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by rusty2
Cleveland Indians sign Grady Sizemore to 1-year, $5 million deal
Published: Wednesday, November 23, 2011, 7:38 PM Updated: Wednesday, November 23, 2011, 7:42 PM
By Paul Hoynes, The Plain Dealer
"At the end of the day, this felt like the best fit for me," Grady Sizemore said after re-signing with the Indians on Wednesday. "I wasn't ready to say goodbye. I wasn't ready to move on."
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Grady Sizemore wasn't ready to say goodbye. Now the Indians will see how much weight his return carries.
The Indians and Sizemore came to terms Wednesday on a one-year, $5 million deal after making him a free agent on Oct. 31 when they declined his $9 million club option for 2012. The new deal includes $4 million in incentives based on plate appearances and a $500,000 bonus if he's named comeback player of the year.
The currency of Sizemore's return will be measured in games played. He's appeared in just 210 over the last three years because of five operations, the most serious involving microfracture surgery on his left knee in 2010 and arthroscopic surgery on his right knee on Oct. 3.
"At the end of the day, this felt like the best fit for me," said Sizemore. "I wasn't ready to say goodbye. I wasn't ready to move on."
The Indians' main competition for Sizemore came from the Phillies, Cubs and Rockies. The Phillies and Rockies wanted him to play left field, the Cubs saw him in right. Texas was involved as well, talking to Sizemore about playing center or left.
Sizemore returned not only because they'll give him a chance to play center, but because he wasn't ready to cut the cord.
Manny Ramirez sauntered into free agency in 2000, hitting a home run in his final at-bat as an Indian. Jim Thome thundered into free agency at the end of the 2002 season with a club-record 52 homers. Sizemore limped into the market, dragging a file cabinet of medical reports and three spoiled seasons.
"I didn't like the way things ended the last three years," he said. "I had other good opportunities from good teams, but it was hard to leave."
GM Chris Antonetti expects Sizemore to be ready for spring training. He is currently rehabbing from his right-knee surgery and will visit Dr. Richard Steadman next Tuesday.
"We don't expect Grady to play 150 to 160 games like he has in the past," said Antonetti. "But we expect him to play the vast majority of games next year."
Said Sizemore, "I don't think there's a day that goes by where I've ever thought I can't stay healthy for a year."
The starting outfield, at the moment, has Michael Brantley in left, Sizemore in center and Shin-Soo Choo in right. Shelley Duncan and Jason Donald can provide depth. As for a backup plan if Sizemore can't stay healthy, Antonetti said, "We're going to continue to try and improve the position player part of the roster." He said that doesn't necessarily mean the addition of a right-handed hitter, but one sure wouldn't hurt.
Antonetti, with a little spare change, has turned the $9 million he saved by declining Sizemore's option into two players -- veteran right-hander Derek Lowe (one year, $5 million) and Sizemore (one year, $5 million). As for further improvements among the position players, Antonetti has some options.
"We still have some [payroll] flexibility," he said. He can also use his deep inventory of relief pitchers to improve his offense.
If Sizemore reaches 450 plate appearances, he'll earn $250,000. Here's how the rest of the incentives work:
475 plate appearances -- $250,000;
500 -- $500,000;
525 -- $500,000;
550 -- $500,000;
575 -- $500,000;
600 -- $500,000;
625 -- $500,000; and
650 -- $500,000.
When Antonetti made his offer to Sizemore on Friday following the general managers' meetings in Milwaukee, he set a deadline. The offer was aggressive enough that Joe Urbon, Sizemore's agent, stopped talking to other teams. The structure of the deal was done over the weekend. Sizemore needed to pass a physical, which he did Tuesday in Goodyear, Ariz.
The one-year deal will give Sizemore a chance to re-establish himself next year before hitting the market again. Sizemore hit .224 (60-for-268) with 21 doubles, one triple, 10 homers and 32 RBI in 71 games last season.
In his career, Sizemore is a .269 hitter with 216 doubles, 43 triples, 139 homers and 458 RBI. He's stolen 134 bases and scored 601 runs. In his last full season in the big leagues, he hit .268 (170-for-634) with 101 runs, 33 homers and 90 RBI.
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