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Tampa Bay Rays acquire slugger Nelson Cruz in four-player trade with Minnesota Twins

MLB, Tampa Bay Rays, Minnesota Twins

CLEVELAND -- Nelson Cruz packed up his big bat and joined a contender.

The Tampa Bay Rays acquired Cruz, one of baseball's most proven sluggers, in a four-player trade with the Minnesota Twins on Thursday night.

Cruz was well aware of the likelihood he'd be dealt this month with the disappointing Twins well out of contention. Nonetheless, he told reporters the news still felt "shocking" and "heartbreaking" to him after becoming fond of the organization over his 2½ seasons in Minnesota.

"It's a tough one," Cruz said. "I guess it's a new chapter, and I will embrace it the way I embrace everything in my life to go help the Tampa Bay Rays to win a championship."

Moments before opening a four-game series at Cleveland, the Rays, who entered the night just one game behind first-place Boston in the American League East, announced they got Cruz and minor leaguer Calvin Faucher from Minnesota in exchange for minor league right-handers Joe Ryan and Drew Strotman.

Cruz, 41, is a seven-time All-Star with 436 career homers and 1,202 RBIs. He'll bring some needed pop to Tampa Bay's lineup and should help the Rays against left-handers. They're hitting .226 versus lefties.

Following Tampa Bay's 5-4 comeback win over the Indians, Rays manager Kevin Cash said he was thrilled to be adding someone of Cruz's caliber.

"It's very exciting,'' said Cash, who recently managed Cruz in the All-Star Game at Denver. "We're a good team and we know we just got better by adding Nelson Cruz, one of the hottest bats out there. His presence. His leadership. I've known him for a long time now, and you never hear anyone say a negative thing about him, so we're adding a high-quality hitter and a high-quality person.''

Cash wasn't exactly sure when Cruz would join the Rays.

Beyond his skills at the plate, Cruz gives Tampa Bay a seasoned player with years of knowledge.

"We're going to allow him to go out and do what he does,'' said Cash, who will have to juggle his roster to make sure Cruz is usually in the lineup. "He's going to DH and hopefully man that position for three months."

With Cruz out of the lineup, the Twins fell 3-2 to the Los Angeles Angels on Thursday night.

"I think the whole team had a consensus of being a little sad to hear the news,'' Twins starter Kenta Maeda said through his translator. "I think that's where we were as a team today before the game."

First baseman Miguel Sano paid tribute by wearing his friend's game pants.

"They both wear pretty good-sized pants, so to the eye, I could not tell any difference. But I bet it meant a lot to Miguel to be doing that, and probably Nellie, too," Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said.

Usually frugal Tampa Bay assumes the $5.1 million remaining in Cruz's $13 million salary. The Rays began the season with a $68.3 million payroll, 26th among the 30 teams.

Cruz also has plenty of playoff experience with 17 homers and 37 RBIs in 46 postseason games. He's batting .294 with 19 homers and 50 RBIs this season, and in 258 games with the Twins, he finished with 76 homers and a .984 OPS.

"People joke about how he's ageless, and it really does feel that way," Twins president of baseball operations Derek Falvey said.

With a week until the trade deadline and no shot at making the playoffs, the Twins figured they'd get something for Cruz to begin building toward the future. Minnesota is 41-56 this season.

"He may be the best teammate I've ever seen in terms of the way he goes about his business, the way he puts his arm around people, the way he helps us become better in our front-office jobs and coaching-staff jobs," Falvey said. "This guy is beyond special."

A 17-year veteran, Cruz signed a one-year, $13 million deal with Minnesota in February. He has also played with Baltimore and Texas. He hit at least 37 homers per season from 2014 to 2019. He belted a career-high 44 homers for the Seattle Mariners in 2015.

"We thought we should be in the playoff race," Cruz said. "Never thought we should be in this situation. Unfortunately, that wasn't the case. You never want to leave the places where you are, where you feel comfortable. It is what it is. That's part of the business."

Both Ryan and Strotman were in Triple-A Durham's rotation.

Ryan, a 25-year-old who will also pitch for Team USA in the Tokyo Olympics, had a 3.63 ERA with 75 strikeouts in 57 innings for the Bulls and was ranked by MLB.com as the No. 10 prospect in Tampa Bay's system. He was a seventh-round draft pick in 2018.

Strotman, 24, had a 3.39 ERA with 62 strikeouts in 58⅓ innings with Durham. He was the 17th-ranked Rays prospect after being drafted in the fourth round in 2017.

Faucher, 25, had a 7.04 ERA with 42 strikeouts in 30⅔ innings for Double-A Wichita. He was a 10th-round draft pick by the Twins in 2017.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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