Welcome to another installment of the Guardians Newsletter. As a reminder, I’m Mandy Bell and I’m entering my fifth season covering Cleveland. Let’s get into the good stuff.
THE AL CENTRAL OUTLOOK
Last year at this time, the Guardians weren’t expected to be contenders.
The roster was young (spoiler alert: it still is). Many were expecting moves to be made. A limited window to do offseason shopping after the lockout made it difficult to execute anything, which led the Guardians to stick with their farm system. That move caused many pundits to count them out. The roster was fueled by it, and the team relied on its jovial enthusiasm to carry it to the ALDS.
The foundation is set. A roster that was so successful in 2022 added a big bat this offseason in Josh Bell to fill the void that Cleveland hoped Franmil Reyes would have filled last year. That means the Guardians should be better in ’23, right?
The problem with youth is uncertainty. Although a year of experience under everyone’s belts should be a benefit, the Guardians need to see last year’s rookies are here to stay. Here are a few "what if?" questions that need to go in Cleveland’s favor to end up on top of the AL Central again this season:
• Is Oscar Gonzalez as impactful as he was in 2022? Or will his all-or-nothing approach at the plate catch up to him this season?
• Will Mike Zunino be healthy? If so, will he get back into his offensive ways from 2021 (33 homers, .860 OPS) to improve production from the catching position?
• Can Zach Plesac and Aaron Civale stay healthy? If so, can they be reliable enough to help this rotation be elite?
Regardless of how this plays out, the Guardians are in a much different position going into 2023 than they were last offseason. No longer is this team expected to struggle or fall into a rebuilding phase. Cleveland is favored by many outlets to retake the AL Central crown.
What have the other teams in the division done to try to prevent that from happening?