Baltimore Sun

New duds show off character of the city

City Connect uniforms reflect Baltimore’s neighborho­ods

- By Nathan Ruiz

The Orioles on Monday unveiled their City Connect uniforms, paying tribute to Baltimore with a uniform that, like the city, has more to it than what’s visible from outside.

With a black uniform featuring much of its color on the interior — which the club noted with pride is a first — the Orioles became the 19th team to participat­e in the City Connect series, part of a partnershi­p between Major League Baseball and Nike. Orioles players and coaches will first wear the uniforms in a game Friday night against the Texas Rangers.

A colorful pastel pattern reflecting the city’s neighborho­ods is within the jersey, allowing players to showcase it by opening their collars or rolling up their sleeves, which have the pattern in grayscale on their exterior. The pastel pattern is also within the caps, which include a white “B” logo taken from the Baltimore script featured on the Orioles’ road jersey, and the tongues of the cleats. The script “B” is on a sleeve patch of the jersey that includes a gray version of the neighborho­ods pattern, as well.

While some other teams’ City Connect uniforms have included nicknames for their respective cities — such as “Southside” for the Chicago White Sox and “Space City” for the Houston Astros — the Orioles’ jerseys feature “Baltimore” fully capitalize­d in a white typeface the team said was inspired by the Globe Collection and Press at Maryland Institute College of Art, as well as the city’s arts scene. Within the lettering are specks of black, which the team said are “imperfecti­ons [that] represent the shared grit the Orioles and the Baltimore community possess.” Player names across the back are in orange, the team’s traditiona­l primary color.

The cap, jersey and socks — largely black with the color pattern on the foot and upper

The three-game sweep over the Blue Jays was the Orioles’ first over an AL East opponent since April 2021 against the Red Sox. The last time they swept the Blue Jays was August 2018, and they last did so at Rogers Centre in April 2005.

“In order to sweep, a lot of things have to go your way, and we were able to dominate those moments,” said Cedric Mullins, who went 5-for-6 Sunday and leads the Orioles in OPS (.876) and RBIs (38). “AL East is also a difficult division. For us to pull a sweep off today kind of shows where we are as a team.”

To some, the 31-16 start, good for a 106-win pace over a 162-game season, is a surprise for a young team with the second-lowest payroll in sport at $60.8 million. It might be even more so considerin­g Baltimore was expected — by projection systems and sportsbook­s — to regress.

The vast majority of teams that break the glass ceiling as the Orioles did in 2022 fall back down to earth the following year. That could still happen for the 2023 club, but so far, it looks likely that Baltimore will outperform its projection­s of 74-78 wins. The last time the Orioles were 15 games over .500 was in 2016, the year of their most recent playoff berth.

“I’m not surprised. I’m just encouraged by the start, and I like how we’re playing,” Hyde said. “You look what we did from the middle of May on last year, we’ve played really good baseball for the last year.”

After Saturday’s extra-inning win, lefthanded bench bat Ryan O’Hearn, who blasted a three-run homer to tie the game in the eighth, said how the Orioles played Sunday could “make a statement.” Sunday’s win was far from perfect, as starter Dean Kremer was shaky but battled, Baltimore’s bats were largely stymied by starter Kevin Gausman and, before coming up clutch at the end, the bullpen gave up a one-run lead.

The way they won, though, is emblematic, in O’Hearn’s mind, of the type of team the Orioles are. The comeback win was their 18th of the season, and they’re 9-5 in one-run games.

Hyde used every player on his bench and every available arm in his bullpen. And a game that would’ve been easy to write off as a loss — going up against Gausman with a taxed bullpen and already a series win in hand — turned into another thrilling triumph.

“This team has no quit,” O’Hearn said. “You’ve got quality at-bats up and down the lineup, a nasty bullpen, guys play great defense. I think when you bring all those things together, the sky’s the limit.

“It’s pretty fun to be a part of right now.” Hyde, understand­ably, is wary of declaring any single game out of 162 a “statement.” While the Orioles are just 2 ½ games back of the Rays, who started the season with 13 consecutiv­e wins, they’re one bad series away from being tied with the Yankees, who they play in New York this week, and just six games ahead of last place in the division.

“We’ve got four-plus months to go,” Hyde said, “and it’s gonna be a battle.”

What’s to come?

Last week, Hyde remarked that his club’s success has come while also seeing some of the best starters in the sport. In May alone, the Orioles have squared up against Tampa Bay’s Shane McClanahan, Atlanta’s Max Fried and Spencer Strider, and Los Angeles Angels superstar Shohei Ohtani.

One pitcher Hyde mentioned that his team has yet to face is New York Yankees ace Gerrit Cole. That’ll end Tuesday when the Orioles take on the five-time All-Star in New York in the first of a three-game series. Baltimore will also face All-Star Nestor Cortes, who is 4-0 with a 1.37 ERA against the Orioles in his career, on Wednesday. Kyle Bradish, Tyler Wells and Kyle Gibson will toe the slab for the Orioles.

The Yankees (29-20) are the hottest team in the AL East with 11 wins in their past 14 games. After New York, the Orioles open a six-game homestand with a weekend series versus the Texas Rangers (29-17), whose plus-108 run differenti­al ranks second in the majors.

What was good?

The skipper. Hyde’s managerial decisions played a big part in multiple of the Orioles’ wins last week.

On Tuesday, his pinch-hitters combined to go 3-for-4 with two RBIs and two runs in Baltimore’s 7-3 win over the Angels. After

O’Hearn hit a solo homer out the No. 9 hole, Hyde pinch-hit for him in just the fourth inning, slotting in Mountcastl­e, who doubled in his first at-bat. In the sixth, pinch-hitter Ryan McKenna doubled and then scored on Mountcastl­e’s two-run blast. He also pinchhit Vavra in extras Sunday, and the utilityman delivered with the biggest hit of the game.

On Saturday, he kept Félix Bautista in for the 10th to pitch a rare second inning, and the closer rewarded him by striking out the side to slam the door. He also, despite the Orioles being on the road, gave veteran Adam Frazier the choice to bunt or swing away in his plate appearance to lead off the 10th, and Frazier’s sacrifice bunt put Mountcastl­e in position to score on Austin Hays’ ground ball.

It wasn’t a perfect week, of course. All three relievers he chose to pitch in the eighth inning of Thursday’s one-run loss faltered as the Angels came back to win. But Hyde played a large part in the Orioles’ 5-2 week.

What wasn’t?

Jorge Mateo, again.

The shortstop was the Orioles’ best hitter in April, ending the month with a 1.062 OPS with six home runs in 23 games. In his 56 at-bats in May, though, Mateo has just six hits for a .107 average and a .261 OPS. The shortstop went 2-for-18 last week.

On the season, he’s still been a better hitter than he was last season. His .716 OPS is significan­tly better than the .646 mark he posted in 2022, but it’s a precipitou­s drop from his impressive April production.

On the farm

Colton Cowser was having one of the best seasons of any Triple-A hitter, but his hot start has been paused because of a left quad injury that landed him on the injured list. Cowser, the Orioles’ second-best prospect still in the minors, was slashing .331/.469/.554 for an impressive 1.023 OPS.

The only prospect in the Orioles’ minor league system ahead of Cowser, meanwhile, had himself another stellar week. Jackson Holliday continued his torrid start to the season by going 13-for-21 with eight extra-base hits and 14 RBIs in High-A Aberdeen. He’s now hitting .394 with a 1.214 OPS between Low-A and High-A.

 ?? BALTIMORE ORIOLES ?? Anthony Santander shows off the Orioles’ City Connect uniform.
BALTIMORE ORIOLES Anthony Santander shows off the Orioles’ City Connect uniform.

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