Orioles reliever Dillon Tate is getting a second opinion on his right elbow after undergoing further testing this week.
Tate is on the 60-day injured list with a flexor strain. He hasn’t pitched this season.
“We’re hoping that everything is clear and he’s able to start a rehab assignment following that,” said manager Brandon Hyde.
Tate was removed from his first rehab assignment after allowing 18 earned runs (20 total) and 21 hits with 11 walks in 10 2/3 innings between High-A Aberdeen, Double-A Bowie and Triple-A Norfolk. Eight of his 13 appearances came with the Tides, and he surrendered 10 runs and 12 hits in 6 2/3 innings against International League batters before returning to Baltimore.
A right forearm/flexor strain kept Tate off the Opening Day roster, with the discomfort beginning in November.
Jordan Westburg is on the bench tonight, as the Orioles begin a three-game series against the Twins at Camden Yards. Gunnar Henderson is the shortstop, Ramón Urías is the third baseman and Adam Frazier is the second baseman.
Westburg and Brian Roberts (2001) are the only Orioles middle infielders to record at least five hits in their first three career games, according to STATS.
Adley Rutschman is serving as the designated hitter tonight, with Anthony Bemboom behind the plate.
Ryan O’Hearn remains in the cleanup spot.
Dean Kremer is 2-0 with a 3.00 ERA in his last three starts after allowing six earned runs in five innings in Milwaukee on June 7. Kremer has received 20 runs over those three starts and is averaging 6.24 per nine innings this season, the fifth-highest total among American League qualifiers.
The Orioles placed left-handed reliever Keegan Akin on the 15-day injured list this afternoon with lower back discomfort, a move that’s retroactive to yesterday. Lefty Nick Vespi was recalled from Triple-A Norfolk.
Akin has allowed 10 earned runs (13 total) and 12 hits in his last four appearances over four innings. He was charged with two earned runs and four total in the 10th inning Wednesday against the Reds and couldn’t record the final out.
The appearance left Akin with a 6.85 ERA.
The Orioles optioned Akin on May 9 and recalled him three weeks later. The media will find out later today if his absence could extend beyond 15 days.
Vespi has registered a 1.71 ERA and 0.987 WHIP in 23 games with Norfolk. His last appearance was Saturday.
The Orioles begin their final homestand tonight before the All-Star break.
Sneaked up on you, didn’t it?
There was movement in the standings yesterday, with the Orioles idle and the Rays winning in Arizona to extend its division lead to 5 ½ games. The Yankees won in Oakland and crept within four of the Orioles.
Two straight losses to the Reds have left the Orioles 17 games above .500. They’re 6-7 since winning five in a row.
No team in the American League ranks higher than the Orioles in the wild card standings. The top three reside in their division.
Perhaps it will work out anyway.
A team selects a player first in the draft, a generational talent, and makes him the key component in a rebuild. Expects him to move quickly through the farm system coming out of college. Expects him to be impactful.
To be an All-Star.
Catcher Adley Rutschman will need some help from players and the commissioner’s office after losing to the Rangers’ Jonah Heim in phase two of fan voting in the American League. The announcement came tonight on ESPN.
Rutschman is vying for a spot on the bench, with his stiffest competition likely Kansas City veteran Salvador Pérez, who finished third in phase one. Every team must be represented.
Orioles catcher Adley Rutschman will learn tonight whether he’s the starting catcher for the American League in the 93rd All-Star Game, played July 11 at T-Mobile Park in Seattle.
Rutschman and the Rangers’ Jonah Heim are the finalists in phase 2 of voting, which concludes today at noon. The announcement is set for 7 p.m. on ESPN.
The most recent update yesterday showed Heim leading with 52 percent of the votes. The gap narrowed.
Rutschman tried to block the media’s questions this week like a spiked curveball. He fielded three Tuesday afternoon, showing no emotion, and got back to preparing for the game.
The spotlight should be turned on the club, where his teammates can feel it, too. He’d rather not stand alone under it. That’s just the way he’s wired.
Kyle Gibson lasted only three innings in his previous start, the shortest of his Orioles career, in a 13-1 loss to Seattle. He threw 35 and 34 pitches in the last two frames and followed up tonight with a 30-pitch first.
And he was better than Luke Weaver for a while.
Rain didn’t slow tonight’s game. The teams did it.
The first inning lasted 38 minutes and featured 18 batters, 70 pitches and seven runs. The Reds scored three in the top half and the Orioles answered with Ryan O’Hearn’s RBI single and Gunnar Henderson’s bases-loaded triple.
Just as storms blew past the last two nights, the offense suddenly went away after the Reds reclaimed the lead in the second. The Orioles didn’t score again and were held to one hit entering the eighth, and Buck Farmer retired the first two batters.
The choices are plentiful and create nice problems for Orioles manager Brandon Hyde.
His Gold Glove third baseman and Fielding Bible Award winning shortstop aren’t in tonight’s lineup. Instead, Ramón Urías and Jorge Mateo are in the dugout for the final game of the series against the Reds at Camden Yards.
The decision to option Joey Ortiz to make room for Jordan Westburg didn’t solve every roster issue.
Ortiz appeared in only four games this month and didn’t start after June 17. Westburg, meanwhile, is here to play.
Upon closer inspection, it wasn’t an even swap.
The latest Orioles lineup tonight, in a game that concludes the series against the Reds, has Gunnar Henderson playing shortstop and Jordan Westburg at third base.
Westburg has three hits in his first two major league games.
Adam Frazier is starting at second base tonight.
Jorge Mateo and Ramón Urías move to the bench.
Aaron Hicks is serving as the designated hitter. He batted .201 against right-handers with the Yankees in 2022 and 2023 but has posted a .276 average against them with the Orioles.
The noise created by Jordan Westburg’s major league debut, in the pouring rain at Camden Yards, drowned out everything else. However, a stat from another infielder shouldn’t go ignored.
Jorge Mateo walked twice.
Not a big deal?
Mateo has played in 330 major league games, accumulated 1,004 plate appearances, and never drawn more than one walk except for Monday night.
“I’ve been trying to work on not chasing, trying to focus on hitting pitches that are in the zone, and trying to find pitches that I can do harder contact with,” he said yesterday via interpreter Brandon Quinones. “So, it’s just a matter of continuing to work on those things and trying not to swing at pitches outside the zone.”
Tyler Wells wouldn’t let the Reds put the ball on the ground tonight until the sixth inning, with the Orioles defense recording its first assist on his 99th and final pitch.
Strikeouts, fly balls and popups were the items on his menu. He walked off the mound for the last time unsure whether he’d have to stomach a loss.
The Orioles followed their 10-run outburst last night by settling for a sacrifice fly in the second inning and wasting a quality start from Wells in a 3-1 loss to the Reds before an announced crowd of 14,057 at Camden Yards.
The teams made it through seven innings before another storm arrived. The third delay in two nights lasted one hour and 43 minutes.
Austin Hays took a called third strike from reliever Lucas Sims to strand two runners in the bottom of the seventh. It began to pour, and fans cleared the lower section.
Jordan Westburg follows last night’s major league debut with another start tonight at second base. He’s batting seventh again.
Ramón Urías is playing first base, Ryan McKenna is in right field, Aaron Hicks is in center and Anthony Santander is the designated hitter.
Adley Rutschman’s two hits last night made him the first catcher since Jorge Posada in 2000 to record 75-plus hits and 50-plus walks in 75 games, according to STATS.
Austin Hays is batting leadoff again. He has a hit in 17 of 21 games this month, slashing .337/.364/.518 (28-for-83) with nine doubles, two home runs, 11 RBIs and 14 runs scored. His .319 average leads the American League.
Cedric Mullins, who’s on the bench, had a 110.5 mph single last night in the seventh inning that was the hardest-hit ball of his career.
The same whistle played and the same video appeared with the flashing ballpark lights. The crowd roared as usual, quick to forgive the previous day’s blown save.
Félix Bautista wanted the ball again Sunday afternoon. He understands the life of a reliever, and how failings are magnified in the ninth.
The memory of the two-out, game-tying home run that he surrendered to Mike Ford disappeared like his first-pitch four-seamer. Bautista recorded back-to-back strikeouts, allowed a single and blew away another hitter to preserve a 3-2 lead.
The tying run stood on second base after a steal. Bautista’s first pitch to Teoscar Hernández was clocked at 103.4 mph, the fastest by an Oriole in the Statcast era that began in 2015.
How did we live without it?
Orioles manager Brandon Hyde didn’t set up a meeting today with Jordan Westburg after the young infielder arrived at Camden Yards, his major league debut against the Reds still hours away. The choices were simple. Give him advice or give him space.
Hyde chose space.
“I try to be as relaxed as I possibly can with him,” Hyde said this afternoon. “I don’t think that anything I say is going to help him or hurt him. Maybe hurt him. But no, this is something they’ve dreamed about their whole lives, and this is something that’s been a goal since they were 8 years old.
“First day’s always a whirlwind, and a lot of stuff thrown at them, and you just kind of want the game to start for them and let them play.”
Westburg couldn’t play for an extra 15 minutes because of the precipitation that pushed back the start. His first at-bat came with two outs in the second inning, at the exact same time that more rain began to fall, increasing in intensity with each pitch following a standing ovation from fans who didn’t rush for cover.
Gunnar Henderson sat slumped in a chair in front of his locker today, staring at his phone with a slight grin on his face. In his own little world, while media surrounded Jordan Westburg on the other side of the clubhouse.
Henderson had his scrum on Aug. 31 in Cleveland. Westburg received the home treatment this afternoon before making his major league debut.
“It feels like forever ago, but also it doesn’t feel like I remember too much leading up until the game,” said Henderson, who was baseball’s No. 1 prospect.
“I remember the night before I got like 45 minutes of sleep. It was a little bit different, but I’m sure he got a good night’s sleep. But it doesn’t seem like too long ago.”
Westburg is starting at second base against Reds left-hander Brandon Williamson. Henderson is on the bench, though left-handed hitters are 9-for-28 (.321) against Williamson.
Jordan Westburg is playing second base and batting seventh tonight in his major league debut at Camden Yards.
Gunnar Henderson is out of the lineup. Jorge Mateo is the shortstop, and Ramón Urías is at third base.
Austin Hays is leading off as the designated hitter, with Ryan McKenna in left field. Cedric Mullins is sixth in the order.
Anthony Santander is starting at first base, with Aaron Hicks in right field and batting fourth.
Santander has homered in five of the last six games. He’s the first Orioles player with homers in three straight games against the same opponent since Pat Valaika on Aug. 20-22, 2020.
Jordan Westburg is making his major league debut tonight, position and spot in batting order to be announced later.
The Orioles selected Westburg’s contract and optioned infielder Joey Ortiz to Triple-A Norfolk. Catcher José Godoy cleared outright waivers yesterday and accepted an assignment to Norfolk, which opened a spot on the 40-man roster.
Every move was anticipated and made official.
Ortiz appeared in only four games this month and needs regular at-bats, which he can find at Triple-A. Godoy didn’t make it into a game after the Orioles selected his contract June 18.
Westburg wasn’t summoned to sit. He’ll be in tonight’s lineup, especially against Reds left-hander Brandon Williamson.
The heat that Orioles reliever Mike Baumann brings with his fastball isn’t what he used to burn the Mariners on Saturday afternoon.
Baumann was put in the unenviable spot of inheriting an automatic runner at second base in the 10th inning. Throw the last warm-up pitch and step into a jam. Scoring position with no outs in a tie game. None of it your fault or the previous reliever’s.
One of baseball’s newer rules, intended to shorten extra innings and save pitching staffs, isn’t intended to favor the guys standing on the mound. But they deal with it.
Baumann reveled in it.
The big right-hander fielded J.P. Crawford’s comebacker and struck out Julio Rodríguez and Ty France, and Ryan McKenna hit a walk-off home run in the bottom of the 10th. Baumann settled for best supporting actor in a dramatic win.
Jordan Westburg wasn’t in Triple-A Norfolk’s lineup this afternoon.
He’s headed to Baltimore.
An industry source confirmed that the Orioles are selecting Westburg’s contract, in time for Monday night’s series opener against the Reds at Camden Yards.
MLB Pipeline ranks Westburg as the organization’s No. 3 prospect behind infielder Jackson Holliday and outfielder Colton Cowser, and 46th in baseball.
Westburg, 24, has been pounding on the door this year, batting .295/.372/.567 with 15 doubles, two triples, 18 home runs and 54 RBIs in 67 games with Norfolk. The Orioles answered before the calendar turned to July.
One day after Orioles reserve outfielder Ryan McKenna hit a walk-off home run in the 10th inning, backup catcher Anthony Bemboom broke a tie in less dramatic fashion.
With less pop and some help from the Mariners’ defense, but only the result mattered.
Bemboom popped up a fastball down the right field line in the fifth inning that fell for a hit. Mariners second baseman José Caballero booted it further toward the corner, and Jorge Mateo came around to score from first.
Kyle Bradish retired 13 of his last 14 batters to complete seven innings, matching his season high, and the Orioles won 3-2 before an announced crowd of 19,143 at Camden Yards.
The Orioles are 47-29 after claiming their 16th series. Closer Félix Bautista notched his 21st save after surrendering a game-tying home run yesterday to Mike Ford with two outs in the ninth.