The Orioles wanted Kyle Gibson to do more than cover innings out of the rotation when they signed him as a free agent. They wanted to improve their chances of winning on the days that he pitched. They wanted his leadership in a clubhouse that lost influential veterans Jordan Lyles, Rougned Odor and Robinson Chirinos.
They sought a character guy, drawn to his makeup as much as his arm.
Gibson was the Phillies’ nominee last year for the prestigious Roberto Clemente Award, bestowed annually to the player who best represents the sport through community involvement, philanthropy and positive contributions on and off the field.
Per Major League Baseball, Gibson raised more than $108,000 for charities during his 1 ½ seasons in Philadelphia. His impact was immediate, his qualifications for the award indisputable.
Within his first week, Gibson invited teammates and fans to join him as he organized a campaign to assist local families and children struggling during the COVID-19 pandemic. Through his #ALLWIN initiative, he made a personal donation for every win and strikeout through the rest of the season, with two local charities the biggest benefactors – “Cradles to Crayons,” which supports low-income and homeless children, and “Philabundance,” which serves those facing food insecurity in the Philadelphia area.
Opening Day is less than three weeks away and the Orioles remain on hold with their most important roster decisions before flying to Boston.
Don’t ask them about the five starters in their rotation or the composition of an eight-man bullpen. Don’t ask about the primary backup for first baseman Ryan Mountcastle or whether a non-roster invite could be introduced on March 30 or put feet on the orange carpet for the first home game.
They just don’t know.
I still don’t know how Tyler Wells got bumped from the five leading candidates to start after his impressive first half in 2022, except that someone must go and the Orioles have Kyle Gibson, Cole Irvin, Kyle Bradish, Dean Kremer and Grayson Rodriguez. Rodriguez starts this afternoon against the Red Sox's split-squad in Sarasota.
What in the world would have happened if DL Hall hadn't experienced lower-back discomfort before arriving in camp, which prevented him from accumulating the necessary innings to be a starter?
SARASOTA, Fla. – The initial round of camp cuts in Clearwater this week weren’t complicated. The groupings were some young prospects who can get more work at Twin Lakes Park as they prepare for the season, and other players who had little or no shot at heading north and didn’t force the issue.
That was it.
Three more cuts were made late last night following a 5-5 tie with the Twins. Right-handers Noah Denoyer and Seth Johnson were optioned and left-hander Cade Povich was reassigned to minor league camp.
The battles for final spots haven’t subsided.
The World Baseball Classic trimmed the original 71-man roster with Cedric Mullins joining Team USA, Anthony Santander and Darwinzon Hernández reporting to Team Venezuela and Dean Kremer leaving Thursday for Team Israel after throwing one last bullpen session with the Orioles and winning the ping pong tournament. John Means and Dillon Tate eventually will go on the injured list.
SARASOTA, Fla. – Kyle Bradish became the first Orioles pitcher tonight to make three starts this spring. He’s the first to work four innings.
No one has done it better.
Bradish shut out the Twins over the first three frames before Matt Wallner homered with one out in the fourth. He struck out the next two batters to give him eight for the game.
“Pretty pleased,” he said. “Everything was really good. Commanded the zone from the second on.”
"Showed really good stuff again," said manager Brandon Hyde. "Some deep counts there early but I thought he got better as the game went on. Really good breaking ball. Love that he's throwing that two-seamer that he introduced second half of last year that made a huge difference. He's just carried that work into this year. He's doing a great job so far this spring."
SARASOTA, Fla. – Terrin Vavra has recovered from the discomfort in his left shoulder and is starting at third base tonight against the Twins at Ed Smith Stadium.
Vavra is 6-for-11 with a double, triple and home run as he fights for a spot on the bench. He was supposed to start in left field the day that he was scratched.
Ryan McKenna gets another start in center field with Cedric Mullins away from camp and playing for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic. Kyle Stowers is in right field and Austin Hays is in left.
Adam Frazier is leading off as the second baseman. James McCann is catching Kyle Bradish, who’s allowed one run and two hits in five innings over two spring starts.
Joe Ryan is starting for the Twins.
SARASOTA, Fla. – The rest of Jackson Holliday’s teammates who stuck around for Wednesday’s exhibition game were gone from the complex or back indoors to shower and change into their clothes. The kid wasn’t ready to leave the field. He couldn’t just walk away from fans who lined up to get his autograph.
They handed him pieces of paper or baseballs shoved through a gap in the protective netting. One after another. Adults and children.
Holliday has looked the part since he arrived at his first major league camp, with maturity that belies his youthful face. And he’s keeping his locker, surviving yesterday’s first round of cuts that claimed 12 non-roster invites.
He came off the bench again yesterday in Clearwater, replacing Gunnar Henderson at shortstop and grounding out in the eighth inning. He’s 3-for-9 with a double, three walks, two strikeouts and a handful of impressive plays in the field that highlight his range and cannon arm.
“It’s been great,” he said. “It’s been a good learning experience and been pretty awesome to be part of this organization and with all these talented guys and getting to know them and building relationships for the future.”
CLEARWATER, Fla. – Spring stats don’t appear to carry much weight with Orioles manager Brandon Hyde. He’s only checked the number of plate appearances. Otherwise, he has no interest.
It’s more about the quality of the at-bats and a pitcher’s control in the strike zone, he says.
“Put very little stock in what their numbers are like.”
Some of the competitors for the backup job at first base probably wish the figures counted for more in the final evaluations.
Josh Lester was 1-for-12 before stepping off the bus Wednesday in Fort Myers. Better to turn away. But he went 3-for-3 with two RBIs against the Twins, and he singled twice today in his first two at-bats.
CLEARWATER, Fla. – DL Hall can only express confidence that he’s going to be available to the Orioles if they want him on the Opening Day roster.
He won’t be a starter. Time is too short to stretch him out. But he’ll be healthy and able to pitch.
The rest is up to the team.
Hall threw his first bullpen session yesterday in Sarasota, his spring training a slow play due to the lower-back discomfort that he experienced before reporting to camp.
“I feel good,” he said. “I’m moving in the right direction. Just trying to take it day by day and just feel better each and every day, whether it’s one percent or 25 percent better. As long as I’m moving in the right direction.”
CLEARWATER, Fla. – Gunnar Henderson is leading off today against the Phillies in Clearwater.
Adley Rutschman is catching Tyler Wells, who’s making his second spring start.
Josh Lester is starting at third base after collecting three hits in Fort Myers. Kyle Stowers is in left field, Ryan O’Hearn is playing first base and batting cleanup, and Jordan Westburg is the second baseman.
Franchy Cordero is playing right field.
Also listed as available pitchers today are Bruce Zimmermann, Joey Krehbiel, Andrew Politi and Eduard Bazardo.
SARASOTA, Fla. – Kyle Gibson didn’t overwork his outfielders today during his three innings on the mound. Two balls made it through the infield for singles. Colton Cowser, playing center, fielded one of them and fired to second base to prevent a double.
Greed might be good, but it also can cost you.
Gibson is costing the Orioles $10 million after signing as a free agent, the largest contract negotiated by executive vice president/general manager Mike Elias. He could be the Opening Day starter, an honor he wants but isn’t obsessing over.
The Pirates managed two hits off Gibson, didn’t draw a walk and struck out twice. He threw 40 pitches, 23 for strikes, and got more work in the bullpen.
The veteran right-hander sat down with pitching coach Chris Holt and assistant pitching coach Darren Holmes to study video of a delivery that didn’t satisfy him.
SARASOTA, Fla. – Orioles manager Brandon Hyde provided some significant health and workout updates this morning, rattling off the morning advancements from a sheet of paper.
Got to keep it straight, and there were quite a few.
Left-hander DL Hall, who’s recovered from the discomfort in his lower back, completed a bullpen session today. Hyde said it “went well,” and Hall will throw live batting practice in a few days.
Closer Félix Bautista, who’s been restricted to bullpens while receiving treatments on his left knee and working to strengthen his right shoulder, also will threw live BP in the next few days.
Left-hander Nick Vespi, who underwent hernia surgery in January, will pitch in a simulated game later this week. Vespi remains confident that he’ll be ready for Opening Day if the Orioles want to bring him north.
SARASOTA, Fla. – Do not fall in love with spring training or September stats. Managers have warned us about it for centuries. Or at least since I’ve been a full-time beat reporter in 1997.
The same rule or sage advice applies to overreactions on the negative side. Do not fall out of love.
Here are a few examples, beginning with a hitter who left camp to play in the World Baseball Classic.
Outfielder Anthony Santander
Santander was hitless in 10 at-bats before joining Team Venezuela in Miami. He went 0-for-2 Monday as the first baseman.
Is anyone worried about Santander after six exhibition games? After he hit 33 home runs last season? Don’t be silly.
SARASOTA, Fla. – The Orioles are back on the road this morning, with their buses heading down I-75 south to the Twins’ complex in Fort Myers. Turn right off the Daniels Parkway exit. A left puts you on the Red Sox’s spring turf.
A helpful tip for you tourists.
Grayson Rodriguez makes his second start after registering two scoreless innings against the Tigers in Lakeland and tossing 99 mph bowling balls.
An ample amount of fuss has been made over Rodriguez, the precise level we anticipated, and he deserves. He comes as advertised. The hype is warranted.
But what about players in camp who are exceeding it? Guys who didn’t create any buzz before it opened or have pumped up the volume?
SARASOTA, Fla. – Anthony Santander took charge of a high popup near the mound in the first inning, finding the ball in the high sky, avoiding any collisions and squeezing it for the second out.
Santander fielded Jake Cave’s grounder and stepped on the bag to finish the second, scooped a throw out of the dirt on an attempted double play in the third to prevent an error, and concluded the inning by handling Darick Hall’s grounder and again hustling to the bag.
The fourth also couldn’t end without Santander. He fielded Cave’s ground ball and tossed to Mychal Givens for the last out and strand a runner on third base following a hit batter and two balks on the reliever.
Santander also was flawless taking two throws, from second and third base, in the opening inning. As if he played the position for most of his professional career.
Try nine games with Single-A Lynchburg in 2016, before his shoulder surgery and the Orioles' selection of him in the Rule 5 draft.
Sarasota, Fla. - The Orioles’ lineup for today’s game against the Phillies has a unique look to it.
Anthony Santander gets the start at first base, a position he hasn’t played since A ball in Cleveland’s organization.
Manager Brandon Hyde indicated that Santander might log some innings there later in camp but decided to do it now, saying he doesn’t know how long his outfielder will be away with Team Venezuela in the World Baseball Classic.
Santander leaves today for Miami.
Jorge Mateo is leading off. Adley Rutschman is catching left-hander Cole Irvin.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - Orioles infielder Terrin Vavra isn’t concerned about the discomfort in his left shoulder that removed him from yesterday’s lineup, saying he felt much better this morning and the rest period shouldn’t last long.
Vavra stayed back in camp while teammates headed to St. Petersburg for today’s matchup with the Rays.
The soreness cropped up while Vavra was hitting in the cage during the morning session. He felt it again during batting practice, and Colton Cowser replaced him in left field.
“Just never really got it calmed down,” he said. “We decided to shut it down for the day, give it some rest, but woke up today feeling better than when I went to sleep, so I don’t think it’s going to be anything that lingers too long. Fortunately, we have some time here yet to get things calmed down before we get rolling too heavily.”
Rest and treatments are in store until Vavra is cleared to hit again.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. – The Orioles took the bus to Tropicana Field today for their game against the Rays, and the top of the lineup has Cedric Mullins in center field and Anthony Santander in right.
Mullins leaves Monday morning for the World Baseball Classic. Santander will be in Monday’s lineup before departing.
Gunnar Henderson is batting fourth as the designated hitter. Jordan Westburg is at the bottom of the order and playing third base.
Nomar Mazara gets the start in left field. James McCann is catching Kyle Bradish.
Heston Kjerstad, Jackson Holliday, Joey Ortiz, Connor Norby, Coby Mayo and César Prieto also had their bags packed for the trip.
For the Orioles
Cedric Mullins CF
Anthony Santander RF
Ryan Mountcastle 1B
Gunnar Henderson DH
Ramón Urías 2B
Nomar Mazara LF
James McCann C
Jorge Mateo SS
Jordan Westburg 3B
Kyle Bradish RHP
For the Rays
Vidal Bruján DH
Wander Franco SS
Randy Arozarena LF
Jonathan Aranda 1B
Harold Ramírez RF
Francisco Mejía C
José Siri CF
Isaac Paredes 3B
Daniel Robertson 2B
Yonny Cirinos RHP
SARASOTA, Fla. – A pitch clock violation wasn’t the most annoying part of Tyler Wells’ day in his first spring start. Pretty close, though.
One of this year's rule changes kept tweaking him.
Wells allowed three runs and five hits today in two innings against the Braves. Left-hander Cionel Pérez replaced him in the third.
Michael Harris, the reigning National League Rookie of the Year, homered with the bases empty and two outs in the first. Ehire Adrianza had an RBI double in the second after Forrest Wall’s leadoff single, and Eddie Rosario lined a single to right field with two outs for a 3-0 lead.
Wells faced 11 batters and threw 36 pitches, 24 for strikes. He had eight first-pitch strikes, an exception coming with his violation against Rosario before the RBI single.
SARASOTA, Fla. – Terrin Vavra was supposed to play left field and lead off today against the Phillies. However, he's been scratched from the lineup and replaced by Colton Cowser.
Third baseman Gunnar Henderson is leading off. Cowser is batting eighth.
No reason provided at this time.
Orioles reliever Nick Vespi had his fifth bullpen session yesterday morning, using all of his pitches and totaling 35. He advances next week to one or two live bullpen sessions and should be ready to start appearing in games.
Vespi, who underwent hernia surgery on Jan. 5, remains confident that he’ll be ready for Opening Day if he makes the club.