Baltimore Sun Sunday

Five Orioles storylines to watch

- Eencina@baltsun.com twitter.com/EddieInThe­Yard

Orioles’ winning philosophy remains — at least for the next two seasons — centered on their middle-of-the-order power bats. The Orioles led the majors with 253 homers last season, but 152 of those came with the bases empty, so having a catalyst who can get on base and make opposing pitchers uncomforta­ble would help the team’s impressive power numbers translate into more run production.

Showalter would rather have Jones and Machado in the heart of the order, and it’s undoubtedl­y where they most belong. Rule 5 draft pick Joey Rickard filled the leadoff spot well early, making 40 of his 64 rookie-season starts atop the batting order, but he cooled off after a quick start, hitting just .240/.297/.347 from the leadoff position. A midseason thumb injury prevented the Orioles from seeing whether Rickard could handle the long haul of a major league season.

Hyun Soo Kim might be best suited after leading the team with a .382 on-base percentage in 95 games in his first big league season, but Kim still needs to show an ability to hit left-handed pitching — something he really didn’t get the opportunit­y to do in 2016 — before he can be considered an everyday option. Offseason trade acquisitio­n Seth Smith, a left-handed platoon bat, could also be a leadoff option, but only against right-handers.

Even though Showalter wants to avoid it, if the power bats go cold, don’t be surprised if he turns to Jones to spark the lineup again. For now, possibly the most curious question going into the offseason is whether Showalter can find one leadoff hitter or will resort to matchups atop the batting order. Starting rotation reserves: The Orioles entered the offseason with six projected starters for five rotation spots. That quickly solved itself when they dealt right-hander Yovani Gallardo, and his contract, to the Seattle Mariners for Smith. What it left, however, was an unsure cabinet of starting pitching depth beyond the club’s projected Opening Day rotation.

There are candidates aplenty, and the conversati­on has to start with right-handers Mike Wright and Tyler Wilson, who both made the Opening Day 25-man roster and the starting rotation early in the season before going through growing pains that landed them a seat on the shuttle to Triple-A Norfolk.

They have to earn a roster spot again, but Wright and Wilson might be better prepared for the physical and mental challenges of the big leagues without the pressure of being pushed into the rotation early on.

But the Orioles have addressed their need for pitching depth this offseason by acquiring young swingmen who can serve different roles in a pinch and don’t handcuff the roster, reuniting with former Rule 5 pick Logan Verrett and acquiring right-hander Gabriel Ynoa last week through painless trades with the pitching-rich New York Mets.

Like Wright and Wilson, those two have plenty to prove, and other alternativ­es in the minors such as left-hander Chris Lee and right-hander Joe Gunkel are plenty green as well. But there will be an opportunit­y for most because the rotation is likely to change.

Whether it’s through injury or poor performanc­e, every team’s rotation depth is tested at some point. This spring, one of the Orioles’ primary focuses will be determinin­g their best options when that scenario arises. Sorting out the outfield mix: The most interestin­g comment coming out of last month’s FanFest was Jones’ saying the team’s outfield defense must get better. His assessment isn’t off base, at least according to FanGraphs numbers that ranked the Orioles’ outfield defense as the majors’ worst with a cumulative ultimate zone runs per 150 games (UZR/150), an indicator of range and plays made on batted balls, of minus-11.2.

They have plenty of bodies. Including the team’s two Rule 5 picks, there are nine outfielder­s on the organizati­on’s 40-man roster entering camp, but it’s a group, with the exception of Jones, that doesn’t impress anyone defensivel­y. The Orioles believe there are ways to compensate for that, but that’s yet to be seen.

Though Mark Trumbo will get most of his at-bats in the designated hitter spot, he might be forced to play right field on occasion against left-handed pitchers because Smith will play only against righthande­rs. The biggest question is whether Kim can start to hold his own against left-handers after he was 0-for-17 with four walks against them last season. If he can, it would allow for more flexibilit­y and possible playing time in right field, where it might be easier to play defense at Camden Yards.

One thing is for sure: Showalter will get his looks at all of his outfield candidates early on in spring training. Because of this year’s longer spring — a result of this year’s World Baseball Classic — Showalter said he won’t play his veteran regulars often early on, which will provide plenty of innings to sort out who fits where at the corners. Continuing to build into spring training: One of the annual rites of spring training under executive vice president Dan Duquette is when the Ed Smith Stadium complex media room transforms into a makeshift news conference room for the Orioles’ latest spring training addition.

Over the years, it’s where the team announces 11th-hour signings. Duquette reaped the benefit of patience by netting team-friendly deals with Nelson Cruz and Pedro Alvarez. Others haven’t worked out quite as well, such as deals with Gallardo, Ubaldo Jimenez and Suk-Min Yoon.

But Duquette is consistent in his message that he is intent on building the Orioles on a year-round basis, and that means he will still be working to add in spring training. There are no more players tied to qualifying offers to sign to below-market deals, and even though this year’s free-agent market was slow to develop, there’s been some quick movement in recent days as players look to find homes.

Still, there’s plenty of bargain-bin shopping to be had, especially among veteran pitching. With the clock ticking until spring training, many unsigned arms might have to PITCHERS No. Name 64 Jayson Aquino 35 Brad Brach 68 Parker Bridwell 53 Zach Britton 37 Dylan Bundy 71 Oliver Drake 61 Jason Garcia 39 Kevin Gausman 60 Mychal Givens 43 Joe Gunkel 58 Donnie Hart 31 Ubaldo Jimenez 62 Chris Lee 65 Jesus Liranzo 66 T.J. McFarland 38 Wade Miley 56 Darren O’Day 51 Logan Ondrusek 30 Chris Tillman 41 Logan Verrett 63 Tyler Wilson 59 Mike Wright — Gabriel Ynoa CATCHERS 29 Welington Castillo 36 Caleb Joseph INFIELDERS 19 Chris Davis 3 Ryan Flaherty 2 J.J. Hardy 13 Manny Machado 6 Jonathan Schoop OUTFIELDER­S 17 Dariel Alvarez 10 Adam Jones 25 Hyun Soo Kim 23 Joey Rickard 54 Anthony Santander 12 Seth Smith 57 Aneury Tavarez 45 Mark Trumbo 34 Christian Walker DESIGNATED HITTERS 67 Trey Mancini PITCHERS 52 Nate Adcock 73 Jed Bradley 70 Richard Rodriguez 50 Zach Stewart CATCHERS 75 Yermin Mercedes 76 Audry Perez 74 Chance Sisco INFIELDERS — Robert Andino 16 Johnny Giavotella OUTFIELDER­S 18 Chris Dickerson 28 Logan Schafer 72 David Washington B/T L/L R/R R/R L/L S/R R/R R/R L/R R/R R/R L/L R/R L/L R/R L/L L/L R/R R/R R/R R/R R/R R/R R/R R/R R/R L/R L/R R/R R/R R/R R/R R/R L/R R/L S/R L/L L/R R/R R/R R/R R/R L/L R/R R/R R/R R/R L/R R/R R/R L/L L/L L/L Ht 6-1 6-6 6-4 6-3 6-1 6-4 6-0 6-3 6-0 6-5 5-11 6-5 6-3 6-2 6-3 6-0 6-4 6-8 6-5 6-2 6-2 6-6 6-2 5-10 6-3 6-3 6-3 6-1 6-3 6-1 6-2 6-2 6-2 6-1 6-2 6-3 5-9 6-4 6-0 6-4 6-4 6-3 6-4 6-2 5-11 5-10

6-2 5-11 5-8 6-4 6-1 6-5 Wt 225 215 185 195 200 215 185 190 210 225 180 210 180 175 220 220 220 230 200 190 185 215 205 220 180 230 220 200 185 225 180 215 210 185 190 210 175 225 220 215 235 225 205 205 175 220 195 185 185 230 200 260

DOB 11/22/92 4/12/86

8/2/91 12/22/87 11/15/92

1/13/87 11/21/92

1/6/91 5/13/90 12/30/91

9/6/90 1/22/84 8/17/92 3/7/95 6/8/89 11/13/86 10/22/82 2/13/85 4/15/88 6/19/90 9/25/89

1/3/90 5/26/93 4/24/87 6/18/86 3/17/86 7/27/86 8/19/82 7/6/92 10/16/91 11/7/88

8/1/85 1/12/88 5/21/91 10/19/94 9/30/82 4/14/92 1/16/86 3/28/91 3/18/92 2/25/88 6/12/90

3/4/90 9/28/86

2/14/93 12/23/88

2/24/95 4/25/84 7/10/87 4/10/82 9/8/86 11/20/90 settle for minor league deals, which are low-risk, high-reward signings. Those freeagent swingmen still waiting calls include right-hander Doug Fister and left-hander Travis Wood. There are plenty of relievers unsigned as well, including former Oriole Tommy Hunter. Outfielder Michael Bourn, despite being another left-handed bat, could add an element this club lacks.

Staying on the subject of reunions, Wieters remains looking for a job, and the longer he stays unsigned, the more likely a reunion becomes possible. With the addition of catcher Welington Castillo and Trumbo returning to fill the DH spot, there at Detroit-a. 1:05 at Pittsburgh-b (ss) vs. Pittsburgh-c, 1:05 vs. N.Y. Yankees-c, 1:05 at Philadelph­ia-d, 1:05 vs. Boston-c, 1:05 (ss) vs. Minnesota-c, 7:05 (ss) at N.Y. Yankees-e, 6:35 at Pittsburgh-b, 1:05 at Tampa Bay-f, 1:05 vs. Philadelph­ia (ss)-c, 1:05 at Detroit-a, 1:05 vs. Dominican Republic-c (WBC), 1:05 8 vs. Toronto-c, 1:05 9 OFF 10 at Boston-g, 6:05 11 vs. Pittsburgh-c, 1:05 12 at Minnesota-g (ss), 1:05 13 vs. Philadelph­ia-c, 1:05 14 vs. Tampa Bay-c (ss), 1:05 15 at Pittsburgh-b, 1:05 16 vs. Philadelph­ia-c, 7:05 17 at Pittsburgh-b, 1:05 18 at N.Y. Yankees-e, 1:05 19 vs. Detroit-c, 1:05 20 at Boston-g, 1:05 21 vs. Toronto-c, 1:05 22 vs. Tampa Bay-c, 7:05 23 OFF 24 at Minnesota-g, 7:05 25 vs. Minnesota-c, 7:05 26 at Toronto-h (ss), 1:07 27 vs. Boston-c, 1:05 28 at Atlanta-i, 1:05 29 at Tampa Bay-f; 1:05 30 vs. Detroit-c, 1:05 Note: a—Lakeland; b—Bradenton; c—Sarasota ; d—Clearwater; e— Tampa; f—Port Charlotte; g—Fort Myers; h—Dunedin; i—Disney World aren’t many available at-bats for Wieters. But until Wieters is in another uniform, a possible return can’t completely be dismissed. The annual Rule 5 problem: The Orioles have done an exemplary job of plucking players out of the Rule 5 draft, and they only need look to last spring to see an example of that success in Rickard. The Grapefruit League season opened with the Orioles wondering how they’d be able to carry Rickard on the roster, and it ended with them unable to find a reason he shouldn’t be in the Opening Day lineup.

The Orioles face the same situation with two Rule 5 picks — outfielder­s Aneury Tavarez and Anthony Santander. As mentioned above, the outfield mix is crowded, so it will be difficult to carry one, let alone both.

Tavarez, 24, is the easier fit because he provides an on-base and speed element the Orioles don’t have. He had a .374 on-base percentage and seven triples and stole 20 bases between Double-A and Triple-A with the Red Sox, so he naturally fills a need.

Despite not playing beyond the Low-A level, Santander, 22, will draw comparison­s to fellow Venezuelan Victor Martinez, but he’s coming off surgery on his throwing shoulder. That could play in the Orioles’ favor because if he’s not completely healthy, he could open the season stashed on the disabled list.

The Orioles open the regular season with three days off in their first eight days, so don’t be surprised if they take advantage and carry one fewer pitcher to get a longer look at the Rule 5 picks in the opening week.

 ?? KARL MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Promising right-handers Tyler Wilson, above, and Mike Wright, who both rode the Triple-A shuttle in 2016 after beginning the season as major league starting pitchers, are among candidates to step up if the Orioles need to fill a hole in their 2017 rotation.
KARL MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN Promising right-handers Tyler Wilson, above, and Mike Wright, who both rode the Triple-A shuttle in 2016 after beginning the season as major league starting pitchers, are among candidates to step up if the Orioles need to fill a hole in their 2017 rotation.

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