What started as an innocent car ride home became a deep dive into the Orioles’ roster.
Interim manager Tony Mansolino needed a lift last Thursday with family in town, and new special advisor John Mabry provided taxi service. Mansolino used the one-on-one time with a respected former major league player and coach to discuss the team and everything happening around it.
“What do you think about all this?” Mansolino asked.
And then came his answer –without pause and aimed at the one player who usually gets lost in the crowd.
“Right away, it’s Jordan Westburg,” Mansolino recalled. “He’s like, ‘That’s the guy that nobody talks about. That’s the piece.’”
The increase in wins has again transformed the Orioles’ home clubhouse into more of a nightclub setting after games. The music is blaring, the strobe lights flashing. The only difference is that IDs aren’t checked at the door.
The smoke machines are creating a dense fog that makes it hard to see across the room. Players had three of them cranked up Saturday. It’s like being inside a van at a Grateful Dead concert.
This is a team that’s riding the high of being competitive again and keeping hopes alive that it can make a run at the postseason. Only six games separate it from the last Wild Card.
The Orioles didn’t quit on former manager Brandon Hyde. They played hard and were racked with guilt over his dismissal. But the fun returns when games aren’t lost in bundles.
The vibe improved along with the level of play. It’s a natural reaction.
SEATTLE - The mailbag is on the West Coast and three hours behind in being awesome.
The last batch didn’t include a handful of questions that will get some play this morning, while we wait for the Orioles to begin their series against the Mariners at T-Mobile Park, which will always be Safeco Field to me. Same as Jacobs Field in Cleveland.
I refuse to bend.
And that’s what …
You ask and I try to answer. Here are a few more after yesterday’s glorious off-day and my painfully long flight to Seattle, with the prerequisite shoulder bumping from the aisle seat every 15-20 seconds.
You don’t have to look far to find the local connections with new Orioles senior advisor John Mabry.
He grew up a fan of the team, which happens when you’re raised in Cecil County and attend Bohemia Manor High School in Chesapeake City, played for the renown Johnny’s amateur baseball team and participated in the Crown All-Star Game at Memorial Stadium.
“Favorite players Cal Ripken, Eddie Murray, the whole nine yards,” Mabry said. “I’ve been watching the Orioles since Wild Bill Hagy type stuff. So it’s a cool opportunity, and at this time it was cool for our family, as well.”
Mabry was at Camden Yards this morning to fulfill his role as senior advisor, a move consummated a few weeks after the Orioles fired manager Brandon Hyde and made third base coach Tony Mansolino the interim, and it’s a broad set of responsibilities.
“Just gonna be a helping hand,” he said. “Just be an available resource for coaches and players. Get to know everything that’s going on and just be available.”
Orioles center fielder Cedric Mullins underwent an MRI yesterday on his right hamstring, and the club is expressing early optimism regarding the severity of the strain and length of his absence.
Mullins leads the club with 10 home runs and 31 RBIs, and he ranks second with a .324 on-base percentage, .448 slugging and .772 OPS. His placement on the 10-day injured list is retroactive to yesterday, making him eligible to return on June 8.
“Very minor,” said interim manager Tony Mansolino. “My guess is that this will probably be the minimum for him. And who knows? It can go a little bit further. But we are not super concerned. It’s more right now just taking care of Ced and making sure we get him back 100 percent.”
Mullins has missed three of five games. He appeared in 147 last season but made two trips to the IL in 2023 with adductor strains.
Dylan Carlson is in center field this afternoon, and Mansolino said deciding on starters will be day-to-day.
The Orioles hired former major league outfielder/first baseman and coach John Mabry as senior advisor. The announcement came this afternoon.
The current coaches will remain with the club for the rest of the 2025 season.
Mabry played in the majors for 14 season and was a coach with the Cardinals, Royals and Marlins over a span of 12 seasons. He spent the 2024 season as Miami’s hitting coach after being an assistant the previous year.
Utility player Cooper Hummel, who declined an outright assignment last night and became a free agent, has signed another one-year major league contract with the Orioles. He’s replacing center fielder Cedric Mullins, who goes on the 10-day injured list with a right hamstring strain.
Mullins was out of the lineup in three of four games before Wednesday. Today’s move is retroactive to yesterday.