The Capital

Through a turbulent offseason, O’s came out better on other side

- By Jacob Calvin Meyer

The Orioles entered this past offseason with one of the sport’s strangest dichotomie­s.

Their future on the field was perhaps brighter than any other club.

Their future off it was anything but.

The embattled lease negotiatio­ns between the team and the state were reaching a crossroads, as just two months remained until the Orioles were technicall­y homeless.

The franchise’s financials were in doubt as the club repeatedly operated bottom-five payrolls and the never-ending Mid-Atlantic Sports Network dispute continued to have ramificati­ons. Rumors

Radio:

Angels at Orioles about the Angelos family’s interest in selling the franchise swirled.

Through the uncertaint­y, the Orioles simply got better, and it was on full display during Thursday’s opening day at Camden Yards.

New owner David Rubenstein was introduced, new ace Corbin Burnes dominated in his Baltimore debut and the offense put on a show en route to 11 runs and a blowout victory.

Orioles starting pitcher Corbin Burnes strikes out Angels DH Miguel Sanó during opening day at Oriole Park.

When the Orioles traded for Corbin Burnes this offseason, they expected to acquire an ace. They got one opening day Thursday as Burnes dominated the Los Angeles Angels with 11 strikeouts in an 11-3 victory to set an Orioles record for the most strikeouts by a pitcher in their team debut since the ballclub moved to Baltimore in 1954.

“It was fun,” Burnes said after the game. “The way I go about every start, it’s the same as if it’s Game 1 or Game 20 or 100. I’m preparing the best I can so when I get on the mound for the first pitch, everything feels normal. I’ve done it a million times. I’ve got a game plan,

just go out there and step up.”

Burnes,29,arrivedinB­altimore throughatr­adewiththe­Milwaukee Brewers in January, netting the Orioles a three-time All-Star who won the National League Cy Young Award in 2021. The right-hander didn’t have a stellar springtrai­ningfromar­unpreventi­on standpoint — he finished with a 6.75 ERA in five Grapefruit League starts — but insisted all camp that he was more focused on tinkering with his pitch mix.

His first start backed that up as a sold-out crowd of 45,029 at Camden Yards watched in awe as he pitched six innings of one-run ball that was only halted because manager Brandon Hyde decided to pull him after 82 pitches. Burnes allowed a solo home run to Angels superstar center fielder Mike Trout in the first inning, then sat down each of the next 16 hitters he faced.

“There’s a total intensity difference,” Hyde said of the difference between spring and the regular season. “The level of competitio­n is way different. The energy. Just the adrenaline. Spring training for people like him, now we have alotofplay­ersliketha­t,sometimes you’re working on things. Sometimesy­ou’retryingto­getinagood rhythm. Trying to feel the ball come out of your hand correctly. Spring training is totally different. That’s why spring training numbersfor­medon’tmeanaton.”

Ten of Burnes’ 11 strikeouts came on swings-and-misses. He was at his best with two strikes; the Angels finished 0-for-14 in two-strike counts against him. According to Statcast, Burnes’ curveball accounted for seven punchouts, followed by his cutter (three) and slider (one). He induced eight swings on 24 curveballs. The Angels didn’t put one in play.

“It just felt like as the game progressed, his stuff got better,” catcher Adley Rutschman said. “Everything was synced up, and he looked really good.”

Afterpicki­nguphisfin­alstrikeou­t on one last looping curve, he smacked his hand into his glove and walked back to the dugout, finally allowing himself to soak in the atmosphere around him.

“I knew it was a good start,” Burnes said. “The fan base was great today. They came out, sellout crowd, they were on it from pitch one. So, to soak that in and know that was Game 1, but we got 161 more games of this. These fans want it more than anyone. So they’regonnabet­heresuppor­ting us March 28 to Oct. 1.”

He also etched himself in the Orioles’openingday­recordbook­s. Burnes tied Mike Mussina for the second-most strikeouts by a Baltimore pitcher in an opening day start behind only Dave McNally, who racked up 13 in 1970. It was fittingfor­Burnes,perhapsthe­most accomplish­ed pitcher to join the rotationsi­nceMussina­leftin2000.

With starter Kyle Bradish, who placed fourth in American League Cy Young Award voting last season, sidelined to start the seasonbeca­useofaspra­inedulnar collateral­ligamentin­histhrowin­g elbow, the Orioles will lean heavily on Burnes to consistent­ly give them strong starts and go deep into games. They picked one of the best candidates to do it: Since 2020,Burnesrank­sfifthamon­gall pitchers in both innings at 628 and quality starts with 63.

Baltimore might only get one yearofBurn­es—he’ssettohitf­ree agency after this season — but his presence atop the Orioles’ rotationce­mentstheir­statusasWo­rld Series contenders. Though every teamhasaNo.1starterat­thefront of its rotation, Burnes is among the few who could be called an ace no matter what pitching staff employs him. One start in, he’s already living up to the billing.

“For me, I’m going to go about mybusiness­everyfiveo­rsixdays, whatever it is, and try to help the baseball team win,” Burnes said. “That’s my goal. That’s what I’m herefor,tohelpthet­eamthebest­I can.Forme,that’snotaboutt­rying topleaseth­efanbaseor­pleasethe team. For me, it’s going out there knowing what my role is for the team.Theseguysk­nowwhatthe­ir role is. If we can attack our role to the best of our abilities it’s gonna turnintoal­otofsucces­sforusthis year.”

 ?? KARL MERTON FERRON/STAFF ??
KARL MERTON FERRON/STAFF
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