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Pirates trade McCutchen

- By Will Graves Associated Press Sports Writer

PITTSBURGH — Andrew McCutchen didn’t run from the challenge in Pittsburgh, he embraced it. A rising star on a franchise mired in two decades of losing, McCutchen bet on the Pirates in the spring of 2012 by signing a six-year contract, gambling that he could become one of the game’s best while helping the city reconnect with a team it had long since abandoned.

It paid off for all involved.

The dynamic, charismati­c outfielder became an MVP while ushering in a renaissanc­e. Five AllStar games. Three playoff appearance­s. A ballpark packed with fans wearing his No. 22. Everything McCutchen and owner Bob Nutting talked about on that sun-dappled Florida day six years ago came to fruition.

And on Monday, it all came to an end.

Facing the certainty that they couldn’t re-sign McCutchen when he hit free agency next winter, the Pirates traded him to the San Francisco Giants in exchange for right-hander Kyle Crick, minor league outfielder Bryan Reynolds and $500,000 in internatio­nal signing bonus allocation. The Pirates also will send $2.5 million to the Giants to cover part of McCutchen’s $14.75 million salary.

General manager Neal Huntington broke the news to McCutchen with a phone call Monday that closed a remarkable but also remarkably brief chapter for a player Nutting said he wanted to make a “Pirate for life” before what the organizati­on considers the economic truths of the sport set in.

“In a perfect world, that would have been a great result for Pittsburgh, a great result for Andrew,” Nutting said. “I think the

Pittsburgh’s Andrew McCutchen heads westward to join the San Francisco Giants for 2018.

realities of the game, the realities of baseball right now don’t allow that to be possible.”

The 31-year-old McCutchen, the 2013 NL MVP, became the second star jettisoned by Pittsburgh in three days. Ace Gerrit Cole was traded to Houston on Saturday.

Nutting called the deal that sent McCutchen to the Giants “a very emotionall­y challengin­g decision” but a move Huntington stressed was the right one.

“The players that we currently have on this roster, the players we have on the horizon, the players we’ve acquired in the two trades will play meaningful roles in the next Pittsburgh Pirates playoff team,” Huntington said.

Fueled by McCutchen’s daily brilliance and aided by Cole’s arrival in 2013 to help anchor the starting rotation, Pittsburgh ended a two-decade postseason drought in 2013 and made three straight playoff appearance­s before falling to 7883 in 2016 and 75-87 last year.

McCutchen, perhaps the franchise’s most popular player since Hall of Famer Willie Stargell, did little to shy away from his role. When the File, Gene J. Puskar / AP

team moved him to right field last winter, he talked openly about following in the footsteps of Roberto Clemente. He and his wife Maria welcomed their first child in December, a boy named Steel.

“Pittsburgh.My Home. My Fans.My City,” McCutchen tweeted. “You will 4ever be in my heart.”

McCutchen added: “Now...I’m a Giant! Ive always enjoyed watching the success of the @SFGiants and I look foward to being apart of more this season. Can’t wait to meet my new teammates and fans. This is just the beginning.”

While Huntington said the Pirates had “informal” talks with McCutchen about an extension, they believed his asking price on the open market would be something they couldn’t match if they wanted to surround McCutchen with competitiv­e talent.

That won’t be an issue in San Francisco. The Giants, who have won three titles this decade, are coming off a forgettabl­e 2017 in which they lost 98 games. They’ve attacked a lukewarm market aggressive­ly, adding third baseman Evan Longoria from Tampa Bay in December.

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