USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Means may be Orioles’ secret weapon

- Gabe Lacques Columnist USA TODAY

BALTIMORE – The best team in the American League, days away from clinching a playoff berth, and now soon after to record its 100th win, found itself last week in an unusual spot for a club so accomplish­ed.

It conducted an audition.

Oh, the Baltimore Orioles know John Means plenty well. Affable 30-year-old, their lone All-Star in 2019, author of the sixth no-hitter in franchise history in 2021.

It’s just that Means threw his most recent major league pitch in April 2022, when they were the doddering but promising Orioles, not the burgeoning powerhouse that entered this week with the second-best record in the major leagues.

Yet these Orioles (93-56) find themselves in an unusual but thoroughly modern predicamen­t, a byproduct of a young team arriving ahead of a theoretica­l schedule and minus the proverbial horses to cover a six-month season.

“We need innings,” manager Brandon Hyde said, and while he was referring to his most recent three starters’ inability to complete five innings, it’s also an appropriat­e macro assessment, given the blinking light on the pitching staff’s hypothetic­al dashboard.

Enter Means.

He walked off the Camden Yards mound on April 13, 2022, feeling tightness in his left forearm, a malady often a forerunner to a torn elbow ligament; two weeks later, he had Tommy John surgery as the Orioles dropped 12 of their first 18 games, seemingly on the way to a sixth consecutiv­e losing season.

Yet less than a month after Means’ surgery, catcher Adley Rutschman joined the club, and it hasn’t been the same since.

As Means climbed the rehab ladder through 2022 and into this year, the club kept adding blue-chip prospects – first Rutschman, then shortstop Gunnar Henderson, prized right arm Grayson Rodriguez this past April, infielder Jordan Westburg after that.

So when Means, his Tommy John return delayed by a back injury, finally took the mound Sept. 19, against the St. Louis Cardinals, he was surrounded by an almost entirely different team than the one he left.

The funny thing is, they need him, too. That night, Means climbed that mound again, felt the rush and the joy and frustratio­n of pitching in the big leagues and, while he was at it, gave Hyde two more outs than he received from his starter the previous three games.

Means pitched five competent innings and, though the Cardinals would win the game 5-2, his outing – 75 pitches and 55 strikes, three runs – certainly raised the prospect that an otherwise indomitabl­e team could add a key weapon come October.

“It’s great to see him pitch the way he did,” Hyde said. “To go five innings and 75 pitches, only make a couple mistakes, holding his fastball velocity, it was close to our target for him his first time out. The adrenaline in the big leagues is way different than any sort of minor league rehab start.

“Really happy with how he looked.” Certainly, there’s not much on-ramp to October. In an effort to further limit their starters’ innings, the Orioles are deploying a six-man rotation. Should they stick with it, that would give Means three more starts before the regular season concludes.

But if his outings are viewed as a progressio­n to viable postseason contributi­ons, this was a solid first step.

Means pounded the strike zone, goosing his fastball up to 94 mph. He required just eight pitches to complete his first inning, though one of those offerings landed 401 feet from home plate, a Paul Goldschmid­t home run.

He gave up another run in the second when he was a little tardy getting off the mound to cover first base and, one strike away from a perfect fourth inning, hung a 0-2 curveball that Richie Palacios clubbed to right field for another home run.

After the final out of that inning, Means cursed into his glove, still regretting that one pitch.

And looking very much ready to compete.

He was in the rotation for Orioles teams that lost 108 and 110 games in two full seasons before his injury.

This club is scoreboard-watching, as Hyde freely admitted, and maintained a two-game lead in the AL East after splitting a four-game weekend series with the Rays in Baltimore.

Yeah, things are a little different now. “It is fun to play for a winning club,” says Means, “and be in this clubhouse and be a part of this team, for sure.”

To that end, Means deployed some of the breathing exercises he worked on while he was out; the pregame nerves still came, but settled down once he threw a live pitch.

“I’m just trying to plug myself in wherever they need me,” he says, “and hopefully provide some help or whatever they need.”

And for these Orioles, perhaps Means’ greatest tool is the lack of tread on his freshly repaired elbow ligament.

The Orioles don’t lack for candidates to fill three or four of the starting spots for a postseason series; it’s just that four of them have already exceeded career highs in innings pitched in a season. Ace Kyle Bradish (152.2 innings, previous high 144), right-handers Dean Kremer (164, 134), Tyler Wells (113.2, 119) and the 23-year-old Rodriguez (111.2, 103) all are in uncharted waters.

Veterans Jack Flaherty and Kyle Gibson are more pliable, but Flaherty has a 7.11 ERA in seven starts since joining Baltimore.

The Orioles will almost certainly employ a very short leash in the playoffs, with Wells returning as a reliever after a trip to Class AAA to conserve innings. But winning the 11 or 14 games needed to capture a World Series is far simpler when reliable starters can cover innings.

A starter like Means, maybe. That first tentative step was a success.

“It would be unbelievab­le,” says Means about pitching in the postseason. “I just want to take it day by day and not think too far ahead.” like a man

 ?? MITCH STRINGER/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Orioles pitcher John Means last week made his first start since April 2022.
MITCH STRINGER/USA TODAY SPORTS Orioles pitcher John Means last week made his first start since April 2022.
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