The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Antonetti: Team made ‘sincere effort’

- By Jake Seiner

Indians executive Chris Antonetti says the franchise and representa­tives for Francisco Lindor made a “sincere and earnest effort” to agree on a long-term contract before deciding to suspend talks.

GOODYEAR, ARIZ. » Indians executive Chris Antonetti says the franchise and representa­tives for star shortstop Francisco Lindor made a “sincere and earnest effort” to agree on a long-term contract before deciding this week to suspend talks.

Antonetti, the president of baseball operations, said March 11 the sides worked for months and tried “different and creative concepts” to strike a deal, but ultimately decided not to continue negotiatio­ns with opening day two weeks away. Lindor characteri­zed the discussion­s in a similar manner to The Athletic on March 9.

Lindor will make $17.5 million this year and can become a free agent after the 2021 season.

“I’m really appreciati­ve of the effort Francisco and his representa­tives and our ownership put into the process of trying to find alignment,” Antonetti said.

Lindor, a four-time AllStar and two-time Gold Glove winner, hit .284 with 32 home runs, 22 stolen bases and an .854 OPS last season. The 26-yearold is among the game’s top young stars and has been with the organizati­on since Cleveland selected him with the eighth overall pick in the 2011 amateur draft.

Cleveland’s payroll projects to be down significan­tly from its final figure of $123 million last year. The team traded star pitchers Corey Kluber and Trevor Bauer over the past eight months partially to cut salary.

Antonetti said he expected “we will have the resources” to add pieces in-season if the club is contending, but that isn’t assuaging Indians fans frustrated that Cleveland is spending less as AL Central rivals Minnesota and the White Sox are aggressive­ly pursuing the division title.

Lindor told The Athletic on March 9 he believed small-market Cleveland could spend $120 million annually. Antonetti said he didn’t know where Lindor got that number but said the sides did discuss the Indians’ ability to add players around Lindor if they did sign a lucrative deal to make him a lifetime Indian.

“I think fundamenta­lly it’s the economic system in baseball that has a big impact on what we’re able to do,” Antonetti said. “Something that’s a function of our market, and our market size, and how Cleveland compares to other cities.”

Asked if it might be impossible for a team like Cleveland to keep a player of Lindor’s caliber for his entire career, Antonetti said “it’s really hard.”

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