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The Orioles hope Jackson Holliday will be the big star payoff for the 2022 Draft class

Baltimore Orioles v. Texas Rangers

Photo by Karen Hastings/MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Orioles chose the correct son of a longtime major leaguer at #1. Will any other picks pay off?

With the introduction of a lottery for top draft picks negotiated into baseball’s Collective Bargaining Agreement beginning with the 2023 Draft, the Orioles stopped stinking at just the right time. They had the worst record in the 2021 season and they are the last team to take that into an automatic #1 pick in the following Draft.

Added to that were picks in both competitive balance round A (after the first round) and round B (after the second round). The Orioles had two such picks because they acquired the round B pick from the Marlins in the surprise late spring training deal that sent Tanner Scott and Cole Sulser to Miami. This meant that the O’s had nearly $17 million to play with in their bonus pool for the Draft, the biggest of any team and well ahead of almost every other team.

Jackson Holliday​


Headed into the Draft, the feeling seemed to be that the Orioles were going to choose between three high school players. Two were sons of former big leaguers, with Jackson Holliday (son of Matt) and Druw Jones (son of Andruw) rating high on draft boards, as well as a Georgia high schooler named Termarr Johnson. I read all of the scouting reports and I really liked Druw Jones. Mike Elias liked Holliday.

His judgment looks much better than mine. It usually does. Three years out from the picks being made, Jones has not made it above the High-A level, where he’s batting .248/.319/.320 with just one home run in 78 games played. Johnson is in Double-A with Pittsburgh, where he’s now batted .249/.332/.389 across two seasons. Holliday, as we know, dominated the minors, climbed to a consensus if not unanimous #1 prospect ranking, and arrived in MLB early last season. He’s only 21 and he’s got 143 MLB games under his belt.

As we all remember, it was not immediately smooth sailing for Holliday after his promotion to MLB. Visions of his following in Gunnar Henderson’s footsteps with winning of the Rookie of the Year were swiftly dashed, with Holliday doing so poorly over his first two weeks that the team demoted him back to the minors, where he stayed for nearly three months. In the meantime, fellow 20-year-old Jacksons Chourio (of the Brewers) and Merrill (of the Padres) turned in great rookie seasons. This was distressing.

The story turned around somewhat by season’s end, as Holliday from July 31 onwards was able to perform at a level that, while not good, was still playable for a contending team letting its incredibly young player figure things out at the MLB level. Holliday’s August/September 2024 was comparable to what Chourio and Merrill did through about June. I was on the Holliday hype train for 2025.

Things are going much better for Holliday in 2025, at least in terms of how he’s hitting. He hit his 12th homer of the season last night, bringing him close to the team lead for the season. After last night’s multi-hit game, he’s batting .263/.313/.425 for the season. I’d like him to get the OBP higher if he’s going to live as the leadoff hitter, but that’s great improvement compared to what happened last year.

It also appears that the Orioles are just letting Holliday run wild on the bases. This experiment is not bearing fruit up to this point, with Holliday posting a 9/17 success rate in steals. It’s not good. If one wants to rationalize, perhaps he is learning and the result will be 20+ steal seasons with better success rates down the road. There seems to be some learning to do on defense as well, as Holliday is scoring poorly in publicly available metrics like Defensive Runs Saved and Statcast’s Outs Above Average.

Dylan Beavers​


This is a familiar story for longtime Camden Chat readers that I’m going to tell again: On day 1 of the 2022 Draft, when the Orioles were due to pick again, MLB Network showed a list of “best available” players on the screen. I turned to my wife and asked, purely based on the names, who she thought the Orioles should take. She exclaimed, “Beavers!” and that’s exactly who the O’s drafted. He’s a favorite in this household for that reason.

Beavers, just 20 at the time the Orioles drafted him, was coming off a sophomore season with California where he’d hit 17 homers in 56 games. The MLB Pipeline ranking of draft prospects put him at #22 in the class, a real steal with the 33rd pick. Other rankings had Beavers as more of a mid-second round talent.

The Orioles got an interesting first full pro season out of Beavers in 2023, with him batting .288/.383/.467 across 119 games between High-A and Double-A. The power wasn’t there as a pro, yet, with just 11 homers in that time. More modest results with Double-A last year halted the momentum somewhat.

Beavers has gone back in an exciting direction with Triple-A Norfolk this season, rounding into an interesting hitter. He’s batting .319/.407/.504 in 65 games with the Tides, with a 13.2% walk rate and just a 17.5% strikeout rate. He’s hit ten homers and stolen 19 bases. With 2025 being a lost season for the Orioles in terms of making the postseason, they should probably find a way to clear him playing time by August 1 and see what he can do as an audition with the rest of the season.

Max Wagner​


The Orioles used their second round pick on the ACC Player of the Year for the 2022 season, Clemson third baseman Max Wagner. At the time of the draft, Eric Longenhagen of FanGraphs described Wagner as having some “tip of the iceberg” characteristics. That meant he could be on the verge of a breakout due to having come from a cold weather state (Wisconsin) and not getting a lot of early college playing time. He hit 27 home runs as a sophomore at Clemson. If that carried over into the pros, the O’s would look smart for this pick.

It was not the tip of the iceberg for good things to come. The power did not carry over to the pros. Wagner has battled assorted injuries as a professional and this year at Double-A is batting .217/.296/.343. That’s not going to get him put on the 40-man roster to protect him from this year’s Rule 5 Draft and it’s probably not going to get him drafted in that draft either.

Jud Fabian​


If it wasn’t for the rumor that floated out about the Orioles having wanted Fabian in 2022, only to have him be picked one slot before them in the second round that year, he probably wouldn’t have made as much of an impression when the O’s did draft him in 2023. That was a reason to remember his name and pay attention to him. So was his power potential, though he came with big strikeout concerns.

Fabian has continued to strike out a lot as a professional, though he’s reduced that to “only” 28.3% - a high but survivable rate if there’s enough else going on - while batting .221/.332/.441. That’s basically Colton Cowser-type numbers, or at least it would be if he got an MLB chance and hit like that. He gets positive marks for center field defense, giving him more potential to hang around as a fourth outfielder.

Like all the other college players from this draft class, this is the Rule 5 decision year for the Orioles with Fabian. I wonder if he might get moved in a trade similar to what the Orioles did with Billy Cook last July. This is complicated by Fabian being on the injured list right now with a left wrist strain. The fact that Beavers has taken a step forward this year makes for a tougher path to playing time in Baltimore for Fabian.

The Nolan McLean thing​


The Orioles used their third round pick on Nolan McLean, a pitcher from Oklahoma State. This was interesting at the time because it was the earliest that Mike Elias had used a pick on a pitcher. They did not sign McLean, apparently due to medical concerns. This meant the O’s got a compensation pick at the end of the third round in 2023. That pick was used on Arkansas outfielder Tavian Josenberger, about whom I won’t have much to say when I write about the 2023 class tomorrow.

In 2023, McLean was drafted again in the third round, this time by the Mets. He has looked like an interesting prospect in that system ever since, currently ranked #4 in their system by MLB Pipeline and as high as #2 at Baseball America. It would be nice if the Orioles had a starting pitcher in Triple-A who had a 2.80 ERA, 1.171 WHIP, and 9.1 K/9 in ten games.

Some people who are coveting contending teams pitching prospects in hopes that the O’s might be able to trade one of their veterans for such a player in the coming sell-off have identified McLean as a guy who’d be worth getting. Sure, but I wonder if the Orioles still have medical concerns. And also whether the Orioles have any veterans who the Mets would give up McLean to get.

Mike Elias will never admit to this, but I think that McLean’s contract falling through screwed up his plans for spreading out the draft bonus pool. The Orioles did not take any other “let’s give this guy an overslot bonus” players in rounds 4-10 of the draft. On day 3, they took several college juniors who appeared to want to go back for their senior seasons: South Carolina pitcher James Hicks, Vanderbilt infielder Carter Young, Miami pitcher Andrew Walters, and Richmond outfielder Alden Mathes.

Down to the signing deadline, it was unclear that any of these guys would sign. Young ultimately took the money, receiving a big overslot $1.325 million bonus. That seems to have been a good decision for him, as his pro performance is not leading him towards a further baseball payday. He’s OPSing .391 in 29 games so far this season. Walters was drafted by the Guardians in 2023, raced up to the MLB level by the end of last season, but had to undergo season-ending surgery for a torn lat after two games this year. They would have just been better off ignoring the medical flag and signing McLean.

One sentence about a bunch of other guys​


Fourth-round pick Silas Ardoin was instantly pegged as a possible future backup catcher because he wasn’t likely to hit and he hasn’t hit (.632 OPS across three seasons in Double-A).

Fifth-round pick Trace Bright is sporting a 5.50 ERA and 1.490 WHIP with Double-A this season.

Eighth-round pick Cameron Weston is unique among Elias-drafted starting pitchers in that he has reached Triple-A and is not totally failing, though his 4.58 ERA and 1.424 WHIP aren’t all that interesting either.

Eleventh-round pick Zack Showalter, part of the trade price for Jack Flaherty in 2023, has a 5.52 ERA with 18 walks in 14.2 innings of relief in High-A this season.

Thirteenth-round pick Jared Beck, who has yet to make it above High-A due to struggling massively with command, is listed at seven feet tall.

Fourteenth-round pick Adam Retzbach is a C/1B/DH who is hitting .239/.346/.410 for Chesapeake this year, which isn’t great but also isn’t nothing.

**

Jackson Holliday looks like he is going to be far and away the best player of any of the guys the Orioles might have considered at #1 in the Draft. That’s a win. It is true that we are still hoping for development into a perennial All-Star rather than seeing that kind of performance already. I like his chances.

Will anybody else from this class pay off for the Orioles? Hopes for that are pinned almost exclusively on Beavers, although if you look around hard enough you’ll find Fabian fans, Ardoin advocates, Weston welcomers, and even Retzbach recommenders. The Orioles really need to start getting some real prospects from outside of their first two picks in a given draft class. The next time this happens in the Elias era will be the first time.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/9...es-2022-review-jackson-holliday-dylan-beavers
 
The lack of Orioles All Stars tells the story of the first half

MLB: Baltimore Orioles at Texas Rangers

Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The Orioles only deserved one All Star roster spot after a disappointing first half, but the roster is filled with All-Star caliber players ready to make a push.

Ryan O’Hearn deserves his flowers for being named a 2025 All Star. The part-time DH easily could have been added to the AL squad last season, but he forced voters’ hands this year.

O’Hearn definitely did not benefit from some type of team-specific bias, as no other Orioles made the team. As Mark Brown noted earlier this week, this will be the first time that Baltimore has only one All Star since Jorge López in 2022.

That year marked the last time that the O’s sold at the trade deadline. Baltimore flipped López and fan favorite Trey Mancini in deals that netted Yennier Cano, Cade Povich and Chayce McDermott.

The Orioles were ahead of schedule that year. Adley Rutschman joined the club in May, but Gunnar Henderson and Jordan Westburg will still in the majors. Some will have you believe All-Star finalist Jackson Holliday was still in the seventh grade.

Baltimore finished 83-79 that season. López and Mancini failed to make a significant impact with their new teams, and few would suggest that the trades prevented a postseason run. It felt like a buzzkill at the time, but selling was likely the right move.

The O’s were a fun, up-and-coming team in 2022. This year, they’re one of the most disappointing teams in baseball. For better or worse, only fielding one All-Star provides the perfect context for the 2025 season.

Henderson missed a majority of spring training and the beginning of the year after making a leaping catch in Sarasota. The injury—and/or the lack of ramp up—led to a slow start. Henderson slashed .228/.268/.413 in the month of April.

The 2024 All Star got things going in May before dominating in June. Henderson slashed .326/.418/.484 over 27 games last month. Those are All-Star numbers for a guy many expected to compete for an AL MVP, but the production came too late to earn a spot in the Summer Classic.

Colton Cowser felt like an All-Star candidate after being named the AL Most Outstanding Rookie last season, but he missed two months with a broken hand. Jordan Westburg, another O’s All Star last season, already holds a 1.1 fWAR despite appearing in only 38 games.

Rutschman has been a league average hitter (98 OPS+), and likely would not have been an All-Star candidate even if he dodged his first IL stint in four years. Gary Sánchez would have been a dark horse if he posted numbers anywhere close to his .354/.415/.646 June line sandwiched between a pair of injuries.

The Orioles failed to replace 2024 All Stars Corbin Burnes or Anthony Santander, but their free agents didn’t really come close. Tyler O’Neill missed a majority of the first half with injuries. Charlie Morton briefly pitched his way out of the rotation with some significant struggles, but the two-time All Star has a 2.97 ERA over his last seven starts.

It’s no coincidence that Baltimore’s fortunes have improved as these guys got going. Cowser, Henderson, and Westburg have helped spark an offense that posted historically bad numbers early in the season. On the other side, Morton and 2021 All Star Trevor Rogers have emerged as the leaders of the rotation over the last month.

Félix Bautista returned after missing a full season, but the Orioles took it slow with the 2023 All Star. Bautista holds a respectable 2.56 ERA and 12.8 K/9, but he did not pitch on consecutive days early in the year. The lack of save opportunities didn’t help the cause, but Bautista didn’t carry an All-Star caliber workload. The training wheels appear to be off now, and the Birds have one of the most dominant relievers back at full force.

O’Hearn did his best, but there was no keeping this ship afloat. The Orioles missed All-Star quality production from too many players. The reinforcements showed up too late to earn a spot in a midseason exhibition game. Whether or not they took too long to save the season remains to be seen.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/9...rn-henderson-rutschman-westburg-morton-rogers
 
Orioles complete doubleheader sweep with 7-3 win over Mets

MLB: Game Two-New York Mets at Baltimore Orioles

Mitch Stringer-Imagn Images

Backup catcher Alex Jackson smacked a pair of doubles, Gunnar Henderson recorded three hits, and Tomoyuki Sugano posted a quality start in a 7-3 win over the Mets.

The Orioles faced a fork in the road today with a doubleheader against the Mets. Fresh off a disappointing loss and a trade that may or may not have marked the start of a firesale, the Birds buckled down against one of the best teams in the National League.

Tomoyuki Sugano quietly turned in a quality start, the bullpen got things done without Bryan Baker, and Alex Jackson introduced himself to Birdland. Jordan Westburg smacked a two-run homer, and the O’s swept the doubleheader with a 7-3 win in Game 2.

The Birds had to battle back after failing take advantage of a pair of gifts from Francisco Lindor in the first inning.

Sugano allowed a leadoff single to Brandon Nimmo, and Lindor followed with a double to right. Juan Soto drove in the first run with a grounder to short, but Gunnar Henderson appeared to have Lindor hung up between second and third. Henderson could have pursued his fellow shortstop, but he inexplicably chose the safe out at first base. Lindor went on to score New York’s second run on a sacrifice fly by Pete Alonso.

Mets opener Brandon Waddell retired the first two hitters he faced, but Henderson slapped a two-out double. Ryan O’Hearn received a free pass, and Ramón Laureano tapped a grounder that should have ended the inning. Laureano had worked the count full, and both runners took off on the pitch. Lindor took his time flipping the ball to second, and O’Hearn slid in safely. Colton Cowser hit a ball sharply, but Alonso caught the fourth out of the inning to keep the O’s off the board.

Sugano bounced back with a clean second, and the Orioles offense came to life in the bottom half. Cedric Mullins ripped a double to right field, and Alex “Great First Name” Jackson came through in his first Baltimore at bat. Jackson skied a ball to shallow right field, and the ball dropped in for an RBI double.

Jackson cut the deficit in half, but Jordan Westburg washed it away. Westburg launched a ball 413 feet over the old wall in left field. The two-run blast provided Baltimore a 3-2 lead and sparked an offense that struggled for a majority of a 3-1 win earlier this afternoon.

Sugano posted another zero in the third, but a pair of walks came back to bite him in the fourth. Sugano walked Soto and Jeff McNeil before allowing a two-out single to Brett Baty. The Mets evened the score at three and appeared to have Sugano on the ropes.

Sugano had failed to complete six innings in his last five starts, and the 35-year-old rookie faced Luisangel Acuña with runners on the corners. Sugano dug deep and generated a harmless line out from Acuña to end the fourth. With his parents watching in the stands, Sugano posted a pair of zeros over the next two frames to secure his first quality start since June 3.

The Birds took control of the game in the bottom of the fifth. Henderson sparked the rally with a single, and Laureano kept the inning alive by taking four straight balls. Colton Cowser muscled a ball into the outfield, and Henderson scored the go-ahead run with ease.

Ramón Urías followed with a sharply hit ball to third base, and Baty failed to make the play. Laureano raced home for Baltimore’s fifth run, and Urías reached base safely on the error.

After a 1-2-3 shutdown inning from Sugano, the O’s tacked on two more in the sixth. Jackson led off the frame with a more traditional double to right-center field, and Jackson Holliday advanced the catcher to third with a grounder to the right side.

Westburg stepped up with the infield playing in and hit a sharp grounder to Lindor’s right. Jackson broke home on contact, and Baltimore’s sixth catcher of the season beat the tag with a head-first slide. Jackson finished 2-for-4 with a pair of runs scored.

Working without Baker, the O’s bullpen took things from there. Andrew Kittredge tossed a scoreless seventh, and Gregory Soto hit 100 MPH while silencing the heart of New York’s order in the eighth.

Seranthony Domínguez entered in a non-save situation, but things got a little dicey after a leadoff single and a one-out walk. Urías made a tremendous sliding catch in foul territory for the second out, and Domínguez kept the tying-run in the on-deck circle with a strikeout of Luis Torrens.

The victory secured Baltimore’s first doubleheader sweep since 6/25/2016. The Orioles moved to 42-50 and now have an opportunity to get within five games of .500 before the All-Star break. Dean Kremer will take the ball tomorrow evening against the Marlins.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/1...-header-game-two-alex-jackson-tomoyuki-sugano
 
Kremer dazzles and gets support, O’s top Marlins 5-2 in series opener

Miami Marlins v Baltimore Orioles

Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images

A standout performance from the Orioles starter set the tone for a Friday night win at Camden Yards.

The Orioles keep on winning. This time saw Dean Kremer lead them with seven shutout innings while the lineup collected 12 hits and earned a series-opening win over the visiting Marlins.

Kremer bounced back from a rough outing in Atlanta to toss seven shutout frames in this one. He used his whole repertoire, but the splitter seemed to have the Marlins particularly befuddled. Kremer threw it 24 times, got 15 swings, and nine whiffs on it. That’s a 60% whiff rate, a huge number. The O’s starter balanced that with his four-seamer, which was less dominant but served as a crucial set up offering.

The Marlins never even had Kremer on the ropes. They managed just three hits and a walk over his seven innings, and went 0-for-1 with runners in scoring position. That lone opportunity came in the third inning. Connor Norby led off with a single, scooted to second on a fly out, and then advanced to third base on a bunt. But he would make it no farther.

Kremer’s season ERA is down to 4.24, it’s lowest point of the entire season. The 29-year-old is turning into a staff horse. Over his last six starts he has pitched seven or more innings in three of them. He has always said he wanted to throw 200 innings a season. For now, he is still well off that pace in 2025, but his improvement since April has been remarkable.

The Orioles bats provided support early, and then tacked on an insurance run late to help Kremer earn the win.

Jackson Holliday, as he often does, swung at the very first pitch in the home half of the first inning, and laced it into left-center for a double. Three pitches later, Jordan Westburg knocked Holliday home on a hard-hit single into right field. Ryan O’Hearn doubled the lead with, well, a double. The O’s all-star representative smacked a two-bagger into right-center field, plating Westburg to make it 2-0 early.

The O’s got back to scoring in the third inning. Westburg reached on a one-out single. Gunnar Henderson followed with a single of his own. And then it was O’Hearn again. He squeaked a base hit through the infield to drive in Westburg. Ramón Laureano capped off the inning with a well-placed double, scoring Henderson and extending the Orioles lead to 4-0.

That’s all the damage that the O’s would do against Miami starter Edward Cabrera. The 27-year-old entered the game in fine form. Dating back to May 25, he had a 1.64 ERA over eight starts and 44 innings. This start was his worst since April, when he was routinely giving up crooked numbers. Kudos to the Orioles for knocking a pitcher out of his groove.

In the seventh inning, the Orioles scored a comforting insurance run. Once again, Westburg got things going with a single. Henderson walked, and then Laureano flared a base hit into shallow right field to score the team’s fifth run of the evening.

After Kremer exited the game, Tony Mansolino only needed to turn to two bullpen options. Yennier Cano worked a perfect eighth inning, and Andrew Kittredge was given the ninth.

Kittredge did not look too sharp. He allowed a single to lead-off hitter Jesús Sánchez, and then served up a two-run homer to Otto Lopez, his 10th long ball of the season. But he settled in from there, retiring the next three batters he faced to close out the Orioles 5-2 win.

This was yet another impressive team win for the Orioles. It’s something they have made a habit of lately, going 6-1 over their last seven games, and they are now just seven games under .500 for the first time since early May. Don’t let these guys get hot!

Westburg and Laureano both had three hits to lead the offense. O’Hearn and Laureano had two RBI a piece. Henderson reached base thrice, including two walks and a run scored. And they did all of this without the help of a home run.

The familiar faces in the Miami lineup had fine nights of their own. Norby was 1-for-3. Kyle Stowers went 1-for-3 with a walk and a strikeout. But neither of them could do much with Kremer on his game and the rest of their lineup going quiet through the first eighth innings of the game.

Saturday’s game is likely the main event of this weekend. Not only will Trevor Rogers faced the two hitters he was traded for. But it’s also the second Hawaiian Shirt giveaway of the week. In all likelihood, Camden Yards is going to be packed and rocking. First pitch is 4:05.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/1...recap-kremer-westburg-henderson-laureano-2025
 
Saturday afternoon Orioles game thread: vs. Marlins, 4:05

MLB: Texas Rangers at Baltimore Orioles

Mitch Stringer-Imagn Images

Somebody could have a revenge game today. But will it be Trevor Rogers, or will it be Kyle Stowers (or possibly Connor Norby)?

This is it, folks. After today’s game, we will be able to officially declare the winner of the Trevor Rogers trade. Mark it down!

The Orioles left-hander will toe the rubber against his former team for the first time, just under a year after the Marlins traded him to the Birds for Kyle Stowers and Connor Norby. The deal, which was lambasted by O’s fans after Rogers’s four-start catastrophe in 2024, is looking a whole lot better for Baltimore now. But the Marlins probably don’t have any regrets, as the newly minted All-Star Stowers has erupted for a breakout season with Miami, while Norby has given the Fish some stability at third base if not a particularly potent bat so far.

Rogers will be throwing his second straight game to familiar battery mate Jacob Stallings, his ex-Marlins teammate. The two worked 22 games together with Miami from 2022-23. Last time out, Rogers tossed 6.2 scoreless innings in Atlanta to lower his ERA to 1.57 in five starts.

The Marlins will counter with the delightfully named Janson Junk, who hopefully won’t Junk the Orioles tonight. The journeyman right-hander, who pitched only 15 games in his first four MLB seasons, has posted a solid 3.12 ERA in nine games for the Fish this year. The O’s will roll back the same lineup as the previous night, when they ambushed the Marlins for five early runs for a victory in the series opener.

Orioles lineup

2B Jackson Holliday
3B Jordan Westburg
SS Gunnar Henderson
1B Ryan O’Hearn
RF Ramón Laureano
LF Colton Cowser
DH Tyler O’Neill
CF Cedric Mullins
C Jacob Stallings

LHP Trevor Rogers

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/12/24466482/orioles-marlins-game-thread
 
Orioles minor league recap 7/13: Heston Kjerstad homers, doubles in Norfolk loss

Baltimore Orioles v Seattle Mariners

Photo by Alika Jenner/Getty Images

Lots of losses on the farm

Triple-A: Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp (MIA) 5, Norfolk Tides 4​


Cameron Weston pitched into the seventh inning, which is impressive. He gave up four runs, which is less so. He only gave up five hits, but the Jumbo Shrimp made the most of them. Two of those hits were solo home runs. He exited the game with one runner on, who scored when Cionel Pérez came into the game. Pérez also allowed a run of his own as his brutal run in Triple-A continues.

On offense, the Tides had a 4-1 lead after the top of the fourth, but didn’t score again. A double from Silas Ardoin doubled and Jordyn Adams singled in runs in the second inning. José Barrero doubled in a run in the third, and Heston Kjerstad homered in the fourth. It was a two-hit night for Kjerstad, who also doubled. Great to see Kjerstad have a good game.

Samuel Basallo started at first base and went 0-for-3 with a walk. Dylan Beavers did not start, but walked as a pinch hitter in his only plate appearance.

Box Score

Double-A: Reading Fightin Phils 3, Chesapeake Baysox 2 - Game 1​


It was another doubleheader day for the Baysox, who managed just two runs on three hits in the first of two seven-inning games. They scored once in the first inning and once in the seventh, with very little in between. Creed Willems, Carter Young, and Alfredo Velásquez each singled, with Young’s knocking in a run. Luis Valdez picked up an RBI with a seventh-inning groundout.

Trace Bright took the loss with 4.1 innings pitched and two runs allowed. He walked three and struck out one.

Box Score

Double-A: Baysox 8, Fightin Phils 3 - Game 2​


The Baysox hit four home runs to win big and split the doubleheader. They got started right away, with sole homers by Carter Young and Douglas Hodo in the first inning. Max Wagner hit the other two. He belted two-run shots in each of the third and fourth inning, the latter part of a four-run rally that included a two-run double from Cole Urman. It was a two-double day for Urman.

Organizational stalwart Ryan Long started game two and kept the Phils off the board until the sixth inning when he surrendered a two-run homer. By then the game was well in hand.

Box Score

High-A: Jersey Shore BlueClaws (PHI) 4, Aberdeen IronBirds 1​


Through eight innings, the IronBirds had just two baserunners. Aron Estrada singled in the first inning and Ethan Anderson singled in the bottom of the eighth. Two more hits in the ninth broke up the shutout when Angel Tejada singled and scored on a double from Estrada.

Vance Honeycutt strikeout watch: 2, for a season total of 124. Plus a pop out on a bunt.

Michael Forret started and allowed three runs in 5.2 innings. Two of his six hits were home runs. He struck out eight without a walk.

Box Score

Low-A: Fayetteville Woodpeckers (HOU) 4, Delmarva Shorebirds 2​


It’s never a good sign when your team has more errors than hits, and that is what happened to the Shorebirds last night. The offense had four hits, all singles, while the defense made five errors in the field. Surprisingly, it only resulted in one unearned run.

The two Shorebirds’ runs scored on a ground out and a wild pitch. Not very inspiring. Nate George watch: 1-for-3. Yasmi Bucce watch: didn’t start, but walked as a pinch hitter.

Chase Allsup started for the Shorebirds and gave up three runs in the first, two on a home run. Overall he pitched 4.1 innings with four runs (three earned).

Box Score

Today’s Schedule​

  • Norfolk @ Jacksonville, 1:05. Starter: Roansy Contreras
  • Chesapeake vs Reading, 1:05. Starter: Nestor German
  • Aberdeen vs Jersey Shore, 2:05. Starter: TBD
  • Delmarva @ Fayetteville, 2:05. Starter: Yeiber Cartaya

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/1...nor-league-recap-tides-baysox-heston-kjerstad
 
Orioles Draft Pick Tracker

MLB Draft presented by Nike

Photo by Mary DeCicco/MLB Photos via Getty Images

Every 2025 draft pick made by the Baltimore Orioles.

Thanks to this past week’s trade for a competitive balance pick from the Rays, the Orioles have the largest signing bonus pool that any team has ever had in the MLB Draft. They can allocate the money how they like across all of their picks, and with four of the first 37 picks, may be able to use it on high school players who slip due to bonus demands that only the O’s can now meet.

This tracker will be updated as the Orioles make their picks across the two days of the Draft. Day 1 of the Draft will go through the third round. Day 2 will race through rounds 4-20.

Orioles Draft Picks​

  • 1st round, 19th overall - Ike Irish - C/OF - Auburn (article)
  • Compensation, 30th overall - Caden Bodine - C - Coastal Carolina
  • Compensation, 31st overall - Wehiwa Aloy - SS - Arkansas
  • CB Round A, 37th overall - Slater de Brun - OF - Summit (OR) HS (article for 30, 31, 37)
  • 2nd round, 58th overall - Joseph Dzierwa - LHP - Michigan State
  • CB round B, 69th overall - JT Quinn - RHP - Georgia
  • 3rd round, 93rd overall - RJ Austin - OF - Vanderbilt (article for 58, 69, 93)
  • 4th round, 124th overall - Colin Yeaman - SS - UC-Irvine
  • 5th round, 154th overall - Jaiden Lo Re - SS - Corona Del Sol (AZ) HS
  • 6th round, 184th overall - Caden Hunter - LHP - USC
  • 7th round, 214th overall - Hunter Allen - RHP - Ashland University
  • 8th round, 244th overall - Kailen Hamson - LHP - University of the Cumberlands
  • 9th round, 274th overall - Cam Lee - OF - Mineral Area JC (MO)
  • 10th round, 304th overall
  • 11th round, 334th overall
  • 12th round, 364th overall
  • 13th round, 394th overall
  • 14th round, 424th overall
  • 15th round, 454th overall
  • 16th round, 484th overall
  • 17th round, 514th overall
  • 18th round, 544th overall
  • 19th round, 574th overall
  • 20th round, 604th overall

Quick notes on the extra picks:

  1. The Orioles received compensation picks (30, 31) for losing free agents Corbin Burnes and Anthony Santander
  2. The Orioles received CB round A pick 37 in a trade with the Rays for Bryan Baker
  3. The Orioles received CB round B pick 69 as part of the normal schedule for the league assigning those picks

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/13/24466448/mlb-draft-2025-orioles-pick-tracker
 
Orioles round up talent on Draft Day 2 from a bunch of less-known schools

Colin Yeaman Portrait Session

Photo by Ric Tapia/Getty Images

Small school, high school, junior college, Mike Elias’s team was all over the place across rounds 4-10 of the Draft.

The first round of the MLB Draft gets the most attention for one simple reason: That’s when any team has the best chance of finding impact talent. Every year, players emerge from the later rounds to become tradeworthy prospects, productive big leaguers, and even sometimes star-level players.

The Orioles, for the most part, have not succeeded in turning these third round-and-later players into big-time prospects or players. The best they’ve got is Coby Mayo, a 2020 fourth rounder, about whom the jury is still out. Other than that, in Mike Elias’s tenure, they have not hit on any pick beyond the second round. That’s especially true about pitchers, because it is still the case that no Elias-drafted pitcher has made a start for the Orioles up to this point.

Is the 2025 Day 2 crop going to be the one that changes these trends? Player development timelines being what they are, it’ll be two years or so before we find out about any of the college players and likely four or five before the high school players might make it to the majors. Here’s who the Orioles grabbed from rounds 4-10.

4th round - Colin Yeaman - SS - UC Irvine

Nominative determinism at work? His name is “Yay, man!”

Yeaman is the player who is pictured on the front page of the site for this article. Listed at 6’2” 200 lbs., this righty-batting shortstop spent two seasons at a junior college and needed two different surgeries on his non-throwing shoulder during that time. As a junior with UC-Irvine, he batted .336/.447/.591 across 60 games.

The MLB Draft stream described him as a player whose “name shot up the draft boards,” and praised “an advanced approach that doesn’t swing and miss a lot, can drive the ball to all fields.” They guessed a most likely outcome of a bat-oriented second baseman.

5th round - Jaiden Lo Re - SS - Corona Del Sol (AZ) HS

The Orioles reached far down on Baseball America’s 500-deep draft prospects list to find Lo Re, who checks in at 413 on that list. He’s listed at 5’11” and 180 pounds and is probably being bought out of a BYU commitment with the O’s selecting him in the fifth round. I’ll be interested to see whether he gets any over slot bonus money compared to the slot value of $452,000.

Less-known high school players don’t always get the over slot. For one Orioles example, 2019 fifth rounder Darell Hernaiz, a high school shortstop who was eventually traded to Oakland for Cole Irvin, received an almost exactly slot value bonus from the O’s. BA on Lo Re:

LoRe’s game is anchored by solid pure contact skills thanks to a simple swing. He doesn’t miss frequently and can put the barrel on the ball with a chance for an average hit tool, though his raw power is just fringy. A shortstop now, LoRe is an average runner with fine quickness in the infield and might be a better fit for third base or second in the long run.

6th round - Caden Hunter - LHP - USC

This 6’2”, 205 lb. junior is a transfer to the bigger school of USC after two years at a junior college. This is not a player who comes along with great college results. He had a 5.50 ERA while pitching with the Trojans, with problems issuing walks and allowing home runs. MLB Pipeline rated Hunter as the #149 player in the Draft class, so roughly a fifth round talent, describing him like this:

Hunter has the chance to bring a solid three-pitch mix into the pro game, which points to a future as a big league starter. While his fastball sits around 91 mph and tops out at 95, it plays above the radar gun readings thanks to good carry, leading to solid swing-and-miss ... Strong and durable, Hunter tends to be around the zone with his fastball and changeup, though he struggles landing his breaking ball for strikes consistently. There are enough pieces to work with for him to be an innings-eater in the back of a big league rotation

The last name of Hunter hits my “fun in a Baltimore accent” test because, you know, it ends up sounding more like Hunner. Let’s note the possibility, if things go colossally well, for there to be a Caden-Caden Orioles battery, combining the earlier draft pick Bodine with this pick of Hunter.

7th round - Hunter Allen - RHP - Ashland University

Another Hunter! Yes! This one’s first name is Hunter, rather than his last name. Allen has been facing Great Midwest Athletic Conference competition with Ashland, where he posted a 3.96 ERA with 84 strikeouts in 61.1 innings. As with last round’s Hunter, there are some command problems on display there; he had a 5.4 BB/9 this season.

Draft broadcast highlighted a mid-upper 90s fastball, “can flash three plus pitches at times,” summing him up as having “big arm strength for a guy from a small school.” Allen is a senior, so this 6’4” 245-pound player could be headed for something under the $272,000 slot value for this pick.

8th round - Kailen Hamson - LHP - University of the Cumberlands

This is another college senior, so again there’s likely some savings against the slot value of $221,700 here. The Orioles need to do that, probably, to pay for talented players they did not expect to fall to them with their top three picks. More immediately interesting about him is that he was born in Australia. (MLB.com beat writer Jake Rill noted that Hamson would become the fourth Aussie-born Oriole.) What a journey from there to playing college baseball in Kentucky, where his university is located.

This 6’1” 188-pound lefty swung between the rotation and bullpen over 21 games, striking out 79 batters in 56.2 innings while having some command problems with a 5.6 BB/9. You can note a little trend in the pitchers the Orioles have taken here on Day 2. MLB’s Draft broadcast noted that “he’s up to 96mph, with a good feel to spin the ball.” In the eighth round, a player with some building blocks who needs some work is about as good as you can hope for.

9th round - Cam Lee - OF - Mineral Area JC (MO)

Talking about slot value things, a junior college freshman who is just 19 years old might be in line for a modest overslot compared to the $200,400 slot value here. According to the MLB Draft broadcast, Lee is committed to transfer to the University of Missouri for the fall.

On that broadcast, Jim Callis described this outfielder, who’s listed at 5’10” and 165 pounds, as “an athletic guy and plus runner who got attention late in the draft process,” noting that there’s question about how much he’ll be able to impact with his bat once switching to wood in the pro ranks. In the ninth round, everybody’s got questions, otherwise they would have been picked several rounds earlier.

10th round - Dalton Neuschwander - RHP - University of West Florida

Another senior sign here, as Neuschwander is already 23 years old. That will net probably six figures worth of savings against the slot value of $189,300 for the pick. For what it’s worth when considering a player who was facing Great South Conference-level competition, Neuschwander posted a 2.42 ERA before being drafted this year, with 80 strikeouts and 14 walks allowed over 81.2 innings pitched.

The broadcast’s limited awareness of him beyond his stat line is that he can “run (a fastball) up to 97mph.” Melanie Newman, a familiar face for Orioles fans, was delighted to discover that he has a website touting his baseball talent.

Local talent that didn’t go to the Orioles

I always think it would be cool if the Orioles draft a local kid who turns out well for the hometown or at least home region team. Mike Elias does not value this aspect in his draft planning.

The best draft prospect from Maryland high schools this year was Aidan West, a shortstop at Columbia’s Long Reach High School. West was picked at the end of the fourth round by the Dodgers. It’s a good guess he’ll sign rather than go to NC State.

**

I won’t be doing a pick-by-pick rundown of rounds 11-20. If the Orioles end up selecting any notable players across these rounds, I’ll add a little section to this article about them when it happens.

On this Day 2 group overall:

The Orioles went best player available with their four picks in the first 37 spots of the Draft on Day 1. I think they’re paying for this in their Day 2 picks because it looks like a lot of under slots on this group, players from mostly smaller schools who don’t have a ton of track record.

One way to look at this is that the Orioles are aiming to take players with some traits they like and they will see if they can polish those players into solid pro prospects. There are player development success stories in the Elias era, but again, other than Mayo, there’s no round 3+ guy who’s become a good prospect, and even Mayo hasn’t established himself as a definite major league regular yet.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/14/24467588/mlb-draft-2025-orioles-picks-day-2
 
Grading the 2025 Orioles Draft class: What do you think?

Los Angeles Angels v Baltimore Orioles

Photo by G Fiume/Getty Images

The Orioles seem to be trying out a different strategy with their largest-ever draft bonus pool.

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Baltimore Orioles fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

The two days of the 2025 MLB Draft have come and gone. The Orioles, after trading Bryan Baker to the Rays for pick #37 in the Draft, ended up with four of the first 37 picks as well as the largest-ever signing bonus pool that any team has had since this system was introduced in 2012.

Along with all of that available money, the Orioles seem to have broadened the type of player that they were willing to take with their high draft picks. Rather than focusing solely on college bats who have good power but questions about their ability to hit, such as last year’s first round pick Vance Honeycutt, the Orioles used their top pick on Auburn catcher/outfielder Ike Irish, whose expected skillset is higher on contact and lighter on power. Their choice with the 30th pick, Coastal Carolina catcher Caden Bodine, was similar.

From there, the Orioles went in a more familiar direction in taking Arkansas shortstop Wehiwa Aloy, who has the power they like but also questions about his swing-and-miss. Aloy was a higher-rated talent that the O’s were able to get with the 31st pick, so it still fit a best player available philosophy. There’s less pressure on him working out when he was “just” the third pick rather than the top pick. BPA led them to take a high school outfielder named Slater de Brun with the #37 pick, who will probably take an overslot bonus to keep him from going to college. They’ve got the money.

As the beginning of Day 1 of the Draft played out, there were some fans who were unhappy that the Orioles didn’t use one of these first four picks on a pitcher. Drafting for need is generally a terrible strategy. There is certainly a need. Starting in the second round, the Orioles took mostly pitchers for the entire rest of the Draft, with early picks from big programs like Georgia and later ones from increasingly-obscure universities and community colleges. Check out the full list of picks here.

There’s no instant gratification in baseball’s amateur draft. The reality of prospect development is that college players are probably two years out from helping, and high school players are four or five years from contributing at the major league level. If they intrigue another team enough, they could be used as trade pieces. But either way there’s no way to really know, right now, which pick is going to be a winner and which won’t.

With the understanding that even the most-informed people can ultimately only guess off of the initial vibes, how are you feeling about this draft class? This week’s survey is giving a grade to Mike Elias and the Orioles based on the early thoughts on these picks:

Results will be shared on Friday. Vote now and check back then. You can always let us know what you think in the meantime in the comments below.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/15/24467851/mlb-draft-2025-orioles-grade-fan-survey
 
MLB All-Star Game open thread

MLB: Baltimore Orioles at Texas Rangers

Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The Orioles’ representative, Ryan O’Hearn, is starting at DH and batting sixth.

It’s All-Star Game time. And it’s understandable if you’re feeling a little less jazzed about the Midsummer Classic than you did, say, last year.

In 2024, the Orioles entered the break as a first-place team, holding the third-best record in the majors, and sent an impressive contingent of five players to the AL All-Star team. Gunnar Henderson, Adley Rutschman, and Corbin Burnes were All-Star starters. Jordan Westburg and Anthony Santander were reserves. It seemed as if it’d be part of a yearly tradition of a winning Orioles club having several All-Star representatives.

Just one year later, look where we are now. The Orioles are a last-place team that has just one player on the All-Star squad. The core of young Orioles who were expected to be perennial All-Stars — including Henderson, Rutschman, and Westburg — are nowhere to be found, due to injuries, ineffectiveness, or both. That’s not to say they won’t be back on the All-Star team someday. But in this cursed 2025 season, it’s not happening.

OK, that’s enough negativity. Let’s focus on the good news. The Orioles’ representative, Ryan O’Hearn, is a plenty worthy All-Star. In his third season with the Birds, the 31-year-old is having his best performance yet, leading all qualified Orioles in average (.286), OBP (.382), and SLG (.458). With Rafael Devers traded to the National League, O’Hearn is unquestionably the best designated hitter in the AL this year, and fans rightly voted him in as the starting DH. He’s the oldest first-time All-Star on the AL roster.

It’s a remarkable turnaround for a player whose baseball career was once on life support when the Royals DFA’d him after four straight substandard seasons. The Orioles took a chance on O’Hearn on a minor league deal, gave him a big league opportunity early in 2023, and he basically hasn’t stopped hitting since.

While O’Hearn may be the only O’s representative, baseball fans can find plenty more excitement in this game. Tarik Skubal pitching to Shohei Ohtani? Paul Skenes facing Aaron Judge? We’ll see both those matchups in the first inning.

There’s quite a few new faces in the All-Star starting lineups. Judge and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. are the only holdovers from last year’s AL lineup, and Ohtani, Skenes, and Ketel Marte the lone repeats from the 2024 NL starters.

American League lineup

2B Gleyber Torres (DET)
LF Riley Greene (DET)
RF Aaron Judge (NYY)
C Cal Raleigh (SEA)
1B Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (TOR)
DH Ryan O’Hearn (BAL)
3B Junior Caminero (TB)
CF Javier Báez (DET)
SS Jacob Wilson (ATH)

LHP Tarik Skubal (DET)

National League lineup

DH Shohei Ohtani (LAD)
LF Ronald Acuña Jr. (ATL)
2B Ketel Marte (ARI)
1B Freddie Freeman (LAD)
3B Manny Machado (SD)
C Will Smith (LAD)
RF Kyle Tucker (CHC)
SS Francisco Lindor (NYM)
CF Pete Crow-Armstrong (CHC)

RHP Paul Skenes (PIT)

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/15/24468159/mlb-all-star-game-open-thread
 
Orioles 2025 Draft Signing Tracker

MLB Draft presented by Nike

Photo by Mary DeCicco/MLB Photos via Getty Images

The deadline to sign 2025 Draft picks is July 28 at 5pm Eastern.

The 2025 Draft has come and gone over a whirlwind two days. The Orioles, with several extra picks available, came away with 24 players over the Draft’s 20 rounds. The next step is to get the players signed. That will all be settled before we even get to the trade deadline, as the signing deadline for picks this year is July 28 at 5pm Eastern.

The Orioles signed every one of their picks a year ago, handing out overslot bonuses to three high school players taken later than the fifth round. The 2025 class has four high school players in it, as well as six junior college players. Even with a record-setting signing bonus pool available, I’m not expecting them to sign all 24 players.

The total Orioles bonus pool​


The Orioles have the largest-ever bonus pool available to spend in the 2025 Draft, with $19,144,500 available. They ended up with a large amount of pool space by virtue of getting compensation picks for both Corbin Burnes and Anthony Santander and they tipped it into record-breaking when they traded Bryan Baker to the Rays for pick #37 in this Draft.

The bonus pool system has been in effect since the 2012 Draft. Each pick in the first ten rounds is assigned a value that decreases as the draft goes along. Add up these values and you get a team’s total bonus pool. Discussion about whether a particular signing is overslot or underslot is relative to the value for that pick. The top Orioles pick at #19 has a slot value of $4,420,900, on down to just $189,300 for their tenth round pick.

On the whole, players who have more leverage to get overslot bonuses are those who have just graduated from high school, as well as draft-eligible college sophomores and junior college players. They can just say they’ll go to school if they don’t like what a team offers. Picks who were either college seniors or even graduate students still playing baseball tend to get under slot bonuses.

In the case of the 2025 Orioles Draft class, they may end up handing out overslot bonuses to college juniors, as top pick Ike Irish as well as #31 pick Wehiwa Aloy were expected to be drafted higher than they were. There may need to be extra money in those signing bonuses to reflect talent being higher than their draft slot.

The total bonus pool does depend on every pick in the top ten rounds being signed. An unsigned pick in the top ten rounds means that the team loses the slot value for that pick from its pool. Because of this, teams and players nearly always have agreed upon figures before a pick is made.

Players taken from rounds 11-20, and undrafted players, can receive a signing bonus up to $150,000 without counting against the pool. Any amount that exceeds $150,000 for these picks is what counts against the pool. Additionally, it’s now the case that junior college players can sign late as “draft-and-follow” players for a bonus of up to $225,000 before next year’s Draft.

Also, a team can exceed its pool by up to 5% and it will only have to pay a tax on the overage amount, equal to 75% of the overage. There are steeper penalties for exceeding 5% that no team has ever incurred. In last year’s Draft, the Orioles exceeded their bonus pool by a bit more than $500,000, ending up under the allowed 5% overage with less than a thousand bucks to spare. The possible 5% overage this year is $957,225.

This article will be updated between now and the deadline as signings or non-signings are announced.

The official signings​


As of this publication, the Orioles have not signed any of their picks.

Undrafted free agents​

No news yet​

  • 1st round, 19th overall - Ike Irish - C/OF - Auburn
  • Compensation, 30th overall - Caden Bodine - C - Coastal Carolina
  • Compensation, 31st overall - Wehiwa Aloy - SS - Arkansas
  • CB Round A, 37th overall - Slater de Brun - OF - Summit (OR) HS
  • 2nd round, 58th overall - Joseph Dzierwa - LHP - Michigan State
  • CB round B, 69th overall - JT Quinn - RHP - Georgia
  • 3rd round, 93rd overall - RJ Austin - OF - Vanderbilt
  • 4th round, 124th overall - Colin Yeaman - SS - UC-Irvine
  • 5th round, 154th overall - Jaiden Lo Re - SS - Corona Del Sol (AZ) HS
  • 6th round, 184th overall - Caden Hunter - LHP - USC
  • 7th round, 214th overall - Hunter Allen - RHP - Ashland University
  • 8th round, 244th overall - Kailen Hamson - LHP - University of the Cumberlands
  • 9th round, 274th overall - Cam Lee - OF - Mineral Area JC (MO)
  • 10th round, 304th overall - Dalton Neuschwander - RHP - University of West Florida
  • 11th round, 334th overall - Holden deJong - LHP - New Jersey Institute of Technology
  • 12th round, 364th overall - Daniel Lopez - RHP - Odessa College
  • 13th round, 394th overall - Brayden Smith - 2B - Oklahoma State
  • 14th round, 424th overall - Brayan Orrantia - RHP - New Mexico JC
  • 15th round, 454th overall - KK Clark - RHP - Pearl River CC (MS)
  • 16th round, 484th overall - Denton Biller - RHP - Johnson County CC (KS)
  • 17th round, 514th overall - Braeden Sloan - LHP - TCU
  • 18th round, 544th overall - Cole Johnson - OF - Oconee County (GA) HS
  • 19th round, 574th overall - Jimmy Anderson - SS - Heartland CC (IL)
  • 20th round, 604th overall - Connor Gehr - RHP - Meridian CC (MS)

Reportedly not signing​


As of this writing, no one has indicated that he’s definitely not signing.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/16/24468811/mlb-draft-2025-orioles-picks-signed-bonus-pool-money
 
Thursday Bird Droppings: Two weeks left until the trade deadline

Boston Red Sox v Baltimore Orioles

Photo by Diamond Images via Getty Images

Unless they dominate out of the break, there’s only one way for the Orioles to go.

Hello, friends.

One more day off to go before baseball resumes. Of less immediate but certainly more long-term interest, there are two weeks to go until the trade deadline, at which point the Orioles will have moved whoever they want to move in deals and picked up whatever they could in return.

The math remains hostile as far as pointing towards anything other than selling off assets. The O’s went 6-3 in their final nine games before the break and even that’s not enough. 7.5 games out, seven teams to pass, it’s just not going to work. I think at this point, they’d need to be four games closer than they are to not be trading away the veterans with value who are going to become free agents after the season. An O’s team that was better enough to have won those four games could make more of a case for being good enough to close the rest of the gap.

It’s just not that way. The 2025 Orioles have been shut out ten times already, including twice in July. They’ve scored only a single run in an additional six games. The Orioles starting rotation has the second-worst ERA of all MLB teams, trailing only the Rockies, who are an entirely different kind of mess.

You can make a pretty good case that the Orioles are going to keep playing better from this point, as their injured players make their way back. They’re 28-24 under interim manager Tony Mansolino. That’s not enough to dig out of the early hole. It’s sad to think about, because they’ve been playing almost well enough to make you think that maybe they can do it, and then they get setbacks. We got that last week heading into the break, with the Bryan Baker meltdown that ended up stopping the O’s from sweeping the Mets, and then whatever it is that happened to the offense in those last two games against the Marlins.

I guess at least we avoided the spectacle of 2018, where Manny Machado was having trade rumors flying around while he was within range of microphones in the All-Star Game and ultimately was dealt the next day. Ryan O’Hearn got through his game with questions swirling but nothing actively happening. That doesn’t mean that Mike Elias won’t strike today, if someone comes calling with a price he can’t refuse.

Orioles stuff you might have missed​


Orioles enter second half with uphill battle, but momentum in mind (Orioles.com)
My reaction to this headline was, “What momentum? They lost two to the Marlins before the break!” But it’s actually about building momentum towards 2026, which I think is necessary and hope that they will be able to do.

Orioles claim Elvin Rodríguez on waivers (School of Roch)
Recent roster maneuvering left the Orioles with two open 40-man roster spots. Mike Elias couldn’t stop himself from claiming a guy who was good in Japan last year, jumped back to MLB this year, and has been bad. Maybe if the O’s can get him to stop giving up home runs, he’ll be good enough.

With Orioles’ TV future uncertain, Manfred hopes to package local rights (The Baltimore Sun)
The Sun notes that it’s been a recent project of commissioner Rob Manfred to have TV rights reverting to the league, and that it’s possible that the MASN divorce will have the Orioles joining the other five teams who’ve already done this by next season.

Former Shoemaker HS shortstop Joe Philip Guzman signs with Orioles as undrafted free agent (Killeen Daily Herald)
We could all use a local paper to highlight our professional successes. This one from Texas makes note of Guzman, the rare high school player to sign as an undrafted free agent. Best of luck to him in his pro career.

Birthdays and Orioles anniversaries​


Today in 1991, Sam Horn struck out six times in a row in the course of a 9-8, 15-inning loss to the Royals. Horn had the ignominious record of being the first-ever non-pitcher to do this.

There is one lone former Oriole who has a birthday today. Happy 31st to Josh Lester, who appeared in 11 games for the 2023 Orioles.

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday to you! Your birthday buddies for today include: Declaration of Independence signer, Vice President, and odd district-drawer Elbridge Gerry (1744), actor James Cagney (1899), pianist and Peanuts theme composer Vince Guaraldi (1928), actor David Hasslehoff (1952), and DJ/producer Darude (1975).

On this day in history...​


In 1453, the final battle of the Hundred Years’ War between England and France was fought. An invading English force led by the Earl of Shrewsbury was defeated in the Battle of Gascony, in which the earl himself was killed, and the war finally ended with England having no further will to fight for its claimed continental territory.

In 1717, baroque composer Handel’s Water Music received its premiere performance as 50 musicians played for Great Britain’s George I for hours while floating on a barge down the Thames.

In 1918, the former tsar of Russia, Nicholas II, along with his immediate family, were executed by the Bolshevik secret police.

In 1955, Disneyland was officially opened.

**

And that’s the way it is in Birdland on July 17. Have a safe Thursday!

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/17/24468858/orioles-news-rumors-trade-deadline
 
Can you guess this Orioles left-hander in today’s in-5 trivia game?

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Think you can figure out what Orioles player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out.

Hello Orioles fans! We’re back for another day of the Camden Chat In-5 daily trivia game. The objective is to guess the correct active OR retired Orioles player in as few guesses as possible. Full game instructions are at the bottom. Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in this Google Form.

Today’s Camden Chat In-5 Game


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous Games


Wednesday, July 16, 2025
Tuesday, July 15, 2025
Monday, July 14, 2025

Play more SB Nation In-5 trivia games


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

Camden Chat In-5 instructions


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Orioles player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS each week. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it. The game will appear in the No. 3 slot of the Camden Chat layout each day this week and as noted above, will appear in this article exclusively.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/17/24469227/sb-nation-orioles-daily-trivia-in-5
 
Orioles trivia: Your in-5 daily game, Friday edition

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Think you can figure out what Orioles player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out.

Hello Orioles fans! We’re back for another day of the Camden Chat In-5 daily trivia game. The objective is to guess the correct active OR retired Orioles player in as few guesses as possible. Full game instructions are at the bottom. Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in this Google Form.

Today’s Camden Chat In-5 Game


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous Games


Thursday, July 17, 2025
Wednesday, July 16, 2025
Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Play more SB Nation In-5 trivia games


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

Camden Chat In-5 instructions


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Orioles player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS each week. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it. The game will appear in the No. 3 slot of the Camden Chat layout each day this week and as noted above, will appear in this article exclusively.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/18/24469837/sb-nation-orioles-daily-trivia-in-5
 
Friday night Orioles game thread: @ Rays, 7:35

Tampa Bay Rays v Baltimore Orioles

Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images

The second half begins with Charlie Morton on the mound

Happy second half, everyone! The Orioles are kicking things off in balmy Tampa, where the temperature at game time is expected to have a real feel of 94 degrees.

Charlie Morton is on the mound for the Orioles, and I have to admit I’ve come around on old Charlie. I guess that makes sense given that he’s been pitching well for a while now. On regular rest, Morton will have three more starts before the trade deadline. It wouldn’t surprise me if he didn’t make that last one. Not for this team, anyway.

I assume Taj Bradley is tired of seeing the Orioles. In two starts against them this year, Bradley has given up 12 runs in 6.2 innings. I would like to order up more of that tonight, please.

The Rays stumbled into the All-Star break and are just 3-9 in July. Will they turn back into the team that played .630 baseball in June? If so, I hope they wait until after this weekend.

Coby Mayo is in the lineup tonight and I sure hope he stays there for the rest of the season. This is his time to sink or swim. Go Coby!

Orioles lineup

  1. Jackson Holliday (L) 2B
  2. Jordan Westburg (R) 3B
  3. Gunnar Henderson (L) SS
  4. Ryan O’Hearn (L) DH
  5. Ramón Laureano (R) RF
  6. Colton Cowser (L) LF
  7. Cedric Mullins (L) CF
  8. Coby Mayo (R) 1B
  9. Jacob Stallings (R) C

Rays lineup

  1. Chandler Simpson (L) CF
  2. Brandon Lowe (L) 2B
  3. Yandy Díaz (R) DH
  4. Jonathan Aranda (L) 1B
  5. Junior Caminero (R) 3B
  6. Josh Lowe (L) RF
  7. Jake Mangum (S) LF
  8. Ha-Seong Kim (R) SS
  9. Danny Jansen (R) C

Let’s go O’s!

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/18/24470217/orioles-rays-friday-night-lineups-game-thread
 
Saturday Bird Droppings: Not an ideal start to the second half

Baltimore Orioles v Tampa Bay Rays

Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images

An ugly loss, Rodriguez is still hurt, and Irish signs

Good Morning Birdland,

Welp, if you were hoping the Orioles would go on a 10-game winning streak right out of the break to convince Mike Elias to buy at the deadline, last night’s game was a big ‘ol disappointment.

Charlie Morton looked like the April version of himself. Grant Wolfram was no better out of the bullpen. And the lineup did next to nothing. But shoutout to Gunnar Henderson (2-for-4, double, triple) and Colton Cowser (3-for-3, walk) for showing a little energy at the plate.

Of course, one game is not shifting the Orioles postseason outlook much. But after the all-star break gave us some time to delude ourselves into thinking a miracle could happen, this was an immediate reminder that this team just does not have the juice to get back into the playoff discussion.

That’s OK. In fact, it might even be the preferred outcome at this point. The front office added tons of young talent to the organization via the draft earlier in the week. And with each passing day it seems like they will do the same at the trade deadline.

That doesn’t make the remaining games pointless. In fact, the Orioles still have plenty to learn at the major league level this year, particularly on the pitching side of things. But we can lower our expectations accordingly.

Links

Rodriguez suffers another setback (right elbow discomfort) | MLB.com
It is coming up on a year since Grayson Rodriguez pitched in a major league game. His exact issue has changed a few times. Originally, it was discomfort in his right lat/teres. Back in March he reported triceps soreness. Then it was elbow inflammation. In April, the shoulder was bothering him. In June, he told the media that his elbow was good to go. And now, here we are. In all likelihood, we will not be seeing him pitch in 2025, and now 2026 feels like it is doubt.

Orioles Sign First-Round Pick Ike Irish | MLB Trade Rumors
It’s nice to get this done early. The deal is only $2,500 underslot, so the team will be looking elsewhere to save money and (presumably) give it to Slater de Brun and Jaiden Lo Re, the two higher schoolers that they took in the top 10 rounds.

Leftovers for breakfast | Roch Kubatko
Roch gets into the topic of Coby Mayo being on the roster but not playing much. That probably changes in August. Ryan O’Hearn is going to get dealt, along with some other veterans. That will open up at-bats, and Mayo should benefit. How the youngster plays is one of those things that the Orioles need to learn in the season’s final two months. Can they count on him as the first baseman? If so, that makes Ryan Mountcastle available during the offseason.

Jon Meoli: Why the next few weeks — and beyond — are pivotal for Mike Elias and the Orioles | The Baltimore Banner
This is a crucial trade deadline for Elias. He has quite a few trade chips. Hopefully he is able to net a few pieces that help the Orioles return to winning next year. That could be in the form of a fringy prospect that plays in Baltimore in 2026, or could be younger players that the team can flip in the next year for their own playoff push.

Orioles birthdays

Is it your birthday? Happy birthday!

  • David Segui turns 59 today. The journeyman started and ended his career with the Orioles. His first stint lasted from 1990 through ‘93, and then he returned from 2001 through ‘04.
  • Dan Graham is 71 years old. He spent parts of two seasons with the Orioles from 1980 to ‘81.
  • The late Billy Gardner (b. 1927, d. 2024) was born on this day. From 1957 throught ‘59 he played all over the infield for the Orioles.

This day in history


1991 - Cal Ripken Jr. goes deep for the 20th time on the season. He becomes the eighth player in MLB history to reach that mark in each of his first ten big league seasons

1994 - A game between the Orioles and Mariners in Seattle is postponded after four wood-fiber tiles fall from the ceiling of the Kingdome. Further inspection reveals that there are many more water-damaged tiles that need to be replaced before baseball can be resumed.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/19/24470400/baltimore-orioles-news-mlb-trade-rumors-2025
 
Saturday night Orioles game thread: at Rays, 7:05pm ET

MLB: Baltimore Orioles at Atlanta Braves

Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

The O’s look to rebound from an 11-1 loss in the series opener as Dean Kremer makes his first start of the second half.

Where to watch: MASN2, MASN+

Probable pitchers: RHP Dean Kremer (8-7, 4.24 ERA, 88 Ks) vs. RHP Zack Littell (8-7, 3.56 ERA, 80 Ks)

In a season where everything that can go wrong seemingly has, it was more of the same yesterday when the Orioles kicked off the second half of 2025. Charlie had his worst start in three months, the offense didn’t get on the board until the 9th inning and Baltimore suffered its fifth loss of 10+ runs this season.

While the Orioles collectively haven’t rebounded from their woeful start to the season, the same can’t be said about Dean Kremer. After a disastrous first month of the season, Kremer’s been a constant positive for this Orioles rotation over his last 13 starts. In that time, the 29-year-old right-hander has a 3.13 ERA, a .241 BAA and a 1.16 WHIP.

Kremer’s been a little rockier on the road during that stretch, posting a 4.26 ERA in his last seven road starts. However, Kremer is the only starting pitcher to guide the O’s to a win in Tampa this season. A month ago, he finished with a final line of 5 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 2 BB and 4 Ks in a 5-1 Orioles win.

It won’t matter how well Kremer pitches, though, if the O’s continue to sleepwalk at the plate. Baltimore is currently in the midst of their worst offensive month of the season. Through the first 12 games of July, the Orioles are hitting a measly .216 with a .635 OPS while scoring 3.3 runs per game.

Trying to break out of that funk against Rays’ starter Zack Littell won’t be an easy task, given Baltimore’s historical struggles against the soft-tossing righty. Littell has a 2.74 career ERA against Baltimore and has combined for 13 IP, 10 H, 4 ER and 8 Ks in two starts vs. the O’s this season—though Littell was the losing pitcher opposite Kremer in that 5-1 Baltimore win.

Colton Cowser may be the X-factor for the O’s offense tonight, as the Milk Man comes in with plenty of success in his previous matchups against Littell. Cowser is 4-for-13 with two HRs and a 1.143 OPS. After going 3-for-3 in yesterday’s loss, another good night at the plate could ignite a hot steak from Cowser—and perhaps kickstart this scuffling Orioles’ lineup.

Orioles Lineup​

  1. Jackson Holliday (L) 2B
  2. Jordan Westburg (R) DH
  3. Gunnar Henderson (L) SS
  4. Ryan O’Hearn (L) 1B
  5. Ramón Laureano (R) LF
  6. Colton Cowser (L) CF
  7. Tyler O’Neill (R) RF
  8. Ramón Urías (R) 3B
  9. Jacob Stallings (R) C

Rays Lineup​

  1. Chandler Simpson (L) CF
  2. Brandon Lowe (L) 2B
  3. Yandy Díaz (R) DH
  4. Jonathan Aranda (L) 1B
  5. Junior Caminero (R) 3B
  6. Josh Lowe (L) RF
  7. Tanner Mangum (S) LF
  8. Ha-Seong Kim (R) SS
  9. Matt Thaiss (L) C

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/19/24470479/mlb-scores-orioles-rays-game-thread-july-19-2025
 
Sunday afternoon Orioles game thread: at Rays, 12:10

Miami Marlins v Baltimore Orioles

Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images

Trevor Rogers is on the bump as the Orioles look to salvage their weekend in Tampa.

Well, if the Orioles weren’t committed to selling coming into this weekend, the first two games of the series have given them a big old shove in that direction. The offense has looked bad in both games. At least Dean Kremer was a treat in Game 2. His improvement since early in the season has been lovely.

Speaking of pitchers that have gotten better, Trevor Rogers will head to the hill today. The lefty has appeared in six MLB games this year and has a 1.53 ERA over 35.1 innings. He is yet to allow more than three runs in any one start, and has allowed exactly zero runs in three of his outings.

There has been some talk of Rogers being a trade chip later this month. I suppose anyone can be had for a price, but given the state of the Orioles pitching staff, and their goal of making the playoffs next year it does not seem wise to trade away Rogers with a year of team control remaining.

For today, let’s hope Rogers and the Orioles can get out of Tampa with their dignity in tact. Winning one game this weekend would be nice.

Orioles lineup

  1. Jackson Holliday, 2B
  2. Jordan Westburg, 3B
  3. Gunnar Henderson, SS
  4. Ryan O’Hearn, 1B
  5. Ramón Laureano, RF
  6. Colton Cowser, LF
  7. Tyler O’Neill, DH
  8. Cedric Mullins, CF
  9. Alex Jackson, C

LHP Trevor Rogers (2-1, 1.53 ERA)

Rays lineup​

  1. Chandler Simpson, CF
  2. Ha-Seong Kim, 2B
  3. Yandy Díaz, 1B
  4. Junior Caminero, DH
  5. Christopher Morel, LF
  6. Jake Mangum, RF
  7. Danny Jansen, C
  8. José Caballero, 3B
  9. Taylor Walls, SS

RHP Ryan Pepiot (6-7, 3.38 ERA)

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/20/24470894/sunday-afternoon-orioles-game-thread-at-rays-12-10
 
Rogers battles, Orioles homer three times in 5-3 win over Rays

Baltimore Orioles v Tampa Bay Rays

Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images

Homers from Holliday, Jackson, and O’Hearn led the offense to a Sunday afternoon win in Tampa.

The Orioles long, difficult weekend in Tampa came to an end on Sunday with a tense 5-3 win over the hosting Rays.

Jackson Holliday woke the offense up out of the chute. He stroked the second pitch of the day—a changeup down and in—and pulled it just beyond the fence in right-center field for an immediate 1-0 lead.

But the real fireworks took place in the third inning. That is the frame in which the Orioles scored three times and saw both their right fielder and their manager get ejected from the game.

Alex Jackson led the third inning off with a solo homer, his first as an Oriole and something of a revenge moment against his former club. Holliday followed with a walk, Jordan Westburg singled, and then Gunnar Henderson scored them both with a double into right-center field.

It felt like an inning that might explode into a massive number. Rays starter Ryan Pepiot looked uncomfortable on the mound, fiddling with his landing spot and the ball quite a bit. Instead, he would settle down. Ryan O’Hearn flew out and then Ramón Laureano struck out on a questionably called swinging strike on a pitch up in the zone.

The half-swing was appealed to first base umpire John Libka, whom rung Laureano up. The O’s right fielder was clearly not pleased with the call. He also seemed to lose track of the number of outs in the inning. He slammed his helmet to the ground, and then started to take all of his batting gear off, as a fielder would do at the end of an inning when they don’t need to return to the dugout and instead head out to their position. None of it would be necessary as Laureano was tossed from the game altogether by home plate umpire James Hoye. That prompted Tony Mansolino to come out of the dugout to defend Laureano and give Hoye a piece of his mind too. So Hoye sent the interim skipper on his way as well.

If it had actually been the third out of the inning, Laureano probably would not have been thrown out. Obviously, he did not like the call, but he also didn’t seem like he wanted to outwardly argue the call. But given the actual situation—players on base and an out to go—the helmet throw was an unwelcome delay to the game, and so he had to go. On a hot day at the end of a rough weekend, an early shower probably wasn’t the worst thing to happen to Laureano.

On the other side of the ball, Trevor Rogers was providing another solid pitching performance.

Rogers wiggled out of a bases loaded jam in the first inning, and then worked a much more efficient 1-2-3 frame in the second. Things got a bit dicey in the middle innings.

The Rays got on the board in the bottom of the third inning. Yandy Díaz doubled to center field, and then came in to score on a Junior Caminero single. In the bottom of the fourth, Danny Jansen doubled their total with a solo homer to left-center field.

But that is all Rogers would cough up as he faced the minimum in the fifth and sixth innings. At 91 pitches it is possible he would have returned for the seventh inning, but the rain came and made the decision for the Orioles. Even still, it was just the latest example of Rogers’ return to the form of his early career.

What’s most impressive is that Rogers managed to navigate six good innings without his best stuff. His velocity was down a tick or two on the gun, and he got just six whiffs all afternoon. But he limited his free passes and forced the Rays offense to beat him. Despite a decent amount of hard contact, they couldn’t do it. It was an impressive, mature showing from Rogers.

Just before the rain came, O’Hearn gave the Orioles their fifth run of the game. In the top of the sixth inning, the O’s all-star rep smacked his 12th home run of the season to right field. Who needs a left-handed bat? That trade value just keeps ticking up.

The rain delay between the sixth and seventh innings was not a welcome development for the Orioles. It felt like they were rolling, and the two-hour-and-36-minute delay killed all of their momentum.

The offense collected three hits from the seventh inning on, but could not convert any of them into runs. But that was an issue all game. The Orioles went 1-for-10 with runners in scoring position, once again relaying heavily on home runs for their offense.

The O’s bullpen did a fine job of getting the game into their closer’s hands. Yennier Cano and Andrew Kittredge combined for two scoreless innings. But Félix Bautista was not at the top of his game.

Bautista walked Jansen to start the inning. A strikeout and passed ball moved Jansen to second, where he was set up to score on a Taylor Walls single to make it 5-3. A pop out of Chandler Simpson put the O’s on the doorstep of a win, and then Bautista lost the strike zone. He issued walks to Ha-Seong Kim and Díaz, which brought up Junior Caminero. Bautista then threw four straight balls to Caminero, but the fourth was incorrectly called a strike. That saved Bautista big time, and allowed him to get down in the zone with his sinker. Caminero chased another ball, and then swung (and missed) the only actual strike of the at-bat for the final out of the game.

It was a dicey afternoon for the O’s. The offense showed up a little bit, struggling to manufacture runs, but putting together a good showing with five runs scored. Rogers was good despite lacking his best stuff, and the bullpen was a mixed bag.

The weekend as a whole further exposed the Orioles weaknesses and why they will (most likely) be selling in the next 10 days. That’s unfortunate given where expectations were back in February, but makes sense in the context.

Up next for the Orioles is a trip to Cleveland for a four-game set against the Guardians. That is a yet another tough test. The Guardians have bounced back from a rough patch, and have put themselves in position to make a run at the playoffs. Tomoyuki Sugano (7-5, 4.44 ERA) will start the opener against Tanner Bibee (5-9, 4.29 ERA). First pitch is set for 6:40 from Progressive Field.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/2...rioles-homer-three-times-in-5-3-win-over-rays
 
Orioles-Guardians series preview: A suddenly surging Cleveland club awaits

Athletics v Cleveland Guardians

Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images

The Guardians had all but buried themselves in the postseason race before a recent hot streak.

It’s official: the Orioles will be sellers. Their next opponent, though, has some tough decisions about which direction they’ll be taking at the trade deadline.

It’s hard to know what to make of the Cleveland Guardians. Last year they were a great story, enjoying a 92-win season under rookie Manager of the Year Stephen Vogt. But this year they’ve been all over the map. The Guardians were doing OK up until June 25, sitting at two games above .500, and then suffered a brutal 10-game losing streak that seemed to knock them out of contention entirely.

Since then, though, Cleveland has been red hot. They’ve won eight of their last 10 games, including a sweep of the Astros and series wins over the White Sox and Athletics, the two worst teams in the American League. Now they’ll get to face the third-worst team, the Orioles, with a chance to keep the good times rolling.

The Guardians are hopelessly out of the AL Central race, 11 games behind the Tigers, but remain on the periphery of wild card contention. They enter play tonight at 48-50, 4.5 games back of the third wild card spot. They would have to pass four other teams to get there, so their chances aren’t great, but is it close enough that the Guardians might be tempted to make some acquisitions at the trade deadline?

Their offense could certainly use some help. The Guardians’ .223 team batting average is tied with the White Sox for the worst in the majors, and their .295 OBP is better only than the Rockies. If Cleveland decides to sell, their best trade chips are in their bullpen, led by three-time All-Star closer Emmanuel Clase and set-up man Cade Smith, both of whom are attracting plenty of interest.

Game 1: Monday, 6:40 PM, MASN 2​


RHP Tomoyuki Sugano (7-5, 4.44) vs. RHP Tanner Bibee (5-9, 4.29)

Remember when Sugano was the most reliable member of the Orioles’ rotation? That was nice. Even during his successful first two months, though, his peripherals were scary — most notably, his low strikeout rate. That seems to have caught up with the 35-year-old as he’s posted a 7.94 ERA and 6.34 FIP in his last six starts. Sugano managed to eke out a bare-minimum quality start against the Mets in his last outing — six innings, three runs — after five straight starts of five innings or less. He faced the Guardians on April 17 and pitched seven strong frames of two-run ball, but that seems like a different version of Sugano than the one we’re seeing now.

Bibee, the AL Rookie of the Year runner-up to Gunnar Henderson in 2023, is having a mediocre season, with a 0.8 WAR in 19 starts. July has been especially a slog for him, as he’s failed to last five innings in two of his three starts. Bibee’s strikeout rate is down significantly this year (7.8) compared to last season (9.7) and he’s giving up more hits, homers, and walks. Not a great combination. Bibee pitched against Sugano in that April 17 game at Camden Yards and the Orioles torched him for six runs in 5.2 innings, including a homer by his Rookie of the Year nemesis, Henderson.

Game 2: Tuesday, 6:40 PM, MASN 2​


RHP Brandon Young (0-4, 7.52) vs. LHP Joey Cantillo (1-0, 4.17)

It’s been a rough rookie campaign for Young, who has made six starts, of which only one has been decent. He’s been chased in the fifth inning or earlier in all the others. Young has allowed 47 baserunners in 26.1 innings. That’s not gonna get it done. Right now the Orioles are using him because they simply have no other options, but the potential returns of Zach Eflin and Cade Povich could send Young back to the minors (barring any trades of other starters).

The Hawaii native Cantillo is a 25-year-old lefty who Cleveland acquired in a nine-player trade with the Padres in 2020. His first 21 outings this season came in relief, but the Guardians moved him to the rotation this month and have been gradually stretching him out, with mixed results. No O’s hitter has more than three career PAs against him.

Game 3: Wednesday, 6:40 PM, MASN 2​


TBD vs. RHP Slade Cecconi (5-4, 3.84)

First off: “Slade Cecconi” is a cool name. The Orioles need some guys with names that cool. They’d also benefit from some pitchers who performed like Cecconi, a perfectly fine back-of-the-rotation hurler. He strikes out an acceptable number, gives up an acceptable amount of hits and walks, and generally keeps his team in the game. Cecconi has made one career start against the Orioles, back in 2023 when he was a Diamondback, and was tagged for six runs in 3.1 innings.

The O’s haven’t announced a starter for either of their final two games. If they stay on turn, it would be Charlie Morton and Dean Kremer, unless the Orioles activate Eflin or Povich from the IL.

Game 4: Thursday, 1:10 PM, MASN, MLB Network (out of market)​


TBD vs. LHP Logan Allen (6-8, 4.06)

This left-handed Guardians starting pitcher named Logan Allen should not be confused with the other left-handed Guardians starting pitcher named Logan Allen who played with the club from 2019-2022 (and later made three appearances for the Orioles). This Logan Allen is a 26-year-old who debuted in 2023 (and, to add to this confusion, was drafted by the Orioles in 2017, but didn’t sign). He’s another Cleveland hurler, like Bibee and Cecconi, who is hovering around a league-average performance this season, with a 102 ERA+. Allen did pitch well against the Orioles earlier this season, throwing 5.2 scoreless innings in a victory in Baltimore.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/7/21/24471497/orioles-guardians-series-preview
 
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