Rockies designated hitter/corner outfielder Charlie Blackmon plans to exercise his player option for the 2023 campaign, he tells Danielle Allentuck of the Colorado Springs Gazette (Twitter link). MLBTR has confirmed that the option value will be $15MM.
It’ll be the sixth and final year of the long-term extension he inked back in April 2018. Blackmon made $14MM in 2018, followed by successive $21MM salaries from 2019-21. He exercised a $21MM player option for this season, while his 2023 option had a base value of $10MM. That contained up to $5MM in escalators that were based on his playing time up to 575 plate appearances. Blackmon hit that highest threshold on Tuesday, triggering all the available playing time incentives. The deal also contained an additional $3MM that would’ve been attainable had Blackmon accrued any MVP support between 2018-22, but he won’t collect any of the awards bonuses.
Blackmon will be back for a 13th season in Colorado. A 2008 draftee, he debuted three years later. After a few seasons as a part-time player, he seized the primary center field job in 2014. Blackmon picked up an All-Star nod that season and kicked off an excellent run of both durability and productivity. He was an above-average hitter, by measure of wRC+, each year from 2015-19. That park-adjusted metric accounts for the favorable hitting environment in which he played half his games. He played 140+ games in each of those seasons, as well of 59 of the 60 contests in the shortened 2020 campaign.
While Blackmon has continued to be a fixture in the lineup over the past three years, his productivity has dipped. He’s not reached 20 homers or topped a .450 slugging mark since 2019. He’s also moved out of center field as his defensive metrics have declined, and he spent more time at designated hitter than in the outfield this season. Blackmon hit .264/.314/.419 across 577 plate appearances this season, which came to an early end when the Rox placed him on the injured list two days ago. He’s headed for surgery to repair a meniscus tear in his left knee next week.
There was never any suspense as to Blackmon’s option decision coming off that down year. Yet even with his production falling in his age-35 campaign, he remains a key part of the Colorado organization. That the Rockies didn’t curtail his playing time late in the season — even as his continuing to rack up at-bats added an extra $5MM to next season’s books — is a testament to the franchise’s affinity for Blackmon and all he’s accomplished in their uniform.
As MLBTR explored in previewing the Rockies’ offseason yesterday, Colorado’s 2023 books are rather cluttered. They’re on the hook for around $112MM in guaranteed payroll commitments (not including projected salaries for arbitration-eligible players), and they’d owe the Cardinals an additional $5MM if Nolan Arenado declines to exercise the opt-out clause in his contract. That doesn’t leave a whole lot of breathing room for outside additions before the team approaches its franchise-record $145MM payroll.
General manager Bill Schmidt and his staff have various areas of the roster they could look to augment this winter. The starting rotation seems the primary concern, but it’s possible they look for corner outfield help to continue to decrease the amount of time Blackmon needs to spend on the grass. He’ll presumably continue to play most days, if healthy, with skipper Bud Black splitting his time between DH and right field. Blackmon will be a free agent after the 2023 campaign, and he tells Allentuck he’s not yet considered what his future holds beyond next season.
SamtheMan!
I really thought he’d opt out……
Jaysfan1981
He did opt out
He opted out of taking less money from another team to stay in Colorado and retire a Rockie
mack22 2
That’s the way I see it too
angt222
You don’t say.
cpdpoet
Kudos to Charlie, great career….there was zero chance he wouldn’t opt in….he earned the contract….Maybe he can carve out a second career as a 4th/5th type guy and grab another 10 million or so if he wants….
As a minor athlete myself, I know most of these guys have ZERO transferable skills after the curtain falls…..Doesn’t matter how many financial advisors they have…..they have been groomed since they were teens….More than 75% fail miserably….
Charlie, don’t leave a dime on the table….
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Halo’s will take him!!!! Chuck is still a very dangerous hitter…
lucas0622
It’s also very dangerous for the team if they let him see the outfield regularly. He’s a DH at this point in his career I don’t think the Angels could use someone like that
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I don’t see it. Has he had a bad year in the OF this year?
getrealgone2
“The world needs ditch diggers too” – Judge Smails
.
“If the glove don’t fit, you must acquit”
– J. Cochran
css 2
Nobody cares that you were a minor athlete.
compassrose
Nobody cares that you don’t care. Even if you did care nobody would care you cared. I don’t care you wrote your post just like you probably don’t care I don’t care.
K Harris
myaccount2
I do
Cosmo2
I care about the one where they don’t care that the other one doesn’t care
Dogbone
@cpdpoet: all your viewpoint shows, is how so many of these guys don’t have much of a grip on reality. But somehow they sure get a strong sense of entitlement.
Baseball contracts should be more like those in football (and in the real world) – you don’t perform as you are being paid to perform, find some other team that will pay you, ‘what you’ THINK your worth.
Cardsfan21
Yeah so the owners can make a ridiculous amount on the backs of these athletes and if they get hurt or can’t perform at the most elite levels of anyone in their career field, their contracted earnings should be in jeopardy (while the owners continue to rake)?
Sounds totally fair to me…
Dogbone
I’m not defending the owners. But as I see it, there’d be more to spread around to others, by the owners- if the agents weren’t able to artificially inflate the bank accounts of players not living up to their hype.
That’s money that could go to the minor leaguers salaries.
toptimrubies
Next up, Rockies extend Blackmon through 2026
Arnold Ziffel
I look for this be his last year, hopefully he retires before skills really decline. He had a great career.
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If he has a good year next season he will get a 2-3 year deal the next.
rememberthecoop
Yes, and water is wet.
baseballteam
What do people think the beard/hair means? (“I don’t care what you think?” or “I can look like this and make more than $100million?”)
Shrutefarm
The Rockies are in a big market. They draw well no matter how well the team is playing or ranked. It seems they can afford to go higher on the payroll to try and field a quality team.
As far as pitching, they’ve got some good arms already. In this home ball park, it will be difficult to get a top tier pitcher to sign there. They’re going to have to rely heavily on the offense.
IF Kris Bryant is healthy, he’s a solid center piece in that lineup. Go get another couple solid hitters on the FA market 1 top tier and 1 middle tier. preferably with speed, and then emphasize defense.
nottinghamforest13
When you can no longer put up 20 home runs despite playing in Colorado, you know things are coming to an end.
RandalGrichuksStubble
He wants to stay in Denver to be near the handsome Grichuk
baseballpurist
Why not opt out and take the league minimum everywhere else?
chound
Was a very good player once upon a time.
Arnold Ziffel
Hopefully retires after next year, keeps a strong legacy.