GOODYEAR, Arizona — The whispers drifting out of the Cleveland Guardians spring camp aren’t about blockbuster trades or big-money signings. Instead, they revolve around something far more unpredictable: young hitters, raw talent, and the risk that comes with believing a prospect can suddenly become the answer.
According to long-time Cleveland insider Terry Pluto, the Guardians’ leadership appears increasingly comfortable with a strategy that would make many franchises uneasy — trusting their next offensive breakthrough to players who are still proving themselves at the highest level. Inside the team’s training complex in Goodyear, Arizona, one question quietly dominates conversations among coaches, executives, and observers: Could the answer to Cleveland’s outfield struggles already be here, hiding among the young bats in camp?
For the Guardians, the problem is obvious.
Last season, Cleveland’s outfield ranked near the bottom of Major League Baseball in offensive production, an issue that repeatedly stalled rallies and placed extra pressure on the team’s pitching staff. While All-Star outfielder Steven Kwan remained a reliable presence, the rest of the unit struggled to generate consistent power or run production.
Instead of aggressively pursuing expensive veteran bats during the offseason, the Guardians appear to be betting on something else: their farm system.
And that gamble begins with one name that keeps echoing through the camp in Goodyear — Chase DeLauter.
The 6-foot-4 outfielder, selected 16th overall in the 2022 MLB Draft, has become one of the most intriguing young hitters in Cleveland’s organization. When healthy, DeLauter has shown exactly the kind of offensive profile the Guardians have lacked — power, patience, and the ability to drive the ball to all fields.
Observers inside camp have already seen flashes of what makes him so intriguing. In one recent spring performance, DeLauter blasted a home run and added a double, a quick reminder of the offensive ceiling that has scouts and executives watching closely.
But the excitement surrounding him comes with a major caveat.
Injuries have repeatedly interrupted DeLauter’s development, including wrist surgery and sports hernia procedures that limited his playing time during key stages of his young career.
The Guardians know the risk.
That’s why spring training has been filled with cautious optimism rather than bold declarations. Coaches are monitoring his workload carefully, while the front office quietly evaluates whether the young slugger is ready for a larger role — or whether patience remains the smarter path.
DeLauter isn’t the only young outfielder drawing attention.
Another name surfacing in discussions is George Valera, who made his Cleveland debut late last season and has long been considered one of the organization’s most intriguing offensive prospects. Like DeLauter, Valera’s development has been slowed by injuries, but his ability to control the strike zone and generate power has kept him firmly on the radar.
Some observers — including Pluto — have even floated the idea of a bold alignment that would place Kwan in center field with Valera and DeLauter filling the corner spots, creating a young but potentially explosive outfield combination.
It’s a lineup that would represent a dramatic shift in philosophy.
Instead of relying on established veterans, Cleveland would be leaning heavily on unproven talent — a move that could either ignite the offense or expose the team to growing pains.
Yet this approach isn’t entirely new for the Guardians.
For years, the franchise has built its competitiveness around internal development rather than splashy acquisitions. The organization believes its scouting and player development pipeline can produce impact players more reliably than the free-agent market.
And according to Pluto, the club sees the current group of young hitters as part of a larger wave that could soon reach the majors.
“They always talk about waves of players,” he said while discussing the emerging prospects in the system. “They’ve got some waves coming.”
Whether that wave crashes into Cleveland’s lineup this season remains uncertain.
Spring training still has weeks remaining, and roster decisions are rarely determined by early March performances. Injuries, consistency, and defensive reliability will all influence how the Guardians shape their Opening Day roster.
But inside the quiet rhythm of workouts in Goodyear, the outline of a potential plan is becoming clearer.
The Guardians may not be waiting for a savior from outside the organization.
They may already believe the answer is standing in their own dugout — a young hitter swinging freely under the Arizona sun, carrying both the promise of a breakthrough and the risk that every prospect inevitably brings.
And if that gamble works, Cleveland’s next offensive star may emerge not from a blockbuster signing… but from the youth movement already unfolding inside their spring camp. ⚾