The Maui News - Weekender

Orioles send former No. 1 pick Jackson Holliday back to minors

- By DAVID GINSBURG

BALTIMORE — Highly touted prospect Jackson Holliday has been optioned to the minor leagues by the Baltimore Orioles after starting his big league career with a disappoint­ing thud.

Holliday was promoted from Triple-A Norfolk on April 10 amid plenty of fanfare, but the 20-yearold second baseman managed only two hits — both singles — and two walks in 36 plate appearance­s over 10 games. He struck out 18 times and was batting .059 with one RBI and a .111 on-base percentage.

The Orioles tried to rest him periodical­ly, but Holliday, the top pick in the 2022 MLB draft, never busted out of his funk at the plate. So, Baltimore sent him back to Norfolk on Friday before opening a three-game series at home against the Oakland Athletics.

“We decided to call him up and see how the translatio­n to the major leagues would go on a short-term basis,” general manager Mike Elias said. “What we have seen here led me to the evaluation and opinion that he would benefit from going back and adjusting there rather than doing it here in real time.”

Holliday will seek to regain his form at the plate with Norfolk, where he batted .333 with five doubles, two homers and nine RBIs in 10 games this season before being summoned by the Orioles.

Holliday excelled in the minors last season and was dominating Triple-A pitching at Norfolk, but that didn’t translate to success at the major league level during his time with Baltimore this month.

“He got very intense, very specific feedback from major league pitching,” Elias said. “He’s a brilliant talent and a very sharp kid, and I expect he’s going to go implement those adjustment­s really quickly. But we felt that Triple-A and steady playing time in

Triple-A was the place for that, for a number of different reasons.”

Most notable is that the Orioles can’t afford to nurse Holliday along while vying to repeat as division champions.

“We’ve got a team in a tight race in the American League East, and it’s just not an optimal place to be doing player developmen­t for a kid like him,” Elias said.

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