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SportsJuly 31, 2015

St. Louis acquired the left-handed slugger from Cleveland.

By TOM WITHERS ~ Associated Press
Brandon Moss had 15 home runs and 50 RBIs with the Indians this season. (John Minchillo ~ Associated Press)
Brandon Moss had 15 home runs and 50 RBIs with the Indians this season. (John Minchillo ~ Associated Press)

CLEVELAND -- Brandon Moss was sorry to see close friend David Murphy traded earlier this week by the Indians.

Now he's gone, too.

Moss was dealt Thursday to the St. Louis Cardinals, who were in the market for an outfielder after seven-time All-Star Matt Holliday re-injured his right quadriceps Wednesday.

"He's a production guy in a time in baseball when production's low," Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. "I know he's excited to be here, and we're excited to have him."

In exchange for Moss, who was in his first season with the Indians, Cleveland received minor league pitcher Rob Kaminsky, a first-round pick in 2013.

The Cardinals led the NL Central by 4 1/2 games over Pittsburgh before Thursday's game. However, St. Louis was in an offensive funk with one run over 22 consecutive innings after being blanked 1-0 on Wednesday by the Cincinnati Reds.

And Holliday is out again with the same injury that sidelined him for 31 games earlier this season. The Cardinals will hope to get some pop from Moss, who signed a one-year, $6.5 million contract as a free agent with Cleveland during the offseason.

Moss did produce 15 homers and 50 RBIs in 94 games, but the 31-year-old was not the middle-of-the-order power hitter the Indians had hoped.

When he was informed of the trade, Moss told general manager Chris Antonetti he wished he could have done more.

"We all know how much Brandon cares, how passionate he was, almost maybe at times too much and he wanted so desperately to be that force in the middle of the lineup that maybe it was difficult for him to do that," Antonetti said. "Now maybe with the change of opportunity and starting fresh with the Cardinals that he will get back to that hitter that we all know he is capable of being."

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Matheny wouldn't commit to Moss in the middle of the Cardinals order, either, saying for starters it would probably be more based on matchups. Moss was not in the lineup Thursday.

"We want to get our eyes on him, too," Matheny said. "Just kind of watch how he fits, but not necessarily having to put him in one particular spot."

Certainly, he saw the deal as a morale boost for a team in need.

"I've been on teams where it was obvious nothing was going to happen," Matheny said. "We were on the other end and watching some of our leaders and players walk out the door without anything really coming back, and that's a different feeling than when you see reinforcements coming in."

Following Cleveland's sixth straight loss Monday night to Kansas City, Moss, who played four seasons in the NL with Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, expressed disappointment at seeing Murphy traded to the Los Angeles Angels and a season that hasn't gone well for the Indians.

"Nobody's happy. Nobody's enjoyed this season," Moss said. "It's just one of those things where, the more you try, the more adjustments you try to make, we're just not making them. Whether we try to make them, whether we go up there with a different approach, everything seems to fall apart."

Kaminsky is another strong arm for Cleveland's future.

The 20-year-old was selected with the No. 28 overall pick two years ago and was considered one of the top prospects in the Cardinals' system.

Kaminsky has spent the entire season at Single-A Palm Beach, going 6-5 with a 2.09 ERA in 17 starts. He was leading the Florida State League in ERA and had 79 strikeouts in 94 2/3 innings.

In parts of three minor league seasons, Kaminsky is 14-10 with a 2.15 ERA.

"Rob is a guy who we have liked for quite a while out of the draft," Antonetti said. "He's a left-handed pitcher who has got a good fastball with good life to it, generates a lot of groundballs and has a really good compliment of secondary pitches. We think he has a good chance to develop into a solid major league pitcher."

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