Dan Connolly

Analyzing the remaining position battles; projecting Orioles’ Opening Day roster

Photo credit: Jonathan Dyer/USA Today Sports

Spring training 2018 is half over. The Orioles had their lone off day on Monday and now play every day until they head north.

The first part of this camp has been dominated by new arrivals: Andrew Cashner, Chris Tillman, Colby Rasmus, Pedro Alvarez, Danny Valencia.

I’d imagine there will be more to come in the next couple weeks as Orioles Executive Vice President Dan Duquette looks to cash in on any bargains still remaining on the free agent market.

I don’t expect any of the Big Three of available pitchers, Jake Arrieta, Alex Cobb and Lance Lynn, to walk through the Ed Smith Stadium door. Their demands likely would have to drop into the three-year realm – or lower — for the Orioles to make a hard push.

Then again, I didn’t expect Nelson Cruz’s market to crash in 2014 to the level the Orioles could land him on a one-year deal.

So, anything is possible, I suppose. And this has been the craziest market to handicap in my career.

I still think the Orioles need to be more aggressive in their pursuit of outfielder Jon Jay on a reasonable deal. And their rotation would look a whole lot better with Lynn or Cobb or Arrieta leading it. There are also some utility infielder types that could be available at the end of the month that would upgrade what the club has presently.

But, for now, the Orioles have 55 players in camp – and that’s plenty to draw from in an attempt to construct a 25-man roster. Here’s a look at the remaining position battles halfway through camp, my sense on what will happen and my projected 25-man roster if the season started today:

Photo credit: Jonathan Dyer/USA Today Sports

Fifth starter

As I wrote Monday, this appears to be a three-pitcher race among Mike Wright Jr., Nestor Cortes Jr., and Miguel Castro. Gabriel Ynoa was always the trailer, and he took a step backward Sunday. Hunter Harvey may be the best of the group, but since he hasn’t pitched much as a pro, the club will be patient – relatively speaking – with their top pitching prospect as he continues to surge back from elbow surgery. Cortes, a Rule 5 pick who must stay with the Orioles all year or be offered back to the New York Yankees, is the only lefty among the fifth-starter candidates (and the four who already have a spot). Castro has the best combination of upside and big league success, but he also has a minor league option remaining and probably could benefit from starting some at Triple-A. That leaves Wright, who has had success starting in the minors but can’t maintain any consistency when he gets to the Orioles’ rotation. He didn’t make a start with the club last year, but likely will be afforded that opportunity in 2018. He is out of minor league options, so it’s sink or swim time for the big fella.

My projected winner: Wright

Photo credit: Kim Klement/USA Today Sports

Front end of the bullpen

Even with closer Zach Britton on the shelf for the first two months of the season, the Orioles have four sports claimed in the bullpen, barring injury: Brad Brach, Mychal Givens, Darren O’Day and lefty Richard Bleier. That leaves three openings in a conventional, seven-man pen. At least one of the losers in the starting rotation battle will end up in the bullpen, and maybe two if the Orioles feel they are better with Castro revisiting his long-man role from 2017. If Castro ends up in the minors to get more exposure as a starter, however, then the fifth-starter runner-up (Cortes, in my opinion) will be joined by two more pitchers to fill out the bullpen. I’m getting the growing sense that one will be Rule 5 right-hander Pedro Araujo, who has electric stuff and has overshadowed the club’s third Rule 5 pick from this winter, Jose Mesa Jr. My sense is the Orioles send Mesa back to the Yankees, and keep Cortes and Araujo, who was selected from the Chicago Cubs. That would leave a knock-down, drag-out for one final relief spot among a cast of hundreds including Castro, Ynoa, Jimmy Yacabonis, Donnie Hart, Josh Edgin, Asher Wojciechowski and Joely Rodriguez. A left-hander wins the tiebreaker and Rodriguez is a power arm that has pitched in the majors each of the past two seasons with the Phillies, so he may be the favorite here. Edgin also has experience and has made a good impression so far. I also wouldn’t be surprised if the Orioles added a free-agent to this mix or to the rotation, which, in that case, would then push Wright to the bullpen.

My projected winners: Cortes, Araujo and Castro or Rodriguez

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

Fourth/fifth outfielder

With Trey Mancini as the starting left fielder, Adam Jones as the starting center fielder and Anthony Santander needing 44 more days to complete his Rule 5 obligations from last year, I feel like there are two more spots here to be filled. One will certainly go to left-handed hitting Colby Rasmus, who was signed to a minor league deal but will almost certainly be in a right field platoon if he stays healthy throughout the spring. That leaves one more opening with several candidates battling, including Craig Gentry, Joey Rickard, Austin Hays and Alex Presley. Hays, the organization’s top position prospect, hasn’t been able to play the outfield in a Grapefruit League game because of a right shoulder/lat issue. He is probably ticketed for Triple-A to begin the year. If Gentry proves to be healthy – he’s been sidelined recently with a hamstring issue but should return to action today – he may have a slight edge over Rickard because he is a more proficient pinch-runner/basestealer. Rickard has the edge over Presley. This dynamic will change completely, however, if the Orioles sign Jay or Carlos Gonzalez or another available outfielder.

My projected winner: Gentry

Photo credit: Kim Klement/USA Today Sports

Utility infielder

This is the most bizarre competition in camp. No one has stepped up and now I’m thinking there may not be a traditional utility infielder on the 25-man roster. Engelb Vielma looked like he could be the leading candidate but his camp was delayed by visa issues. Luis Sardinas and Ruben Tejada have been OK, and Erick Salcedo was recently reassigned to minors’ camp. When the Orioles signed Danny Valencia this weekend – and the veteran immediately said he was solely focused on a major league job and would not go to the minors – the focus of this spot shifted. If Valencia, who can play first, third and the corner outfield positions, makes the club, the Orioles wouldn’t necessarily need a utility type to play shortstop and second base. Instead, Valencia could get some time at third base against left-handed pitching and starting third baseman Tim Beckham could play the occasional game at second or short to spell starters Manny Machado and Jonathan Schoop. I also could see the Orioles filling this spot in late March when a utility infielder – Ryan Flaherty, Ryan Goins, et cetera – gets cut loose in a roster crunch elsewhere.

My projected winner: Valencia or someone not yet in camp

Photo credit: Douglas DeFelice/USA Today Sports

Reserve Catcher

There’s no real clarity yet to this one. Someone will be backing up Caleb Joseph among Chance Sisco, Andrew Susac and Austin Wynns. Sisco is the club’s catcher of the future, but there’s strong sentiment in the organization that he should begin the season at Triple-A so the 23-year-old can continue to play every day and work on his defensive game. That would make Susac the favorite to back up Joseph, but he’s been limited in the spring due to a staph infection that recently cleared. Wynns is a defensive whiz who hasn’t played above Double-A.

My projected winner: Susac

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

Projected 25-man roster

This, obviously, is subject to change due to injuries and future signings. But this is my most educated guess at this moment. It would include three Rule 5 picks (including Santander) and seven players who weren’t with the 2017 Orioles.

Rotation (5):  Kevin Gausman, Dylan Bundy, Andrew Cashner, Chris Tillman, Mike Wright.

Bullpen (7):  Brad Brach, Mychal Givens, Darren O’Day, Richard Bleier, Nestor Cortes, Pedro Araujo, Joely Rodriguez.

Catchers (2): Caleb Joseph, Andrew Susac.

Infielders (5): Chris Davis, Jonathan Schoop, Manny Machado, Tim Beckham, Danny Valencia.

Outfielders (6): Adam Jones, Trey Mancini, Colby Rasmus, Mark Trumbo, Anthony Santander, Craig Gentry.

Dan Connolly

Dan Connolly has spent more than two decades as a print journalist in Pennsylvania and Maryland. The Baltimore native and Calvert Hall graduate first covered the Orioles as a beat writer for the York (Pennsylvania) Daily Record in 2001 before becoming The Baltimore Sun’s national baseball writer/Orioles reporter in 2005. He has won multiple state and national writing awards, including several from the Associated Press Sports Editors. In 2013 he was named Maryland Co-Sportswriter of the Year by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association. And in 2015, he authored his first book, "100 Things Orioles Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die." He lives in York, with his wife, Karen, and three children, Alex, Annie, and Grace.

View Comments

  • Dan ... Ryan Flaherty .. possibly cut loose and back in an O's uniform?

    SO YOU'RE TELLING ME THERE'S A CHANCE?

  • Is Wright that impressive this spring that we can forget previous experience? I have no faith in the boy. Or Tillman for that matter. To me they are place-holders till Harvey and Castro/Araujo take their places.

    • I get your feelings on Wright. Hasn’t seized the opportunities yet. But Tillman? It’s amazing to me how many smart Baseball fans have written him off. Maybe I’m being slow here. But good pitchers have had bad years due to injury. When he’s healthy he is a good, solid MLB pitcher. I sense 2017 was the fluke. But I suppose it could be the trend.

  • With the current roster I would have to agree with you with the exception of Wright and Cortes . Cortes has the fifth starter for now and Wright in the bullpen. John Jay would be a perfect fit for this team.

    • That’s possible cuz of lefty situation. But I think they want to give Wright another chance to start at MLB level — he didn’t last year — and they want to see how MLB hitters, esp. RH, react to Cortes. Easier to experiment in bullpen.

  • Good analysis and evaluation of the projected final roster heading north. Castro with one option remaining may not make team. He was valuable as a long man last year. I think the Orioles will let him make starts at Norfolk. I still think Cortez wins the 5th spot with Wright in the bullpen. Adding another veteran starter is needed imo but it seems unlikely.

      • True. Considering Duquette has traded 3 or more left handed starters and failed to acquire one, this off season. I find it odd that he was so adamant and then didn't follow through. Wait, that has been par for the course with him, what was I thinking.....

  • Hey Dan. Good and clear article. You have brought these battles into focus. However you failed to mention Alec Asher, who started several games for the O's last summer and also pitched out of the pen. He was pretty good some times. And I have the impression he has pitched well this Spring. Where do you think he fits in this discussion? Certainly better than Asher W.....eye chart. No? BTW: I think you are right about Tilly. He is going to rebound enough to make most of the incentives in his contract.

    • There wasn’t much buzz around Asher while I was in camp. I don’t think he is legitimately in the Opening Day plans. They kind of have a feel as to who he is. The other guys are more of mysteries and will be vetted more I think. The Orioles feel Asher can have a role as long man/spot starter but I’m not sure that begins in the big leagues. But I’d imagine we will see him in the majors at some point. I probably should have included him.

      • Thanks Dan. Does he have another option left? To the minors, I mean. We all have "other options"....

    • I’ll have to check. He’s done 3 but probably received a fourth. So that means he would have one remaining for this year. But I’m not 100 percent positive.

  • This team looks like 4th place club at best. The Orioles are no better than they were at the end of last season. Very, very sad. How does the GM keep his job?

    • I would suppose it would be getting the team in the playoffs half the time he’s had the job.

  • Your roster evaluation appears to be on mark. I too want the the addition of John Jay. This team begs for his tools. Rasmus,Santander,Gentry in RF is very underwhelming. I see Hays st AAA. The Valencia addition and being that DD really limes him concernd me. Utility means SS, 2nd baseman etc. Question Dan--what is Jays asking price and where would the O's go to meet it?

    • No way of knowing. Can’t be too ambitious this late in the calendar considering he isn’t a starting pitcher. Just a nice supplemental piece

  • Guess we will know soon enough about Tillman. Although I'm skeptical, I see no problem giving Tillman 8-10 starts early in the season to see what's up with him.

    My concern is that, knowing how the Orioles operate, even if it becomes clear that Tillman can't get the job done, and even if no other team in MLB wants him in their rotation, the Orioles will still keep sending him out every fifth game to rack up another loss.

  • It’s a shame Santander has to stay on the 25 man roaster for 44 days this year. Richard, or Pressley would be better suited as the fifth outfielder. I believe Santander would benefit more by playing every day in the minors than sitting on the bench in the majors.

  • I am not a GM, so my opinion really does not count. But it seems to me that hitters coming from the NL to the AL take at least a quarter to half a season to adjust to pitchers they are not familiar with. At least they do for the O's. That said, I would skip Jon Jay. Of course I am not one that has to have a LH hitter either. A good hitter can hit RH or LHs. That said, let Hayes start in the OF with Santander as the fourth OF. It's time to bring some excitement back and young players do that.

    • Jay just signed with Royals for $3m....would think the O's could have signed him if they wanted to for that little. A lot of $$ for most of us but not for MLB...My guess is that the O's management team is 1. happy enough with Rasmus/Presley and 2. Pleasantly surprised by Santander that they felt comfortable passing on any other LH OF.

      • Forgot to mention, I am not a Rasmus fan either. He seems like a total bust. But he could be reinvigorated and have a great season, betting not though.

  • Bundy
    Gausman
    Cashner
    Tillman
    Wright

    Brach
    O'Day
    Givens
    Bleier
    Castro
    Edgin
    Mesa

    Joseph
    Susac

    Beckham
    Machado
    Schoop
    Davis
    Valencia

    Jones
    Santander
    Gentry
    Rasmus
    Mancini
    Trumbo

    Hays and Sisco start the year at AAA
    Harvey and Wynns to AA

  • You certainly rank in with the "Buck doesn't like young kids" camp on this prediction. I don't disagree.

    -I hope your wrong and Sisco gets the job as split time catcher. Sending him down does nothing for him at this point. Susac will be hurt soon enough, but still silly to send Sisco down.
    -Somehow writing Wright in as a starter, just hurts all over...
    -It will be interesting to see how long Beckham holds his job at 3rd. Maybe it will be his spot, SS certainly isn't.

    The players "passed" on by the organization, the past 2 weeks, have shed a spot light on the fact that we are not truly trying to compete. Only to "appear" like the organization cares about winning.

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Dan Connolly

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