ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Nick Blackburn was making a team-leading 31st start for the Twins on Friday night. The rookie right-hander was in need of a good one. The Twins had lost six of his previous seven starts, including three in which he failed to get through five innings.
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It was scoreless when Akinori Iwamura led off for Tampa Bay in the bottom of the first. Blackburn, who is from Ada, jumped ahead in the count, and then Iwamura lifted a fly ball toward left field.
This looked harmless off the bat, and then there was Delmon Young taking choppy steps in the general direction of the ball. He made a futile reach, the ball hit off the low wall in the left-field corner and ricocheted past him.
Iwamura cruised into third, and Blackburn was in instant trouble.
Meanwhile, the Rays' executives responsible for last winter's large deal with the Twins were somewhere, nodding with satisfaction.
Andrew Friedman, the Rays' young general manager, and his braintrust made a big deal on Nov. 28, 2007.
Tampa Bay sent outfielder Young and infielder Brendan Harris to the Twins for starting pitcher Matt Garza and starting shortstop Jason Bartlett. There were also minor league throw-ins: outfielder Jason Pridie to the Twins and pitcher Eduardo Morlan to the Rays.
Generally, the trade was applauded in Minnesota for two reasons: A) Young's numbers as a 22-year-old rookie — .288, 13 home runs, 93 RBIs — offered a promise of stardom; and B) the Twins were in desperate need of right-handed power after the loss of Torii Hunter to free agency.
We have watched Young step to the plate nearly 580 times in a Twins uniform. Those visions of promise and power turned into a constant gritting of teeth as Young piled up meek outs by swinging early at nonstrikes.
He's been a flop as a run producer, and a flop as a left fielder, and don't be surprised if the Twins attempt to move him for a third baseman (San Diego's Kevin Kouzmanoff?) during the off-season.
How about the other side of the deal?
The Rays clinched a tie for their first playoff berth in 11 years of existence with an 11-1 victory on Friday night. A day earlier, John Romano, a sports columnist for the St. Petersburg Times, was in the press box at midafternoon and considering his options.
One column possibility: "Imagine life without Bartlett and Garza,” he said.
In Minnesota, what we can only imagine is the Twins' position in the AL Central with a season-long regular at shortstop and a power right-handed arm as a presence in the rotation.
OK, without Young and with Michael Cuddyer hurt all year, the Twins would've been short in the outfield. Guess what? A guy like Jason Michaels would've cost nothing and offered production in the same ballpark as Young's.
Garza will turn 25 in November. He throws in the mid-90s, a rarity in this post-steroids era. He's 11-9 with a 3.66 ERA and has pitched 179 innings. The Rays see him as so important they are trying to sign Garza to a long-term deal.
And Bartlett?
The former Oklahoma standout filled a huge shortstop gap here and left one back in Minnesota.
McClatchy-Tribune News Service
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Former OU standout Jason Bartlett has been a key part of the surprising Tampa Bay Rays. Associated press
Thank you for joining our conversations on NewsOK.com. We encourage your discussions but ask that you stay within the bounds of our terms and conditions. Please help us by reporting comments that violate these guidelines. To review our rules of engagement, go to Commenting and posting policy.
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