Blackburn rewarded with four-year deal

The righthander received a similar deal that teammate Scott Baker got a year earlier, getting $15.25 million for the next four seasons with a club option for 2013.

March 8, 2010 at 7:14AM
Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Nick Blackburn
Twins righhander Nick Blackburn has put up very similar numbers in his first two full major league seasons, going 11-11 both in 2008 and 2009. (Associated Press/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

FORT MYERS, FLA. - On March 7, 2009, the Twins rewarded pitcher Scott Baker with a long-term contract. Exactly one year later, it was Nick Blackburn's turn.

The Twins signed Blackburn to a four-year, $14 million contract with a club option for 2014 on Sunday. The deal was very similar to Baker's, who received a four-year, $15.25 million contract with a club option for 2013.

In each case, the Twins took a workhorse pitcher and bought out his arbitration years, leaving an option to keep the pitcher the first year he could become a free agent.

"It's a great feeling," Blackburn said. "A couple years ago, I didn't really think it was an opportunity that I would get. To get it done and to get the security for my wife and I, with a baby on the way ... we couldn't be more excited."

His wife, Alicia, is expecting the couple's first child in August. He has come a long ways since 2001, when the Twins drafted him in the 29th round out of Del City (Okla.) High School.

Often sidelined by knee injuries, Blackburn had a slow climb through the system. The righthander became a big factor for the Twins as a rookie in 2008, going 11-11 with a 4.05 ERA and pitching 193 1/3 innings.

He was the losing pitcher in that year's Game 163 tiebreaker against the White Sox but lasted 6 1/3 innings in a 1-0 defeat, with the only blip coming on Jim Thome's seventh-inning home run.

Last year, he posted almost identical numbers. He was 11-11 with a 4.03 ERA, led the team with 205 2/3 innings pitched and posted a similar strikeout-to-walk ratio. He also pitched well down the stretch -- the Twins won his final four starts, in which he posted a 1.65 ERA, and he gave up three hits and one run in 5 2/3 innings against the Yankees in his Game 2 start of the playoffs.

"We tried to identify players who would be a good fit for a multiyear contract, and Nick certainly fit that bill," Twins General Manager Bill Smith said. "He's had two remarkably consistent seasons. He threw 200 innings last year, and he's pitched in a lot of big games for us over the last two years."

Baker was derailed by a strained shoulder last spring after signing his deal. He opened last season on the disabled list and was 2-6 with a 6.32 ERA by the end of May. But then he got on a roll, finishing 15-9 with a 4.37 ERA, with 200 innings pitched.

Blackburn and Baker were two of only 36 pitchers in the majors who reached the 200-inning mark last season.

Blackburn didn't sound worried about letting pressure from his new contract affect his performance. He will make $750,000 this year, $3 million in 2011, then $4.75 million and $5.5 million, with an $8 million option for 2014.

"It just kind of helps me relax, knowing they have a lot of confidence in me," he said. "There's great people throughout the organization, and I'm just glad to be here for the next four years, maybe five. Hopefully five."

about the writer

about the writer

Joe Christensen

Sports team leader

Joe Christensen, a Minnesota Star Tribune sports team leader, graduated from the University of Minnesota and spent 15 years covering Major League Baseball, including stops at the Riverside Press-Enterprise and Baltimore Sun. He joined the Minnesota Star Tribune in 2005 and spent four years covering Gophers football.

See Moreicon

More from Sports

card image