Meet Cleveland Indians Prospect Tony Wolters
Cleveland Indians fans, meet Tony Wolters. He is a shortstop who is doing it with, both, the glove and the bat for the Mahoning Valley Scrappers. Wolters missed time last season due to injury after being selected by the Indians in the third round of the 2010 Draft. So far in 2011, he has not disappointed. Hustle and dedication are two intangibles that cannot be taught. Wolters runs out every ball, no matter how routine of a play it looks like. He is a quiet guy with a big smile who signs plenty of autographs for the fans after home games. Learn the name, he is Cleveland’s shortstop of the future.
Paneech: Growing up in California, were you a Padres, Dodgers, Giants, or Angels fan?
Wolters: I was a Padre fan. We use to constantly go to the games when they used to play at Qualcom Park. My dad would always get tickets in the outfield right on the edge, those were his favorites. The first player I was always watching was Tony Gwynn. I try to pattern myself after him from a hitting standpoint. My dad always tells me a 180-foot hit will get you there, keep doing those. So Gwynn was my idol. I was amazed with Khalil Greene at shortstop because he made some special plays and I tried to mock him and even went as far as wearing my pants the way he did, and I grew my hair out because he had long hair. I liked Mark Loretta a lot too while he was there. Once they moved to Petco, we started going there too. I actually got to play at Petco for the Afflac game, it was an awesome and great experience for me.
Paneech: When you are here in Niles, Ohio, there is about a six foot radius around the mall with some nice restaurants but no beach, no Disney, no mountains. There isn’t really as much to do, does that free your mind to think baseball?
Wolters: I love the game of baseball and feel truly lucky to play every day. If I strike out, I get mad, but then I think myself down that I am so, so lucky to be doing what I am doing on a day-to-day basis. Baseball was my first sport, I also played hockey, and very little, but some soccer. Hockey was my first sport and then I fell in love with baseball. It came easy, but as I progress it gets harder. I have to get in the right mindset everyday and find my swing. I love the challenge and feel like over the next few years, I want to develop into the best possible player that I can become.
Paneech: Coach Wallace and others before him say that this is a developmental league and the wins are nice but winning and losing are outweighed by progress of individual players. What are your feelings on winning versus going 0-5 in a win?
Wolters: All of the players on this team want to win. A lot of it is development, as far as learning how to be a winner at this level. When we lose, nobody should have a smile on their face and be goofing around. We want to win. We want to get to the playoffs and win the whole thing. We see it as getting better everyday, and secondly, winning as a team.
Paneech: You are in the 2011 Bowman Baseball Card Set. How do you get into that process and are there other contracts for you?
Wolters: It all goes through my agent, and I really don’t know all of the aspects of it. Every year you have a card that comes out at some level. At extended Spring training, I took about five hours to autograph the cards of myself as part of the agreement. (** Bowman Baseball inserted autographs into packs randomly in 2011. There are 500 Wolters Autos, plus 150 Blue, and 50 Gold randomly inserted in the whole print run**). The other contracts, I can’t really talk about right now.
Paneech: Last year you were injured and missed a lot of time. What was going through your mind when you were drafted by the Indians?
Wolters: I was at breakfast and missed school that day. I wasn’t expecting a call or anything and was kind of sad. My dad looks at his phone and says ‘hey, you just got drafted by the Cleveland Indians’. I was like ‘really?’ Right after that, I got a call from the scout. I was really not expecting the Indians to pick me. Ironically, I played for a team called the Indians when I was in Little League, and my father just happened to be wearing his old Indians shirt. The Cleveland Indians were like the only team in the majors that I didn’t talk to much before the draft. It was kind of a boring Summer. I did go play for Team USA in 2010. When I first got to Arizona, I was so excited, and I am loving it right now.
Paneech: What is it like playing for Coach Wallace and Coach Mansolino?
Wolters: It is awesome. They both know so much about baseball. I have learned so much physically, as well as, mentally. I am working hard on my mental side and they are guiding me through it. CoachWallace always comes to me and drops pointers of things that I need to work on. Coach Manso has done good things for my hitting. We butt heads sometimes, but that is how you learn. They haven’t coached much, but I feel like they have.
Paneech: Sometimes when you bat, you lay the bat across the box (above), is it alignment or superstition?
Wolters: I am measuring how far I am from the plate. If I don’t see where I step in, I do it. I am very superstitious. If I have a bad game, I can’t wear the same sliders, and I have to wear different socks, different things on my wrists, or rearrange the order of what is on my wrists. I have to go out earlier to change the rhythm. I do everything different until the right combination of things work, and if they work, I stick with them. If they don’t then I change things some more.
Paneech: So if you go five-for-five tonight, what time do I have to come back and interview you tomorrow?
Wolters: (laughs) You are totally obligated to do that.
** Wolters went 5-6, and was 5-5 until his last at-bat the day of this game.
One Word Answers
Favorite Meal of The Day: Dinner.
Favorite Thing To Drink: Always Water.
Favorite TV Show: ESPN Sportscenter.
Favorite College Football Team: USC.
Favorite Baseball Team Still The Padres? I can’t say that (laughs).
Musical Preference: Starting to like Country.
Song on Your ipod That People Would Be Surprised By: Baby by Justin Bieber.
Best Friend On The Team: Jake Lowery.
Favorite Candy: Sour Patch Kids.
Fast Food Order: Chipotle, Chicken Burrito with rice, no beans, guacamole, sour cream, cheese, and medium salsa.
Favorite Cartoon Character: Tasmanian Devil.
** Top Photo Courtesy of Jesse Piecuch.