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Committee Chairman

Committee Chairman

Kirk Buchner, "The Committee Chairman", is the owner and operator of the site.  Kirk can be contacted at [email protected] .

C.C. Sabathia might have been more famous for the second half of his career as a New York Yankee, but the first seven-and-a-half seasons for Sabathia were in Cleveland…and they were damned good ones.

Jim Bagby Sr. played for the Cincinnati Reds for a cup of coffee in 1912, but he didn’t stay in the Majors, having to wait another four years for another opportunity.  When that came in 1916, Bagby showed he was there to stay.

Terry Turner’s path to the American League was paved by the depth of the Pittsburgh roster, where future Hall of Famers Honus Wagner and Tommy Leach blocked his path to a starting role. Cleveland recognized the opening and secured the young infielder in 1904, a move that stabilized their defense for the next decade and a half. He surfaced as a shortstop and matured instantly into a premier run-preventer, reaching a defensive apex in 1906 when he recorded a staggering 5.4 dWAR, a mark that stands as one of the most statistically dominant fielding seasons in baseball history. He was a model of specialized range, leading the league in assists and double plays while providing the pitching staff with an elite security blanket.

The most impressive aspect of his tenure was his mastery of the "small ball" tactics required to survive the deadball era. Turner was a master of the sacrifice, authoring a career total of 264 sacrifice hits, a mark that still ranks him among the top three in franchise history. He possessed a specialized ability to manufacture runs without the benefit of power, utilizing a respectable .254 average and a fearless approach on the basepaths to pressure opposing batteries. He was the pioneer of the head-first slide, a technique he adopted to protect his ankles, and it served him well as he swiped 254 bases during his stay, a record that remained the Cleveland gold standard until the modern era.

In 1918, Turner departed as the organization’s most durable player, having played more games in a Cleveland uniform than any peer of his generation.  With Cleveland, Turner compiled 1,472 hits, 254 stolen bases, and 264 sacrifice hits while appearing in a then-franchise record 1,619 games.

When José Ramírez arrived in Cleveland as an unheralded amateur free agent in 2009, few predicted he would become the statistical titan he is today. He debuted in 2013, but his true residency in the sport’s elite tier began with a breakout 2016 campaign, in which he helped anchor the team's run to the World Series. He arrived as a versatile "utility" piece but quickly matured into a cornerstone, displaying a combination of high-contact skill and a "leg-kick" power surge that turned him into a perennial MVP threat.

The middle of his journey has been phenomenal and consistent. Between 2017 and 2018, Ramírez firmly established himself as one of the game's premier players, leading the league in doubles (56) in 2017 and joining the prestigious 30/30 club a year later with 39 home runs and 34 stolen bases. He has spent the better part of a decade in the top 10 of MVP voting, finishing as the runner-up in 2020 and third on two other occasions. Whether it’s his five Silver Sluggers or his six All-Star appearances, Ramírez has proven that he is the rare superstar who can beat an opponent with a disciplined walk, a stolen base, or a walk-off blast.

The most significant chapter of his run occurred off the field in 2022. Amidst heavy speculation that he would be traded, Ramírez signed a long-term extension that effectively kept him in Cleveland for years. By prioritizing the city and the team over the open market, he solidified his status as a permanent hero. He followed that commitment with continued brilliance, including a massive 2024 campaign where he powered the Guardians to the postseason with 39 home runs and 118 RBIs, finishing fifth in the MVP race.

As he entered the 2025 season, the narrative of his residency remained one of a hunter chasing the final trophy. Still performing at an MVP-caliber level, Ramírez led a World Series-contending squad into the summer, continuing to climb the franchise leaderboards in home runs, doubles, and WAR. He is no longer just a "solid contributor”; he is a legend in real time, rapidly closing in on the top-five status in the organization's history.

José Ramírez’s walk toward the exit is still many years away, but his legacy is already etched in the dirt at Progressive Field. He arrived as a kid from Baní with a helmet that never stayed on his head and transformed into the emotional and statistical anchor of a franchise. He has proven that greatness isn't just about the numbers you put up, but the jersey you choose to wear while doing it.