Baltimore Sun

Five-player package from Dodgers fills gaps for O’s

- By Jon Meoli jmeoli@baltsun.com twitter.com/JonMeoli

In acquiring a five-player prospect package from the Los Angeles Dodgers for All-Star shortstop Manny Machado on Wednesday, including Cuban center fielder Yusniel Díaz, pitchers Dean Kremer and Zach Pop, and infielders Rylan Bannon and Breyvic Valera, the Orioles continued a process that began in last month’s MLB draft of using this summer’s talent-acquisitio­n opportunit­ies to fill in the gaps in their farm system.

The Orioles, by virtue of some improved draft classes, have loads of high-floor pitching, and have used 2017 and 2018 first-rounders DL Hall and Grayson Rodriguez to add some possible impact to that group. They’re also well-set in corner outfield bats in the high minors, and don’t have a single up-the-middle infielder in full-season ball. Oregon State shortstop Cadyn Grenier, their second draft pick this year, changed that.

So it’s no surprise that in selecting players from the Dodgers’ system to trade for Machado, the Orioles filled somemorega­ps.

Díaz is a higher-ceiling center field prospect than the ones the Orioles have in the high minors, Cedric Mullins and Ryan McKenna. Bannon joins Grenier as an intriguing infield prospect. Kremer joins a thin crop of pitching prospects in the high minors, a list that pretty much only includes the injured Hunter Harvey and left-hander Keegan Akin at Bowie. Pop is a hardthrowi­ng reliever in a system in which they’re scarce. Valera is the Orioles’ latest attempt at a utility man, a role they haven’t filled since Ryan Flaherty left last year. Yusniel Díaz, CF: The centerpiec­e of the deal, though, is Díaz, the 21-year-old Cuban outfielder the Dodgers signed after he won the Serie Nacional Rookie of the Year award in Cuba in 2015. Díaz debuted stateside in 2016, but took a major leap forward this summer at Double-ATulsa. Many credit his health, and a refined approach at the plate, for helping him unlock his potential at the plate.

Díaz impressed with a pair of home runs at Sunday’s MLB All-Star Futures Game before a pair of Orioles scouts and is batting .314 with a .905 OPS in 59 games for the Drillers. Even before that, he was one of the breakout prospects in all of the minor leagues, though it’s not as if he was a secret.

Defensivel­y, he has the speed and arm for all three positions, playing primarily center field in the Dodgers’ system. Yusniel Díaz, left, hit two home runs for the World Team in the All-Star Futures Game at Nationals Park on Sunday. Rylan Bannon, IF: Bannon is another infield prospect to add to the Orioles’ low minors along with Grenier and 2017 first-day draft pick Adam Hall. A teammate of Orioles left-hander Zac Lowther at Xavier, Bannon won Big East Player of the Year honors in 2017 as Lowther was named Pitcher of the Year. The Dodgers selected him in the eighth round last year and jumped Bannon, 22, right to High-ARancho Cucamonga to start 2018 after he played rookie ball last year. Despite not showing much power until his final year at Xavier, he’s homered 20 times with 16 doubles in the hitter-friendly California League, helping him to a .296/.402/.559 line in 89 games. Dean Kremer, RHP: Kremer, who recently was promoted to Double-A Tulsa, was back-and-forth between the bullpen and starting rotation in parts of two seasons before he was in the Rancho Cucamonga rotation full-time this year. Kremer, a 14th-round pick from Nevada-Las Vegas in 2016, responded well, posting a 3.30 ERA in 17 starts with 114 strikeouts in 79 innings with a1.18 WHIP — impressive numbers for a hitter’s league. He struck out 11 in seven scoreless innings in his debut for Tulsa on July 5, and hasn’t pitched since. Zach Pop, RHP: Pop, too, defied the California League’s reputation to pitch well there before the trade. A 2017 seventhrou­nd pick out of Kentucky, Pop has dominated two levels with a sinker-slider combo in his first full year as a pro. His fastball runs 94-97 mph and has substantia­l horizontal break, complement­ed by a short, tight slider from a low 3/4 arm slot. Like most relievers, he needs to command them consistent­ly for success. Breyvic Valera, IF: The only piece with major league experience of the group is Valera, a 26-year-old Venezuelan infielder who came to the Dodgers from the Cardinals at the end of spring training. A career .302 minor league hitter, Valera hasn’t hit for much power in his career, and has six hits — all singles — in 39 major league at-bats.

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ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES

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