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Cleveland Indians Thread of Malaise (2014 Season)

How in the world is Santana still in the lineup? He's hitting, what .170? There's sticking with a guy and then there's just plain stupid.
You really could say the same thing about Swisher but then that home run he hit yesterday will probably save him for the rest of the season and Santana got 3 hits so the same thing probably goes for him unfortunately. Hard to believe that there are two guys in the starting lineup that are close to the Mendoza line and they play power positions. I guess that is Indians baseball now.
 
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WHAT IT?

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You really could say the same thing about Swisher but then that home run he hit yesterday will probably save him for the rest of the season and Santana got 3 hits so the same thing probably goes for him unfortunately. Hard to believe that there are two guys in the starting lineup that are close to the Mendoza line and they play power positions. I guess that is Indians baseball now.

Well for his part, Santana has been hitting the cover off the ball since coming back from the DL (.333 BA/.435 OBP/.615 SLG). At the very least, he's a guy that can work a walk, which is how his OPS is above league average even though his BA is still .191.

Swisher, on the other hand, has shown no improvement in the four games since his return.

Honestly I'm more concerned with Kipnis than Santana. Kipnis hit .282 in 71 May/June ABs but that masks his ONE extra-base hit in that time period. His slugging is a woeful .296 in that time span.
 
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BTW, we're into the 2nd half of June, and the Royals are in 1st place. Maybe this division really is wide open this year. Of course, this has been the tiggers routine for a few years now, start sluggishly, let everyone hang around until August, then pull away. Probably happen again.
 
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Was Chief Wahoo named after Allie Reynolds?

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It’s about the history of the Chief Wahoo mascot, and it uncovers a number of intriguing little nuggets that even a guy fixated on Wahoo like I am hadn’t heard before.

Most specifically the origin of the caricature and its name. Which are two separate things, according to Ricca. He notes that, while the accepted story has come to be that Bill Veeck commissioned a young artist to draw up Wahoo as a mascot, a Cleveland Plain-Dealer cartoonist had been using a profoundly similar character as a form of illustrated box score for some 15 years before that. Click through to see the examples.

The name is more interesting. The newspaper version was not named Chief Wahoo and neither was Veeck’s until at least 1952. But that name had come to be used, again, by the Cleveland Plain-Dealer, to describe someone else. A real person this time: former Indians pitcher and then-current Yankees star Allie Reynolds. Reynolds was a Creek Indian and was far more famously known by the nickname “Super Chief,” but Plain-Delaer reporters often referred to him as “Chief Wahoo” when he made return visits to Cleveland as a member of the Yankees:

A surprising nickname for Reynolds’ appears on October 6, 1950 in his old local paper, the Plain Dealer. Under the title of “Chief Wahoo Whizzing,” Reynolds fans learn that “Allie (Chief Wahoo) Reynolds, the copper-skinned Creek” lost to Philadelphia, but “in the clutches, though, the Chief was a standup gent—tougher than Sitting Bull.”

The Yankees are always big baseball news (even in Cleveland), but Reynolds especially garnered a lot of coverage in his old town. In subsequent articles, he is called “Chief Wahoo,” “old Wahoo,” and just plain “Wahoo.”

Later, it came to be used derisively. Reynolds was traded away from Cleveland when Bob Feller came back from the war and there was no room in the rotation. Get a load of this:

The name “Chief Wahoo” also appeared in the popular Cleveland sports column “The Sports Trail” by Jimmy Doyle. On May 25, 1951, Doyle writes that “It’s great to see Bob Feller show how he’s mastered that old pitching know how” and signs it “Chief Wahoo’s-this” as a possible parting shot against the departed Reynolds.

Entire article: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2014/06/20/was-chief-wahoo-named-after-allie-reynolds/
 
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