Dan Connolly

Looking into the current status of the Orioles’ 10 free agents from season’s end

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

If you’ve been paying attention this offseason, you know the drill about free agency.

Few significant deals have been consummated. A ton of quality players are looking for jobs. The players are waiting. The players’ union is ticked. The agents are whispering – or shouting – collusion.

And Major League Baseball contends this is the current market: Figure it out, embrace it or at least live with it.

There are more than 100 free agents still on the market. And the Orioles haven’t signed a major leaguer to a big league deal (unless you count right-hander Michael Kelly, who was signed and placed on the 40-man roster in December, but has never pitched in the majors).

On Wednesday – which marked one week before pitchers and catchers must report to Sarasota, Fla. – the Orioles announced the signing of three players: outfielder Craig Gentry and relievers Elvis Araujo and David Holmberg. All were signed to minor league deals, and only Gentry, who had 117 plate appearances with the Orioles last year, received an invitation to spring training.

If you want a microcosm of what this free agent market has become, look no further than the Orioles’ 10 free agents at the end of last season.

Only one has inked a big league deal and only three have signed a pro contract. Certainly, part of the reason is that, as a group, the 10 had down years in 2017. But you’d think most would land big league deals. This offseason, though, is like nothing we’ve witnessed before – or at least not in decades.

Here’s a look at what’s going on with the 10 Orioles that declared free agency at season’s end:

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

Welington Castillo

Of the Orioles’ free agents, Castillo had the best 2017 – hitting .282 with 20 homers and an .813 on-base-plus-slugging percentage while catching 88 games. He held a $7 million option to stay with the Orioles, but declined it and agreed to a two-year deal with the Chicago White Sox worth $15 million. It also includes a 2020 club option worth $8 million. So, Castillo did extremely well here – especially signing in early December before the market bottomed out.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

Ryan Flaherty

Heading into the winter, the sense was that Flaherty, 31, had priced himself out of the Orioles’ plans because he’d likely command seven figures on the open market (he made $1.8 million last year) and the Orioles could get a utility infielder for the league minimum. But this stagnant market really crashed on role players like Flaherty, who took a minor league deal with a spring invite from the Philadelphia Phillies on Wednesday (first reported by ESPN). Flaherty always seemed to be a National League type player due to his positional flexibility. Still, it’s a bit of a surprise the Orioles didn’t retain him if a minor league deal would get it done since their current candidates for utility infielder are uninspiring.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

Craig Gentry

No matter what the market did this offseason, Gentry was likely looking at another minor league deal. He’s 34 and the definition of a role player, a defensive standout and speedy pinch-runner but limited hitter. It’s somewhat surprising he re-signed with the Orioles since he is a right-handed-hitting outfielder and the club already has several of those on the roster bubble: Anthony Santander, Joey Rickard and Austin Hays. But manager Buck Showalter loves what Gentry brings to a team, and the Norfolk shuttle is always revving. According to USA Today, Gentry will make $900,000 if he is on the Opening Day roster. I don’t necessarily see that happening, but I wouldn’t bet against Gentry being a member of the Orioles at some point in 2018.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

Chris Tillman

You can make the argument that few players are more affected by the glut of top free-agent pitchers still available than Tillman, who isn’t yet 30 and was one of the American League’s more reliable hurlers before a disastrous 2017 (7.84 ERA in 24 games). He was sitting in the third tier of veteran starters when the offseason began. And while some in that group signed early (Doug Fister, Mike Fiers, Tyler Chatwood), just about every starter above that tier is still lingering. Since Tillman appears to be a one-year, make-good pitcher in 2018, the waiting game continues. He’ll get a big league deal, but when becomes nearly as big of a question as who signs him. The Orioles remain interested, but don’t seem to be particularly aggressive on Tillman (or anyone, for that matter). One team that previously showed interest in Tillman, the Minnesota Twins, have lost ace Ervin Santana to a finger injury that will probably sideline him through April. Perhaps their need for rotation help has increased in urgency.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

Wade Miley

Miley can be thrown into the Tillman mix as well. The veteran lefty had a rough 2017 (5.61 ERA in 32 starts) and led the league in walks. But the most important part of the above sentence is the word, “lefty.” Despite not posting an ERA below 4.30 since 2013, the 31-year-old Miley shouldn’t have trouble finding a job. But, like most back-end rotation options, he’s caught in a holding pattern presumably until the big boys land. The Orioles have discussed bringing him back in the right deal, but given his lack of success in Baltimore, the odds are he’ll be in a rotation elsewhere.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

Jeremy Hellickson

It seems mind-boggling that this time last year Hellickson was heading into the season with a $17.2 million qualifying offer that he accepted from the Philadelphia Phillies. After an ERA of 5.43 in Philadelphia and Baltimore last year, Hellickson likely will be looking at another one-year deal, and this time at a fraction of his 2017 salary. He’s a Boras Corp., client and so it will be interesting to see how this one shakes out. He’s had very little buzz around him, but Hellickson is 30 and has a career 4.12 ERA. He’ll land somewhere, too, with the best guess being somewhere away from the AL East. The Orioles have shown no interest in retaining him.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

Ubaldo Jimenez

I would have lost a lot of money here. I would have told you in September, no matter how much Jimenez struggled with the Orioles, he would land a big league deal in the National League because of his durability and past success there. This wouldn’t be the first time I’ve been wrong about Jimenez, however. I’ve not heard his name associated with any teams this offseason. And I’ve asked plenty of people. I still think he’ll get a job, but a one-year, big-league deal is probably the best he can hope for this late in the game. And a minor-league pact wouldn’t be surprising at this point.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

J.J. Hardy

He said in September that he is willing to be patient and see how the market develops for his services before he decides whether to play another year. That mentality has not changed at all. The 35-year-old shortstop is working out in Arizona as if he has a job for 2018, and so he has not hung up his spikes yet. Spring training has never been his favorite time of the year anyway, so, unlike most of the guys on this list, there doesn’t seem to be any urgency here. If he gets an offer he likes, he’ll take it. If he doesn’t, he’s had a heck of a career.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

Pedro Alvarez

While others might be panicking due to unemployment in February, Alvarez has to be like, “I got this.” Each of the past two years, Alvarez didn’t sign with the Orioles until March. Last year, he spent most of the season in the minors and he turned 31 on Tuesday, so his market again appears to be a minor league deal somewhere. The guy is a legitimate power hitter, but his lack of position – despite his agent, Scott Boras, declaring at the winter meetings that Alvarez has re-established himself as a quality first baseman – hurts him. Someone will get an underappreciated slugger to stash in Triple-A. He’s a great insurance policy to have.

Photo credit: Joy R. Absalon

Seth Smith

This is an interesting case to me. Smith came advertised last year as a no-frills pro who could hit right-handers, get on base, had a little pop and would be adequate in the outfield. He checked every box, and though he’s now 35, there’s no reason, based on last year, that he shouldn’t be playing in the majors in 2018, specifically as a part-time outfielder/DH and pinch-hitter. In this depressed market, however, what is that worth? At this stage of his career, I can’t imagine Smith is the kind of guy that would want to do what Alvarez did and bide his time in the minors. So, it may be big leagues or bust for the veteran. The Orioles still need a lefty in the outfield, but my sense is they’ve moved on from him and prefer a better defender who can also handle center field on occasion.

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

  • The fact that the so called “top tier” FA’s are still waiting for offers, it doesn’t surprise me that the O’s FA’s are still in limbo. Except for Tillman (who I wish would get an offer from the O’s) these guys are fill in types. And until the big name FA’s are in place, they’ll continue to wait.
    Tillman has a lot to prove. And until last year, he was as valuable a part of the rotation as anyone. Given the desperate starting pitching situation the O’s

    • The talk of signing Tillman is premature. Sign 2 solid pitchers then you can take a chance on Tillman. But as of now, you cannot afford for him to fail.But I am just fed up. How can you talk about about competing and then talk about resigning Miley. They can talk to Miley but can they talk to either Machado or Schoop no. What does Duquette do while waiting for someone to fall into his lap? Go through the seat cushions looking for loose change.?

  • I find the interest in Tillman by the team and fans to be reaching considering how awful and dishonest he was with his coaches(telling them he was fine) in 2017. Another concern I have is Angelos' fear of long term deals for pitchers. Hearing that a possible 3 year/$57 million deal for Lance Lynn is in the works to be followed by articles on Angelos' long term reluctance is very annoying. It's mandatory that they remain aggressive.

    • I think it has to be on a case-by-case basis. But Angelos and family is right here in the belief that 4 and 4+ deals for free agent pitchers rarely work out. Again, sometimes you have to take a shot. But generally speaking it’s not wise.

    • Remain aggressive? Not disagreeing that aggressiveness is called for, but I am not sure I have ever seen them aggressive. Duquette moves at the speed of a snail alone, let alone adding PA and his crew into it.

  • It doesn't surprise me that Jimenez. Miley, Tillman and Hellickson are unsigned. Tillman is a HUGE question mark. The other three impressed nobody last season

    All during his career. We have heard about Miiley's potential. He has bounced from Houston to Arizona to Boston to Seattle. He is runnimg our of teams.

    • The surprise is it has been this long and none has jobs. Say what you want about last year, but MLB rotations are a mess and all of these guys have experience. I expect all to get jobs. The timing is the thing.

  • It is no surprise that few of the O's free agents aren't signed. The majority of them are from the "no one else wanted" category and the others are just plain bad.

    Sorry Dan, but Smith was not adequate in the outfield and slow on the bases. He was, the same as most of Duquette's signings, not a factor.

    • To me, adequate is making the plays one should make. He did that. Was he limited? Sure. But he was adequate.

      • Ok. I understand your definition.

        I will say it this way. Smith is not good enough defensively to play the OF, utilizing the big side of a platoon.

        With Mancini in LF, Smith's lack of range becomes exasperated. The sabermetric folks think Smith was 7 runs worse than average in 17' and FAR worse in Seattle in 16'..

        Let's ask Jones if Smith was adequate.

    • I think Jones would agree to adequate. Or fine, anyway. He has had worse next to him. Trust me on that. Not a fan of defensive metrics is putting it mildly. But I think we agree he’s not a good defender. I just don’t think he is a bad one.

      • I agree he has had worse. lol The O's total indifference to outfielders is hard to fathom. 2015 O's OF WORST in baseball. Keep in mind that was the off-season Markakis and Cruz were allowed to walk.

        Had Mancini not forced his way onto the team, the O's outfield would have been the WORST again. it almost was, even with him.

  • I like it that mediocre free agents are not signing for $millions. Ticket prices continue to rise, and going to a game has become expensive. We should only pay for top talent who want to play hard baseball in Baltimore, and want to win for the fans.

  • Nice summary. The free agent market remains pretty incredible, and frankly I'm glad. I'm tired of huge contract failures on any team. Baseball players need to realize there is not a player on the planet worth 30 million a year when slots in a lineup can be filled by guys like mancini for a million or less. I've nothing against players earning, but the reality of that comparison says it all.

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Dan Connolly

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