Albuquerque Journal

Kemp heads back to LA in five-player deal

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Matt Kemp is returning to the place where he began his major league career, reacquired by the Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday as part of a fiveplayer trade with the Atlanta Braves that creates more financial flexibilit­y for the reigning NL champions.

The Dodgers sent first baseman Adrian Gonzalez, oft-injured starting pitchers Scott Kazmir and Brandon McCarthy, infielder Charlie Culberson and cash to Atlanta for the 33-year-old Kemp.

Gonzalez agreed to waive his notrade clause after receiving assurance from the Braves that he would be designated for assignment since they are already set at first base with Freddie Freeman.

“This allows him the opportunit­y to go and find some playing time,” new Braves general manager Alex Anthopoulo­s said.

After sitting on the sidelines during the recent winter meetings, the Dodgers moved quickly to dump nearly $50 million in salary committed to Gonzalez, Kazmir and McCarthy for 2018. Kemp is owed about $43 million over the next two seasons.

Los Angeles was looking to reduce baseball’s highest payroll of $240 million last season as a way of lowering exposure to higher luxury taxes.

The deal made sense for the Braves, too, since the players they acquired all have expiring contracts.

“It puts us in an even greater financial position going forward and going into next offseason as well,” said Anthopoulo­s, who was hired from the Dodgers.

Kemp played for the Dodgers from 2006-14, hitting 182 home runs, fourthmost in Los Angeles history. The outfielder hit .276 with 19 homers, 64 RBIs and 23 doubles in 115 games last season with the Braves.

Moving Kemp opens up a potential roster spot for top Braves prospect Ronald Acuna, who turns 20 on Monday. He was the most valuable player of the Arizona Fall League and Baseball America’s minor league player of the year.

“We expect Ronald Acuna to be a very good player for a very long time,” Anthopoulo­s said.

The 35-year-old Gonzalez, who played on the original (2003) Albuquerqu­e Isotopes team, helped the Dodgers win five straight NL West division titles after being acquired from the Red Sox in August 2012. He was an All-Star in 2015 and led the NL in RBIs in 2014, but went on the disabled list with a herniated disk in his back last season for the first time in his career. He was usurped at first base by NL Rookie of the Year Cody Bellinger.

NATIONALS: Second baseman Daniel Murphy ambled around the team’s annual fan festival in Washington with the aid of a pair of crutches and declined to offer any sort of estimate about the length of his recovery from right knee surgery.

“I don’t want to put any timetables on it, because if you miss ’em, you guys get really fishy when stuff like that happens,” Murphy said Saturday, about eight weeks after the operation.

YANKEES: The reunion that made too much sense not to happen finally did Saturday when free agent pitcher CC Sabathia, 37, agreed to a one-year, $10 million contract with the Yankees, Newsday reported. Sabathia turned back the clock this past season, going 14-5 with a 3.69 ERA, his lowest ERA since 2012, when it was 3.38.

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