Dan Connolly

O’Day’s injury should be Duquette’s signal to acquire veteran lefty reliever

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The news that sidearmer Darren O’Day will be out for at least 15 days with a rotator cuff strain in his right shoulder is obviously a big blow to one of the best bullpens in baseball.

O’Day is the unit’s leader, but he’s also one of the club’s most effective relievers versus left-handed hitters, despite being right-handed (a .229 average against lefties this season).

Countless times while O’Day was out for nearly two months with a hamstring strain, Orioles manager Buck Showalter talked about how the absence really stung because O’Day could do the work of two pitchers. And that assisted Showalter in his constant bullpen juggling.

During that time, Brad Brach filled in at the set-up role in the eighth and was splendid. But, subsequently, right-hander Mychal Givens was called on to pitch the seventh more often, and his struggles versus left-handed hitters are well-documented.

When O’Day returned in late July, Orioles executive vice president Dan Duquette talked about how getting him back and signing Logan Ondrusek (a right-hander advertised as good versus lefties, too) out of Japan was like acquiring two relievers in the trade market.

But O’Day is gone again. He had a cortisone shot in his shoulder Saturday, and Showalter told reporters in San Francisco that he thinks the injury may not require longer than a 15-day stay. So O’Day could be ready to come off the disabled list by Aug. 28.

The Orioles weathered the storm without O’Day in June and July, so what’s another couple weeks?

The difference, of course, is that this is crunch time. The Orioles have basically one and a half months left, and every game, every inning, is crucial. And the bullpen, like most in August, is showing some signs of fatigue.

Consider all of that, and the O’Day injury makes the Orioles’ vulnerability versus lefty hitters late in the game more glaring.

Rookie Donnie Hart has flummoxed left-handers so far (they are just 1-for-9 against him), but it’s tough to count on someone with such little experience in a pennant race. Ondrusek is back in the minors after allowing four hits and two walks while facing 10 left-handers.

Givens has gotten better recently, but lefties are still hitting .355 against him on the season.

Lefties Brian Duensing and T.J. McFarland will eventually be back from injury, but, again, it’s tough to count on them now.

So this is when Duquette should strike and boost the bullpen for the stretch run. His trade checklist last month was right-handed-hitting outfielder, lefty starter and lefty reliever. He got two of those in Steve Pearce and Wade Miley, but found the cost for a lefty reliever – some teams were asking for Dylan Bundy – was too steep.

That may still be the case. But a team like the Colorado Rockies, who were hanging onto lefty Boone Logan while they remained in the race last month, are further out of contention now.

The Orioles checked in on Logan in July, and they also kicked the tires on San Diego’s lefty duo of Brad Hand and Ryan Buchter, and Minnesota’s Fernando Abad (who ultimately was dealt to Boston).

Trading this month gets a little trickier since players have to pass through trade waivers first, but it’d be surprising if at least one solid lefty didn’t get through.

If so, Duquette should pounce. He may not have the deepest farm system at his disposal, but it should be solid enough to land a lefty specialist in return.

Yes, O’Day may be gone for only 15 days, but neutralizing lefties has been a priority all year.

Now it appears even more necessary.

Dan Connolly

Dan Connolly has spent more than two decades as a print journalist in Pennsylvania and Maryland. The Baltimore native and Calvert Hall graduate first covered the Orioles as a beat writer for the York (Pennsylvania) Daily Record in 2001 before becoming The Baltimore Sun’s national baseball writer/Orioles reporter in 2005. He has won multiple state and national writing awards, including several from the Associated Press Sports Editors. In 2013 he was named Maryland Co-Sportswriter of the Year by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association. And in 2015, he authored his first book, "100 Things Orioles Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die." He lives in York, with his wife, Karen, and three children, Alex, Annie, and Grace.

View Comments

  • This IS indeed an alarming development, but I have to say that I disagree with you a bit here Dan. We've already dealt one of our promising farm hands for a rental piece in Pierce, and I'd hate to see them let another go. Unless a southpaw reliever comes along for the price of the proverbial bag of crackers, I'd be inclined to stay the course, give Hart his chance, and for gosh's sake, burn that danged bobblehead before the Gods rain more misfortune upon our beloved club! Go O's!

    • Either follow Boog's advice with the bobblehead or drop him down in the order. He pissed me off today. Guys getting on base ahead of him all day, Golden Sombrero again. The 4 hole batting .219. Really can't defend him in mid-August heading down the stretch collecting sombreros.

        • That was a great birthday present for the Earl of Baltimore, and my Dad whose bday would have been on saturday. The 3-run dinger served up by Schoop for you, Earl.

        • It was impressive for sure, Mau. Buck gives them that even temperament that we didn't see with previous managers, and they seem to believe they're never out of a game.

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