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Red Sox acquire red-hot Byrd from Indians in waiver deal

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The Indians, in last place in the AL Central, traded lefty C.C. Sabathia to Milwaukee on July 7. Then they sent third baseman Casey Blake to the Dodgers on July 26.

"This trade is more about clearing room to give some of our other players an opportunity, giving Paul a chance with a contender and providing us some payroll relief," Indians general manager Mark Shapiro said.

Shapiro said the Red Sox will assume the remainder of the $7.5 million Byrd is getting in the option year of a three-year, $21.5 million contract he signed as a free agent before the 2006 season.

Shapiro said the way Byrd pitched lately drew a lot of interest, and made it easy to complete a deal.

Josh Beckett, Jon Lester and Daisuke Matsuzaka have had strong seasons for the defending World Series champion Red Sox, but Wakefield went on the 15-day disabled list Tuesday with a stiff right shoulder and Buchholz is 0-6 with an 8.19 ERA in his last eight starts. Bartolo Colon has been on the disabled list since June 17.

"It just seemed like the right time to add this kind of stabilizer," Boston general manager Theo Epstein said. "You never want to get caught short on starting pitching in August and September because there's very little you can do about it."

The trade "was an opportunity, without dipping into our farm system, to add a veteran starter we can trust," Epstein said.

The Red Sox called up knuckleballer Charlie Zink from Triple-A Pawtucket to make his major league debut Tuesday night against the Texas Rangers.

Byrd was at Fenway Park for Game 7 of last year's AL Championship Series on the day the San Francisco Chronicle reported he had used human growth hormone from 2002-2005. He said before the game that he had used it for a medical condition but that he never injected the banned drug without a doctor's prescription.

"I have nothing to hide," Byrd said about two hours before Game 7. "Everything has been done out in the open. I have a reputation. I do not want the fans of Cleveland or honest, caring people to think that I cheated.

"Because I didn't."

He said in spring training that he met with baseball officials on Dec. 17 in New York but gave no details. He also said the offseason was "stressful."

Boston beat the Indians three straight times to win the ALCS.

"I wasn't a Red Sox fan this offseason, put it that way," Byrd quipped. "It will take a quick adjustment, but I'm eager to play for Terry Francona and with a talented team with a chance to win it all.

"I'm 37 and you only get so many chances."

Byrd went 15-8 with a 4.59 ERA in 31 starts last season, his most wins since 2002 with Kansas City. He won both his starts in the playoffs -- in Game 4 of the AL division series against the New York Yankees and in Game 4 of the ALCS against the Red Sox.

Byrd, a soft tosser with a classic, double-pump windup, struggled through the first three months of the season with a 3-10 record and 5.53 ERA. But in each of his last three starts he went at least seven innings.

The turnaround came after a chat with former All-Star Bert Blyleven, now doing television work with the Minnesota Twins. Byrd credited Blyleven with giving him a refresher course on throwing the curveball.

"I'm as confident right now as I've ever been," Byrd said. "I've got a good curve and am pitching well."

For his career, Byrd is 104-91 with a 4.37 ERA for Cleveland, the New York Mets, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Kansas City and the Angels.

Byrd went 15-11 for Philadelphia in 1999 in the third of Francona's four seasons as manager there and made the NL All-Star team.

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