Guardians Slide Sends A Worrying Message During Jose Ramirez Absence

The Cleveland Guardians face a critical juncture as star players' injuries impact their standings and challenge their resilience in the AL Central race.

When the Cleveland Guardians lost Jose Ramirez, Chase DeLauter and Angel Martinez all at once, they were still sitting in first place in the AL Central. On June 13, they held a one-half game edge over the Chicago White Sox.

Less than three weeks later, the picture has shifted. Entering play on June 30, Cleveland is now in second place, and the lead it once had is gone. The White Sox haven’t exactly surged past them, though; the gap is only one game as the calendar turns toward the second half.

That backdrop made Bleacher Report’s latest power rankings sting a little more for the Guardians. Cleveland dropped from No. 11 to No. 12, a move that reflects how much the injuries have slowed them down.

“The Guardians are now 5-7 since Jose Ramirez suffered a fractured hamate bone in his left hand on June 13, and with an expected recovery timetable of 5-7 weeks following surgery, they will need to continue to tread water. A starting staff that ranks fifth in the majors with a 3.66 ERA will need to shoulder the load,” Joel Reuter wrote.

Chicago sits at No. 9 in the same rankings, and the White Sox are 7-7 since Cleveland’s injury wave hit.

There have been some encouraging signs on the Guardians’ side. DeLauter has already returned from the injured list and looked fine in a comeback win over the Seattle Mariners on Sunday. He followed that up by going 2-for-4 in Monday’s loss to the Texas Rangers.

Martinez is also on the comeback trail after injuring his foot earlier this month against the Detroit Tigers. His original timetable called for 4-6 weeks, and Cleveland may decide to be cautious and keep him out past the All-Star break, which ends July 16.

Still, Ramirez remains the big one. He’s the team’s best player and veteran anchor, and his bat and presence have clearly been missed even as the Guardians have managed to stay around .500 without him.

The timing of the injuries matters, too. At the moment Ramirez went down, Cleveland would have had a comfortable cushion in the wild-card race. Instead, other clubs have closed the distance, including the Minnesota Twins, who have cut 3.5 games off the gap and are now 3.5 games behind the Guardians.

For Cleveland, the path is obvious: getting Ramirez back as soon as it’s safe could change everything. The challenge is making sure that return doesn’t come before he’s ready.

In Other News...

Josh Naylor's Ugly Guardians History Just Took Another Turn

Kyle Manzardos go-ahead homer on Sept. 16 gave the Guardians a late lift, and Josh Naylor was right there at home plate celebrating the moment with his teammate. It was a reminder of the kind of energy Naylor has brought since arriving in Cleveland in 2020, even as his time with the club has been defined by more than just big swings and loud celebrations.

There has also been no shortage of friction along the way, and a recent on-field exchange with Austin Hedges only added to the sense that the relationship has not always been smooth. The tension traces back through a roster shuffle that sent Aaron Civale away in the deal for Manzardo and included the move of Josh Bell, leaving Naylors place in the organization feeling more complicated than it once did. [Read more 🡒]

Guardians Injury Update Just Raised The Stakes Against Texas

The Guardians and Rangers head into Tuesdays matchup in Texas with the kind of pregame uncertainty that tends to shape a late-June series. Cleveland is still trying to sort through its roster health while preparing for a marquee pitching duel, with Tanner Bibee lined up against Jacob deGrom in a game that already carried plenty of weight before the injury news started to pile up.

For Cleveland, the timing matters because every lineup decision feels amplified when the opposing starter can change the tone of a game by himself. The projections point to a close one and even hint at a higher-scoring finish than you might expect, but for the Guardians the bigger question is whether they can absorb the absences, stay competitive early, and keep themselves within striking distance against a Texas club that has a little more room to lean on its top-end arms. [Read more 🡒]