, and Leutge threw to first baseman Justin Smoak, but Stubbs beat the throw to shortstop Brendan Ryan. Bourn hit a slow roller past the mound and second baseman Dustin Ackley's throw to first was late.

"That was the matchup we wanted, lefty-on-lefty there, but he (Luetge) just spun one up there and they took advantage of it," Mariners manager Eric Wedge said. "Speed got us there in the 10th. The kid (Stubbs) did a heck of a job getting to second base, and Bourn is just so fast."

The Mariners fell short of reaching the .500 mark for the first time since they were 4-4 on April 8. Raul Ibanez's two-run homer in the sixth tied the game, and the bullpens on both sides took over.

Chris Perez retired the side in order in the ninth. Perez, who has been nursing a stiff shoulder, was pitching for the first time since May 11. Pestano had been on the DL since May 1 with a sore right elbow.

Mariners relievers Charlie Furbush and Carter Capps combined to pitch 3 1/3 scoreless innings. Capps struck out Mark Reynolds to start the 10th. Luetge got Michael Brantley to ground out before running into trouble. Seattle lost for just the seventh time in 19 games.

Ubaldo Jimenez allowed two runs and struck out a season-high nine in five innings. He was pulled after Smoak led off the sixth with a single. Rich Hill was brought in to face Ibanez, who homered to right on an 0-1 pitch to tie the game. Jimenez, who had won three consecutive starts, struck out five of the first seven batters he faced. Seattle rookie Brandon Maurer allowed three runs in six innings. The right-hander matched a career high with six strikeouts.

Jason Giambi's sacrifice fly gave Cleveland the lead in the second. Maurer's wild pitch allowed another run to score. Kendry Morales' solo homer into the second deck in right field cut the lead to 2-1 in the fourth. Stubbs homered in the fifth to give Cleveland a two-run lead.

Nick Swisher drew a leadoff walk in the second and took third on a double by Carlos Santana. Swisher scored on Giambi's fly ball to right, which also move Santana to third. Santana scored when Maurer bounced a pitch in front of the plate with Brantley batting.

Morales, who flirted with an extra-base hit down the right line before lining out to Jimenez in the first, homered on a 2-0 pitch with one out in the fourth.

Stubbs' drive to right with one out in the fifth landed in Seattle's bullpen, barely clearing the wall.

Kipnis and Ryan collided in the third. Kipnis banged his head into the right leg of Ryan as he dove into second on a failed steal attempt. Ryan applied the tag, but both players were down for a couple of moments after the play as the two managers and trainers ran on the field. Kipnis and Ryan remained in the game.

Mariners outfielder Michael Morse was a late scratch with an irritated eye. Endy Chavez took his spot in right field and batted eighth.

Friday, May 17, 2013

Browns ink Backup Hoyer

Former Michigan State Spartan Brian Hoyer is headed home to Northeast Ohio on a two-year deal with the Browns. The Saint Ignatius Alum was released by the Arizona Cardinals earlier this week.

Hoyer is expected to compete with Jason Campbell for 2nd string on the Browns' depth chart. The move signals the end for another Shurmur-era player, as Thad Lewis is likely done in the Orange and Brown.

Hoyer started one game in Arizona last season. The Browns are Hoyer's fourth NFL team, as he has played in New England and Pittsburgh in addition to his brief stint in with the Cardinals. On his career, he's got a 59.4 completion percentage, 616 passing yards, 2 TD's and 3 interceptions.

Draft Combine Buzz: Day One

A few quick rumors from Day One that may be important for the Cavs.

Giannis Antetokounmpo was given a First Round promise by one team, per ESPN's Chad Ford. The Cavs are one possibility as Antetokounmpo is projected as a mid/last first round selection. The Cavs are rumored to have high interest in him with the 19th pick.

Rudy Gobert might be a freak. The French big man reportedly measured in over 7', but more impressive was the 7'9 wingspan that was blowing up Twitter yesterday. He also looked solid in some of the drills, as one analyst noted Gobert seemed to disrupt every shot in his vicinity. Look for the Euro to creep up draft boards as we inch closer to June 27th.

Victor Oladipo reported measured in at 6'4 in shoes, which has experts backing away from early projections of him as a SF.  Official measurements are not released until the end of the combine.

Shabazz Muhammed's stock continues to drop. Many rated Muhammed as the #1 prospect in the country coming out of high school, but after a less than stellar season at UCLA and a bizarre scandal involving his age, Muhammed's draft stock has taken quite a hit. After struggling in the shooting drills yesterday, many analysts were questioning whether he will even be chosen in the lottery.

Otto Porter told Sports Illustrated's Chris Mannix yesterday three teams which he believes are his best fit. He listed Cleveland, Phoenix and Orlando as desired destinations. Although the Cavs will not be meeting with Porter at the combine, many see Porter as a likely candidate for the Wine and Gold next season.

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Prospects to Watch at the NBA Draft Combine

Coverage of the 2013 NBA Draft Combine gets underway tomorrow morning in Chicago, Ill. The annual event probably will not play much of a role in Chris Grant's decision with the Cavs' early first round draft pick. However, there will be several guys the Cavs may be eyeing for one of their three picks later in the draft. Here are some highlights of a few guys to keep an eye on:

Steven Adams - C - Pittsburgh


Reggie Bullock - SF - North Carolina



Gorgui Dieng - C - Louisville



Archie Goodwin - SG - Kentucky



Glen Rice Jr. - SF - Rio Grande Valley (NBADL)




Jeff Withey - C - Kansas


(All videos via DraftExpress)