Baltimore Sun

6 Orioles named as finalists for honor

Personal recognitio­n reflects team’s overall defensive success over the past season

- By Eduardo A. Encina

In rebuilding the Orioles into a contender, manager Buck Showalter knew a greater priority needed to be placed on playing exceptiona­l defense.

Now, after a year during which the club set standards for defensive excellence, the Orioles are being recognized individual­ly for their defensive play.

Six Orioles were named finalists Friday for Rawlings Gold Glove Awards.

When the winners are announced Tuesday night, Orioles center fielder Adam Jones and catcher Matt Wieters will be going for their third career Gold Gloves. Wieters could win his third consecutiv­e award. Shortstop J.J. Hardy and right fielder Nick Markakis are up for their second career Gold Gloves. Hardy won last season, and Markakis in 2011.

Third baseman Manny Machado and first baseman Chris Davis are first-time finalists.

“I just like the recognitio­n our guys are getting,” Showalter said. “I’m proud of them. And when you tell some of the coaches like [first base and outfield coach] Wayne Kirby, [third base and infield coach] Bobby Dickerson and [bench and catchers

coach] John Russell, they look like proud papas.”

The Orioles are the only team with six finalists. The Kansas City Royals and Los Angeles Dodgers have five finalists, and all four Tampa Bay Rays infielders were named finalists.

“Everybody makes so much of the offense in the American League East, but really it’s about your ability to defend the ball and keep it in the ballpark,” Showalter said. “That’s another way to make your pitching better. I think it’s become something we’ve all tried to create as part of the culture of being an Oriole.”

Machado, 21, is considered a favorite to win in his first full big league season. He could become the first Orioles third baseman to win a Gold Glove since 1975, when Brooks Robinson won the last of his 16 straight.

Machado looks to break the current strangleho­ld on the position held by fellow finalists Adrian Beltre (Texas Rangers) and Evan Longoria (Tampa Bay), who have accounted for the past six American League Gold Gloves at third base. At .973, Machado has a better fielding percentage than either Longoria (.972) or Beltre (.959), and he further distances himself in more advanced fielding metrics.

Davis, whose defensive strides were overshadow­ed by a Most Valuable Playercali­ber season at the plate, was also named a finalist. Only two Orioles first basemen have won the award: Eddie Murray (1982-1984) and Rafael Palmeiro (1997-1998).

There will be a first-time winner at first base this season. Neither of the other two finalists — the Royals’ Eric Hosmer and the Rays’ James Loney — has won a Gold Glove.

Despite not making the playoffs, the Orioles had one of the best defensive seasons of all time. They set a major league record with a .991 team fielding percentage, and their 54 errors was a record low for a 162-game season. They also had a record 119 errorless games.

Gold Glove winners are decided by a vote of managers and coaches; and this year a sabermetri­c element will be considered for the first time and will account for about 25 percent to 30 percent of the decision. Rawlings partnered with the Society for American Baseball Research to create a metric — the SABR Defensive Index — that complement­s the voting process.

The winners will be announced at 8 p.m. Tuesday on ESPN2.

Some of the Orioles’ best teams were built on defense, and the franchise has had multiple Gold Glove winners 18 times, including in each of the past two seasons. Last year, Jones, Hardy and Wieters were honored.

The Orioles won a franchise-record four Gold Gloves five times (1969, 1971, 1973, 1974 and 1975).

Since the award was establishe­d in 1957, the Orioles have won 64 Gold Gloves, third-most in the majors, behind the St. Louis Cardinals (76) and New York Yankees (65).

They could move into second place this year; second baseman Robinson Cano is the Yankees’ only finalist.

Wieters could become the first Oriole to win three straight Gold Glove Awards since right-hander Mike Mussina won four straight from 1996 through 1999. The Minnesota Twins’ Joe Mauer and Kansas City’s Salvador Perez are the other finalists at catcher.

Jones could win his third career Gold Glove, second-most among Orioles outfielder­s, trailing only Paul Blair’s eight. His competitio­n is Kansas City’s Lorenzo Cain and Jacoby Ellsbury of the Boston Red Sox.

Hardy, who is up against Kansas City’s Alcides Escobar and Tampa Bay’s Yunel Escobar, can become the first Orioles shortstop to win back-to-back Gold Gloves since Cal Ripken Jr. in 1991 and 1992. Mark Belanger won eight Gold Gloves at shortstop.

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