Peter Schmuck

Peter Schmuck’s Short Take: Don’t go to sleep on Orioles’ Jorge Mateo just yet

It might appear to some that there isn’t going to be much playing time available for shortstop Jorge Mateo in Baltimore this coming season, but I believe he still has significant value to the Orioles in spite of his obvious limitations at the plate.

Why should we still love him when it looks as though Jackson Holliday is going to make the Opening Day roster and play every day in the middle of the infield?

Let me count the ways:

He has otherworldly athletic ability:  Of course, I’m not telling you anything you don’t already know. He’s faster than a speeding bullet and makes SportsCenter-worthy defensive plays that most other big league infielders can only dream about. Guys like that don’t grow on trees. 

CONTINUE READING BELOW

He doesn’t have to play every day to be a difference-maker: On a talented team – as the Orioles proved to be 101 times last season – it’s still okay to keep the occasional specialist around. Mateo is almost automatic on the bases and having him on the bench in the late innings on a team that plays a ton of close games is not a bad thing.

Holliday appears to be a can’t-miss prospect, but… He’s still a kid and there really is no guarantee that he’ll settle in and follow in Gunnar Henderson’s Rookie of the Year footsteps. Nice to have one of the best defensive shortstops in the game still available if Holliday needs a little more time to realize his stunning talent or somebody gets hurt.

Mateo might have some untapped offensive potential: It looked as though he had figured something out last April (.347 average, 1.063 OPS, 6 home runs, 17 RBIs) and helped spark the mid-month surge that kept the Orioles within range of the runaway Tampa Bay Rays but regressed to more characteristic batting stats over the course of the season. That was disappointing, but no one should assume that he can’t do something that he showed last year – albeit for a short time – that he could. He doesn’t need to be a .350 hitter to be a great all-around player. He just needs to figure out how to get on base consistently against right-handed pitching. He’s only 28.

Just an aside, if people had decided I’d reached my peak by that age, I would have had to settle for being the best-looking sports writer in Southern California instead of the entire Mid-Atlantic region.

He’s a chemistry guy: When you play with great enthusiasm and flair, it raises the energy level in the dugout and in the stands.  The Orioles had great team chemistry the past two seasons. Mateo was a big part of that.

Peter Schmuck

Share
Published by
Peter Schmuck

Recent Posts

  • Rich Dubroff

Projecting how the 2025 Orioles will differ from 2024

It’s been a busy few weeks for Orioles executive vice president/general manager Mike Elias, and…

November 24, 2024
  • Rich Dubroff

Examining contract decisions by Orioles on Friday; Hays among non-tendered players

For the second time in a month, the Orioles cut ties with one of their…

November 23, 2024
  • Orioles

Orioles offer contracts to 11 arbitration-eligible players, announce Rivera’s signing, Webb’s departure

The Orioles offered 2025 contracts to 11 players eligible for arbitration, agreed on a 2025…

November 22, 2024
  • Rich Dubroff

Orioles non-tendering reliever Jacob Webb

The Orioles are non-tendering right-handed reliever Jacob Webb according to an industry source. Webb, whom…

November 22, 2024
  • Midday Mailbag

Could Orioles trade for Garrett Crochet? | MAILBAG

Question: Let’s kill two birds to tackle the O’s needs in one fell swoop. What…

November 22, 2024
  • Rich Dubroff

Orioles seem likely to bring back arbitration-eligible players

This week, Mike Elias marked his sixth anniversary as the Orioles’ executive vice president/general manager.…

November 22, 2024