Countdown to Indians’ Opening Day – 53

While the offseason has been historically slow and the winter has crawled along at an even slower pace, we at Did The Tribe Win Last Night look ahead to the warmer days of the 2018 season by remembering Tribe players past and present.

Countdown to Opening Day – 53 days

After two seasons in the Cleveland bullpen, Jeff Manship‘s time as part of the Indians relief staff came to a close last winter when the team opted not to tender him a contract in December in advance of his first exposure to arbitration, making the 32-year-old right-hander a free agent.

The move may have come as a surprise to some, as his overall numbers were average, especially compared to his incredible half-season of work with the club in 2015, but on the surface alone may not have merited being cut loose at a fairly reasonable salary for the coming year. He had been projected to make in the vicinity of $1.2 million through arbitration by the number gurus of MLBTradeRumors.com.

Instead of remaining state side and finding a minor league deal with a Major League club, Manship and his services sailed overseas to Korea, as he signed a $1.8 million one-year contract with the NC Dinos of the Korean Baseball Organization. He put together a nice season for the Dinos, going 12-4 with a 3.67 ERA in 21 starts.

Manship had some interest among Major League organizations, with several rumored to be considering minor league contracts with spring training invites. But no offers rolled in for Manship to super agent Scott Boras in a crowded and slow-to-develop relief market and he inked a contract that would pay him far more than he had made in any one previous season (he was paid $760,000 in his final pre-arb season with the Indians in 2016).

Manship – Jason Miller/Getty Images
He signed with Cleveland on a minor league deal prior to the 2015 season and performed well at Triple-A Columbus, leading to a call-up midseason. His traditional numbers were more than sound – he was 1-0 in 32 appearances with a 0.92 ERA and a 0.76 WHIP. Nine of the 33 runners (27%) scored and the effort led to his return to the club’s bullpen for 2016.

In 2016, he made his way into 53 games, going 2-1 with a 3.12 ERA and 1.43 WHIP. While the ERA number was still in the ball park of a respectable reliever, an increased number of his pitches had left the ball park for home runs (a total of seven on the season, six more than he had allowed the previous year in four fewer innings). His hit rate jumped more than three and a half hits per nine innings and his walk rate double as he walked a career-high 22 batters despite a personal-best 36 strikeouts in the most innings that he had worked in his eight-year career. Allowing just eight of 35 inherited runners (23%) to score was not sufficient to save his Major League job, as the high hit, homer, and walk rates may have scared some away from otherwise good traditional pitching numbers, statistically speaking.

In wearing the number 53 over the last two seasons, Manship became one of many relievers (and converted starters, no less) to don the digits for the Cleveland Indians. The first player to do so, however, was catcher Jerry Willard, who broke into the bigs in 1984 while wearing it for parts of his 87 games in his debut season. Right-handed reliever Reggie Ritter was next in 1986, wearing it in parts of each of his only two seasons in the Majors, both in the Indians organization. Sammy Stewart also wore it in his only season in Cleveland in 1987 while wrapping up his ten-year MLB career. Pitcher Kevin Wickander wore it over four seasons in Cleveland from 1989 to 1993 and handed it off later to Jeremy Hernandez, who took the mound 49 times in relief in 1993 for the Tribe in his lone season with the club.

Paul Shuey is the longest tenured 53 in club history, debuting less than two years after the club selected him with the second overall pick in the 1992 draft out of the University of North Carolina. He had arguably the most big league success of any of the former Tribesmen in the number, appearing in 361 games and posting a 34-21 record with 21 saves, a 3.60 ERA, and a 1.40 WHIP over nine seasons with the club before his trade to the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2002.

The number bounced around on the backs of relievers like Carl Sadler, Jeriome Robertson, Jeremy Guthrie, and 20-year vet Arthur Rhodes before it found a more permanent home on the jersey of left-hander Rafael Perez.

Perez - Jared Wickerham/Getty Images
Perez – Jared Wickerham/Getty Images

“Raffy Left”, part of the bullpen matchup tandem with Rafael Betancourt, wore the number from 2006 to 2012 and become one of the more heavily used arms on the club’s relief staff, appearing in 73 games in 2008, 70 games in 2010, and 71 games in 2011. Early strong strikeout rates did not continue throughout his career, however, as he struggled during his middle and later years in Cleveland with higher hits and walks rates. Being a left-hander with some success at the Major League level earned him several additional opportunities along the way, as he signed free agent deals with Minnesota (2013), Boston (2013), Texas (2014), Pittsburgh (2014), and Seattle (2015), but he never once returned to the Majors.

He has spent time since pitching professionally in foreign leagues, spending time in the Mexican League and in the Dominican Winter League in 2015 and the same Dominican Winter League in 2016 and 2017. Last season, he emerged in the independent Atlantic League and made 22 starts for Long Island before returning to the Gigantes del Cibao for his fifth straight winter pitching for the Dominican club.

Prior to Manship taking on the number, southpaw reliever Rich Hill wore it for Cleveland in 2013 with minimal success before reviving his career elsewhere after converting back to a starting pitcher. Catchers Chris Gimenez and George Kottaras both represented it on the field during the 2014 season.

After being unused in 2016, it returned to action for the Indians at the end of 2017 when rookie outfielder Greg Allen made his big league debut, appearing in 25 games while hitting .229.

Photo: Duane Burleson/Getty Images

Related Posts

Barker’s Perfect Game in 1981 Remains Last No-No for Tribe

Today we remember Len Barker’s perfect game against the Toronto Blue Jays in 1981, the last hitless game tossed by an Indians pitcher. This story was originally…

Caldwell Gave an Electrifying Performance on the Mound for the Tribe in 1919

On the anniversary of a bizarre event in baseball history, Did The Tribe Win Last Night shares a story originally posted on August 24, 2016, by guest…

Carl Mays: My Attitude Toward the Unfortunate Chapman Matter

We continue our look back on the death of Ray Chapman on the 100th anniversary of the tragedy. This supplemental interview appeared in the November 1920 issue…

League, City Plunged into Mourning after Chapman’s Death

This story was originally published on December 26, 2014, as part of a series of stories by Did The Tribe Win Last Night’s Vince Guerrieri on the…

Tragedy Struck Tribe with Chapman Beaning

This weekend marked the anniversary of a tragic event thankfully never replicated on a Major League field. This story of the death of Ray Chapman was originally…

Don’t Call It A Comeback!

Today’s trip down memory lane takes us back to a story published on August 5, 2011, in the infancy stages of the Did The Tribe Win Last…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.