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Jobu, the voodoo doll from Major League fame, has reappeared in the Indians locker room this season.

(Screen shot via YouTube)

CLEVELAND, Ohio - Jobu is back in the Indians' locker room.

In the movie Major League, Indians fictional slugger Pedro Cerrano prayed to Jobu, his voodoo statue, so his bats could hit the curveball. It's unclear what real Indians Jason Kipnis and Mike Napoli do in front of their Jobu shrine, but one has been built in the empty locker between them in the far corner of the Tribe's clubhouse.

A sweater with a picture of Jobu and the inscription, "It is very bad to drink Jobu's rum. Very bad," hangs in the locker. The also contains two Jobu statues with small bottles of rum placed between them.

Not sure if there's a connection, but the Indians were wearing "Party at Napoli's' T-shirts for batting practice Tuesday.

Napoli said his agent gave him one of the Jobu statues and the sweater in spring training. Kipnis recently added another Jobu statue to the shrine, that was recently constructed in the Progressive Field locker room.

"We've had Jobu there for a little bit," said Kipnis, after Tuesday's 6-0 victory over the Rays. "He's been working. He didn't like the first airport vodka we left him. So we tried Bacardi (rum) and that seems to be working.

"Right now it's working so we're not going to mess with what works."

Drafting: The Indians have signed all but two of the 11 players they selected in the first 10 rounds. Their bonus pool for signing those players is $7,343,000.

No.2 pick infielder Nolan Jones and No.4 pick right-hander Shane Bieber are the Tribe's only unsigned picks in the first 10 rounds. Bieber can't sign because he's pitching for UC Santa Barbara in the College World Series. Jones is a high school senior from Holy Ghost Prep (Pa.) School.

Jones is slotted for a $1,159,200 signing bonus. Bieber's slot is $482,500.

The Indians announced Tuesday that they've signed outfielder Conner Capel (No.5), infielder Ulysses Cantu (No.6), catcher Michael Tinsley (No.7) and right-hander Andrew Lantrip (No.8). They were at Progressive Field on Tuesday afternoon.

They had already signed outfielder Will Benson (No.1), catcher Logan Ice (lottery pick), right-hander Aaron Civale (No.3), outfielder Hosea Nelson (No.9) and shortstop Samad Taylor (No. 10).

Ice, who signed for who signed for $850,000, has already caught nine innings at Class A Mahoning Valley. He'll be working with some of the Indians' top young pitchers in Juan Hillman and Triston McKenzie.

Testing, testing: Brady Aiken, the Indians' No.1 pick from last season, made his professional debut Monday for the Arizona Rookie League Indians. He pitched two scoreless innings in his first official appearance since Tommy John surgery on his left elbow.

"He pitched well," said Brad Grant, Indians director of amateur scouting. "He hit 94 mph and threw all of his pitches."

The Indians drafted Aiken knowing they'd have to wait at least a year for him to pitch.

Let there be peace: Manager Terry Francona said their would be no more good-natured prodding of Rays manager Kevin Cash after what happened Monday night.

"How can go past that?" said Francona.

When the Rays took the field to stretch before Monday night's game, a picture of Cash, wearing a Red Sox uniform, appeared on the scoreboard with this message: "Kevin Cash, a tribute to a legacy. Career stats 2002-2010: .183 batting average, .248 on base percentage, .273 slugging percentage."

Tito and Indians busting chops of Rays manager Kevin Cash, who used to be Tribe's bullpen coach. pic.twitter.com/34HSTBv6js — paul hoynes (@hoynsie) June 20, 2016

Cash was on Francona's coaching staff with the Indians and played for him in Boston.

"He told me, "Man, that's not fair. That's a low blow,'" said Francona with a laugh. "Cashie is great. He's gotten me a lot more. We're still getting even here."

Finally: MLB has overturned a scoring decision from June 15 when the Indians played Kansas City. The scoring change removes a hit by Kansas City's Eric Hosmer in the fifth inning, charges Indians third baseman Michael Martinez with an error and removes three earned runs from Tribe starter Corey Kluber's line score. Kluber was originally charged with eight earned runs in that game.