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Betancourt Headed West, Tribe Looking to the Future

chris davies by Analyst Written on July 24, 2009
CLEVELAND - OCTOBER 16:  Rafael Betancourt #63 of the Cleveland Indians celebrates after closing the game to defeat the Boston Red Sox by a score of 7-3 to win Game Four of the American League Championship Series at Jacobs Field on October 16, 2007 in Cleveland, Ohio.  (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)

The Indians made an important move yesterday in trading Rafael Betancourt to the Rockies for Class-A pitcher Connor Graham.

This is a move that will surprise no one, considering the team was unlikely to exercise their $5.4 million option on Raffy Right next year. However, this move signifies that the team is willing to look beyond 2010.

I think that most fans can agree that this is a good thing. With the current state of the pitching rotation, and the fact that some of our best prospects are two years away, competing in 2010 is not as important as 2011.

Currently, the Indians have four players listed in Baseball America's top-50 prospects; with Carlos Santana listed as No. 7, and Matt LaPorta coming in at No. 22 (Lonnie Chisenhall and Nick Weglarz were simply listed by alphabetical order in the 25-50 half of the list).

Of those four, I would only expect to see Weglarz and LaPorta in the big leagues prior to next September (at least for serious consideration). Unfortunately, none of those prospects listed can provide pitching help.

That's where Graham comes in.

In two-and-a-half seasons in the minors, Graham, from Miami of Ohio, has pitched in 48 games, and started all but two of those. His numbers have been impressive in Class-A ball, with an overall 20-10 record, and an ERA of 2.55.

This year for the Rockies Advanced-A team in Modesto he has gone 7-4 over 80 innings, notching 87 strikeouts to only 41 bases on balls. Though his WHIP is a bit high at 1.35, his K/9 makes up for it at 9.7, and his HR/9 has been microscopic at 0.2.

Baseball America describes Graham as a hard-thrower that sits in the mid-90's and can touch 96 at times. In the past, Graham has had issues with location, in part because of a hard slider that he has difficultly controlling, and a fastball with "plus natural life" according to BA.

As it stands currently, he is projected as a solid bullpen option for the Indians. However, should he be able to reign in his two current pitches, and pair them with a curve or change up, he would be a valuable addition to the big league rotation.

Looking forward, this deal could work out well for the Indians, who certainly got their money's worth out of Betancourt—a converted infielder.

Time will tell who else among this current batch of Tribe players becomes a big league troubadour...until then, stay positive Tribe fans.

 

Originally posted at The Wahoo Blues.

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written on July 24, 2009 Opinion

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