
via Imago
chroniclet.com

via Imago
chroniclet.com
For a team already grappling with ups and downs, the timing of Emmanuel Clase suddenly getting placed on disciplinary leave over betting suspicions couldn’t have been worse. The clubhouse felt the shock. Reporters crowded for answers, and fans were left wondering what this meant for their season and for the game they love. In the middle of the turmoil, the Guardians’ manager stepped up—not as an official, but as a steady voice for his players and their supporters.
The Guardians are coming off a rough night on the scoreboard. It was a gut punch behind the scenes, too. Hours before the team blew a ninth-inning lead to the Rockies, the skipper, Stephen Vogt, addressed a situation that had caught the entire team off guard. After all, it concerned one of the most prominent trade prospects ahead of the July deadline.
“I’m not happy. This stinks,” Stephen Vogt said bluntly and honestly. Who could blame him? Clase’s news marked the second blow to Vogt’s team after Luis Ortiz was already on leave through August. Two stars gone, and a whole lot of questions still unanswered.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
The irony? Clase was supposed to be a trade chip. With the team hovering around .500, some thought his 24 saves in 48 games made Clase a valuable closer on the market. Instead, the buzz around the star vanished overnight. “It’s a different part of our game now because [sports betting] is legal,” the manager added. Legal? Sure. Clean and uncomplicated? Not even close.
To make the situation worse, the news dropped just hours before the Guardians’ opener in Colorado. Vogt had to hold a meeting with his coaches and key players to address the bombshell. The manager praised the team’s resilience; however, even Vogt could not pretend it was business as usual. “You’re shocked, you’re upset, you’re frustrated,” Vogt said. “It was a long day for our guys, for everybody”, he added.

via Imago
MLB, Baseball Herren, USA Athletics at Cleveland Guardians Jul 18, 2025 Cleveland, Ohio, USA Cleveland Guardians pitcher Emmanuel Clase 48 throws a pitch during the ninth inning against the Athletics at Progressive Field. Cleveland Progressive Field Ohio USA, EDITORIAL USE ONLY PUBLICATIONxINxGERxSUIxAUTxONLY Copyright: xKenxBlazex 20250718_kab_bk4_027
On the field, it showed. Reliever Cade Smith, now part of what the manager called a “closer-by-committee” approach, gave up a four-run ninth and blew the save. After the game, Smith was also honest about how much the team missed Clase. “He’s a part of the team,” Cade Smith said. “It sucks for him to not be here today.” Not exactly the ideal way to open a series.
However, the larger picture keeps growing. This is not just a Guardians issue—it is a league-wide issue. Just last season, MLB dropped the hammer on five stars for gambling, handing out suspensions and a lifetime ban. From stars to umpires, no one has been immune. With two Guardians stars now under investigation, the microscope is zooming in tighter on every pitch and every star.
As for Vogt? The manager has left, trying to keep a shaken bullpen and team from falling apart. “We’re ready to get here tomorrow and get back after it,” Vogt said, clinging to a sense of normalcy that is feeling harder and harder to find.
What’s your perspective on:
Is sports betting ruining the integrity of baseball, or just a new challenge for teams?
Have an interesting take?
With the dust barely settling from the fallout of Clase’s suspension, the team had no choice but to reshuffle the bullpen on the fly—and they have now officially made their move.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
Guardians tap Tim Herrin as Emmanuel Clase’s roster replacement amid bullpen shakeup
It did not take long for the Guardians to act. Hours after the situation with Clase, the Guardians declared that left-hander Tim Herrin would be taking Clase’s position on the roster. It is a big leap for Herrin, who has been bouncing between the Guardians and the minors this season. Now, the attention is on him—and so is the pressure. With one of MLB’s dominant closers sidelined, Herrin’s next month in the big leagues is not just about surviving—it is about stepping up.
Herrin’s season so far has been… a mixed bag. In 37 appearances, he holds a 3.99 ERA, with a 4-2 record and 28 strikeouts in just over 29 innings. However, that WHIP? A concerning 1.500, fueled by 22 walks. Herrin’s control has been shaky, and the home runs have not helped either. Still, he has one thing working for him—he has done this before. In 2024, Herrin was lights-out and posted a 1.92 ERA over 65.2 innings, with a sub-1.00 WHIP and rock-solid strikeout data. That version of Herrin is exactly what the Guardians need now.
Of course, that dominant 2024 could have been the outlier. Herrin’s rookie season was rough, and this season, he has been inconsistent. However, with Smith probably handling most of the ninth-inning duties, Herrin’s value lies in being the star who bridges the gap—taking on heavier bullpen work and soaking up the innings Clase used to do.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
Whether Herrin is a temporary band-aid and a powerful breakout star, one thing is for sure: he has just inherited a high-stakes role in a very intricate moment. If the Guardians want to stay afloat while Clase is out, the team will need more than just decent numbers. They will need the best version of Herrin—and quickly.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Is sports betting ruining the integrity of baseball, or just a new challenge for teams?