Baltimore Sun

Rebuild results coming quickly

Machado happy to see progress that dealing him kick-started

- By Nathan Ruiz

SAN DIEGO — On the television inside the Orioles’ clubhouse before Monday night’s game at Petco Park, a group of MLB Network broadcaste­rs discussed whether the best team in the American League should call up the best prospect in baseball, wondering what 19-year-old Jackson Holliday could bring to Baltimore’s lineup. The segment came before the Orioles faced a player who they promoted in that aggressive fashion a little more than 11 years ago.

Manny Machado has grown a lot, as a player and a person, since he was a 20-year-old joining Baltimore straight from Double-A for its 2012 playoff push. He’s now in his fifth season with the San Diego Padres, with many more to come after he signed an 11-year, $350 million extension this spring. But his time with them thus far still leaves him nearly a full season’s worth of games short of the total he played with the Orioles after his August 2012 call-up.

His tenure in Baltimore ended just shy of six years later, when the Orioles started their rebuild by trading Machado to the Los Angeles Dodgers amid their dreadful 2018 season, the first of four straight campaigns in which they finished with one of baseball’s five worst records. But five years later, they’re the leaders in the AL East, and Machado’s Padres are one of baseball’s biggest underperfo­rmers.

But he’s pleased to see that Baltimore’s process has paid off, saying that this year’s team reminds him of the group he was a part of that won more games than any other AL club from 2012 to 2016, a stretch that features the Orioles’ only three playoff berths in the past 25 years.

“It takes me back to when I played there, winning baseball, and obviously, they brought back that culture,” Machado said Monday. “It’s been a big sports city for a long time, so to see them go and clean house and rebuild that in a short period of time to be where they’re at today, it’s pretty impressive.

“It’s happened fast. I’ve never seen a team rebuild that quickly. … This year, they’ve shown that they could take the [AL] East. It’s impressive to see that, in such a short period of time, what they’re doing over there.”

Machado, who turned 31 last month, was a pending free agent when the Orioles dealt him to Los Angeles for five prospects, only one of whom is still in the organizati­on. Right-hander Dean Kremer is scheduled to start Wednesday’s series finale, which could present his first matchup with Machado.

But this week doesn’t represent Machado’s first reunion with his former team, with the Orioles hosting and visiting the Padres in 2019, Machado’s first season in San Diego after signing there following a run to the World Series with the Dodgers. His goal remains to make it back and win it, but this season, the Orioles are better positioned to do so than the Padres, who entered the series 56-62 and 5 games back of a playoff spot. After finishing in the top three of National League Most Valuable Player voting two of the past three years, Machado is having a relatively down season but still considered an above-average performer with a .256 batting average, .778 OPS and 21 home runs through Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States