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Red Sox announce $52M, six-year Matsuzaka deal

BOSTON -- Daisuke Matsuzaka threw his first pitch off the Fenway Park mound Thursday, the end of an 8,000-mile journey that the Red Sox hope will give them a new ace.

COMMENTARY
In the end, both Matsuzaka and Red Sox had to make this deal
by Scott Miller
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Boston announced Matsuzaka's $52 million, six-year contract at a packed news conference that ended several long days of negotiation. Now it wants the Japanese star to follow Roger Clemens and Pedro Martinez as a dominant major leaguer.

"In our minds, it was not a certainty until the very end," Red Sox general manager Theo Epstein said.

Red Sox officials and the pitcher's agent spent the early part of the week negotiating in Newport Beach, Calif., where bargaining often bogged down.

But on Wednesday morning -- with a preliminary agreement and Matsuzaka and agent Scott Boras on board -- Epstein and other team officials got on principal owner John Henry's plane and headed east.

Despite the often contentious negotiations, Red Sox officials, Matsuzaka and Boras smiled broadly at a news conference that was punctuated by repeated flashes from dozens of media cameras.

"I'd like to contribute to the world championship," Matsuzaka said. "I'd like to meet Curt Schilling."

Pitchers and catchers report for spring training on Feb. 16 in Fort Myers, Fla. The 26-year-old Matsuzaka will join Schilling in a strong rotation that includes Josh Beckett, Jonathan Papelbon and Tim Wakefield. The Red Sox also will have another Japanese pitcher, lefty reliever Hideki Okajima, in training camp. He signed on Nov. 30.

Theo Epstein welcomes Daisuke Matsuzaka to the Red Sox. (AP)  
Theo Epstein welcomes Daisuke Matsuzaka to the Red Sox. (AP)  
"For the next six years we hope to get the prime of (Matsuzaka's) career," Epstein said. "We want Daisuke to be a Red Sox for the rest of his career."

They're certainly making a huge investment.

Add the team's winning $51.11 million bid for negotiating rights to the Japanese ace, which must be paid to the Seibu Lions by Dec. 21, to the $52 million contract and Boston's investment comes to $103.11 million. That doesn't include $8 million in escalators based on Matsuzaka winning awards.

"Today what we're really doing is announcing the signing of a national treasure," Epstein said. "We understand his importance in Japan. We know what he represents."

Matsuzaka was then handed a jersey with the No. 18 -- the number worn by Johnny Damon before he left for the New York Yankees as a free agent.

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