ST. PETERSBURG -- The first step toward having back Danys Baez and Julio Lugo for the 2006 season was taken by the Devil Rays on Monday, when they exercised the club options for their closer and shortstop.
Baez, 31, saved a career-high 41 games last season and was the club's representative at the All-Star Game in Detroit. By renewing his option, he will make $4 million in 2006, while Lugo, who has been the Rays' everyday shortstop since he signed as a free agent in May 2003, will make $4.95 million.
Both players can still be traded, but the Rays said repeatedly over the summer that Baez and Lugo were budgeted in for 2006.
Baez saved 61.2 percent of the Rays' victories in 2005 (41 of 67). Only five pitchers have saved a greater percentage of their team's wins in a single season (since saves became an official statistic in 1969). The Cuban-born Baez signed with the Rays prior to the 2004 season and has totaled 71 saves, second most in club history behind Roberto Hernandez (101) and tied for the sixth most in the Majors over that span. He has also finished 123 games over the last two seasons, tied with Francisco Cordero for second most behind Mariano Rivera (136).
Lugo, who turns 30 on Nov. 16, batted a career-high .295 (seventh among Major League shortstops) in 2006, while also establishing career bests in games played (158), hits (182), triples (six), walks (61) and stolen bases (39, fourth in the AL).
He also tallied six home runs and 57 RBIs. Lugo became only the fifth Devil Rays player to reach 180 or more hits in a season, joining Rocco Baldelli, Carl Crawford, Aubrey Huff and Randy Winn.