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The three biggest names on the rumour mill regarding mid-season transactions have clearly been Carlos Beltran, Freddy Garcia and Aaron Boone. And then, as the saying goes, there was one ... Garcia.

Beltran to the Astros; Boone, in the worst-kept secret in MLB since Roger Clemens unretired, to the Indians. The Tribe issued the following release this afternoon:

CLEVELAND -- Free agent Aaron Boone turned down opportunities to play elsewhere and agreed Saturday to a two-year contract with the Indians. The deal includes an option for 2006.

Boone's signing had been expected. Boone, who's coming off knee surgery, was in town Friday for a physical examination, and Indians general manager Mark Shapiro said he was awaiting results of those tests. Boone passed them all.

In signing Boone, the Indians have expanded their options at shortstop, second and third. Boone, once he's ready to play, will likely move in as the starter at third base and Casey Blake will take over to first base.

With his experience, Boone should provide leadership in the Indians' clubhouse.

"That's probably the one thing that's needed in this clubhouse is guys who've been through some things," said one Indians player, who didn't want his name used.

Besides leadership, the 31-year-old Boone adds a potent right-handed bat to the lineup, and general manager Mark Shapiro had called adding one a key ingredient in building the team's long-term success.

But Boone won't be in the Indians' lineup immediately. He's still trying to rebound from serious injury to his left knee, an injury he sustained playing in a pickup basketball game during the offseason.

The injury cost Boone his job with the Yankees. After last season, they signed Boone, a lifetime .270 hitter, to a one-year contract for $5.8 million. But terms of that agreement prevented Boone from playing basketball.

After he injured the knee, the deal was voided. The Yankees paid Boone a reported $917,553 as termination pay.

To make room for Boone on the 40-man roster, the Indians released pitcher Jeff D'Amico, an offseason pickup who began the '04 season in the starting rotation. The veteran right-hander had been on the disabled list with a bad back.

D'Amico made several rehabs starts in the minors, but he wasn't able to get his fastball back into the high 80s.
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_Jordan - Saturday, June 26 2004 @ 07:08 PM EDT (#32201) #
Meh. I'm not all that high on Aaron Boone, to tell you the truth. He's a fine fantasy player, but in real life he's 31, he's got a career OPS+ of 98, he's had only three seasons with more than 450 AB, and all three of them were pretty mediocre. He gets to a lot of balls at third base, but his FP is below average. He's not that much better than Casey Blake, and he's surely going to be more expensive next year. I can't see him as part of any rebuilding program in Cleveland.

As for Freddy Garcia, he's an expensive gamble, and consequently has New York Yankee written all over him.
Mike Green - Saturday, June 26 2004 @ 07:56 PM EDT (#32202) #
Seconded, Jordan. Casey Blake is a perfectly adequate third baseman. I don't see any evidence that Aaron Boone is better. An uncharacteristic mis-step from an organization that seems to know what it is doing.
Craig B - Saturday, June 26 2004 @ 10:25 PM EDT (#32203) #
Maybe I'm totally off base here, but I assumed that Boone would follow in his brother's footsteps and move over to second base?

I guess maybe (maybe) the Indians see Blake fitting better over at first base, where he's played successfully in the past. I can't imagine why; Ben Broussard's been a disappointment with the bat but he's likely to do better than Aaron F. Boone from here on in; and anyway, if Broussard's hitting the bench Travis Hafner should bloody well be playing first instead of DHing every day.

Aaron Boone is totally interchangeable with the corner guys the Indians have now, the Gerut/Lawton/Blake/Broussard/Hafner group that covers five positions perfectly adequately. I suppose Boone allows you to keep them rested by rotating him and Raul Gonzalez in where necessary; but if that were the role they were planning for him, he never would have signed with the Indians.

Meanwhile, the pitching staff continues to get hammered. And Russell Branyan, the unluckiest man in baseball this year, has found another team that doesn't trust him to shine shoes. And he and Eric Crozier and Ernie Young will at least give the fans in Buffalo something to cheer for.
_JackFoley - Sunday, June 27 2004 @ 07:14 PM EDT (#32204) #
None to go. Freddy Garcia is now a White Sox.
_Gwyn - Sunday, June 27 2004 @ 07:24 PM EDT (#32205) #
Freddy Garcia and Ben Davis for Miguel Olivo, Jeremy Reed and Michael Morse.
That looks like a great trade for the Mariners.
_Jordan - Sunday, June 27 2004 @ 07:55 PM EDT (#32206) #
What happens when an irresistable force strikes an immovable object? What happens when Kenny Williams and Bill Bavasi pull off a trade? Someone has to be the winner, and Bavasi is the hands-down, lights-out, A+ winner here. What a steal for Seattle.
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