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Domino effect

Indians trade Rhodes for Michaels; Crisp deal on deck

Posted: Friday January 27, 2006 3:19PM; Updated: Friday January 27, 2006 8:09PM
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Arthur Rhodes
Arthur Rhodes went 3-1 with a 2.08 ERA in 47 appearances for the Tribe last season.
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CLEVELAND (AP) -- The Indians traded reliever Arthur Rhodes to the Philadelphia Phillies on Friday for outfielder Jason Michaels, a deal expected to trigger a larger swap sending outfielder Coco Crisp to the Boston Red Sox.

Now that the Rhodes-for-Michaels exchange is complete, the Indians will likely ship Crisp to the Red Sox, who have been looking for a center fielder since Johnny Damon signed with the New York Yankees.

Earlier this week, the Red Sox wanted to send third base prospect Andy Marte, catcher Kelly Shoppach and reliever Guillermo Mota to Cleveland for Crisp, reliever David Riske and backup catcher Josh Bard.

However, that deal hit a snag when the Indians got an unfavorable medical report on Mota, a right-hander who spent part of last season on the disabled list with Florida because of elbow inflammation.

Mota's suspect health might have prompted the Red Sox to sweeten their original offer to the Indians by adding another player and cash.

But both trades hinged on Rhodes passing his physical, and now that he has, it appears the clubs can proceed.

In his only season with Cleveland, the 36-year-old Rhodes went 3-1 with a 2.08 ERA in 47 games. He was a key contributor in the AL's best bullpen for four months in 2005, but missed the last two for family reasons.

Michaels, a right-handed hitter, batted .304 with four homers and 31 RBIs in 105 games for the Phillies. The 29-year-old recently was put on six months' probation and ordered to complete 100 hours of community service following a fight with a Philadelphia police officer last year.

"Jason is a hard-nosed, tough player that compliments our lineup extremely well," Indians general manager Mark Shapiro said. "He has always been a tough out while recording a high on-base percentage and has the ability to play all three outfield positions well."

Crisp has been a sparkplug and fan favorite for Cleveland, hitting .300 with 16 home runs, 69 RBIs and 15 stolen bases last year. If he goes to the Red Sox, the 26-year-old will replace the wildly popular Damon in center field and at the top of the lineup.

Earlier on Friday, Shapiro declined comment on any deals. He did, however, boost Crisp's stock as an up-and-coming player.

"He's just entering his prime right now and he definitely has upside beyond what he has done thus far," Shapiro said following lunch at Jacobs Field. "He can become a better, more effective basestealer. The question and the unknown is always going be how much more power he's got.

"But he's an energy player and he can impact the game on both sides of the ball," he said.

The Indians won 93 games last season, narrowly missing the playoffs after going 1-6 in the final week. A potential deal involving Crisp has not been well received by some Indians fans, who are afraid of Shapiro messing with Cleveland's chemistry now that the club is back among the AL's elite.

"We're not looking to be judged along the way," Shapiro said. "We have certainly dealt with criticism, quite a bit of it, an extensive amount of it over the last three years, and we're making decisions that are in the best interest of the fans. We need to be right in the end, not along the way, that's the reality.

"Hopefully, we have some trust with our fan base, that they know we'll make good decisions. But it has been a short period of time, and we have to do more. But I hope that over time our track record will build trust."

With Rhodes, the Phillies would be able to move Ryan Madson to the starting rotation.

Madson, 25, had been a setup man the past two seasons. Madson, 6-5 with a 4.14 ERA in 78 games, began the season as the setup man for Billy Wagner, but gave up that role when the Phillies acquired Ugueth Urbina in June.

Copyright 2005 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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