CLEVELAND â âNow is the winter of our discontent.â Shakespeare wrote it centuries ago, but the line might as well be echoing through Progressive Field this offseason. Guardians fans, fresh off a miraculous division run, are staring at a reality few expected: nearly $30 million trimmed from payroll and an offense that ranked 28th in Major League Baseball last year poised to lean heavily on internal options and hope. Hope, as it turns out, does not sell tickets in February.
Frustration is no longer subtle. Some fans are canceling ticket plans. Others are dropping streaming subscriptions. A few are openly calling for boycotts. Ownershipâs decision to cut spending after a season that rekindled belief has landed like a cold wind off Lake Erie. Yet amid the anger and resignation, there remains a narrow but very real path back to optimism. The Guardians are not powerless. In fact, five decisive moves could dramatically reshape both perception and performance before Opening Day.
Move No. 1: Trade for Nico Hoerner.
If Cleveland wants to send a signal that this isnât a soft reset disguised as patience, this is the move. Hoerner, entering his final year of control with the Cubs, represents exactly what this roster lacks: stability, contact, and elite defense up the middle. His career 103 wRC+ wonât headline SportsCenter, but his 120 wRC+ against left-handed pitching addresses a glaring weakness. Add in 11 Defensive Runs Saved and 23 Outs Above Average at shortstop, and youâre looking at a player who immediately raises the roster floor.
Install Hoerner at short. Slide Brayan Rocchio to second. Keep Travis Bazzana in reserve or let him force the issue. If the season pivots unexpectedly, Hoerner remains a flippable asset at the deadline. There may not be a cleaner roster fit available anywhere in baseball. The question is not whether it makes sense. Itâs whether Cleveland is willing to meet the price.
Move No. 2: Stop pretending the utility pieces are the solution.
Gabriel Arias and Daniel Schneemann have value â just not in everyday roles. If the Guardians truly believe in youth, then Rocchio must be given a legitimate runway at shortstop this spring. Arias is what he is offensively. Rocchio, at least, flashed a 100 wRC+ over the final three months of last season. That glimmer of progress deserves examination, not obstruction.
Spring Training lineups matter symbolically. If fans see Rocchio paired consistently with Juan Brito, Bazzana, or Angel Martinez in âAâ lineups, belief begins to rebuild. If they see Arias penciled in daily at short, resentment returns overnight. Development cannot be preached and postponed simultaneously.

Move No. 3: If Parker Messick is healthy, let him pitch in Cleveland.
Last season, Messick was more than promising â he was electric. Assuming the top six starters emerge from camp intact, there will be temptation to stash Messick in Columbus to manage innings. Resist it. Let him pitch in Cleveland and manage the workload creatively. Bullpen days exist for a reason.
A rotation anchored by Shane Bieberâs leadership, supported by Gavin Williamsâ upside and Messickâs emergence, has the potential to rank among the leagueâs top ten. If the Guardians want fans to believe they are still chasing a division title, this is how you show it.
Move No. 4: Start extension talks â now.
Steven Kwan. Kyle Manzardo. Cade Smith. Gavin Williams. Chase DeLauter. Even if some negotiations go nowhere, the act of engaging matters. Kwanâs durability questions might make an extension more plausible. Manzardo feels like the most logical candidate to lock in arbitration years and buy out early free agency. Smith, as a reliever, could prioritize security over volatility.
Williams, represented by Scott Boras, is unlikely to bite. Still, you make the call. And DeLauter? If the organization believes heâs foundational, find a creative way to secure cost certainty during his injury-recovery arc. Extensions signal commitment. Silence signals caution. Fans know the difference.

Move No. 5: Add one established bat â any bat that moves the needle.
It doesnât have to be a blockbuster. Rhys Hoskins. Randal Grichuk. Even a creative trade no one sees coming. The 2025 offense cannot simply run back the same structure and expect variance to save it. One veteran presence capable of delivering 20-plus home runs or a league-average OBP would stabilize a lineup that too often disappeared last season.
None of these moves require a $200 million splash. They require conviction. They require the front office to acknowledge what the city feels: this roster is close enough to matter, but fragile enough to fall apart if left untouched.
Cleveland has built a reputation on pitching development and payroll discipline. That formula produced miracles last year. But miracles are not sustainable strategy. If this winter truly is one of discontent, it does not have to remain that way.
Five moves. Five opportunities to change the tone before a single pitch is thrown.
The Guardians can either double down on patience and risk alienating a fan base that just rediscovered hope â or they can act boldly and remind everyone why October baseball returned to Cleveland in the first place.
The clock is ticking.