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This week in the Orioles minors: Honeycutt and Anderson stand out for Aberdeen

New York Yankees v. Baltimore Orioles

Photo by Kelly Gavin/MLB Photos via Getty Images

Norfolk had signs of life from Coby Mayo, Aberdeen saw last year’s picks do well, and other week 2 highlights.

Each Tuesday on Camden Chat, we look back on the last week of action from the Orioles minor league affiliates, with a particular focus on the performance of players from Camden Chat’s composite top Orioles prospect list.

One belated prospect list was released in the past week. FanGraphs posted a top 50 for the Orioles system. They’ve got some different opinions than the lists that were used for my composite ranking.

Triple-A Norfolk Tides​

  • Last week: 2-4 vs. Gwinnett (Braves)
  • Next opponent: at Omaha (Royals)
  • Overall record and standing: 6-9, tied-fifth place (6 games back) in International League East

Let’s hope that this week heralds the beginning of the Coby Mayo revival, as the slugging prospect shook off a rough start to his season with a pair of home runs across five games played. Mayo added five walks to his tally and only struck out three times. Pretty good! This was a 1.420 OPS for the week, boosting his season number to .861.

Outfielder Jud Fabian got in on the home run party, doing so in very Fabian fashion. He was just 4-21 at the week and struck out 11 times, but three of his four hits were for extra bases, including two dingers, and he walked four times. That’s a lot of the three true outcomes. Fabian is hitting just .216 through 14 games but OPSing .828. Fellow outfielder Dylan Beavers added no extra-base hits, but he had five hits and six walks in six games, plus he stole five bases.

However, it was not a good week for the pitching prospects in Norfolk’s rotation. Righty Cameron Weston made a pair of starts but only pitched 8.1 innings between them. That was still enough time to allow nine runs (eight earned) as he walked five guys and hit two batters. Brandon Young started only once and his start wasn’t very good either, with five earned runs allowed in five innings. If the fact that he struck out six and walked none makes you feel better, don’t let me stop you.

Also notable

  • C Samuel Basallo - Remains on the injured list with a hamstring strain.
  • RHP Kyle Brnovich - The “other” Kyle of the Dylan Bundy deal that brought Bradish to the Orioles is finally back to Norfolk after 2022 Tommy John surgery. In a long relief outing, he allowed one run in four innings, striking out five; Brnovich has 18 strikeouts in 12.2 innings for the season.

Tides season-to-date stats.

Double-A Chesapeake Baysox​

  • Last week: 3-3 vs. Erie (Tigers)
  • Next opponent: at Richmond (Giants)
  • Overall record and standing: 5-4, third place (2 games back) in Eastern League Southwest

The injury bug bit the top Baysox prospect this week. Outfielder Enrique Bradfield raced for a triple in a game this week and came up limping from that. He was diagnosed with a hamstring strain and is on the injured list. He had a 1.032 OPS through his first six games, so it’s a doubly disappointing injury.

Next-most interesting among Chesapeake batters, at least as far as our composite ranking is concerned, is catcher/first baseman Creed Willems, who had a fine if unexciting week at the plate, going 5-18 with three doubles.

In contrast to the Norfolk pitching prospects, some Chesapeake guys can feel good about their outings this week. Patrick Reilly made two starts and allowed only two runs over 8.2 innings, though he did walk four guys. As I will say perhaps every week: Stop walking so many dudes, Orioles pitching prospects! Trace Bright allowed one run (none earned) over 5.2 no-hit innings. That’s good! He walked four guys. That’s not good.

Things did not go so well this week for Zach Fruit, who gave up seven earned runs in a no-outer. Three hits, three walks, and a hit batsman, and they all eventually scored. Yowza.

Also notable

  • RHP Alex Pham - One run allowed in 5.1 innings, and unlike these other guys he did NOT walk too many dudes - just one compared to nine strikeouts. A fine start.
  • OF Tavian Josenberger - Five hits in 17 at-bats, with one double, triple, and home run apiece, and a stolen base.

Baysox season-to-date stats.

High-A Aberdeen IronBirds​

  • Last week:4-2 at Jersey Shore (Phillies)
  • Next opponent: vs. Brooklyn (Mets)
  • Overall record and standing: 5-4, tied-third place (2 games back) in South Atlantic League North

Probably more than a bit premature to call this a breakout week for Vance Honeycutt since he struck out eight times in six games, but make no mistake, this was a very good week for last year’s first round pick: Seven hits in 18 at-bats (double, triple, and homer included), and he drew seven walks, and he stole four bases. Honeycutt’s OPSing 1.004 through nine games played.

Teammate Ethan Anderson - being used more as a catcher than a first baseman so far - is above even Honeycutt’s early OPS. Anderson went 8-21 in five games, with three doubles and a homer. All of that action was enough for him to drive in eleven runs. Really, there was lots to be happy about with this Aberdeen offense: Leandro Arias had eight hits over five games and stole two bases, and Aron Estrada stole five bases while getting in nine hits over six games.

Remaining in this rotation is the trio of Michael Forret, Nestor German, and Trey Gibson. German was the guy who made two starts this week, totaling just 6.2 innings overall with four earned runs allowed. This included four walks. I refer you to my earlier statement regarding free passes. Gibson’s start went for just 3.2 innings, still enough time for him to strike out seven as he allowed only one run. Forret pitched five shutout innings with five strikeouts. I dig it.

Also notable

  • OF Austin Overn - #4 in the system on that FG list, he missed both games of a Saturday doubleheader and didn’t play Sunday either. That’s weird and probably won’t have good news at the end of it. Homered and stole two bases in the three games he did play.

IronBirds season-to-date stats.

Low-A Delmarva Shorebirds​

  • Last week: 3-3 vs. Fayetteville (Astros)
  • Next opponent: at Carolina (Brewers)
  • Overall record and standing: 3-6, sixth/last place (5 games back) in Carolina League North

I’d really like to be able to tell you something good about Keeler Morfe, the 18-year-old righty who’s the only ranked prospect on our list on this Delmarva roster to begin the season. That’s what I’d like. The reality is that Morfe started one game, pitched one-third of an inning, and walked five guys. Morfe has walked 10 of 15 batters faced in two games.

Much better things to say about Chase Allsup, last year’s fourth round pick. In a five inning scoreless start, Allsup struck out ten guys while giving up just one hit and two walks. The 22-year-old may not have much to prove at this level. Mike Elias isn’t likely to ask me, but I’d have Bright to Norfolk, Forret to Chesapeake, and Allsup to Aberdeen pretty soon here.

Shorebirds season-to-date stats.

**

The overwhelming favorite for the season’s first Orioles Minor League Player of the Week poll was Tides pitcher Brandon Young. He might have made his MLB debut by the time we speak again. Young won 85% of the vote after dropping a 0.00 ERA through his first two starts with Norfolk. He will not be a repeat winner since he stunk this week and is not going to make the poll. Who’s joining him on the list of weekly winners? The choice is yours.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/4/15/24408442/orioles-prospects-vance-honeycutt-chase-allsup
 
Tuesday night Orioles game thread: vs Guardians, 7:05

MLB: Baltimore Orioles at Arizona Diamondbacks

Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

Can Charlie Morton finally turn in a good start for the Orioles? Let’s all hope so.

We haven’t gotten much Orioles baseball in the last few days. They have played just twice since April 9, going 1-1 in that time. At the very least, these guys should be well-rested ahead of this series against the visiting Cleveland Guardians.

The bullpen will have a new face in it since the last time we saw the O’s in action. Scott Blewett, a righty claimed off waivers from the Twins on Monday, was activated. He will replace Colin Selby, who pitched just once since being called up, and will return to Triple-A Norfolk.

But perhaps the most important person of the day is Charlie Morton. The 41-year-old has been a disaster through three games with the Orioles. At some point he has to become the dependable, 4-ish ERA innings eater that the Orioles thought they have signed this winter, right? RIGHT!?

Brandon Hyde is deploying his full complement of right-handed hitters to face the lefty Logan Allen. He is also dropping Gunnar Henderson in the order, from lead off to the clean-up spot. This could simply be a bet that Henderson is about to run into his first home run of the season, and Hyde would like some runners on base when he does it. It’s worth noting that Henderson is 0-for-7 against southpaws so far this year.

Orioles lineup​

  1. Jordan Westburg, 3B
  2. Adley Rutschman, DH
  3. Tyler O’Neill, RF
  4. Gunnar Henderson, SS
  5. Ryan Mountcastle, 1B
  6. Gary Sánchez, C
  7. Cedric Mullins, CF
  8. Ramon Laureano, LF
  9. Jorge Mateo, 2B

RHP Charlie Morton (0-3, 8.78 ERA)

Guardians lineup​

  1. Steven Kwan, LF
  2. José Ramirez, 3B
  3. Carlos Santana, 1B
  4. Kyle Manzardo, DH
  5. Nolan Jones, RF
  6. Gabiral Arias, 2B
  7. Angel Martínez, CF
  8. Bo Naylor, C
  9. Bryan Rocchio, SS

LHP Logan Allen (0-1, 3.60 ERA)

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/4/15/24408927/tuesday-night-orioles-game-thread-vs-guardians-7-05
 
The Orioles bullpen cannot save this substandard starting rotation

MLB: APR 05 Orioles at Royals

Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Orioles injury-riddled starting rotation has been a disaster, and a strong bullpen cannot offset the shortcomings.

It’s been a long time since the Orioles featured a dominant starting rotation. Baltimore’s last two division winners (2014, 2023) both possessed units capable of delivering quality starts, but neither bunch struck fear into its opponent.

The Orioles current rotation isn’t scaring anyone right now. The group, already without Kyle Bradish and Tyler Wells, lost its top two pitchers before the middle of April. Now, without Zach Eflin and Grayson Rodriguez, Baltimore has no idea what to expect on a nightly basis.

Dean Kremer and Charlie Morton have both disappointed early in the season. Tomoyuki Sugano has yet to inspire confidence that he can routinely retire big league hitters, and Cade Povich still needs some polish. Baltimore’s depth has been decimated by injuries with Albert Suárez, Trevor Rogers, and Chayce McDermott all ruled out as immediate reinforcements.

Brandon Young could make his major league debut this weekend. The Birds are starved for some positive momentum on the mound, and Young made significant progress at Triple-A dating back to last season. Any bit helps with a rotation this down in the dumps, but Young’s arrival will not significantly alter the current state. Kyle Gibson probably can’t save this bunch either.

The 2014 and 2023 teams possessed dominant bullpens that were capable of keeping the opponent off the scoreboard for three or four innings. Fortunately, early returns on this year’s bullpen are quite favorable. Could the Orioles ride the same strategy this year?

For argument's sake, let’s assume Seranthony Domínguez and Gregory Soto pitch to their potential for the duration of the season. Yennier Cano and Keegan Akin have a solid track record, Bryan Baker suddenly looks like a difference maker, and everyone not named Cionel Pérez has pitched well so far.

Félix Bautista is the ultimate difference maker. The former All Star returned after missing all of 2024 recovering from Tommy John surgery. Unfortunately, Baltimore’s disappointing start has not yielded many save opportunities for The Mountain.

The lack of late-inning drama has mostly kept Bautista’s early season limitations out of the spotlight, but Sunday’s extra-inning defeat brought the conversation front row center. The Orioles are not asking Bautista to pitch multiple innings or work consecutive days until further notice.

Bautista’s restrictions really prevent Baltimore from carving out a late-inning template or a clearly defined pecking order. It feels unnecessary to name a “backup closer,” but the current picture is cloudier than “O’Day, Miller, Britton.”

The Baltimore bullpen is essentially operating with one hand tied behind its back. Nobody can blame the Orioles for easing Bautista back into things, but the current circumstances will prevent the bullpen from becoming a truly dominant unit, and the Orioles need something special to offset their rotation woes.

There’s really no reason to believe a Baltimore starter will deliver more than five innings right now. Even if the bats do their part, the opponent will likely post a crooked number within that span. A winning recipe would require four relief pitchers to work within a small margin of error on a nightly basis. That’s simply not sustainable for any team.

The 2014 rotation featured Chris Tillman (3.34 ERA), Wei-Yin Chen (3.54 ERA), Miguel González (3.24 ERA), Bud Norris (3.65 ERA) and Kevin Gausman (3.57 ERA). The 2023 squad received a dominant season from Bradish (2.83 ERA), a nice year from Wells (3.64 ERA) and decent years from Kremer, Rodriguez and Gibson.

The Orioles still hold aspirations of winning the AL East, and there’s plenty of factors that could turn in the team’s favor as the temperature rises. Gunnar Henderson should get going, Colton Cowser will return, and Andrew Kittredge could bolster an already strong relief unit.

But at the end of the day, it’s hard to see this team excelling unless Eflin, Rodriguez and Bradish are taking the ball every fifth day. That level of rotation, paired with a strong bullpen, could make a run in October—if the team hasn’t fallen too far out of contention by then.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/4/1...struggles-bullpen-felix-bautista-brandon-hyde
 
Holliday’s grand slam, Kremer’s strong start lead Orioles to 9-1 victory over Cleveland

Cleveland Guardians v Baltimore Orioles

Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images

The Orioles combined a powerful offensive showing with a stabilizing start from Dean Kremer in a 9-1 win over the Guardians.

The vibes have been less than stellar in Birdland this month, but a game like tonight goes a long way toward calming the nerves. Jackson Holliday sparked the offense with a grand slam, Dean Kremer played stopper, and the offense broke things open late in a 9-1 victory over the Guardians at Camden Yards.

Holliday’s second-inning swing took the pressure off Kremer and a struggling Orioles offense. Ryan Mountcastle sandwiched a soft single between walks to Cedric Mullins and Ramón Urías, and Holliday muscled a 1-0 sweeper over the center field fence. The “Four Bagger Hoser” sent Holliday and all three base runners to the hydration station in the Baltimore dugout for the first time this season.

The Orioles desperately needed a strong performance from a starting pitcher, and Kremer stepped up tonight. The 29-year-old limited Cleveland to only one run over 5.1 innings. He allowed four hits, one walk, and struck out a pair.

Baltimore’s injury-riddled rotation has been substandard so far this spring, and Kremer had contributed to the chaos before this evening. The righty allowed five earned runs in his first start of the season and failed to complete five innings in his last two outings.

He set the tone early tonight with a pair of clean innings to start the game. Holliday provided the four-run cushion after two frames, and Kremer made his only mistake in the top of the third. Pitching with a lead, Kremer threw a 2-0 cutter right over the heart of the plate. Gabriel Arias launched the ball 424 feet to dead center, but Kremer retired the next three batters he faced.

The long-haired hurler worked around a one-out single in the fourth and escaped his only true jam in the top of the fifth. Kremer walked Arias with one out, retired Bo Naylor, and allowed a hard hit ball up the middle by Daniel Schneemann. Kremer went into self defense mode, but Henderson appeared to have a play before the ball bounced off of second base. Regardless, Kremer generated a harmless grounder from Steven Kwan to strand runners on the corners.

Kremer left after allowing a single to José Ramirez and getting Carlos Santana to pop out. Pitching into the sixth inning represents a win for the Orioles right now, and Kremer earned his second official win of the season tonight.

Bryan Baker replaced Kremer and immediately allowed a single to Kyle Manzardo before retiring Lane Thomas for the second out. Angel Martínez nearly trimmed the lead to one with a liner to right field, but Heston Kjerstad chased the ball down and made a sliding catch to end the threat.

Baker retired the first two batters he faced in the seventh, and Gregory Soto struck out Kwan to end the inning. Soto returned in the eighth inning and allowed the first two batters to reach. Yennier Cano struck out Jhonkensy Noel for the first out, but a one-out walk allowed the tying run to come to the plate. With tensions suddenly high, Cano generated a weak dribbler from Martínez.

Cano flipped home for the second out, and Adley Rutschman fired to first for a potential inning-ending double play. Mountcastle failed to secure the throw, but Martínez was called out for running outside of the baseline. The MASN replay showed Martínez running inside the grass as Rutschman fired to first base.

Somewhat lost in the offensive outburst was the fact that Tyler O’Neill was scratched from the lineup with a sore neck. Ramón Laureano, originally not in the lineup, replaced O’Neill and hooked a solo homer inside the foul pole in left field in the seventh inning. The blast marked Laureano’s first homer in a Baltimore uniform.

Hyde labeled O’Neill “day-to-day” after the game.

The O’s stretched the lead to eight with a four-run eighth inning off a wild Triston McKenzie. Ryan O’Hearn hooked a moonshot inside the foul pole in right for a solo homer, Kjerstad plated a pair with a single to right, and Ramón Urías drove in the ninth run of the game with a sacrifice fly.

The Orioles pitched, the Orioles hit, and the Orioles won the game. The natural next step would be securing the first series victory of the season. Baltimore will look to take two-of-three with Tomoyuki Sugano on the mound tomorrow at 6:35.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/4/1...recap-jackson-holliday-grand-slam-dean-kremer
 
The biggest deliverers (or not) of Orioles Magic, so far - week 3 edition

Toronto Blue Jays v Baltimore Orioles

Photo by G Fiume/Getty Images

Some Orioles have been coming through so far, but many have not.

It only feels like it’s been a long week of Orioles baseball because of how they played. Due to two scheduled off days and last Friday’s game being postponed to July, the O’s have only played four games since this time last week. That was still enough time for them to squeeze in the first big bullpen meltdown of the year. As glum as it felt, the Orioles are 2-2 over these four games. They haven’t shown improvement and they haven’t collapsed.

This series looks at each Orioles game, the most crucial play that happened in it and who was involved, and the Oriole who contributed the most positive to a win or negative to a loss. These determinations are made using the Win Probability Added stat, which you can find in game logs on Baseball Reference or FanGraphs.

Here’s how things went over the third week of the Orioles season:

Game 14​

  • Result: Orioles beat Blue Jays, 5-4
  • Orioles record: 6-8
  • The biggest play: Cedric Mullins breaks tie by hitting two-run double in sixth inning (+28%)
  • The biggest hero: Mullins (.291 WPA)

One notable thing that happened in this game is that the Orioles collected their first save of the year. Félix Bautista was called upon to protect the one-run lead. When he entered the game, the Orioles had an 85% chance to win. After three batters, this was down to 73% because he’d issued two walks, but Bautista protected the lead and got the save. That’s .152 WPA in the first outing. Closers who succeed get big numbers over time.

Mullins with the tiebreaker in a big situation was the biggest positive swing for the Orioles. Coming through with men on and getting two runs in is big at any point in a game, but especially later on. You could easily say that Mullins is the largest bright spot for the O’s so far this season. Perhaps even that he’s the only bright spot up to this point. If he’s going to follow Anthony Santander in having a “just before hitting free agency” season for the ages, I won’t be sad about that - only about the Orioles apparent lack of attempts to secure a contract extension with him.

Game 15​

  • Result: Orioles lose to Blue Jays, 7-6
  • Record: 6-9
  • The biggest play: Tyler O’Neill strikes out in 10th inning with man on third and one out (-25%)
  • The biggest goat: Jordan Westburg (-.207 WPA)

Falling behind in extra innings as the home team isn’t great because you’d rather give up the run, but the thing about it is that you’re going to get the Manfred Man starting right there on second base too. The Orioles got the tying run to third base with one out. All O’Neill had to do was put the ball in play and see if he could have something productive happen with the would-be tying run. He failed.

Westburg piled up the biggest negative since he took an 0-5 in the game, including a first inning strikeout with a man on third base and only one out (-7%), and flying out in the ninth inning when the winning run was on second base (-10%). Gregory Soto, who blew the three-run eighth inning lead, was just the third-worst O’s WPA for the game (-.154), behind Westburg and O’Neill. Had this lead been blown in the ninth, it would have been a much bigger negative.

Game 16​

  • Result: Orioles lose to Guardians, 6-3
  • Record: 6-10
  • The biggest play: Steven Kwan hits two-run home run off Charlie Morton in fifth inning (-13%)
  • The biggest goat: Morton (-.188 WPA)

A common theme of every one of Morton’s four starts to date is that Morton pitched badly, put the Orioles in a big hole, and did the most to make the O’s lose that game. All the options that Mike Elias had to try to improve the rotation for this season and he decided to give $15 million to the 41-year-old Morton. This is not looking like it will turn out to be a good decision.

Pretty much the lone positive for the Orioles in this game was Mullins, who was on base three times and stole a base, giving him .101 WPA for the game. Adley Rutschman had just as much impact on the game except in the negatives (-.101 WPA) for his 0-5 night.

Game 17​

  • Result: Orioles beat Guardians, 9-1
  • Record: 7-10
  • The biggest play: Jackson Holliday hits a grand slam in the second inning to put the Orioles up, 4-0 (+23%)
  • The biggest hero: Holliday (.222 WPA)

It’s never bad when the Orioles hit a grand slam. It’s especially not bad to get a grand slam that breaks a 0-0 tie early in the game. Holliday’s salami put the O’s in a strong position to win the game - the Orioles were 88% to win after that big four-run blast. He needed that. He needs some more good hitting beyond.

It is not unheard of for a team to blow that kind of lead, and goodness knows with the Orioles rotation it would be even less of a surprise. But a better version of Dean Kremer showed up in this game (the #2 positive contributor behind Holliday) and the O’s kept on scoring, so it turned into a relatively comfortable win. I say relatively because the Guardians did load the bases in the eighth when it was still just 5-1. That could have gotten worse, but it didn’t.

The best Orioles so far​


This time last week, the best hitter by WPA was Ramón Urías (0.34) and the best pitcher was Zach Eflin (0.26).

  • WPA (hitters): Cedric Mullins (0.60), Urías (0.38), Ryan O’Hearn (0.29)
  • WPA (pitchers): Seranthony Domínguez (0.35), Bryan Baker (0.30), Yennier Cano (0.30)
  • fWAR: Mullins (1.0), O’Hearn (0.5), Cade Povich (0.4)

bWAR leaders are Mullins (0.9) for hitters and Cano (0.5) for pitchers.

The worst Orioles so far​


Through two weeks of games, the worst hitter by WPA was Heston Kjerstad (-0.46) and the worst pitcher was Charlie Morton (-0.76).

  • WPA (hitters): Jordan Westburg (-0.58), Ramón Laureano (-0.51), Kjerstad (-0.40)
  • WPA (pitchers): Morton (-0.94), Dean Kremer (-0.42), Cionel Pérez (-0.29)
  • fWAR: Jorge Mateo (-0.5), Pérez (-0.2), Gary Sánchez (-0.2)

bWAR negatives are led by Mateo (-0.5) for hitters and Pérez (-0.4) for pitchers.

Source: https://www.camdenchat.com/2025/4/17/24409745/orioles-best-worst-players-clutch-hitters-2025
 
Your daily Orioles trivia 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’d like to introduce you to our brand new 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, April 17, 2025
Wednesday, April 16, 2025
Tuesday, April 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/2025/4/18/24411078/sb-nation-orioles-daily-trivia-in-5
 
Can you guess this Orioles outfielder 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’d like to introduce you to our brand new 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


Friday, April 18, 2025
Thursday, April 17, 2025
Wednesday, April 16, 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/2025/4/19/24411817/sb-nation-orioles-daily-trivia-in-5
 
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