Dan Connolly

The six biggest storylines of the Orioles’ first half — and what happens with each one now

The Orioles started out 22-10 and looked to be one of the best stories of the early season.

Then they dropped 36 of the next 56, and have left a fan base muttering about whether the club should be blown up and its best pieces sold for upper-end prospects.

It’s been a really confounding first half of the season. The Orioles weren’t as good as they first appeared and shouldn’t be as bad as they’ve looked for much of the last few weeks.

There have been some fairly consistent Orioles’ storylines, however, throughout these first three-plus months. I’ve ranked six, dissected them and predicted how these issues may end up.

Here they are:

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

6. The disappearing playing time of Hyun Soo Kim

For the first two months of the season, I probably received more fan interaction about outfielder Hyun Soo Kim’s lack of playing time than almost any other issue (besides Kevin Gausman’s performance). Kim became a fan favorite in 2016 for his high batting average (.302), smart at-bats and knack for getting on-base (.382). The only question was whether the left-handed Kim could hit lefties. That was left unanswered this year – he’s had nine plate appearances versus southpaws in the first half and was 1-for-8 with a walk. Now, the question is, will he get much of a chance to hit against anyone? Kim’s opportunity for steady playing time was damaged by the emergence of rookie Trey Mancini in left field. And when Mancini moved to first to cover for the injured Chris Davis, Kim got an expanded look in left. But he didn’t hit in the brief window, and has again become mainly a bench guy. He’s hitting just .229 with a .301 on-base percentage in 134 plate appearances. Davis is expected back Friday, so Kim’s playing time should plummet again. It’s possible the Orioles could look to move him, but the market for a platoon hitter with limited outfield range that’s owed a couple million bucks won’t be hopping.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

5. The Britton effect

I’ve been told for years, and have been given data that supports it, that the ninth inning is like any other inning. And that any effective reliever can serve in the closer’s role. I’m sure there is some truth to that, though I think the pressure that comes with the ninth – facing a team in a close game with the opposing players fighting for their last chance at victory – is more pronounced than in any other frame. I’m also a believer that human beings thrive when they know how they’ll be used and what is expected of them, assuming they have the tools to complete the job. To me it’s more about knowing your role than when that role actually occurs. So, when an effective closer leaves his role, it creates a domino effect, and each reliever below him must step into another spot. Some will struggle with that change mentally, and others may not have the physical tools to succeed in the new position. That’s what I think happened with the Orioles’ bullpen when closer Zach Britton missed a large chunk of time with a forearm injury. Brad Brach did a fine job filling in, but everyone had to move up a slot, and that affected the overall performance of the usually stout bullpen. Britton’s back now, and assuming he is healthy, things should return to normal. In fact, the bullpen could be better now that guys such as Mychal Givens, Richard Bleier and Miguel Castro have had success in “elevated” situations.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

4. Who’s gonna pitch for us?

I’ve been around this organization for a long time and perhaps my favorite quote I’ve ever received occurred in December 2005, when the Orioles ignored an immense need to improve the rotation and bought catcher Ramon Hernandez as a free agent. In response to that, and to Miguel Tejada asking for a trade, then-Orioles third baseman Melvin Mora said in a phone conversation that he understood Tejada’s frustration, and then quipped, “Who’s gonna pitch for us?” Mora’s line set off a mini-firestorm within the organization at the time, but the sentiment still rings somewhat true now. In fact, with the way the Orioles have juggled pitchers from the minors to the majors in 2017 – they used 23 different hurlers in the first half, including 19 in relief – Mora’s question may be more apropos than ever. The Orioles have obviously had some injuries, but what was initially a Norfolk Shuttle by design – to take advantage of a larger bench and optionable relief pieces — has morphed into a turnstile of relievers who can’t maintain consistency in the bigs. That, and an overmatched rotation, has given the Orioles the second highest ERA in baseball in the first half. The revolving door should slow some in the second half. Zach Britton’s return means one fewer spot available on the staff. It should also mean more quality innings from the bullpen overall. It won’t matter, though, if the rotation fails to pitch deeper into games in the second half.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

3. The Great Mancini

For all the negatives this season, the emergence of Trey Mancini has to be the biggest positive in Baltimore. The 25-year-old wasn’t supposed to make the team. But he learned to play the outfield in spring training, and justified his presence in the field by crushing the ball routinely at the plate. He hit a bit of snag after a hot start, but he made adjustments, and continued to put together good at-bats instead of trying to homer at every opportunity. The results followed. Through his first full half in the majors, Mancini is leading the Orioles in batting average (.312), on-base percentage (.354) and slugging (.538). He has 15 doubles and 14 homers and held his own defensively in left field and at first base, his natural position. When the Orioles re-signed Mark Trumbo it appeared that Mancini was the odd man out. Instead, he’s worked his way into an everyday role. And when Davis returns from the disabled list, likely Friday, Mancini will continue to get regular starts, primarily in left field. He’s earned that.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

2. The juxtaposition of Manny and Schoop

The Orioles have a mid-20s infielder and middle-of-the-order hitter with 30-homer pop, a near-.300-average bat and the ability to play shortstop in an emergency. His name? Jonathan Schoop. OK, up until the last week or so, the easy identifier to those hints was third baseman Manny Machado. Schoop’s emergence, both as a middle of the lineup force and a shortstop in a pinch, has been one of the club’s biggest revelations in 2017. It’s been important, too, because Machado has hit just .230 – roughly 50 points below his career average – with an on-base percentage of .296. Yet, for all hand-wringing about Machado’s offense, he’s tied with Schoop for the team lead in homers with 18. And Machado has turned it up lately, hitting .333 (13-for-39) in nine July games. Really, it was a matter of time for the uber-talented Machado to re-establish himself offensively. He’s the best player on this team, but his best buddy Schoop is trying to make it a contest. They are like two brothers, pushing each other, trying to one-up each other and yet supportive at the same time. I guess the question here – with the thoughts that the Orioles could be sellers – is how long will they be teammates? Well, I don’t see management punting on this season and dealing either during the season.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

1. What’s wrong with Gausman?

Technically, the burning question at No. 1 could be, what’s wrong with the rotation, which is 29th of 30 teams in starters’ ERA? However, the only member of that group whose 2017 has been a true surprise is Kevin Gausman’s, and not in a good way. Certainly, Chris Tillman is better than a near-8.00 ERA, but his shoulder injury and late start explains the poor numbers, at least partially. Dylan Bundy got off to a tremendous beginning and he leads the team in wins (8), strikeouts (84) and innings pitched (108), among other categories. But his ERA currently sits at 4.33, which is probably about right for most mortals is their first full year starting in MLB (and the AL East). Wade Miley’s 4.97 ERA, Ubaldo Jimenez’s 6.67 ERA and the duo’s penchant for head-shaking inconsistency is frowned upon, but not shocking. So that leaves Gausman, who was supposed to be the anchor of this staff, especially with Tillman’s health woes. Instead, Gausman is 5-7 with a 5.85 ERA. It’s rather befuddling as to why. The guy throws 97 mph routinely. He has solid breaking stuff that should keep hitters honest. He hadn’t posted an ERA above 4.25 in his last three big league seasons. But his fastball command has been shaky, and it’s made his other offerings, as well as his blazing fastball, hittable if in the strike zone. Given the talent, expectations and first-half results, Gausman’s performance (and the rotation’s overall inability to pitch deep) has to be the No. 1 storyline. Will he turn it around in the second half? You’d think so, but you also never thought he’d be at this point 19 starts into his season, either. This is hard to predict, but it just doesn’t seem like Gausman will be this bad for a full season.

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

  • Great rundown, Dan. Wondering this about Gausman...everything I've read seems to indicate the base of his issues is mental, so do the Orioles employ a sports psychologist? I really have no idea, given the Orioles penchant for doing things that make little sense. I'd imagine one could help him.

    • They do. Or have anyway. I haven't seen him around recently, but I'm sure if the Orioles and/or Gausman think he could benefit from such, I'm sure that option would be available.

      • Not around lately? Allow me to fill in by paraphrasing a certain 2 bit Carnie once under the employ of the New York Knights ....

        "We must ask ourselves, what is losing? Losing .... Losing is a disease ... as contagious as bubonic plague."

  • Good stuff. . A lot of ands ,ifs ,and buts but we can still get it done . Heres to a 50 win second half !

  • Yeah, that thing I said about Aaron Judge possibly losing steam and Mancini creeping into the ROTY discussion in the second half? I'm gonna need Dan and Steve to go ahead and delete that one from the site please.

    • Judge didn't break a sweat last night in the HR derby. He didn't look fatigued at all in that final round where Sano was sucking all kinds of air. He has a chance to be a very good player for quite some time, and a big thorn in our side as well!

      • Yeah Os Fan, I couldn't help watching that display last night thinking this guy is REALLY gonna make things difficult in Camden Yards for the next decade or so. And you are right, his being juxtaposed (stole one of Connolly's $10 words) next to Sano was telling. Sano was taking such violent hacks, complete with hair and gold chains flying to and fro while Judge looked like he was casually taking a few swings at the driving range after work. Watching Sanchez whack 500 footers didn't exactly make me feel good either. Ugh, another 10 years of awesome Yankees teams.

    • I believe you to have doubted him as the 2nd coming of Babe Ruth. What were you thinking?

    • Come on, Stache. I only delete posts when I'm wrong. Good to be the King (or the Judge). :).

  • my hope is high for the rotation but expectations low. just hope Buck can keep it competitive until we can attract a REAL GM.

    • Would like to see a trade or 2 with an eye to the future as I just don't believe the starting pitching is anywhere what it needs to be for a playoff run. The only other thing ill be watching/hoping for is for this team to show some pride and perform closer to their capabilities. It's not that bad of a team. Just need more consistency across the board.
      Also would like to see Kim get more PT. And if you're not going to play him then get something in return for him and lets see what Sisco and Mountcastle can do.

    • I don't sense there is much of a market for Kim. He's owed a couple million and is viewed

  • As a retired guy who travels around the country in his RV, watching the team via satellite TV... I realize this is easy to say. And as such, I'm not advocating it. But as long as the fans keep filling 30-40% of the seats every game at the Yards, management will have no real motivation to do anything differently than they have the past few years.

    I've said this before... for the ownership, it's a business model and they're turning a profit. Love him, hate him, or whatever... I think DD is doing the exact job ownership hired him to do: put a competitive team on the field, that will keep the fans engaged. If they win, great... but competitive is good enough. As long as ticket sales, concessions, and TV money keep pouring in, they're making money.

    Not being in the area and reading the local sports pages, or watching local TV coverage... I'm quite sure I may have missed it. But I can't recall ever hearing either Angelos or Duquette saying, 'Our priority is to win a championship', as other owners & GMs around the league have done. If they have, I apologize... but that in itself speaks volumes.

    So while I admit that I'd like to see a fire sale & rebuild of the team that could really contend in 3-to-5 years from now, I don't think it'll happen. Instead, we can expect to see more of the same during the same period... with the team being just good enough to tease us into possibly making it into the wild-card playoff game.

    • You're right it wont happen because Angelos only cares about dollars and cents, he has no baseball sense. He would never allow Manny or the like to be traded even though he knows he'll never be able to sign him long-term. All that matters to him is the here and now and players with Manny's talent sell tickets and put butts in the seats. He's like MLBs version of Jerry Jones, meddlesome. Just because the purse strings were loosened in recent years doesn't change that.

    • Angelos rarely if ever talks on the record. Duquette often talks about winning a title. He's never gotten one.

    • I agree with you 100%...a complete shakeup using ex O's in management and building a
      Strong minor league organization....HOW. BY USING THE TALENT WE HAVE ...BRITTON,
      MACHADO, DAVIS, TRUMBO, GAUSMAN, TRADE FOR YOUNG TALENT AND PITCHING
      I THINK SOMETHING LIKE THIS WILL STILL GET FOLKS TO PAY TO SEE THE O'

  • Fingers crossed that Britton returns to form, if given the opportunity (the big if), so at least he is trade bait at the deadline.

  • "they used 23 different hurlers in the first half"...causing some fans to "hurl" at times ;-)

  • Dan - not exactly a second half storyline but overall, I think this team needs clarity on the front office. with both buck and duq potentially out of here after 2018, there's no incentive for them to think past that at the moment. they either need extensions or to move on in some capacity. not sure how they can do anything to the team otherwise until then...

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Dan Connolly

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