Delayed Orioles home opener set for today with Kremer on the mound

The threat of severe thunderstorms can’t ruin the Orioles’ home opener this afternoon.

Aaron Judge, maybe, but not thunderstorms.

The temperature in Baltimore reached 85 degrees yesterday but is likely to stay in the 50s today. No rain or hail or high winds, though. Cloudy and playable.

Gates open at noon. Severna Park native Parijita Bastola will perform the national anthem prior to the game. She was a contestant on season 22 of NBC’s “The Voice,” and also performed at Governor Wes Moore’s inauguration earlier this year.

Moore and children Mia and James will throw out the ceremonial first pitches.

Vavra: "I don't think it's going to be an extended period of rest"

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.

Updates on Santander, Henderson, Watson, starters and more

BRADENTON, Fla. – Anthony Santander noticed the Orioles beat writers walking toward his locker this morning, smiled and provided an unsolicited update on his left knee.

Skip the formalities and get to it.

“I’m OK guys, I’m OK guys,” he said.

Santander was hit by a pitch yesterday, fell to the ground and limped to the dugout, and later the clubhouse. X-rays came back negative.

“Just a bruise,” he said. “Eighty-five miles, but he hit me in the right spot, on the bone. But we’re feeling good, much better today. I think it’s nothing to get worried about.”

Revisiting roll call of Orioles' non-roster invites to spring training

The Orioles sent out their list of non-roster invites to spring training yesterday with the understanding that other names could appear later. Thirty wasn’t a set number. There’s always room for Jell-O and more lockers at the Ed Smith Stadium complex.

Within hours, left-hander Darwinzon Hernandez cleared outright waivers and was assigned to Triple-A Norfolk. He, too, will be in Sarasota, giving the Orioles 38 pitchers in camp, including 12 of the non-roster variety.

The possibility still exists that the Orioles make a waiver claim, sign a free agent or consummate another trade. They aren’t shutting down.

“We’re still working on stuff,” executive vice president/general manager Mike Elias said yesterday during a Q&A with fans at Wilde Lake High School.

Could be pitching, an infielder or an outfielder. And it could be a major league contract.

Offseason workouts lifted Watson to organizational pitching award

Ryan Watson didn’t seek out a trainer during the offseason to decrease his chances of being injured. It was more about eliminating some mobility issues, concentrating on hip work and “becoming very aware of his body because he’s so tall,” said Theo Aasen, a strength and conditioning coach who owns Optimal Athlete Kollective in Tampa.

Never did the 6-foot-5 Watson imagine that he’d rise above others in the Orioles organization to be named its minor league Pitcher of the Year. An unexpected byproduct of the many improvements that included a sharper slider and an uptick in fastball velocity.

Watson often worked in the 89-91 mph range last year in his first professional season. He climbed to 93-95 mph this summer and was able to reach 96-97.

Watson’s representative, Francis Marquez of The MAS+ Agency, suggested that the right-hander meet with Aasen.  

“He’s never really lifted in a style that I train, so we taught him how to lift properly and use a full range of strength,” said Aasen, who also worked with Austin Hays, changing the outfielder’s weightlifting routine to get his body more in baseball shape, with improved flexibility, rather than just bulking up. Hays avoided the injured list this year.

After getting O's Player of Year honor, Baltimore is next stop for Westburg

Orioles infield prospect Jordan Wesburg is looking forward to the baseball offseason. For him it will include his wedding in December and more work toward making his major league debut.

While it didn’t come this year, it figures to be a near certainty for the 2023 season. Westburg is the O’s No. 5 ranked prospect via MLBPipeline.com on the club’s top 30 list and is now No. 76 on their national top 100. He is the O’s No. 6 prospect on the Baseball America list and No. 89 on the BA top 100.

After a big year that included 47 games at Double-A Bowie and 91 at Triple-A Norfolk, Westburg was named the Orioles' Minor League Player of the Year, winning the Brooks Robinson award. He was at Camden Yards yesterday and hopes to make that ballpark home soon.

“I feel like you are one step away when you get to Triple-A," he said. "You are one injury away, one whatever away. It’s really cool to have that realization. But there are still things that I would like work on. Still things I need to accomplish. Obviously I didn’t make it up here this year. And that says that we were winning here with the big league club and I wasn’t needed, but there are things I need to address so that next year in spring training I can have a shot.

“I’d like to continue to be more consistent. Continue to polish up the hit tool. There are flashes of things clicking together and also flashes of going into slumps and a little bit up and down. So, if I can can smooth those things out, it gives me a better chance to play up here. Everything is amplified and a bit harder on the biggest stage.”

Jordan Westburg and Ryan Watson on their O's minor league awards

opacy-2022

Orioles infield prospect Jordan Westburg admits it was a bit surprising that he took home the Orioles Minor League Player of the Year award after his good friend and minor league teammate Gunnar Henderson was named national Player of the Year by Baseball America.

But Westburg’s season and performance this year don’t take a back seat to anyone. He batted .265/.355/.496 (144-for-544) with 39 doubles, three triples, 27 homers, 96 runs scored, 106 RBIs, 70 walks and 12 stolen bases in 138 games between Double-A Bowie and Triple-A Norfolk. He led Orioles minor leaguers in doubles, extra-base hits (69), total bases (270) and RBIs. He also finished second in the organization in hits and home runs. After being promoted to the Tides on June 6, he led the International League with 74 RBIs.

“I’m proud of the award,” Westburg said this afternoon at Camden Yards. “I put in a lot of work this offseason to, obviously, produce the way I did this year. I’m happy that I won it. But essentially, at the big league level it’s not about me, it’s about the team and winning games and winning championships. That is what it’s going to come down to, but right now it’s cool to win this award.

“When I saw the news that Gunnar won the Baseball America Player of the Year, I was happy for him and a little shocked that I won the Orioles’ award. That is a little bit bigger award. But like I said, there were a lot of guys deserving of the award and I just feel lucky to have won it.”

And beyond Henderson, several players had big years on the O's farm this year. Henderson produced the top OPS in the system at .946, with Connor Norby next at .886, then Kyle Stowers at .884, Colton Cowser .874 and Westburg at .852.

O's Jordan Westburg is club's Minor League Player of the Year

You have to have a pretty strong year to beat out Gunnar Henderson for an O's farm award this year, and Jordan Westburg sure had one.

Today he was named the Brooks Robinson Award winner as the Orioles Minor League Player of the Year. Right-hander Ryan Watson won the Jim Palmer Pitcher of the Year award while High-A manager Roberto Mercado was named winner of the Cal Ripken, Sr. Player Development award. Scott Walter is the Jim Russo Scout of the Year.

The winners will be recognized in an on-field ceremony before Tuesday's game with Toronto at Camden Yards. 

Westburg spent time between Double-A Bowie and Triple-A Norfolk and batted .265/.355/.496 (144-for-544) with 39 doubles, three triples, 27 homers, 96 runs scored, 106 RBIs, 70 walks and 12 stolen bases in 138 games.

He led all O's minor league players in doubles, extra-base hits (69), total bases (270) and RBIs. He also finished second in the organization in hits and home runs. After being promoted to the Tides on June 6, he led the International League with 74 RBIs, tied for the league lead with 25 doubles, while also ranking second in the IL with 46 extra-base hits, 184 total bases and 64 runs scored through the end of the season.

A night of some good pitching at high levels on O's farm

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Two of the Orioles' top pitching prospects were on the mound last night for Triple-A Norfolk and Double-A Bowie, and they pitched the Tides and Baysox to wins.
 
Right-hander Grayson Rodriguez, who threw four scoreless innings in his Triple-A debut, got his first win at that level as Norfolk won big 12-5 at Scranton. Rodriguez, baseball's top pitching prospect, allowed three hits and two runs, one on a solo homer, with no walks and eight strikeouts. He threw 67 pitches after throwing 61 in his season debut.
 
Through two starts, he is 1-0 with an ERA of 2.00 and a 0.55 WHIP for the Tides. Over nine innings, he has walked one and fanned 15.
 
Norfolk bashed four homers in improving to 6-3 with five wins in six games. Norfolk's 6-3 start is its best since 2015, the year they were last in the International League playoffs.
 
Outfielder Kyle Stowers absolutely crushed one to right for his first homer of the year. Johnny Rizer hit a two-run shot, his third. Patrick Dorrian’s two-run shot was No. 1 and Jacob Nottingham hit a three-run homer, his second.
 
The Tides are nine homers away from hitting 5,000 in franchise history.
 
Bowie won 10-2 at Binghamton to get to 3-3. Lefty Drew Rom threw five scoreless innings on two hits with eight strikeouts. He had allowed three runs in three innings on opening night last Friday. But Rom was dealing last night in his 74-pitch outing and is 1-1 with a 3.38 ERA after two outings.
 
Rom is ranked as the Orioles' No. 11 prospect via ESPN and is No. 15 on FanGraphs.com and The Athletic and No. 17 by Baseball America and MLBPipeline.com.
 
Bowie put up 10 runs despite striking out 17 times. Toby Welk went 2-for-4 with a solo homer and three RBIs. Zach Watson hit a two-run single and Joey Ortiz a two-run double.
 
Wilmington bashed high Single-A Aberdeen 13-3, but César Prieto went 2-for-5 and is batting .286. Lynchburg beat low Single-A Delmarva 6-2. Mishael Deson had a single and double, and drove in both Delmarva runs.
 
Watson dazzled for Bowie: You won’t find his name on any Orioles top 30 prospects lists. The FanGraphs.com O’s prospects list goes 45 deep, but right-hander Ryan Watson of the Bowie Baysox didn’t make the cuts.
 
But on Wednesday night, he made a stunning debut at the Double-A level, throwing four scoreless innings on 45 pitches with no walks and seven strikeouts as Bowie won 4-3 at Binghamton. This followed up a strong 2021 for Watson, who went 6-3 with a 3.48 ERA between Single-A Delmarva and Single-A Aberdeen. He had a 2.2 walk rate, fanned 11 batters per nine and recorded a 1.18 WHIP.
 
Then the Rumble Ponies couldn’t get to him in that game as he was throwing his fastball from 93 to 96 mph with a strong swing-and-miss slider.
 
Watson was a guest Wednesday night on my postgame show on WBAL Radio and I asked him what his strikeout pitch was that night.
 
“It was probably my slider,” he said. “I felt like it was tunneling really well off the fastball, especially when they were looking for the fastball. They were looking fastball, and it would break out of the zone and it was too late for them to react.”
 
During the 2020 season when the First-Year Player Draft was just five rounds, the Orioles signed some players after that draft who have done well on their farm. That list includes JD Mundy, Brandon Young and TT Bowens. And it also includes Watson, who pitched at Auburn University and had an ERA of 1.23 in 7 1/3 innings to start his senior year in 2020 before the pandemic ended that season. He had been drafted in the 39th round by the Los Angeles Dodgers out of high school, but didn’t sign. A few years later, the Orioles would get him.
 
“There were a couple (of teams showing interest in me in 2020),” he said. “But Baltimore was definitely the one showing the most interest and the one I had the most contact with before signing in ’20. So it was a no-doubter for me who I was going to sign with after the shortened Covid season and the shortened draft.”
 
So for now, Watson flies under the radar as an unranked prospect. Does he care about that?
 
“It doesn’t really bother me. I use it, I guess you could say, as motivation you know. I’ve always thrown with a chip on my shoulder. That doesn’t really bother me, but I guess you could say that adds a bit of extra motivation,” he said during the WBAL Radio interview.

Updates on Orioles signing drafted and undrafted players (more)

Updates on Orioles signing drafted and undrafted players (more)
On the same day that teams are allowed to begin signing undrafted players, cleared to make some noise following the 48-hour quiet period, the Orioles have reached agreements with two of their selections from last week. Both are high school players chosen at the backend of the abbreviated draft. Both are over-slot. Right-hander Carter Baumler, a fifth-rounder from Dowling Catholic High School in Iowa, has agreed to terms on a $1.5 million contract, as first reported by Prospects 365's Mason...