Rich Dubroff

Orioles’ international scouting director Koby Perez knows Latin America

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Orioles general manager Mike Elias isn’t rushing into any hires. Koby Perez knows that beefing up the team’s international scouting operation will take time.

Perez, who was introduced as the Orioles’ international scouting director on a Thursday conference call, has worked as the Cleveland Indians’ director of Latin American scouting for the past three years.

That experience, and his years working as a scout in the Dominican Republic with Cleveland and Philadelphia, should allow the Orioles to penetrate an area they’ve largely avoided for years.

Although they’ve signed a handful of mid-range prospects, those players have been given bonuses that are usually handed out to ninth- or 10th-round domestic draft choices, and they muffed on signing the Cuban prospects Victor Victor Mesa, Victor Mesa Jr. and Sandy Gaston in October.

The Orioles stocked up on international signing bonus money at the trading deadline, adding $2.75 million from the Atlanta Braves in trades for Brad Brach and Kevin Gausman. Before their trade for Rule 5 pick Drew Jackson with the Philadelphia Phillies last month, the Orioles had $6,563,500 to spend, but it’s unlikely that most of that money will be spent on signing international players.

Elias’ predecessor, Dan Duquette, demonstrated his naivete in accumulating so much money without a scouting infrastructure in place.

Elias and Perez reiterated that signing international players is a complex process and that relationships have to be built. Perez, a native of the Dominican Republic who grew up in Northern New Jersey, has connections in Latin America.

Perez had 13 Latin American scouts in Cleveland. For now, he has only Calvin Maduro, an Aruban, whom he said had done a “decent” job in accumulating a list of prospects.

While the next signing period doesn’t start for another six months, recruiting efforts must begin and the Orioles need to show that they’re serious about doing business.

The international signing bonus money, which is what the Orioles are allowed to spend, is money from their budget. In the past, they spent little of it, trading most of it away. Some of the money was used to acquire two pitchers on the team, Paul Fry and Yefry Ramirez.

If that $6 million isn’t used by June 15, it can’t be spent. Elias said that the Orioles wouldn’t spend money in the next five months just to spend it. That money can be used elsewhere.

There’s still the possibility that the money can be spent on prospects, though not from the Dominican Republic or Venezuela. Elias said that if a prospect from Cuba or Asia materializes the Orioles can pounce.

In the past, the Orioles paid bonuses to Cuban prospects Dariel Alvarez, Ariel Miranda and Henry Urrutia, but none became breakout major leaguers.

The Orioles haven’t had a homegrown Dominican since infielder Pedro Florimon appeared in four games in 2011. Florimon signed as a 17-year-old, and it took seven years for him to make his way to the majors.

That type of patience is going to be necessary with the players Perez signs. Many will be 16 or 17 and will have to play in the Dominican Summer League before they’re ready for Gulf Coast or Aberdeen.

A worthy goal might be to develop the club’s first homegrown Venezuelan. It appeared as if left-handed pitcher Eduardo Rodriguez would be the first until the Orioles traded him to Boston for Andrew Miller in July 2014.

Elias said that he would allow Mike Snyder to continue the Orioles’ Asian scouting department. The talent coming from Asia pales in comparison to the number of Latin American players.

The Orioles have had success in signing Asian players. Koji Uehara, signed in 2009 from Japan, Taiwanese pitcher Wei-Yin Chen, who was an early Duquette masterstroke in January 2012, and South Korean outfielder Hyun Soo Kim all contributed.

But, as Elias acknowledged, Latin America is where the action is, particularly for position players. With Perez’s hiring, the Orioles finally appear to be on the right path internationally.

Rich Dubroff

Rich Dubroff grew up in Brooklyn as a fan of New York teams, but after he moved to Baltimore, quickly adopted the Orioles and Colts. After nearly two decades as a freelancer assisting on Orioles coverage for several outlets, principally The Capital in Annapolis and The Carroll County Times, Dubroff began covering the team fulltime in 2011. He spent five years at Comcast SportsNet’s website and for the last two seasons, wrote for PressBoxonline.com, Dubroff lives in Baltimore with his wife of more than 30 years, Susan.

View Comments

  • This well-written, well-reported article begs an obvious question -- after watching the competition deftly capitalize on Latin American talent (and analytics) year after year after year, why did the O's essentially sit on their hands and do nothing? I guess long-shot reclamation projects like Colby Rasmus were viewed as preferable??

    Whatever. Thankfully, it's all rear view mirror stuff now. Work your magic, Koby Perez.

    • To properly scout Latin America, huge resources are necessary, and the Orioles decided to focus their attention elsewhere. The team didn’t want to deal with a complex area it knew little about. You can win without scouting Latin America, but you have to be dominant in the other areas, and they weren’t.

  • I'm thinking Peter's antiquated methods,that have hopefully been abolished with his Sons taking over, is the main reason this process was never successful or used. Interesting comment that relationships have to be built. Can't just go down there,check a player out,and offer a contract. More to it than that. This like everything else Elias and co. are implementing will take a couple of years to come to fruit.

    • Orial, it’s like recruiting basketball players for college. You have to know the AAU coaches, and that takes years. There’s no international draft, so boots on the ground are needed.

  • I like this move. The statement in your article "Latin America is where the action is," is very true. According to an article I read in Forbes magazine 27% of players listed by Major League Baseball as eligible were born outside the U.S, including Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Of that percentage Dominican Republic born players lead the way with 84 players, with Venezuela second at 74 players. I'm wondering why the O's are just now coming to the realization that "the talent coming from Asia pales in comparison to the number of Latin American players". Yes, Koji Uehara and Wei-Yin Chen were good signings, Hyun Soo Kim was a bust in my opinion, but I believe Latin American is where the O's should have been looking all along. I'm hoping this is just the start of a new way of thinking in the organization.

    • ClyOs, the Orioles avoided Latin America because it was a complex market and the money needed to make a dent there is vast. This move couldn’t be avoided.

  • I’m certainly learning a lot about international scouting and I guess that shows the difference in thinking between then and now.

    Rich - we hear relations need to be built and that more scouts will be needed, but for we know what else will the Orioles need to do? Are there baseball camps they can establish or local teams they should be connecting with?

    • Cedar, the Orioles already have two minor league teams in the Dominican, and they need to get better facilities, much like they did in Sarasota. They need to show their presence, and hopefully Perez can help.

    • Thanks Rich! Maybe the Orioles will spend some of that international money to do that.

      Any excess could then be sent to Baltimore Baseball to bring on an International reporter! ;)

  • It's about time the birds woke up and smelled the coffee. I was tired of seeing the rest of the league succeed in Latin America while the orioles had their head in the sand. With that said, I wonder how long it will take for the orioles to create a decent presence in Latin America.

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Rich Dubroff

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