2013 Cleveland Indians season

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2013 Cleveland Indians
American League Wild Card
Major League affiliations
Location
Results
Record 92–70 (.568)
Divisional place 2nd
Other information
Owner(s) Larry Dolan
General manager(s) Chris Antonetti
Manager(s) Terry Francona
Local television SportsTime Ohio · WKYC
(Matt Underwood, Rick Manning)
Local radio WTAM · WMMS
Cleveland Indians Radio Network
(Tom Hamilton, Jim Rosenhaus)
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The 2013 Cleveland Indians season was the 113th season for the franchise. The team, managed by Terry Francona, began their season on April 2. They advanced to the post-season and lost to the Tampa Bay Rays in the 2013 American League Wild Card Game.

Offseason

Departures

Infielder Brent Lillibridge refused assignment and became a free agent on November 25, 2012. The Indians did not tender contracts to infielder Jack Hannahan, Rafael Perez and Chris Seddon, making them free agents. All three went on to sign with other clubs. In a three-team trade on December 11, the Indians traded Shin-Soo Choo, Jason Donald, Tony Sipp and Lars Anderson.[1]

Arrivals

Following the firing of three-year manager Manny Acta,[2] the Indians signed former Boston Red Sox manager, Terry Francona to a four-year deal on October 6, 2012.[1] Francona and Sandy Alomar Jr. were the only candidates for the position. Francona previously had a history with the Cleveland Indians as a front office advisor in 2001. Also, Francona and his dad, Tito, both played in the Major Leagues for the Indians. He stated that he is close with Indians president, Mark Shapiro and general manager, Chris Antonetti and that's what intrigued him the most.[3]

On November 2, Blake Wood was claimed off waivers from Kansas City. The next day, Mike Avilés and Yan Gomes were acquired in a trade with Toronto.[1] Mike McDade was also claimed off waivers from Toronto about a month later.[1] On December 9, the Indians signed Mark Reynolds to a one-year, $6 million contract. Two days later, the Indians made their biggest trade of the offseason. They acquired Drew Stubbs from Cincinnati and Trevor Bauer, Bryan Shaw, and Matt Albers from Arizona.[1] In one of the biggest signings of the offseason, the Indians signed Nick Swisher to a four-year, $56 million on December 23.[4] Brett Myers agreed to a 1-year, $7 million deal January 1, 2013.[5] After signing Michael Bourn to a four-year $48 million contract, the Indians finished the offseason with spending $117 million on free agents after spending just $8 million the past two seasons.[6]

The busy offseason left many fans and writers saying the Indians will be the most improved team in 2013[7] and "if there was an offseason championship, the trophy would be heading to Cleveland".[6]

Spring training

On November 29, the Indians announced their spring training schedule.[8] Pitchers and catchers reported to spring training on February 10, 2013. The first full team workout took place on February 15 and the first game took place on February 22 against the Cincinnati Reds.[9]

Injuries

Michael Brantley was accidentally spiked by Oakland Athletics third basemen Josh Donaldson on February 25 at spring training. He received 15 stitches and was expected to be out 10 days.[10] Chris Perez also sprained his shoulder during spring training and was expected to be out three to four weeks.[11] The Indians had several players on the Disabled List (DL) to start the season; Frank Herrmann, Blake Wood and Josh Tomlin started the season on the 60-day DL after having Tommy John surgery.[12]

Regular season

The Indians started the regular season in Toronto against the Blue Jays on April 2. Their home opener, which was on April 8, sold out in 6 minutes; one of the fastest sell outs in Indians history.[13]

Opening Day Starting Lineup

  1. CF Michael Bourn
  2. SS Asdrúbal Cabrera
  3. 2B Jason Kipnis
  4. 1B Nick Swisher
  5. LF Michael Brantley
  6. C Carlos Santana
  7. DH Mark Reynolds
  8. 3B Lonnie Chisenhall
  9. RF Drew Stubbs

SP Justin Masterson

April

For the second straight year, the Indians opened the season against the Toronto Blue Jays, this time in Toronto. Unlike the 2012 opener, the Indians won the game 4-1 with ace Justin Masterson going eight dominant innings and closer Chris Perez picking up the save. Despite this win, the Tribe started the season slowly, at just 8-13. The Indians' struggles during April included a crushing 11-6 defeat by the New York Yankees in the team's home opener, and a 3-game sweep at the hands of the Boston Red Sox.

The Indians' fortunes turned around late in the month. Beginning with the second game of an April 28 doubleheader against the Kansas City Royals, the Indians won six straight games and 18 of 22 going through the middle of May. On April 30, the Indians tied a team record with seven home runs in a game, as they defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 14-2.

May

The Indians started May on a high note, winning 15 of their first 19 games of the month. This included four-game sweeps of the defending AL West champion Oakland Athletics and the Seattle Mariners, the latter of which featuring three walk-off hits. After the Seattle series, however, the Indians struggled for the rest of the month and into early June, losing 16 of their next 20, including a May 26 loss to the Boston Red Sox, in which the Indians blew a 5-2 9th inning lead and closer Chris Perez left the game with a shoulder injury. Perez would be out until late June.

During April and May, the Indians defeated seven former Cy Young Award winners: R.A. Dickey (April 2), David Price (April 7), Roy Halladay (April 30), Cliff Lee (May 1), Bartolo Colón (May 9), Justin Verlander (May 11), and Félix Hernández (May 19). Also, slugger Mark Reynolds was among the league leaders with 14 home runs at the end of May.

June

June started slowly for the Indians as they lost eight straight games from June 2–10. After that losing streak, however, the Indians would go 14-5 the rest of the month. Vinnie Pestano filled the role of closer as Chris Perez was on the disabled list for most of the month.

Second baseman Jason Kipnis was named the American League Player of the Month for June. During the month, he hit .419 with 12 doubles, four home runs, and 25 RBI. He also stole nine bases and received Player of the Week honors twice during June.

July

on July 6, second baseman Jason Kipnis and starting pitcher Justin Masterson were named to the American League All-Star team. This marked the first All-Star selection for both Kipnis and Masterson. Kipnis had an RBI double in the game, as the American League won 3-0.

The Indians started July by losing 5 of 7 to division rivals Kansas City and Detroit, before finishing the first half on a strong note, taking five of six from Toronto and Kansas City. Late July was highlighted by an eight-game winning streak, which included sweeps of the then AL West leading Texas Rangers and the Chicago White Sox.

The sweep of Chicago was the Tribe's second four-game sweep over the White Sox of the season, marking the first time since 1960 that the Indians swept two four-game series from the same club. On the July 29 win over the White Sox, slugger Jason Giambi became the oldest player ever to hit a walk-off home run at 42 years and 202 days. Chris Perez regained his closing duties in July and saved eight games. Meanwhile, late reliever Vinnie Pestano had struggled throughout the month and was sent to AAA Columbus on July 31.

August

On August 5, the Indians began a key four-game home series against the Detroit Tigers just three games behind Detroit for the division lead. Taking a 2-0 lead into the 9th inning of game 1, Chris Perez gave up four runs en route to a 4-2 loss. The Tigers ended up sweeping the series and leaving Cleveland with a 7-game lead. The Indians went on to lose their next two games – to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim – and were in danger of finishing their homestand 0-7, which would be their first winless homestand since 2004. They managed to win that final game 6-5 after trailing 5-0.

The team's struggles continued throughout the month, as they finished August 12–16, their worst month of the season. The Indians lost their final 5 games of the month to playoff contenders Atlanta and Detroit.

September

File:2013-09-29 Cleveland Indians defeat Minnesota Twins to go to playoffs.jpg
The Indians celebrate after clinching a wild card slot

On September 1, the Indians salvaged their final game of the season against Detroit, 4-0 on a Mike Avilés grand slam, but the Tigers won the season series 15-4 and had a commanding lead in the division. The next day, all-star starter Justin Masterson left the game against the Baltimore Orioles with an oblique injury. The Indians lost that game and sat 3​12 games out of a wild card spot without their top pitcher.

Indians #2 starter Ubaldo Jiménez stepped up in Masterson's absence, going 4-0 with a 1.09 ERA during the month of September. He was named American League Pitcher of the Month. The Indians played some of their best baseball of the season in September, going 21-6 in the month including a 10-game winning streak to close the season. Throughout the month, the Indians closed the gap on the Texas Rangers and Tampa Bay Rays, and took the lead for one of the wild card spots with about a week left in the regular season. The Indians needed this strong month to clinch a Wild Card spot, as they were not able to clinch until the final game of the season, a 5-1 victory over the division rival Twins. The Indians finished the season 92-70, which was good enough for the top wild card spot, which meant they would host the 2013 American League Wild Card Game at Progressive Field. This was the Indians' first playoff appearance since 2007. They finished one game better than both Texas and Tampa Bay, who would face off in a tie-breaker game. Tampa Bay won this game, and the Wild Card playoff was set.

Also of note during the month, the Indians swept the Chicago White sox in a four-game series for the third time this season, a first in franchise history and the first time since 1963 that any team accomplished this feat. The Indians finished the season 17-2 against the White Sox. On September 24, Jason Giambi hit a walk-off home run against the White Sox, again becoming the oldest player ever to hit a walk-off home run at 42 years and 259 days, breaking the record he set less than two months earlier.

Season standings

American League Central

AL Central W L Pct. GB Home Road
Detroit Tigers 93 69 0.574 51–30 42–39
Cleveland Indians 92 70 0.568 1 51–30 41–40
Kansas City Royals 86 76 0.531 7 44–37 42–39
Minnesota Twins 66 96 0.407 27 32–49 34–47
Chicago White Sox 63 99 0.389 30 37–44 26–55


American League Wild Card

Division Winners W L Pct.
Boston Red Sox 97 65 0.599
Oakland Athletics 96 66 0.593
Detroit Tigers 93 69 0.574


Wild Card teams
(Top 2 qualify for 1-game playoff)
W L Pct. GB
Cleveland Indians 92 70 0.568
Tampa Bay Rays 92 71 0.564
Texas Rangers 91 72 0.558 1
Kansas City Royals 86 76 0.531
Baltimore Orioles 85 77 0.525
New York Yankees 85 77 0.525
Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 78 84 0.481 13½
Toronto Blue Jays 74 88 0.457 17½
Seattle Mariners 71 91 0.438 20½
Minnesota Twins 66 96 0.407 25½
Chicago White Sox 63 99 0.389 28½
Houston Astros 51 111 0.315 40½


Record vs. Opponents

2013 AL Records
Source: AL Standings Head-to-Head
Team BAL BOS CWS CLE DET HOU KC LAA MIN NYY OAK SEA TB TEX TOR NL
Baltimore 11–8 4–3 3–4 4–2 4–2 3–4 5–2 3–3 9–10 5–2 2–4 6–13 5–2 10–9 11–9
Boston 8–11 4–2 6–1 3–4 6–1 2–5 3–3 4–3 13–6 3–3 6–1 12–7 2–4 11–8 14–6
Chicago 3–4 2–4 2–17 7–12 3–4 9–10 3–4 8–11 3–3 2–5 3–3 2–5 4–2 4–3 8–12
Cleveland 4–3 1–6 17–2 4–15 6–1 10–9 4–2 13–6 1–6 5–2 5–2 2–4 5–1 4–2 11–9
Detroit 2–4 4–3 12–7 15–4 6–1 9–10 0–6 11–8 3–3 3–4 5–2 3–3 3–4 5–2 12–8
Houston 2–4 1–6 4–3 1–6 1–6 2–4 10–9 1–5 1–5 4–15 9–10 2–5 2–17 3–4 8–12
Kansas City 4–3 5–2 10–9 9–10 10–9 4–2 2–5 15–4 2–5 1–5 4–3 6–1 3–3 2–4 9–11
Los Angeles 2–5 3–3 4–3 2–4 6–0 9–10 5–2 1–5 3–4 8–11 11–8 4–3 4–15 6–1 10–10
Minnesota 3–3 3–4 11–8 6–13 8–11 5–1 4–15 5–1 2–5 1–6 4–3 1–6 4–3 1–5 8–12
New York 10–9 6–13 3–3 6–1 3–3 5–1 5–2 4–3 5–2 1–5 4–3 7–12 3–4 14–5 9–11
Oakland 2–5 3–3 5–2 2–5 4–3 15–4 5–1 11–8 6–1 5–1 8–11 3–3 10–9 4–3 13–7
Seattle 4–2 1–6 3–3 2–5 2–5 10–9 3–4 8–11 3–4 3–4 11–8 3–3 7–12 3–3 8–12
Tampa Bay 13–6 7–12 5–2 4–2 3–3 5–2 1–6 3–4 6–1 12–7 3–3 3–3 3–4 11–8 12–8
Texas 2–5 4–2 2–4 1–5 4–3 17–2 3–3 15–4 3–4 4–3 9–10 12–7 4–3 1–6 10–10
Toronto 9–10 8–11 3–4 2–4 2–5 4–3 4–2 1–6 5–1 5–14 3–4 3–3 8–11 6–1 11–9

Updated for games through September 29, 2013


Detailed records

Roster

2013 Cleveland Indians
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Other batters

Manager

Coaches

Game log

2013 Game Log: 92–70 (Home: 51–30; Away: 41–40)

Player stats

Batting

Player G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI AVG SB
Matt Albers 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Cody Allen 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Mike Avilés 124 361 54 91 15 0 9 46 .252 8
Scott Barnes 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Trevor Bauer 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0
Michael Bourn 130 525 75 138 21 6 6 50 .263 23
Michael Brantley 151 556 66 158 26 3 10 73 .284 17
Asdrúbal Cabrera 136 508 66 123 35 2 14 64 .242 9
Ezequiel Carrera 2 4 1 2 0 0 0 1 .500 0
Carlos Carrasco 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Matt Carson 20 11 5 7 0 0 1 3 .636 3
Lonnie Chisenhall 94 289 30 65 17 0 11 36 .225 1
Jason Giambi 71 186 21 34 8 0 9 31 .183 0
Yan Gomes 88 293 45 86 18 2 11 38 .294 2
Nick Hagadone 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Rich Hill 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Ubaldo Jiménez 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0
Scott Kazmir 2 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 .250 0
Jason Kipnis 149 564 86 160 36 4 17 84 .284 30
Corey Kluber 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0
Jason Kubel 8 18 0 3 1 0 0 0 .167 0
Zach McAllister 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0
John McDonald 8 7 2 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0
Lou Marson 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0
Justin Masterson 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 .500 0
Chris Perez 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Cord Phelps 4 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0
Ryan Raburn 86 243 40 66 18 0 16 55 .272 0
Jose Ramirez 15 12 5 4 0 1 0 0 .333 0
Mark Reynolds 99 335 40 72 8 0 15 48 .215 3
Mark Rzepczynski 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Danny Salazar 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0
Carlos Santana 154 541 75 145 39 1 20 74 .268 3
Omir Santos 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0
Bryan Shaw 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Kelly Shoppach 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0
Drew Stubbs 146 430 59 100 21 2 10 45 .233 17
Nick Swisher 145 549 74 135 27 2 22 63 .246 1
Totals 162 5465 745 1391 290 23 171 711 .255 117

Pitching

Player W L ERA G GS SV IP R ER BB K
Matt Albers 3 1 3.14 56 0 0 63.0 25 22 23 35
Cody Allen 6 1 2.43 77 0 2 70.1 22 19 26 88
Scott Barnes 0 1 7.27 6 0 1 8.2 7 7 3 10
Trevor Bauer 1 2 5.29 4 4 0 17.0 11 10 16 11
Carlos Carrasco 1 4 6.75 15 7 0 46.2 36 35 18 30
Preston Guilmet 0 0 10.13 4 0 0 5.1 6 6 3 1
Nick Hagadone 0 1 5.46 36 0 0 31.1 21 19 21 30
Rich Hill 1 2 6.28 63 0 0 38.2 30 27 29 51
David Huff 0 0 15.00 3 0 0 3.0 5 5 1 5
Ubaldo Jiménez 13 9 3.30 32 32 0 182.2 75 67 80 194
Scott Kazmir 10 9 4.04 29 29 0 158.0 76 71 47 162
Corey Kluber 11 5 3.85 26 24 0 147.1 67 63 33 136
Matt Langwell 1 0 5.06 5 0 0 5.1 3 3 2 6
C. C. Lee 0 0 4.15 8 0 0 4.1 3 2 3 4
Zach McAllister 9 9 3.75 24 24 0 134.1 65 56 49 101
Joe Martinez 1 0 1.80 2 0 0 5.0 1 1 0 3
Justin Masterson 14 10 3.45 32 29 0 193.0 75 74 76 195
Brett Myers 0 3 8.02 4 3 0 21.1 19 19 5 12
Chris Perez 5 3 4.33 54 0 25 54.0 27 26 21 54
Vinnie Pestano 1 2 4.08 37 0 6 35.1 18 16 21 37
Ryan Raburn 0 0 0.00 1 0 0 1.0 0 0 0 1
Clay Rapada 0 0 0.00 4 0 0 2.0 0 0 2 0
Mark Rzepczynski 0 0 0.89 27 0 0 20.1 4 2 6 20
Danny Salazar 2 3 3.12 10 10 0 52.0 18 18 15 65
Bryan Shaw 7 3 3.24 70 0 1 75.0 31 27 28 73
Joe Smith 6 2 2.29 70 0 3 63.0 17 16 23 54
Josh Tomlin 0 0 0.00 1 0 0 2.0 0 0 0 0
Blake Wood 0 0 0.00 2 0 0 1.1 0 0 3 1
Totals 92 70 3.82 162 162 38 1441.1 662 611 554 1379

Notes/Records

  • On April 7, Justin Masterson became the third pitcher in Major League history to defeat both reigning Cy Young Award winners in the same season by defeating David Price. He had previously defeated R.A. Dickey on April 2.
  • On April 20, Jason Giambi homered against the Houston Astros, the last team in baseball he had never done so against.
  • On May 18, Mark Reynolds drove home Jason Kipnis in extra innings against the Seattle Mariners, who would have been out but Mariners catcher Jesus Montero didn't have his foot on home plate
  • On May 19, the Indians defeated Félix Hernández and the Seattle Mariners, improving their record to 7-1 against former Cy Young Award winners (Dickey, Price, Halladay, Lee, Colón, Verlander, and Hernández. The only loss was to Peavy.) They became the first team in Major League history to defeat 7 former Cy Young winners before June.
  • On June 28, the Indians defeated the Chicago White Sox 19-10, only the second time in franchise history (and the first since 1923) the team had scored at least 19 runs twice in one season.
  • Also on June 28, the Indians and White Sox set the Major League record for longest double header without extra innings, with Game 1 lasting 4 hours, 2 minutes and Game 2 lasting 3 hours, 51 minutes, for a combined time of 7 hours, 53 minutes.
  • On July 3, Jason Kipnis became the first Indians player to hit an inside-the-park home run since 2010.
  • On July 6, Jason Kipnis and Justin Masterson were selected for the American League All-Star team. Kipnis was selected as a reserve second baseman, and Masterson as a pitcher. This is both players' first selection. Kipnis went 1-1 with an RBI double, while Masterson did not enter the game.
  • On July 11, Danny Salazar become the fourth pitcher ever to defeat a reigning Cy Young winner (R.A. Dickey) in his Major League debut.
  • On July 14, fan Greg Van Niel caught four foul balls at Progressive Field, the odds of which Ideal Seat (a foul ball tracking site) roughly estimated at 1,000,000,000,000 to 1.
  • On July 29, the Indians set a franchise by scoring first in their 16th consecutive game.
  • Also on July 29, Jason Giambi became the oldest player in Major League history to hit a walk-off home run, at 42 years and 202 days old.
  • On July 30, Indians catcher Yan Gomes faced Chicago White Sox pitcher André Rienzo, marking the first time in Major League history that a Brazilian-born hitter faced a Brazilian-born pitcher.
  • On September 24, Jason Giambi again became the oldest player in Major League history to hit a walk-off home run, at 42 years and 259 days.
  • On November 13, Terry Francona was named the American League Manager of the Year.

Post-season

American League Wild Card Game

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Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Tampa Bay Rays 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 4 8 0
Cleveland Indians 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 1
WP: Alex Cobb (1-0)   LP: Danny Salazar (0-1)
Home runs:
TB: Delmon Young (1)
CLE: None

Farm system

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Level Team League Manager
AAA Columbus Clippers International League Chris Tremie
AA Akron Aeros Eastern League Edwin Rodríguez
A Carolina Mudcats Carolina League David Wallace
A Lake County Captains Midwest League Scooter Tucker
A-Short Season Mahoning Valley Scrappers New York–Penn League Ted Kubiak
Rookie AZL Indians Arizona League Tony Medrano

[14]

References

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External links