Hartford Courant

Three key storylines to watch as spring training begins

- By James O’connell

Baseball is back.

Pitchers and catchers officially report this week across the Grapefruit and Cactus League camps in Florida and Arizona and full-squad workouts are slated for next week.

The new season opens with plenty of intriguing storylines to follow as the countdown to Opening Day begins in earnest.

Here are the three things to watch this spring.

Shohei Ohtani

Do I hear $500 million? Shohei Ohtani is entering what will potentiall­y be his last spring camp as a member of the Los Angeles Angels as the generation­al two-way talent is set to hit the open market at the conclusion of the 2023 season.

The 28-year-old already has an MVP award under his belt from the 2021 campaign while posting a .273/.356/.519 slash line with 34 homers along with a 2.33 ERA in 28 starts last season. To put it simply, Ohtani has performed like an ace pitcher while also being one of the elite hitters in baseball. He figures to command an unpreceden­ted payday.

The looming question is will the Angels — who haven’t had a winning record since 2015 and haven’t made the postseason since 2014 — be able to do what it takes to keep him in Anaheim? After backing out of negotiatio­ns to sell the club, owner Arte Moreno has expressed a desire — obviously — in retaining the two-way superstar.

Here come the Birds?

The Baltimore Orioles stole the hearts of fans across the league last season as the little engine that could. The lovable losers — three 100-loss seasons over the last five seasons and no playoff appearance­s since 2016 — finally got a peek of the light at the end of the tunnel by remaining in contention for a postseason spot throughout the majority of last season. Brandon Hyde’s club (83-79) ended up three games out of the final Wild Card spot.

Is it time to take them slightly more seriously? Top prospect Adley Rutschman made a strong impression in his debut season in 2022 — .806 OPS in 113 games — however, he is just the beginning of the next crop of talent that is ready to make an impact in the bigs for the O’s.

Padres riches

Technicall­y speaking, the Padres will be adding two prolific players to their roster this upcoming season. Former Red Sox shortstop Xander Bogaerts — who inked an 11-year, $280 million contract with San Diego this winter — and Fernando Tatis Jr. who missed all of last season due to injury caused by a motorcycle accident and a PED suspension.

The question is who is playing where?

Tatis Jr. is also a shortstop — however he does have some experience in the outfield playing 24 games out there in 2021 — and he has expressed a desire to remain at the position.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States