Orioles announce celebrations of 2,131 anniversary

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The Orioles today announced the full slate of celebrations to recognize the 30th anniversary of National Baseball Hall of Famer CAL RIPKEN, JR. surpassing the said-to-be-unbreakable record for consecutive games played, when the club hosts the Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday, September 6, at 7:05 p.m. ET. Ripken solidified himself as baseball’s version of Iron Man on September 6, 1995, when he took the field for his 2,131st consecutive game, passing National Baseball Hall of Famer LOU GEHRIG’s mark of 2,130 games.

Ripken will be in attendance that evening and joined by former teammates, opponents, celebrities, friends, and family. The list of those invited who so far confirmed their attendance and will participate in the evening’s festivities include National Baseball Hall of Famers HAROLD BAINESEDDIE MURRAYMIKE MUSSINA, and JIM PALMER; Orioles Hall of Famers BRADY ANDERSONAL BUMBRY, and B.J. SURHOFF; former Orioles BEN McDONALDRAFAEL PALMEIRO, and LARRY SHEETS; former Oriole broadcaster JON MILLER; and Commissioner of Baseball ROBERT D. MANFRED, JR.

Pregame ceremonies will begin at approximately 6:25 p.m. and be carried live on MASN. To pay homage to the night 30 years ago, Ripken will greet fans throughout the ballpark as he is driven around the warning track in a red Corvette convertible, making his way to home plate. Ripken will share some remarks in front of the crowd and then catch the ceremonial first pitch, thrown by his son, RYAN RIPKEN. Ripken will also be joined by other family members and friends for the celebration. 

The Warehouse will be adorned with the legendary 2-1-3-1 number banners, and adjacent to his statue in Legends Park, fans can peruse a museum installation that includes memorabilia from Ripken’s personal collection including his full uniform from that evening and other exclusive pieces. Each game ball for that evening’s matchup will be stamped with a 2131 logo, and commemorative logo-adorned cups will be available for purchase at concessions stands throughout the ballpark. The Orioles Team Store will also have a variety of exclusive 2131 merchandise available for purchase.

Throughout the evening, fans will be able to enjoy various in-park elements including scoreboard games, trivia, and music from 1995. Proceeds from sales at the Orioles Authentics Store, and proceeds collected during the night’s 50/50 raffle, will benefit the Cal Ripken, Sr. Foundation and their mission to create STEM centers in schools.

Orioles get first walk-off win on Holliday's double in ninth (updated)

Jackson Holliday

With each passing start, Trevor Rogers offers further confirmation that what he’s doing isn’t a fluke. He isn’t going to fall apart at the baseball seams. This is how he pitches.

He can't control the bullpen, which stumbled again, but he can put his trust in a young hitter to make the mishap irrelevant.  

Rogers completed seven innings again tonight and allowed only one run, and Jackson Holliday doubled with two outs in the ninth to score Dylan Carlson and give the Orioles their first walk-off win, 4-3, over the Mariners before an announced crowd of 17,290 at Camden Yards.  

Carlson, who had two hits after ending an 0-for-35 slump last night, singled off Matt Brash with two outs and raced home on Holliday's first career walk-off. The Orioles were the last team in the majors to get one, and it came from Holliday, who was 5-for-41 this month before pulling a slider down the right field line.

"I knew he had a really good slider," said Holliday, who almost had his jersey torn off by teammates during the celebration. "Honestly, just trying to hit another line drive, hit a barrel. But I was kind of looking for that pitch and just trying to get it in a good spot to do something with and was able to do that.

Eflin talks about his upcoming surgery, plus O's-Mariners notes (and lineup)

Zach Eflin

Zach Eflin will undergo lower back surgery on Monday, which should lead to a four-to-eight month recovery period.

"I think it really all depends on how the post-op stuff goes, how everything responds and how my body's moving post-surgery," he said today. "I don't expect not to be ready for spring training. From what I've heard from the surgeon, after 12 weeks I'm able to have a normal offseason, so I'm pretty optimistic it's not gonna be a long thing."

Eflin said he’s experienced back pain randomly for the past five or six years and is looking forward to the lumbar microdiscectomy, which relieves pressure on a spinal nerve caused by a herniated disc.

“It’s just gotten progressively worse,” he said. “A couple months ago an MRI was a little worse than it was previously and just seems like the disc is in a place where it’s kind of pushing against my nerve and it’s just not going away. Tried an epidural, didn’t really work, so I think the next step is just to get it taken care of, and hopefully be ready for spring training.”

Eflin said “all signs” point to the surgery bringing a permanent resolution.

Orioles announce multi-year partnership with Tsao Baltimore

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Partnership debuted during Orioles Hall of Fame weekend with custom timepieces for inductees

The Orioles today announced a new partnership with Tsao Baltimore, a locally owned luxury watch brand known for its quality timepieces that pay tribute to Maryland’s rich heritage. As part of this multi-year partnership, Tsao Baltimore designed a custom, Orioles-branded timepiece to honor the legacy of Birdland and the pride of Baltimore. The partnership debuted this weekend during Orioles Hall of Fame celebrations and will continue through the 2027 season.

"We're thrilled to partner with a Baltimore-based company like Tsao that shares our deep connection to the community and commitment to excellence," said DON ROVAK, Orioles Chief Revenue Officer. "This collaboration reflects the Orioles' pride in our city and state, and the timeless legacy we continue to build."

To mark the occasion, Tsao Baltimore presented exclusive, custom-designed watches to Orioles Hall of Fame inductees, former center fielder ADAM JONES, former outfielder JOE ORSULAK, and longtime broadcaster TOM DAVIS during Saturday’s on-field ceremony, offering each honoree a lasting symbol of their achievement. The brand was also featured at Friday’s Hall of Fame luncheon, where attendees explored Tsao’s full collection of Maryland-inspired timepieces. Throughout the partnership, Tsao will maintain a presence on the club level at Oriole Park with branded signage, reinforcing shared values of craftsmanship, legacy, and local pride.

"We’re incredibly excited to be the proud watch company of the Baltimore Orioles,” said Tsao Baltimore founder ALAN TSAO. “As someone that was born and raised in Maryland, this is a dream come true."

Injuries keep piling up for Orioles

Kyle Bradish

The Orioles gave up on wondering what else could go wrong a long time ago.

Their luck wasn’t going to change for the better. A horseshoe would come from the thoroughbred that trampled them.

Shortstop Gunnar Henderson, starter Grayson Rodriguez and reliever Andrew Kittredge didn’t break camp with the team, and that should have provided a hint. The 2025 season was going to destroy everything in its path. It was going to break them.

Only nine players are on the active roster from the 26 who made the club on Opening Day. Seven are on the injured list, including utility player Jorge Mateo, who was questionable throughout camp after undergoing left elbow reconstructive surgery.

Remember when his status in Sarasota was worthy of daily updates?

Kremer cruises through eighth inning and gets no run support in 1-0 loss (updated)

Dean Kremer

Dean Kremer went with the high-socks look tonight, though he already stood out as one of the Orioles who’s stayed away from the injured list. Tonight marked his 24th appearance and 23rd start, the most of anyone in the rotation.

Durability is becoming a source of pride for Kremer.

He’ll also take the wins if they come to him, but it's much harder when your team doesn't score.

Kremer surrendered a run in the first inning and nothing else through the eighth in a 1-0 loss to the Mariners before an announced crowd of 19,356 at Camden Yards.

The eight innings were a season high for Kremer, who allowed five hits, threw 101 pitches and lowered his ERA to 4.17. He’s completed the seventh in seven of his starts.

Eflin and Bautista out for rest of season

Eflin and Bautista out for rest of season

The severity of injuries to Orioles starter Zach Eflin and closer Félix Bautista is confirmed. They won’t pitch again in 2025.

Interim manager Tony Mansolino announced today that Eflin will undergo surgery on his lower back next week and rehab at home. Bautista has another medical appointment later this week but he’s shut down with a “significant injury” to his right shoulder.

Eflin is having a lumbar microdiscectomy, intended to relieve pressure on a spinal nerve caused by a herniated disc. He’s gone on the injured list twice with lower back pain and was sidelined earlier this season with a mild lat strain.

Any chance to trade Eflin at the deadline vanished with his latest injury, though it didn't involve his arm. He’s made 14 starts this season and posted a 5.93 ERA and 1.416 WHIP in 71 1/3 innings. A pending free agent, Eflin could be finished with the Orioles after 23 starts and a 4.48 ERA and 1.287 WHIP.

Eflin started Game 2 of the 2024 Wild Card series against the Royals and was removed after allowing one run in four innings.

Orioles option Adams, tonight's lineup and notes

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The Orioles optioned outfielder Jordyn Adams earlier today to make room for Daniel Johnson, a waiver claim yesterday from the Giants.

Johnson had one at-bat with the Orioles in 2024. He was 5-for-29 with the Giants this season.

Adams is 0-for-5 in 10 games with the Orioles and was used more for defense.

Albert Suárez is making his first injury rehab start tonight with Double-A Chesapeake. He hasn’t pitched for the Orioles since his lone appearance on March 28 in Toronto.

Johnson isn’t in tonight’s lineup against the Mariners at Camden Yards. Ryan Noda is in right field, Dylan Carlson in left and Greg Allen in center. Carlson is trying to snap an 0-for-35 streak.

Johnson activated, Adams optioned

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The Orioles have made the following roster moves:

  • Activated OF Daniel Johnson. He will wear No. 56.
  • Optioned OF Jordyn Adams to Triple-A Norfolk.

Schedule gets harder as Orioles try to win games and evaluate talent

Tony Mansolino

The next home series begins tonight with the Mariners coming to town. The team that’s won seven games in a row and nine of 10. The team that holds the first Wild Card spot.

Get used to it.

The schedule isn’t doing the Orioles any favors. They go to Houston and Boston after the homestand, come back to Camden Yards and host the Astros for four games and the Red Sox for four. Who came up with this setup?

The next road trip is a West Coast swing through San Francisco and San Diego, sans any hopes of making the playoffs.

Oh, and there’s the home series against the Dodgers in the first weekend of September.

Rodriguez undergoes elbow surgery

Grayson Rodriguez

Grayson Rodriguez underwent a procedure earlier today to remove a bone spur in his right elbow. Dr. Keith Meister performed the surgery in Dallas, and the Orioles said it was “successful.”

The club indicated last week that Rodriguez probably would have the surgery today, putting an official end to any hopes that he would pitch this season.

Executive vice president/general manager Mike Elias stated in in a video call after the trade deadline that surgery was “back on the table,” and the timing should make Rodriguez available for spring training.

Rodriguez hasn’t appeared in a regular season game since July 31, 2024 against the Blue Jays. He went on the injured list with another lat strain that kept him off the Wild Card roster, and he didn’t pitch after a March 5 exhibition outing against the Twins in Fort Myers.

The initial complaint from Rodriguez was a feeling of sluggishness that robbed him of the usual velocity. The Orioles put him on the injured list before breaking camp with elbow inflammation.

Orioles claim Daniel Johnson on another busy roster day

Daniel Johnson Giants

The Orioles will continue to tweak their outfield as they play out the remainder of the 2025 season.

The latest move came today, with the Orioles claiming Daniel Johnson on waivers from the Giants. He hasn’t reported to the club but could be on the roster for Tuesday night’s series opener against the Mariners at Camden Yards.

Johnson, 30, comes back to the organization. He had one at-bat with the Orioles last summer and appeared in 118 games with Triple-A Norfolk, slashing .259/.320/.448 with 20 doubles, a triple, 21 home runs and 76 RBIs. He can play all three spots in the outfield.

Johnson was 5-for-29 (.172) with two doubles and a home run in 14 games with the Giants this season after signing on May 2.

A corresponding move is needed to make room for Johnson.

Orioles claim OF Daniel Johnson off waivers from Giants

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The Orioles have made the following roster moves:

  • Claimed OF Daniel Johnson off waivers from the San Francisco Giants. He has not yet reported.
  • Selected the contract of RHP Jose Espada from Triple-A Norfolk and optioned him to Triple-A Norfolk.
  • Designated RHP Houston Roth for assignment.

The Orioles’ 40-man roster currently has 40 players.

Newest top 100 showcases rising Orioles talents

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Entering the 2023 season, the Orioles’ farm system was at the peak of its powers. 

Baltimore had eight top-100 prospects, according to Baseball America. That included the No. 1 overall prospect, Gunnar Henderson, another top-10 prospect, Grayson Rodriguez, a rising star in Jackson Holliday, a soon-to-be Rookie of the Year candidate in Colton Cowser, and the underrated Jordan Westburg, checking in at No. 76. 

By the time 2024 rolled around, however, that list had taken quite a hit due to graduations. Then it included just three players, with Coby Mayo and Samuel Basallo joining Heston Kjerstad. 

With Mayo’s graduation this season, there was some question as to who, if anyone, would join Basallo in the top 100. Baseball America’s most recent rankings gave us an answer, highlighting three Orioles prospects on the rise. 

Nate George 

Mayo settling into first base with Orioles

Coby Mayo

Coby Mayo walked into the clubhouse yesterday morning with a first baseman’s mitt in his hand and beads of sweat on his forehead.

He wasn’t in the lineup, but there’s always work to be done. 

Mayo got in more reps at his new position, with senior advisor John Mabry handling a bulk load of the tutelage.

“He’s been with me like side-by-side during the ground balls, talking to me, going through just different kind of plays that could pile up during a game,” Mayo said. “He’s been super good even in-game going over plays with me. Maybe somewhere where I could have done something a little better, encouraging me that, ‘That was a good play.’ Just kind of talking me through some of those in-game weird situations.”

Mayo is a third baseman who’s learning to play first, with the switch beginning in the minors. And it’s much more complicated than just moving across the diamond, away from a spot that he hadn’t mastered.

Akin surrenders two runs in ninth to offset Povich's quality start in Orioles' 3-2 loss to A's

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Because the Orioles’ roster can’t sit still, much like a fussy toddler except with grown men, changes are coming again to a rotation that posted the second-highest ERA in the American League before today.

Cade Povich is trying to stay in it. He’s pitching to win and also keep his job, and he isn’t alone. The club is allowing for a developmental period after falling out of the playoff race, but there’s a limit to the number of starters and length of the patience displayed.

Povich registered his first quality start since April 24, holding the Athletics to one run over six innings, but Willie MacIver's two-run double off Keegan Akin in the ninth gave them a 3-2 win over the Orioles before an announced crowd of 23,183 at Camden Yards.

Akin was trying for his third save in his new role, but a leadoff walk to Darell Hernaiz and one-out single by Gio Urshela preceded MacIver's double. Pinch-runner Lawrence Butler ran through the stop sign and would have been an easy out if catcher Alex Jackson had held onto the ball. Or maybe if Gunnar Henderson's relay wasn't so far up the line.

"He didn’t mean to throw it there," said interim manager Tony Mansolino. "Things are speeding up right there. He’s got his back to the play. He’s catching the ball and he just kind of threw a sinker to the plate, just kind of getting on top of it, straighten the thing out, making a better throw.”

Orioles break out another new lineup, update on Albert Suárez

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The Orioles are shuffling their outfield again today for the series finale against the Athletics.

Jordyn Adams gets his first start, playing center field and batting ninth. He’s made six appearances in center and two in right.

Greg Allen is playing left field and Jeremiah Jackson is in right. Dylan Carlson, who's in an 0-for-34 slump, goes to the bench.

Adley Rutschman is the designated hitter. Ryan Mountcastle is the first baseman, with Coby Mayo on the bench.

Alex Jackson is batting seventh and catching.

This, that and the other

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The Orioles have a group of relievers on the roster who will be tasked with protecting slim leads in the ninth inning. They do not have a closer.

There’s a difference.

Félix Bautista is on the injured list with shoulder inflammation, and the Orioles drained the pool of veteran replacements by trading Bryan Baker, Seranthony Domínguez, Gregory Soto and Andrew Kittredge.

Keegan Akin recorded the save Friday night, but Rico Garcia warmed in case right-handed hitting Brent Rooker stepped to the plate.

Interim manager Tony Mansolino was asked yesterday whether Garcia will get chances in high-leverage situations. That’s clearly the case. He was on the verge of a save opportunity.

Orioles' bats go cold after first inning and Athletics roll to 11-3 win

brandon young v A's

Before the Orioles played their 117th game of the season tonight, they switched up the usual routine at home by gathering in the dugout to watch the latest Hall of Fame inductions. They stood at the railing, eyes locked on former center fielder Adam Jones as he addressed the crowd and tried to control his emotions.

"I took tremendous pride playing for you guys,” he said. “I took tremendous pride playing more for the name on the front of the chest than the name on the back."

Jones turned to the bench and reminded a team going through hard times that he was there, too, early in his career and to keep grinding.

“Trust me,” he said, “you do it long enough, you’ll be where I’m at.”

Rookie Brandon Young went to the mound and began warming for his 10th major league start, walked the first batter he faced and surrendered a long home run to Shea Langeliers.

Mountcastle returns, Cowser and O'Neill on IL

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The Orioles have made the following roster moves:

  • INF Ryan Mountcastle (right hamstring strain) was returned from his rehab assignment and reinstated from the 60-day Injured List.
  • Recalled OF Jordyn Adams from Triple-A Norfolk.
  • Placed OF Colton Cowser on the 7-day concussion Injured List, retroactive to August 7.
  • Placed OF Tyler O'Neill (right wrist inflammation) on the 10-day Injured List, retroactive to August 6.

The Orioles’ 40-man roster currently has 39 players.