Lucroy vetoes deal between Brewers, Indians

Share

UPDATE (9:40am PDT on Sunday): Jonathan Lucroy met with the media Sunday morning and said the following about vetoing the agreed-upon deal between the Brewers and Indians:

"I know you guys want [details], but I'm not going to give them. Some Circumstances came up that made me void it. Obviously, I think when it comes out, everyone will understand why. That's it. I'm not going to comment on any specifics, nothing like that, as much as I'd like to. I'm respecting their process and what the Brewers are trying to do in terms of the trade. If that's going to happen or not, I don't know. As of right now, I'm still a Brewer and I'm going to be until somebody tells me differently."

"I'm looking for long-term, not short-term," Lucroy said according to Brewers.com reporter Adam McCalvy.

***

UPDATE (8:03 am PDT on Sunday): Jonathan Lucroy has exercised his no-trade clause and vetoed the agreed-to trade between the Brewers and Indians, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

The reason Lucroy vetoed the trade, according to Yahoo Sports' Jeff Passan, was because he wanted the Indians to "rip up" his $5.25 million team option for 2017, making him a free agent at the end of this season. Cleveland refused to do that to acquire Lucroy.

According to USA Today's Bob Nightengale, Lucroy was concerned about his playing time in Cleveland in 2017. Yan Gomes, who separated his shoulder on July 17, is on the 15-day DL, but is expected to be fully healthy for next season.

***

CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Indians could be nearing a trade for Milwaukee All-Star catcher Jonathan Lucroy.

According to several reports late Saturday night, the teams have an agreement in place for a deal that would send Lucroy to the Indians in exchange for four minor league prospects. Lucroy must waive his no-trade clause for the deal to completed, FOX Sports reported .

Neither team commented on the proposed swap.

The Indians lead the AL Central by 4 1/2 games over Detroit. They have been in the market for a catcher since Yan Gomes separated his right shoulder earlier this month, and Cleveland has been actively looking to upgrade its offense for several weeks.

Lucroy was held out of Milwaukee's lineup Saturday night, a signal the teams were closing in on a trade. He's batting .300 with 13 homers and 50 RBIs.

Three of the players reportedly headed to the Brewers are catcher Francisco Mejia, shortstop Yu-Cheng Chang and outfielder Greg Allen — all three have been in Class A this season.

The Indians have been on top of their division for most of the season, and with one of baseball's best starting rotations, they believe they can win the pennant and perhaps follow their next-door neighbors, the Cavaliers, and win another championship for Cleveland.

The Cavs ended the city's 52-year title drought in June, coming back to beat Golden State in the NBA Finals.

Lucroy can certainly help.

The 30-year-old would give the Indians another right-handed bat to bolster a lineup that has struggled at times to keep pace with Cleveland's solid pitching staff. Lucroy is making $4 million this season and the Brewers own a $5.25 million option on him for 2017, a contract that fits within the Indians' payroll and will be more than worth every penny if he can push them over the top.

It's possible that Lucroy could be asking the Indians for an extension on his current deal or to increase the value of his option for next season.

The Indians have been searching for an infusion of offense all season.

Former All-Star left fielder Michael Brantley has appeared in only 11 games after undergoing surgery on his right shoulder in November. Brantley returned in late April, but still felt pain and has been sidelined since May 9. Brantley was making progress during a recent minor league rehab assignment but sustained a setback and has been shut down. He underwent another minor procedure on his shoulder but it's uncertain if he'll play again this season.

Cleveland's catching situation has been a problem as well.

Gomes was batting just .165 in 71 games before he got hurt when he fell while running to first base on July 17. He's expected to miss at least another month. With Gomes out, Chris Gimenez and Roberto Perez have been sharing catching duties but neither has been productive — Gimenez entered Saturday's game batting .200 and Perez, who missed six weeks with a broken thumb, is in a 1-for-23 slump.

The Indians were in the mix to acquire Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman, but felt the price was too high and the left-hander ended up with the Chicago Cubs. Cleveland has been reluctant to pull off a major deal at the risk of losing either Brad Zimmer or Clint Frazier, the top two minor leaguers in their system.

Cleveland has also been looking to add another reliever before Monday's 4 p.m. trade deadline.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Contact Us