Baltimore Sun Sunday

O’s need move to shake fans out of doldrums

-

Now, nobody is saying that FanFest is some sort of deadline for upgrading the team that finished at the bottom of the American League East last season. But it is a mile marker on the road to the club’s spring training complex in Sarasota, Fla., where the first pitcher/catcher workout will take place in just three weeks.

FanFest also has long been considered the perfect time to put a charge into advance ticket sales, and it’s no coincidenc­e that the Orioles will put single-game tickets for the 2018 season on sale Thursday.

If Duquette were the second coming of P.T. Barnum, he’d be sure to drop some big Orioles news on us over the next few days, and maybe he will. He just hasn’t done anything yet that would make you want to set aside a bunch of your warm summer nights this far in advance.

The Orioles have to know that attendance has dropped in each of the past three years and now is threatenin­g to fall below two million for the first time since Duquette arrived on the scene.

They can cite all sorts of reasons for that, from the Freddie Gray unrest to the presence of a giant high-def television in just about every home. But there’s only one thing the Orioles have the power to exercise control over, and that is the quality of the product they put on the field.

There is only one way to change the prevailing narrative that the team is headed toward a competitiv­e abyss — a time not so far ahead when there could be no Manny Machado or Adam Jones or Zach Britton or Jonathan Schoop.

The Orioles have to demonstrat­e in some tangible way that they haven’t given up on competing for a playoff berth this year, even if that must seem like an impossible dream with the New York Yankees ascending and the cost of quality free-agent starting pitching almost prohibitiv­e.

Orioles fans aren’t greedy. They know they’re not going to wake up Saturday to the revelation that the Orioles swept in and signed bigmoney starter Yu Darvish, even though the smaller-market Minnesota Twins seem to be in the running.

The Twins and the Orioles are in similar situations. The Twins are a year away from possibly losing Joe Mauer and Brian Dozier to free agency and they badly need to flesh out their starting rotation. The big difference is that the Twins are coming off a playoff year and an impact pitcher might put them in better position to challenge for the AL Central title.

The Orioles probably aren’t that close, especially after the Yankees blew past them last season and then acquired superstar Giancarlo Stanton to pair with young slugger Aaron Judge. Oh, and they also might sign Darvish.

It bears repeating that Duquette has waited out the free-agent market before and come away with an impact player at a bargain-basement price (Nelson Cruz). He obviously is hoping the market remains frozen while multiple teams bid on Darvish and Jake Arrieta, allowing him to pick off a pitcher in the second tier.

If not, the projected starting rotation starts and ends with Dylan Bundy and Kevin Gausman. The other three spots are wide open, though one of those jobs probably is Miguel Castro’s to lose. The other candidates are all recyclable­s, with Mike Wright getting one more chance because he’s out of options and Gabriel Ynoa showing a bit of promise in four September starts.

Unless the front office has given up hope, the Orioles need at least one legitimate No. 3 starter if they hope to avoid another rotation meltdown like the one they experience­d in 2017.

That’s the storyline heading into FanFest. It would nice if the Orioles could do something before then to change the subject.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States