Cade Smith keeps making the same point for the Guardians: once he gets the ball in a save spot, the game feels finished.
That was true again Sunday, even if it took a few twists to get there. Cleveland spent most of the afternoon grinding through a flat game against Seattle at Progressive Field before erupting for five runs in the eighth inning and hanging on for a 6-5 win. Smith, who leads the majors with 26 saves, shut the door in the ninth for his 29th chance.
The Guardians didn’t make life easy on themselves early. Rookie outfielders Cooper Ingle and Kahlil Watson, along with rookie second baseman Travis Bazzana, had shaky moments in the field and on the bases, and even Brayan Rocchio was part of an error that helped Seattle build a 3-0 lead after the third inning. Stephen Vogt didn’t sugarcoat the feel of the game.
“The stadium was quiet,” said manager Stephen Vogt. “We didn’t give them much to get excited about.”
Cleveland finally cracked the scoreboard in the fifth on Bazzana’s sacrifice fly, cutting the deficit to 4-1. Then came the big swing of the afternoon: Chase DeLauter delivered a two-run single and Rhys Hoskins followed with a two-run double in the eighth to flip the game and send Smith to the mound with a 6-4 cushion.
Smith was already preparing for that moment.
“When we had the tying run at the plate,” said Smith, “theoretically we were one swing away from tying the game up. That’s why I was up, getting ready slowly, but getting ready.”
He needed every bit of that readiness. Smith opened the ninth by getting Cal Raleigh on a liner to center, then watched Cole Young single to right and Colt Emerson poke a ball off Rocchio’s glove behind second as Young moved to third. After Smith struck out pinch-hitter Dominic Canzone, the inning still wasn’t over.
Victor Robles rolled a grounder to Bazzana that should have ended it. Instead, Bazzana stumbled on the play and threw wildly past Hoskins at first, allowing Young to score and pulling Seattle within 6-5 with Emerson at third and Robles at second.
Smith didn’t blink.
“I try and be very, very clear in the things I can and cannot control,” said Smith. “When something like that happens, it happens. But these guys have been really good behind us for a long time.
“It’s going to happen, the same way I’m going to throw a ball at times and walk guys at times - but we’ve still got a game to win.“
He finished it on the next pitch, a 97-mph fastball that J.P. Crawford grounded to Rocchio for the final out.
For a bullpen that has leaned on Smith more and more, it was another reminder of how much he owns the late innings. He made his team-high 36th appearance and has now collected 26 saves in Cleveland’s first 84 games, a pace that would put him on track for a franchise-record 50. Emmanuel Clase owns the club mark with 47, and Smith has taken over the closer role after replacing him last year following federal prosecutors’ allegation that Clase consorted with gamblers to throw fixed pitches during games.
Smith’s workload is becoming a real talking point because Cleveland keeps playing tight games. In June, 16 of the Guardians’ 22 games have been decided by two runs or fewer. For the season, they’ve had 50 such games and are 27-23 in them.
Smith says he’s built for it.
“I feel good,” said Smith. “It’s a ton of fun.
To be used a lot is something I enjoy. I’m honored that they call upon me in a lot of different situations.
“The training staff does a great job of taking care of us. There’s a whole team back here keeping us on the field.”
The Guardians are only 9-13 in June and have been hit by injuries to José Ramírez, Ángel Martínez and DeLauter. Even so, Vogt called Sunday’s comeback their biggest win of the year. Smith liked the sound of that.
“It’s exciting to see that kind of a comeback, to have that kind of momentum and to protect that momentum,” said Smith. “I’m hoping we can let it roll and let it build rather than the opposite.”
In Other News...
Former Guardians Coach Suddenly Looms Large In Mets Chaos
Kai Correas move from Cleveland to Queens was supposed to give the Mets a fresh voice in the dugout, and the former Guardians coach quickly found himself in a prominent spot under Carlos Mendoza. Instead, a rough start to the season has pushed the organization into another reset, with the focus now on how the club sorts through its next move after Mendozas dismissal. Correas background makes him part of the conversation, especially for a team trying to stabilize both its daily operations and its long-term direction.
The bigger issue for the Mets is that the problems have not been limited to the standings. Their defensive slippage has been a recurring headache, and the organizational picture has only grown messier as pressure builds around the staff and the roster. Correas lack of big league managerial experience has been one of the questions hanging over him, and in a season already defined by second-guessing, it is the kind of detail that keeps his name in the middle of the discussion even as the next decision takes shape. [Read more 🡒]
Austin Hedges Had A Heated Message For Josh Naylor In Reunion
A tense reunion between Austin Hedges and Josh Naylor added another layer to a close Cleveland win over Seattle, with the two former Guardians teammates exchanging words after a pitch sequence that quickly turned testy. The game itself still mattered most, and Cleveland came away with a 6-5 victory behind contributions from Gavin Williams, Matt Festa and Cade Smith as the club climbed to 44-40.
Hedges and Naylor were at the center of the flashpoint, which grew out of a strange plate appearance and an interpretation that left both sides with plenty to say. Naylor kept the interaction going through the end of the inning, underscoring how little had changed between the two, and Cleveland now turns its attention to a next series against the Texas Rangers with the memory of that scene still fresh. [Read more 🡒]
How Are The Guardians Still Holding Off Trouble In The Central
Clevelands grip on the AL Central has held even through a rough stretch of injuries that could have knocked a less balanced club off course. Instead, the Guardians have kept answering with the kind of depth and flexibility that has become a hallmark of the roster, as younger players have been asked to do more and the pitching staff has continued to steady the team from behind the scenes.
The front offices decision to build around a broad base of contributors rather than lean on one or two stars has suddenly looked even more important. Cleveland has found a way to keep the lineup moving and the rotation settled, but the larger question is how long that kind of margin can last if the injuries keep piling up and the division race stays this tight. [Read more 🡒]
