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The addition of Lee means Philadelphia has to drop someone -- possibly Rodrigo Lopez -- from its starting rotation. Lopez, though, is 3-0 with a 3.09 ERA in four starts. The Phillies also have Pedro Martinez rehabbing in the minors. The three-time Cy Young Award winner signed a $1 million, one-year contract during the All-Star break.
"I'd rather have a surplus than have needs," Amaro said. "It'll work itself out."
Manager Charlie Manuel said he'll probably make a decision about the rotation on the team's plane ride to San Francisco on Wednesday night.
Francisco, batting .250 with 10 homers and 33 RBIs, upgrades Philadelphia's bench, which has lacked a solid right-handed hitter.
The Indians have been a disappointment this season and their decision to deal Lee for prospects is another blow for Cleveland fans, who have seen stars such as Manny Ramirez, Jim Thome and Sabathia leave via free agency or trade.
"We've been through this before with much less talent in our cabinet," Shapiro said. "If we hadn't made tough decisions and trades before like this in the past, we wouldn't have had guys like Cliff."
Lee came to Cleveland, along with center fielder Grady Sizemore, from the Montreal Expos in a 2002 deal for Bartolo Colon.
The club had hoped to sign Lee to an extension but talks broke off during spring training. A succession of injuries and dismal relief pitching dropped the Indians out of contention and forced Shapiro to begin rebuilding.
The Indians traded infielder/outfielder Mark DeRosa to St. Louis last month, sent reliever Rafael Betancourt to Colorado last week and dealt first baseman Ryan Garko to San Francisco on Monday.
[Associated Press;
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