Daily Press

Several ex-Tides should help O’s grow

- By Nathan Ruiz

As the Baltimore Orioles embark on the third full season of their organizati­on-wide rebuild, signs of progress are apparent. But many have yet to reach Camden Yards.

Under executive vice president and general manager Mike Elias, Baltimore’s farm system has grown into one almost universall­y considered among the game’s 10 best. The club’s first extensive dive into the internatio­nal market and a series of trades have added young talent in areas that were previously bereft. The “elite talent pipeline” Elias promised to build is well under constructi­on.

Yet in Brandon Hyde’s two years as manager, the major league team remains a work in progress. In 2019, the Orioles lost 108 games, finishing with baseball’s second-worst record. The 2020 season, shortened to 60 games because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, saw the club flirt with a postseason berth into the campaign’s final week, only to still land a top-five draft pick.

“We’ve made strides,” Hyde said. “This is now our third year. I thought we got better last year from the year before in a lot of areas. I thought our players improved, and I’m looking to have that happen again this year.”

Hyde’s lineup has lost three of its most significan­t members as the team traded shortstop José Iglesias and released infielders Hanser Alberto and Renato Núñez. But 2021 will also feature the return of Trey Mancini, an All-Star candidate in 2019 who missed last season while recovering from Stage 3 colon cancer, and Baltimore can hope for full seasons from

Anthony Santander, who followed Mancini in earning Most Valuable Oriole honors in 2020, and Ryan Mountcastl­e, their No. 5 prospect, who shined after a midseason promotion.

Mountcastl­e, the Internatio­nal League MVP in 2019 with the Norfolk Tides, arrived in a wave of debuts, and more are to come. Pitchers Keegan Akin, Dean Kremer and Bruce Zimmermann each had highlights in their end-ofthe-season stints. Like them, Michael Baumann, Zac Lowther and Alexander Wells could be taking turns behind 2019 All-Star John Means in the Orioles’ rotation by season’s end.

Akin, a left-hander, started 24 games for Norfolk in 2019, and Santander (48 games), Zimmerman

(seven games) and Kremer (four games) also spent time with Norfolk in 2019.

Yusniel Diaz, who like Kremer was acquired in the July 2018 trade that sent Manny Machado to the Los Angeles Dodgers and jumpstarte­d Baltimore’s rebuild, and Ryan McKenna join Mountcastl­e in a collection of young outfielder­s. The members who have already reached Baltimore, a group that also features Austin Hays, Cedric Mullins and DJ Stewart, have had their ups and downs at the major league level, and Hyde said it’s on him and his staff to help smooth those out.

Mullins and Stewart spent 60-plus games with the Tides in 2019.

“We need our players that we have here to get better,” Hyde said. “Our job as coaches is to develop these players. It’s not the easiest thing at the major league level as well as playing the schedule that

we have. Playing the schedule that we play (in the American League East), for me, it’s the ultimate competitio­n in really evaluating what we have.”

The Orioles were the AL’s winningest team from 2012-16, but former slugger Chris Davis and his behemoth contract are the vestiges of that era. Baltimore hopes the pending arrivals of prospects, led by 2019 first overall pick Adley Rutschman, can guide the Orioles back to such heights. But in the meantime, the rebuild marches on.

“I want to win as much as anybody else,” Hyde said. “It really hurts to lose, but I feel like we did improve last year, we did get more competitiv­e.

“We’re getting more talented and a little bit more athletic, but we’re pretty young. We have a lot of growing to do still, and our job is to try to get these guys better as quickly as we possibly can.”

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 ?? TERRANCE WILLIAMS/AP ?? Baltimore Orioles manager Brandon Hyde, shown walking off the mound during a game last season, admits his team still has a lot of growing to do.
TERRANCE WILLIAMS/AP Baltimore Orioles manager Brandon Hyde, shown walking off the mound during a game last season, admits his team still has a lot of growing to do.

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