CLEARWATER, Fla. -- Saturday morning, Denard Span received a congratulatory phone call from Torii Hunter. Saturday afternoon, he left a spring training game in Clearwater and Ben Revere replaced him, continuing the Twins' succession of dynamic, personable, mutually-supportive center fielders.
"When I leave a game, I tell Ben, 'Take it easy on me,"' Span said. "Then I look in the paper the next day and he had two hits again. But I like it."
Span doesn't have to worry about Revere breathing down his neck anymore. Saturday morning, Span signed a five-year contract worth $16.5 million, with an option for the 2015 season.
Revere probably will start the season at Class AA New Britain, and could be in the majors by next year.
Kirby Puckett tutored Hunter, who tutored Span, who tutors Revere, who could be the first center field prospect in that lineage to be forced to find a new position. "We don't worry about having too many good players," Twins General Manager Bill Smith said. "If Ben's ready, we'll find a place for him."
The signing of Span is an indication of how much the Twins organization has changed, in many ways:
• The front office aggressively pursues long-term contracts with young players whom Smith said "meet certain criteria," including displaying the kind of work ethic and personality that makes them trustworthy. Span, one of the most polished players and personalities in the clubhouse, easily qualified.
• The franchise is willing to spend -- and risk -- big money to keep its best players. In the past three offseasons, the Twins have signed Nick Blackburn, Span, Jason Kubel, Scott Baker, Michael Cuddyer, Justin Morneau, Joe Nathan and even Brendan Harris and Nick Punto to multi-year contracts.