Rich Dubroff

Urías has gotten the Orioles’ attention with his play and bat at shortstop; Hunter Harvey stays at Norfolk

NEW YORK—One of the biggest surprises of the season for the Orioles has been the play of Ramón Urías at shortstop. Urías, who was claimed on waivers just before the start of spring training in February 2020, has been the Orioles’ primary shortstop since Freddy Galvis injured his right quadriceps muscle in June.

Urías played well in Galvis’ absence, and the Orioles felt comfortable dealing Galvis to the Philadelphia Phillies.

In 74 games, Urías is batting .272 with seven home runs and 36 RBIs with a .768 OPS.

CONTINUE READING BELOW

“I feel great. This opportunity that I’ve been waiting for, I feel I’ve taken advantage of it,” Urías said. “I have to keep going, keep working the last month to make a good impression on the team.”

Urías, 27, has made a good impression on manager Brandon Hyde.

“Just really solid,” Hyde said during the series in Toronto. “Solid defender. He started the [Tuesday] game at third, made a couple nice plays. I put him at short there late, ball goes to him, makes the play. Has been really solid defensively. I think he’s still learning the speed of the major league game a little bit, and he’s continuing to get better there.”

Urías is back at third base for Friday night’s game against the Yankees, and batting fifth.

When Galvis was injured, it gave the Orioles a chance to take a long look at Urías at shortstop.

“I just took it as an opportunity here,” Urías said. “I wasn’t thinking taking the job from Galvis. I just wanted to have a job for me, take advantage of the opportunity and, thank God, I did.”

The Orioles have a number of infield prospects in the minors — Gunnar Henderson, Darell Hernaiz, Joey Ortiz and Jordan Westburg — but none have played at Triple-A. Westburg only recently has been promoted to Double-A Bowie.

Urías is hoping that he can be the Orioles’ shortstop in 2022.

“Well, why not?” he said. “Every day, I come to the field to get better, to have a better opportunity every day. I’ve been working to have a job like that.”

The most surprising part of Urías’ emergence has been his offense.

“Offensively, he puts together good at-bats,” Hyde said. “He uses the whole field, he’s got some juice in the middle part of the field. His barrel stays in the strike zone a long time. It’s a simple swing, and he gives himself a chance.”

Urías isn’t surprised by his power.

“Of course, I feel like I’ve been doing good with my bat, too,” Urías said. “Obviously, the numbers are there, and I just want to keep working the last month and see what happens.”

Urías hopes the Orioles finish strong, as well. They have lost 24 of their last 27 games.

“You always want to win,” Urías said. “It sucks when you’re losing as a team because you come here every day expecting to win. You do what you can do to help the team win. I’m trying to control what I can control. I expect to win every day.”

Waiting on Harvey: Hunter Harvey remains at Triple-A Norfolk after his fourth rehab appearance. On Wednesday night, Harvey allowed four runs on four hits while recording only two outs.

“He had a tough outing there and, as of right now, he’s going to continue to stay there, and we’ll reevaluate whether to bring him up or not,” Hyde said.

Harvey is on the 10-day injured list because of a right lat strain.

“We were seeing how he was coming back after his outings, and how he felt after,” Hyde said. “He felt fine after his last outing. Everybody feels that the right thing to do for him is not to throw him in a major league game right away and have another outing and continue to reevaluate and just continue to evaluate every time he throws.”

Minor matters: Delmarva right-handed pitcher Jean Pinto was named the Low-A Pitcher of the Month for August. Pinto had a 1.35 ERA in five starts. … Mishael Deson was named the Florida Complex League Player of the Month. Deshon led the league with a .429 average and had a 14-game hitting streak.

Pinto was acquired from the Los Angeles Angels in the trade for shortstop José Iglesias, and Deson was one of three players the Orioles obtained from Colorado for relief pitcher Mychal Givens.

Rich Dubroff

Rich Dubroff grew up in Brooklyn as a fan of New York teams, but after he moved to Baltimore, quickly adopted the Orioles and Colts. After nearly two decades as a freelancer assisting on Orioles coverage for several outlets, principally The Capital in Annapolis and The Carroll County Times, Dubroff began covering the team fulltime in 2011. He spent five years at Comcast SportsNet’s website and for the last two seasons, wrote for PressBoxonline.com, Dubroff lives in Baltimore with his wife of more than 30 years, Susan.

View Comments

    • C'mon Buzz ... not being fair to Nolan Reimold. Herniated disk in his neck. Not exactly as if he forgot to stretch or long toss before the game. You try shagging sky high fiy balls and crouching in your stance when you friggn' neck isn't cooperating.

      And yeah, we're all disappointed with the bad luck that Harvey has seemingly and constantly been dealt since signing his name to the contract. And that's what these things most often are ... simply bad luck. Maybe the genes passed down from his mother weren't quite as hardy as his fathers side.

      I suggest we save the mean posts for Elias. He deserves it. I'm not sure injury prone players are.

  • Good to see Pinto doing so well. Remember all the hand wringing when they traded Iglesias for Pinto and Stallings. And the Angels just released Iglesias. So things may have worked out after all.

  • Just as I'm reading about how well Urias' defense is, he boots his second ball tonight. Go figure. Tyler Wells is proof that BRR has been right all along. No everyone needs to spend years and years in the minor leagues. Let em play. And yes, do the be Dew.

    • Oh my! First off you're going to give BRR a fat(ter) head with posts like that. Yeah, not everyone needs to be on the same development schedule, but look at Mullins' path, look at Diaz, Richie Martin, etc. For every two years in minor success, there are scores of players who need a good long stay in the minors or a return to the minors to develop to their full potential. So let's not take one player's story and turn it into a "been right all along" story. And yeah I've figured out you're BRR's relative ;)

      • I'll agree that guys like Cedric and Martin may have needed more time in the minors, but there's also guys like Juan Soto and Ronald Accuna who have been very successful in their very early 20's. Sometimes you won't know what you've got till you give em a chance.

    • But that defense ...I don't know what people are looking at when they say he's good. He's less than average with the glove IMO.

      But he's deserves another shot next year. I was dead wrong about the guy.

  • I am generally not one to pile-on Dan Duquette. He is a Tragic Figure in a Shakespearean way..

    His tenure w the Orioles was undermined by people like Peter Angelos, Buck Showalter and Brady Anderson--three Original Members of the Rat Fink Hall-of-Fame...

    But he did this group no favor by Drafting Hunter Harvey and accepting Yusniel Diaz in that ill-fated #13 Trade w L.A.

    Oh well, as they say in High Finance--it's "sunk costs" just deal with it....

Share
Published by
Rich Dubroff

Recent Posts

  • Rich Dubroff

Elias says Orioles’ philosophy will stay the same with new hitting coaches

After the Orioles’ elimination from the postseason, executive vice president/general manager Mike Elias promised a…

November 17, 2024
  • Rich Dubroff

Orioles’ Elias on the wall, free agency, injury updates

The surprising news that the Orioles were bringing the left-field wall closer to home plate…

November 16, 2024
  • Rich Dubroff

Orioles to bring in left-field wall; Elias: ‘We overcorrected’

After three seasons of a heightened and lengthened left-field wall, the Orioles have decided to…

November 15, 2024
  • Midday Mailbag

Could Orioles sign Trey Mancini to minor league contract? | MAILBAG

Question: Rich, any chance Trey Mancini gets a minor league contract and a chance to…

November 15, 2024
  • Rich Dubroff

Orioles’ 2025 coaching staff taking shape

The Orioles' coaching staff for 2025 is close to being finalized. According to an industry…

November 15, 2024
  • Rich Dubroff

What factors would Corbin Burnes consider in choosing a team? | MAILBAG

Question: With all the interest and hype surrounding signing either players already on the team…

November 14, 2024