Look for the Black Sox to give Phil Bradley and Asdrúbal Cabrera a few starts over the final week of the season, with Dick Ellsworth and Kevin Tapani continuing to get extended looks on the mound.
Bradley and Cal Ripken, Jr. each hit 2 out, leading the Black Sox to a 10-6, come from behind victory over Portland.
#Cleveland Spiders
Joe Smith was sent down with Bob Tewksbury being recalled as the Spiders try to overtake the Black Yankees for the division title.
#Detroit Wolverines
JD Martinez has forced the Wolverines to give him more playing time with an OPS nearing 1.300 in 35 games. That means his OPS is–in limited appearances–higher than Ty Cobb‘s. I don’t care if you do that in 5 games or 35, that’s impressive.
Cal Ripken Jr went deep twice and drove in 5 in a 14-11 win over Chicago. Moody slugger Gavvy Cravath will miss about 3 weeks with a quadriceps injury, with the Black Sox recalling OF Ken Griffey Sr, a stalwart AAA performer, for a complimentary cup of WBL coffee.
Curt Blefary had quite an unexpected day. His 9th inning homer to break up a shutout wasn’t so surprising, but his throwing out six runners trying to steal was quite a shock for a catcher not exactly known for his defensive prowess. Baltimore wasted a fine outing from Dennis Martínez in a 2-1 loss to Chicago.
Bryce Harper hit 2 homeruns and he and Asdrúbal Cabrera each had 4 hits as Baltimore topped Chicago, 9-1.
#Cleveland Spiders
Ron Blomberg was recalled from his rehab assignment which leaves the Spiders in the envious position of having to find at bats for the shockingly good Willie McCovey, who was recalled when Blomberg went down. McCovey has a .952 SLG over a tiny 50 AB sample, but still. .952 SLG.
The Spiders recalled Joe Smith to take the place of the injured Terry Adams and then, as part of roster expansion, recalled Ps Claude Passeau, Willis Hudlin, and Sergio Romo and position players Bob Elliott, Kenny Lofton, and Paul O’Neil.
Johnny Bates went deep twice, but that was about all the Spiders could manage in a 13-4 loss to Memphis.
Evan Longoria and Lance Berkman each went deep twice and the Spiders bullpen held on for dear life as Cleveland topped Memphis, 11-10.
#Detroit Wolverines
Johnny Marcum and George Bechtel started rehab assignments. Logan Hensley was promoted from AA for the stretch run.
Juan Beníquez scored 4 times and hit his 17th homerun in a taut, 8-7 win over Baltimore. The victory went to Jack Wilson, who improved to 6-0 on the season.
#Memphis Red Sox
Skel Roach will miss about a month with an elbow issue, meaning his season is most likely over. Nixey Callahan was recalled.
Not a great day for the Red Sox: they fell 8-6 to Miami, and lost Dobie Moore for 2-3 weeks. They recalled Wayne Causey to help out at SS.
Ted Williams and David Ortiz went back-to-back twice as the Red Sox dominated Cleveland, 13-4 behind a decent effort from Len Barker, who evened his record at 10-10.
The Black Sox recalled Buddy Groom and Bobby Wallace from rehab assignments, sending RA Dickey and Dave Anderson to AAA. They also named Johnny Sain and newly-acquired Mike Cuellar to fill out the rotation.
Wallace’s return is complicated–honestly, the Black Sox had hoped to deal the veteran, but found the market wanting, especially given his recent injury. Wallace returns to a backup role behind Cal Ripken, Jr., although he will see some time at 3B as well.
Frank Robinson homered twice and drove in 5 as the Black Sox won a slugfest over Memphis, 12-11.
#Cleveland Spiders
Cleveland’s trades led to some roster shuffling. Joe Smith and Chico Walker were sent to AAA to clear room for Claude Passeau and Ed Bailey. Bob Feller and Pat Malone were named to the rotation for the Spiders with Passeau starting off in Cleveland’s bullpen for the time being.
Evan Longoria won a see-saw game with a walkoff homer in the bottom of the 10th against the Black Yankees. John Ellis, Larry Doby, Ron Blomberg, and Bailey also went deep for the Spiders in the 9-7 victory.
#Detroit Wolverines
Recently acquired Victor Martinez steps into the reserve catching role for Detroit, who have also decided to juggle their middle infield, with Tony Lazzeri being recalled from AAA to take over at SS. JD Martinez was also recalled to add some power from the bench, with Billy Nash heading down to AAA.
George Bechtel was added to the rotation while Felipe Vásquez was sent to AAA in exchange for Mike Griffin.
It’s not quite the wholesale commitment to youth some have been asking for (Lazzeri is 36, replacing George Davis who is 35), but it’s something. I guess.
The Martinez boys came through, with JD hitting a homerun in his first WBL at-bat and Victor adding 3 hits in a 3-2, 10 inning win over Los Angeles. Ty Cobb hit one out in the top of the 10th for the go-ahead run.
#Memphis Red Sox
The Red Sox recalled Iván De Jesús to fill a utility role. One impact of this is allowing Dobie Moore to focus more exclusively on SS.
David Ortiz went deep twice and Manny Ramírez homered a record-tying 3 times (the second time this year he’s done that), driving in 7 … but the Red Sox failed to hold several leads, falling to Baltimore, 12-11.
#New York Black Yankees
Dave Righetti started a rehab assignment. AJ Burnett and Josh Harrison were sent to AAA, with newcomers Pascual Pérez and Rogers Hornsby stepping right into the rotation and the starting lineup, respectively.
Babe Ruth went deep twice in a 12 inning, 8-4 win over Cleveland. Lou Gehrig did the same the next day, but once again Aroldis Chapman couldn’t hold a lead, and the Spiders won in extra innings, 9-7. This latest meltdown may trigger a shakeup in the Black Yankees’ bullpen, with Goose Gossage taking over the closer role.
Time for some changes. Bobby Wallace, Sean Marshall, and John Wetteland were all recalled from rehab assignments, with Mark Baldwin, Gregg Olson, and–yes–Larry Gardner heading to AAA. This means Miller Huggins will see most of the time at 2B, and while Wallace is the starter, Cal Ripken, Jr. will rotate through SS, 3B, and occasionally 2B in a quest for playing time.
Baltimore continues with only 3 named starters (Dennis Martínez, Ned Garvin, and Mike Mussina).
#Cleveland Spiders
Bill Steen returned to the Spiders’ rotation.
Both Sammy Strang and Victor Martinez were moved to AAA as Cleveland’s patience for them to turn around horrible starts to their season ran thin. John Ellis‘ recent mini-revival means Cleveland doesn’t necessarily need to recall a C; instead they brought IFs Steve Sax and Chico Walker up from AA.
Mel Harder‘s injury status remains unknown, but needing a starter, the Spiders placed him on the DL, recalling Hank Gastright. Gastright was OK, and Ron Blomberg went deep twice, but the Spiders couldn’t keep Memphis’ bats quiet, losing 8-4 to the Cuban Giants.
Al Smith, decent in a very small sample size as a lefty in the pen, will miss about a week, earning him a trip to the DL. Joe Smith (no relation) was promoted from AAA.
The Spiders finally got a diagnosis on Harder, who will miss the rest of the season with a fractured elbow.
A strong start from Steen combined with 2 homers from Evan Longoria carried Cleveland to a 4-1 win over Memphis.
#Detroit Wolverines
Bill Carrigan was sent to AAA to see if he could break out of his season-long slump. The Wolverines recalled Jack Wilson from his rehab assignment to help out their beleaguered staff.
Charlie Gehringer continued to impress with his 9th and 10th homeruns of the year as the Wolverines topped Chicago, 5-2. Charlie Root was excellent, allowing 1 run in 7 plus innings to level his record at 6-6.
The Wolverines finally had seen enough of Gene Conley‘s struggles, sending the former pro basketball player to AAA along with Claude Passeau and activating Billy Hoeft and Pete Conway being recalled. With Hal Newhouser starting a rehab assignment, look for more changes in the Detroit mound corps in the days to come.
#Memphis Red Sox
Ted Williams reached 20 homeruns on the season, going deep twice in an 8-6 loss to Los Angeles.
#New York Black Yankees
Hank Bauer did well in his time in the WBL, with 6 homers in under 30 games. But he’s no Eric Davis, and with Davis ready to return from his rehab assignment, Bauer moves back to AAA and the Black Yankees become, if anything, more formidable.
Mickey Mantle went deep twice and Waite Hoyt improved to 5-0 as the Black Yankees beat Portland, 9-4.
Dave Righetti will miss a couple weeks with a strained shoulder, prompting the Black Yankees to recall Roy Evans from AAA Newark. Evans isn’t very heralded as a prospect, but he led AA in IP in 2000, and was 6-3 with a 3.20 ERA so far at AAA.
This is a hard one. Cleveland was one of the best teams in the league last season, but they also got a few career years which are unlikely to duplicate (Ron Blomberg for sure, but also perhaps Bill Steen and Pat Malone). On the other hand, they discovered some elite talent that will be available all year (Tris Speaker and Bob Feller). So maybe that balances out, and a championship push is possible?
Best Case
Blomberg remains an MVP candidate (unlikely) and the offense solidifies behind Speaker, Chuck Knoblauch, and Lance Berkman and the pitching staff is a net gain (perhaps Steen or Malone regress, but Cy Young steps forward, for example).
Worst Case
Blomberg collapses, leaving only Speaker as a true offensive force (if he actually is one) with the rest of the big bats from last season (John Ellis, Jake Stahl, Knoblauch, Johnny Bates) all regressing towards mediocrity. There is a lot of pitching depth here, but of course there is the danger of injury or total collapse, but it feels like someone will produce here.
Key Questions
Who plays 3B? This is a question of scarcity: nobody has seemed able to step up.
What happens in the OF? Both Speaker and Kenny Lofton offer strong defense, is it possible to move one of them to LF or RF effectively?
Trade Bait
Sure. One way to solve the OF situation is to trade some of them for a 3B.
Roster Evaluation
POS
Elite
Strong
Solid
Meh
Weak
Unknown
C
Santop
1B
Blomberg
Stahl Ellis
Berkman
2B
Knoblauch
3B
Strang
Longoria
SS
Vaughan
Sewell
LF/ RF
Bates
Doby
CF
Speaker
SP
Malone Young
Coveleski Steen
Feller
End
Adams
Gearrin Reed
RP
Harder Wyatt
Street Marberry Ventura
New Addition | Injured
Pretty accurate, and pretty optimistic: especially if Speaker performs anywhere like he did in his debut 100 PA’s. The Spiders just need a few players to lean left, and they have a shot at a championship.
Talent Ratings
WBL
Minors
Raw Power
1B/OF Ron Blomberg 1B/OF Lance Berkman
1B/OF Paul O’Neill
Batting Eye
IF Sammy Strang
IF Bobby Avila
Contact
OF Tris Speaker
OF Kenny Lofton
Running Speed
2B Chuck Knoblauch
OF Kenny Lofton OF Randy Winn 1B Bill Phillips
Base Stealing
OF Johnny Bates
OF Kenny Lofton
IF Defense
3B Evan Longoria
IF Jim Gantner
OF Defense
OF Tris Speaker
OF Rowland Office
Stuff
P Bob Feller
P Billy Gumbert P Wes Whisler
Control
P Mel Harder
P Edward Mujica
Velocity
RP Cory Gearrin
RP Joe Smith
Best In The Minors
Rank
Age
POS
Name
1 (45)
22
1B
Aubrey Huff
2 (93)
21
P
John Keefe
3 (96)
26
P
Hank Gastright
4 (99)
23
SS
Joe Sewell
5 (133)
20
1B
Bill Phillips
6 (186)
23
P
Huston Street
7 (194)
24
P
Wade LeBlanc
Others: None.
This is a barren system, probably one of the worst in the WBL. Sewell and Street start the season in Cleveland. Beyond them, especially given that Huff is blocked positionally, it’s not clear where help might come from.
Most
Least
Age
P Stan Coveleski, 37
IF Johnny Hodapp, 18
Height
P Toby Borland, 6’6″ P Ron Reed, 6’6″
OF Herbie Moran, 5’5″
OPS
1B/OF Ron Blomberg, 1.061 (WBL)
IF Brandon Phillips, .468 (—)
HR
IF Roy Howell, 49 (—)
IF Rick Burleson, 0 (WBL/AAA)
SB
OF Johnny Bates, 41 (WBL)
Many with 0
WAR
1B/OF Ron Blomberg, 5.8 (WBL)
IF Brandon Phillips, -3.7 (—)
W
Pat Malone, 17 (WBL)
Ron Reed, 1 (WBL)
SV
Stew Cliburn, 39 (—)
ERA
Bill Steen, 2.93 (WBL)
Willis Hudlin, 6.41 (AAA/AA)
WAR
Pat Malone, 5.0 (WBL)
Willis Hudlin, -0.8 (AAA/AA)
Stats are across all levels. 200 PA / 75 IP min. Non WBL leagues indicated by —.