Porterville Recorder

Indians trade star Lindor, Carrasco to Mets

- By TOM WITHERS AP Sports Writer

CLEVELAND (AP) — The Indians drafted and developed Francisco Lindor, who blossomed into an AllStar shortstop and one of baseball’s best all-around players.

Cleveland chased a World Series title with him. They’ll now do it without Lindor. Knowing they could never meet his price, the Indians dealt the fourtime All-star and pitcher Carlos Carrasco to the New York Mets, who have a new owner willing to spend at baseball’s highest levels in order to get his franchise back on top.

The cash-strapped Indians sent Lindor and Carrasco to the Mets on Thursday for infielders Andr√©s Gim√©nez and Amed Rosario, righthande­r Josh Wolf and outfielder Isaiah Greene — a move Cleveland hopes can keep it competitiv­e and capable of ending baseball’s longest title drought.

The Indians knew this day was coming. That didn’t make it any easier.

“They’re special people in addition to special players,” said Chris Antonetti, the team’s president of baseball operations, adding he cried when informing the players they were New York bound. “Trades like this are really, really hard to make. But at the same time, we feel it’s the right thing to do for us.

“Hopefully this will be — as painful as it is right now — a trade that positions us to be successful moving forward.”

Dealing Lindor, who is eligible for free agency after the 2021 season, will cut roughly ‘$30 million off the Indians’ payroll and allow them to rebuild.

For the Mets, the acquisitio­n is another sign owner Steven Cohen means business.

“They did not come cheaply,” Mets president Sandy Alderson said of Lindor and Carrasco . “What we’re trying to do is create a new reality rather than deal with perception.”

A billionair­e hedge fund manager, Cohen bought the team on Nov. 6 from the Wilpon and Katz families and pledged to increase spending. One of his next big-ticket items figures to be signing Lindor to a long-term contract, something the Indians couldn’t do.

Lindor, who will be playing in a far different spotlight than he experience­d in Cleveland, impacts the game with his bat, glove and legs. A two-time Gold Glove winner, he’s a career .285 hitter and averaged 29 homers, 86 RBIS and 21 steals in his six major league seasons — all with the Indians, who drafted him in 2011.

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 ?? AP PHOTO BY NAM Y. HUH ?? Cleveland Indians’ Francisco Lindor runs after hitting a double against the Chicago White Sox during the fourth inning of a baseball game in Chicago, in this Saturday, Aug. 8, 2020, file photo. Thursday, Jan. 7.
AP PHOTO BY NAM Y. HUH Cleveland Indians’ Francisco Lindor runs after hitting a double against the Chicago White Sox during the fourth inning of a baseball game in Chicago, in this Saturday, Aug. 8, 2020, file photo. Thursday, Jan. 7.

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