The Capital

As club slow-plays Rutschman, his 2019 draft peers are already fighting for big-league jobs

- By Jon Meoli

Every few days, the Orioles bring top prospect Adley Rutschman over from their minor league site at Twin Lakes Park to their major league facility across town in Sarasota, Florida, and give him a taste of what it’s like.

On the other side of the baseball world in Arizona, the two players selected after him in the 2019 draft

— Kansas City Royals shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. and Chicago White Sox slugger Andrew Vaughn — are playing far more often and forcing conversati­ons to make their teams.

That’s no cause for any kind of second-guessing a selection that landed the Orioles one of the consensus top prospects in baseball, a catcher that has generated lofty expectatio­ns for when he arrives in the majors by virtue of his talent and track record in college.

It is, however, cause to consider what this current version of the Orioles value and how far down the road it will be before their mission of growing talented players in the minors leads to young stars producing at the major league level for a competitiv­e team.

Simply put, this spring has been a reminder that they’re not even close to that.

Rutschman having more than 12 at-bats over six spring training games wouldn’t accelerate that timeline, though how the Royals are using Witt and talking about the chance that he can play himself onto the team — however unlikely — speaks a bit to what they’re trying to do.

Royals general manager Dayton Moore said in a radio interview this week that the team didn’t want to create an aura around Witt, but let him be himself and make an impression on and off the field. He’s done so to the point that Moore said he’s “open-minded” about Witt making the team out of spring training, though it’s a tough ask for a player drafted out of high school in 2019 who had such a limited 2020 in the way so many minor leaguers did.

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