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by J.R.
Chris Antonetti never thought Cleveland Indians could afford Edwin Encarnacion, Boone Logan
By Paul Hoynes, cleveland.com
on February 07, 2017 at 7:25 PM, updated February 08, 2017 at 6:25 AM
CLEVELAND, Ohio - When the off-season finally began for the Indians, Chris Antonetti, trying to numb the pain of a Game 7 loss to the Cubs in the World Series, had another problem.
Antonetti and his front office looked at the list of available free agents and knew who their "in a perfect world' selections would be - first baseman Edwin Encarnacion and left-hander Boone Logan.
He also knew that the odds of it happening were about as slim as President Donald Trump deactivating his Twitter account.
"At the start of the off-season, I didn't think we had any chance to sign Edwin and Boone," said Antonetti, Indians president of baseball operations, "based on how well they'd performed and the price range they'd be in."
Not to mention the Dolan family's longstanding reluctance to overspend in the free agent market. But these are different times for the Indians. The opportunity is ripe to do great things in 2017 and beyond.
In December, the Indians signed Encarnacion to a three-year, $60 million deal with a club option for a fourth year. It is the biggest free agent contract the Indians have ever given a player.
Last week the Indians reached agreement with Logan on a one-year, $5.5 million deal with a $7 million club option for 2018 and a $1 million buyout. The team officially announced the deal Tuesday after Logan passed his physical.
"It demonstrates ownership's continued support and faith in our ballclub," said Antonetti.
The Indians have committed a franchise-record $108,108 million to 18 players for 2017. If they fill the seven remaining spots on the 25-man roster with players paid at or just above the major league minimum of $535,000, plus the $9 million they still owe the depated Chris Johnson, the payroll would be an estimated $120 million.
Logan makes a strong bullpen even stronger. The Indians needed a second left-hander to pair with Andrew Miller. While Miller can be used at any point in a game against righties or lefties, Logan has proven to be excellent against left-handed hitters.
"One of the things we sought to do this off-season was to find some balance for our bullpen - especially from the left side," said Antonetti. "We wanted to provide Tito (manager Terry Francona) with another option to match up with some tough left-handed hitters late in the game.
"We were trying to find the right guy to complement our bullpen. We feel Boone is that guy."
Logan spent his last three years with the Colorado Rockies. Last year lefties hit .142 (15-for-106) against him with 40 strikeouts and 15 walks. Overall, he went 2-5 with a 3.69 ERA in 66 games. He struck out 57 in 46 1/3 innings.
Austin Adams was designated for assignment to make room for Logan on the 40-man roster.
The Tribe's bullpen headed into spring training looks like this: closer Cody Allen, Bryan Shaw, Miller, Boone, Dan Otero and Zach McAllister. Depending on how many relievers Francona wants to carry, that leaves at least one spot open and perhaps two if he goes with eight pitchers.
Last year the bullpen tied for second in the AL in ERA at 3.45 with Kansas City. Baltimore was first at 3.40.
Indians pitchers and catchers report to spring training in Goodyear, Ariz., on Sunday. Position players report on Feb. 16.
Finally: Antonetti said outfielder Michael Brantley is nearing the end of his tee work as he tries to regain his swing following August surgery on his right shoulder. Brantley will progress to soft toss and batting practice. "He's increased the volume and intensity of his work," said Antonetti. ... On Monday, the Indians made it official that Willy Mo Pena, 35, will come to camp in March with the minor leaguers. Encarnacion asked the Indians to scout Pena, his friend, in the Dominican Republic this winter. Pena has not played in the big leagues since 2011. While scouting Pena and other players Encarnacion worked out with, the Indians signed a left-handed reliever, who will come to camp with the minor leaguers. Antonetti said the left-hander has pitched in the big leagues, but would not give the player's name.