Tom Hamilton recognized by Baseball Hall of Fame
DALLAS — Tom Hamilton, who has called Cleveland games on the radio for 35 seasons, won the Hall of Fame’s Ford C. Frick Award for excellence in broadcasting on Wednesday.
Hamilton, 70, joined the team’s broadcast in 1990, when he was with Herb Score in the booth and part of the coverage of their World Series appearances in 1995 and 1997. Hamilton became the voice of the franchise when Score retired after that second World Series.
Hamilton will be honored during the Hall of Fame’s induction weekend from July 25-28 in Cooperstown, New York. He was selected the hall’s Frick Award 16-member committee as the 49th winner.
There were 10 finalists on this year’s ballot, whose main contributions came as local and national voices and whose careers began after, or extended into, the Wild Card era. The other nine were Skip Caray, Rene Cardenas, Gary Cohen, Jacques Doucet, Ernie Johnson Sr., Mike Krukow, Duane Kuiper, Dave Sims and John Sterling.
“Whoever had under 15 seconds before he cries won,” Hamilton said when asked for a statement before taking questions on a Zoom call. “I’m so humbled. I’m so grateful. Can’t believe it happened. I certainly looked at that list of 10 and if I were to rank them, I would have put myself 10th.”
Sims next season replaces Sterling as Suzyn Waldman’s play-by-play partner on New York Yankees radio broadcasts. Sterling, 86, retired in April, a few weeks into his 36th season, but he returned in the final week of the regular season and worked in the postseason. Sims, 71, has spent the last 20 years calling Seattle Mariners games.
Since taking primary play-by-play duties following Score’s retirement in 1997, Hamilton has partnered with Mike Hegan, Dave Nelson, Jim Rosenhaus and Matt Underwood on WWWE-AM and WTAM-AM, the longtime radio home of the Guardians.
Deals made
CLEVELAND (AP) — The Cleveland Guardians broke up their infield and plugged a hole in their rotation.
The AL Central champions pulled off two significant trades at the winter meetings in Dallas on Tuesday night, first sending three-time Gold Glove second baseman Andres Gimenez to the Toronto Blue Jays.
Gimenez, considered one of baseball’s best defensive middle infielders, was dealt by the Guardians along with reliever Nick Sandlin to Toronto for infielder Spencer Horwitz and outfielder Nick Mitchell.
Cleveland didn’t even have time to welcome Horwitz before shipping him to the Pittsburgh Pirates for three pitchers: right-hander Luis Ortiz and lefties Michael Kennedy and Josh Hartle. Ortiz could slide immediately into a starting slot after going 7-6 with a 3.32 ERA last season.
The Guardians re-signed ace Shane Bieber last week, but he may not be ready to pitch until June after undergoing Tommy John surgery.
The trades were the first announced at this year’s winter meetings.
Ortiz, 25, is coming off his best season in the majors, recording career bests in wins, strikeouts (107), innings pitched (135 2/3), ERA and WHIP (1.11). He began 2024 in the bullpen, posting a 2.51 ERA in 20 appearances before joining the rotation in June.
Ortiz pitched six scoreless innings against the Guardians on Aug. 31.
Cleveland has been involved in numerous trade rumors this offseason, but few of them included Gimenez, who was once considered a core player for the future.
The 26-year-old GimÈnez batted .252 with nine homers, 63 RBIs and 30 steals last season. He was acquired by the Guardians as part of the Francisco Lindor blockbuster trade with the New York Mets in January 2021.
Two years ago, GimÈnez was selected an All-Star, hitting 17 homers with 69 RBIs and being hit by pitches a major league-high 25 times. While the Guardians have always valued his stellar, run-saving defense, they’d like to get more offensive production from the bottom of their lineup and weren’t getting it from GimÈnez.
Also, the team could be looking to open a future spot for Travis Bazzana, the No. 1 overall pick in this year’s amateur draft.
Bazzana immediately went to Class A Lake County and helped the Captains win a championship. The Guardians have been impressed with everything about Bazzana, and the former Oregon State star could be on a fast track to the majors.
Juan Brito, who played well at Triple-A Columbus, could also be in the mix to make the 2025 roster at second base.
Financial considerations are always a part of every Cleveland move.
GimÈnez has $96.5 million in guaranteed money remaining as part of a $106.5 million, seven-year contract he agreed to before the 2023 season. He’s due $10 million next year, $15 million in 2026 and $23 million in each of the following three seasons.
The deal contains a $23 million team option for 2030 with a $2.5 million buyout.
Sandlin was a valued member of Cleveland’s top-flight bullpen last season. The right-hander went 8-0 with a 3.75 ERA in a career-high 68 appearances, but he was left off the club’s roster for the AL Division Series and ALCS.
Sandlin is eligible for arbitration this winter and next, then can become a free agent after the 2026 World Series.
Mitchell was drafted in the fourth round this year. The 20-year-old hit .289 in 22 games for Class A Dunedin.
Kennedy, 20, was selected by the Pirates in the fourth round in 2022. In two seasons as a pro, he’s 4-6 with a 3.25 ERA in 31 games. He split last season between Class A Bradenton and High-A Greensboro.
The 6-foot-5 Hartle was drafted in the third round from Wake Forest. In three seasons with the Demon Deacons, he went 24-11 with a 4.41 ERA.
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