MARYVALE, Ariz. — If this were two years ago — maybe even last spring — Joey Cantillo might have walked off the mound simmering, dissecting every pitch, replaying every mistake in his head. Saturday felt different. Not cleaner. Not dominant. Just different. And that difference might matter more than the box score in February.
In a chaotic, momentum-swinging 9–6 split-squad victory over the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field, Cantillo’s outing was short, noisy, and strangely revealing. He needed 20 pitches to escape the first inning and, thanks to the spring re-entry rule, returned for the second. The first pitch back? Crushed for a home run by Brandon Lockridge. Just like that, the left-hander’s stat line read two runs in 1 1/3 innings. In years past, that might have unraveled him. This time, he calmly retired the next three hitters and walked off composed.

“Giving up two runs is not what we want to do,” Cantillo admitted afterward, competing for a rotation spot that suddenly feels wide open. “But from a process side, and working on the things I want to do, I think it was a pretty positive day.” That word — process — lingered in the air longer than the Lockridge homer. Cantillo attacked with fastballs over the plate, trusting his stuff instead of nibbling, and while the results weren’t pristine, the conviction was unmistakable. Manager Stephen Vogt didn’t need to say much; the message was already evident: maturity is measurable in moments like this.
And if Cantillo’s performance hinted at growth, the Guardians’ offense screamed resurgence. Trailing 2–0 early, Cleveland flipped the script behind a thunderous day from Nolan Jones, who looked nothing like the player searching for rhythm last season. Jones doubled home a run in the fourth, then detonated a three-run homer in the sixth that felt like a warning shot to anyone questioning his swing path. He finished with four RBIs, and perhaps more importantly, visible swagger.
“What I really liked today is that Nolan was getting the head of the bat out,” Vogt said. “Last year he was pushing the ball. Today he was turning in the box really well.” In spring training, mechanics are headlines. Adjustments are currency. And Jones may have just cashed in early.

The game also offered a glimpse of the organization’s future. Top prospects Chase DeLauter and Travis Bazzana injected energy into the lineup, with DeLauter collecting two early singles from the leadoff spot and Bazzana grinding out a bases-loaded walk to knot the game at 2–2. Their at-bats carried October intensity in a February sun, a reminder that Cleveland’s pipeline isn’t just depth — it’s pressure.
Then came one of the most fascinating wrinkles of the afternoon: the Automatic Ball and Strike challenge system. Seven challenges. Six by Cleveland. Four successful. It wasn’t just experimentation — it was strategy. Veteran catcher Austin Hedges challenged a borderline call in the second inning that flipped a ball into a strikeout for Cantillo. Later, catching prospect Cooper Ingle overturned an 0–2 strike call, shifting his count to 1–1 before launching a three-run homer to right. If the call stands, maybe the inning changes. Instead, Cleveland seized technology and momentum at once.
“We went 4-for-6,” Vogt said with a grin. “Those are the times to use it.” In a league inching toward automated precision, the Guardians looked prepared, opportunistic, and aggressive.
Meanwhile, across town at Goodyear Ballpark, Cleveland’s other squad quietly handled the Cincinnati Reds 4–2 to complete the split-squad sweep. Logan Allen opened with two scoreless innings before the Reds struck against Colin Holderman, highlighted by a homer from former Guardian Will Benson. But Cleveland responded methodically. RBI doubles from Gabriel Arias and David Fry erased the deficit, and in the seventh, former No. 1 pick Carter Kieboom — in camp on a minor league deal — ripped a two-run double that sealed the victory and perhaps reintroduced his name into roster conversations.

Two games. Two wins. One message.
This isn’t simply about scores in the Cactus League. It’s about tone. About growth. About prospects knocking and veterans adjusting. Cantillo didn’t dominate, but he didn’t unravel. Jones didn’t hesitate, he attacked. DeLauter and Bazzana didn’t defer, they contributed. The Guardians didn’t just experiment with new technology — they weaponized it.
Spring training is often painted as rehearsal. Saturday felt more like declaration. Cleveland is blending maturity with youth, process with power, patience with urgency. If this is how February sounds, the rest of the American League might want to start listening now.