Baltimore Sun

Biggest questions still remain to be answered

- By Jon Meoli

The latest adjustment to baseball’s calendar because of the coronaviru­s pandemic is the reworked MLB winter meetings, which were meant to be held as an in-person event this week in Dallas to jump-start the offseason.

Instead, the industry meetings and all the other accoutreme­nts of the week are being held virtually.

That doesn’t mean, however, that the offseason is at a different stage than the meetings’ annual arrival would suggest. Teams, including the Orioles, will still use the time as a way to check in with other clubs and set their course internally for the coming year.

The Orioles’ brass won’t be in Dallas the way they were meant to be this week, but either way, here are four questions that will need to be answered as the virtual event kicks off Monday:

1. Is there anyone left to trade?

General manager and executive vice president Mike Elias has spent the past two years using any experience­d players on the Orioles roster who weren’t part of the team’s long-term plan as trade chips for prospects who can help in the future, to the point that it’s unclear who is actually left to be moved.

The pricey remainders of the contracts for first baseman

Chris Davis and right-hander Alex Cobb are the team’s biggest financial commitment­s, though the former is untradeabl­e and it’s unclear of the market for the latter.

Below them, the players in the team’s trading window in terms of a salary well above the league minimum and appeal to other teams are outfielder­s Trey Mancini and Anthony Santander. They’re the team’s two most recent Most Valuable Orioles, and Mancini was already a fan favorite before he missed this season battling colon cancer. Moving either would be tough to justify, even for an organizati­on that has made its plan clear for the past two years.

That doesn’t leave much more in terms of trade assets. That’s not to say that some of the players who signed ahead of the arbitratio­n process this month or the free agents who join them on the 2021 Orioles won’t be candidates in July, but until then, the trade market for the Orioles might be a cool one.

Compared with the first offseason under Elias, last offseason was an active one in terms of player acquisitio­ns.

The Orioles signed starting pitcher Kohl Stewart to a big league deal at the end of December and infielder José Iglesias in the first week in January, and then ended up with meaningful minor league free-agent signings in reliever Cesár Valdez and catcher Bryan Holaday later that month. Left-handers Wade LeBlanc and Tommy Milone were minor league free-agent signings in February.

The Orioles’ needs are the same with a thin infield and uncertain rotation depth. This week, they’ll likely get a better impression of where the market is and whether they can find value by moving quickly on a target who is in their price range, or whether they’ll be better suited waiting out what could already be a slow and depressed market to get such players on lower-risk, less-expensive minor league deals.

History shows that the Orioles will likely wait out the market. What’s less clear is just what will be available to them once they decide to dive in.

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