Rich Dubroff

Changing Camden Yards’ dimensions; Orioles’ progress in signing international players

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The Orioles’ decision to change the distance from home plate to left field and left-center and to raise the height of the wall was perhaps the biggest offseason news since Mike Elias was hired in November 2018.

The changes should help the Orioles. Last season, 277 home runs were hit at Camden Yards, the most in the major leagues. Watching the New York Yankees’ Gleyber Torres, Toronto’s Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and many others, hit home run after home run to left-center had to be annoying to Elias. But the move is one that has been speculated by fans for years.

Elias and the fans know how difficult it has been to lure free-agent pitchers to Baltimore. Not only do the Orioles play in baseball’s toughest division, the American League East, but pitching in home run-friendly Camden Yards makes it even harder.

The change in dimensions isn’t going to magically lure free agents for 2022, but it could help convince an undecided starter to give Baltimore a try.

Having a better team would help, too.

The decision seems to be popular with fans who are tired of watching long fly balls turn into home runs.

Elias said the the new dimensions also could add excitement, leading to more doubles and triples. Centerfielder Cedric Mullins, who hit two of his five triples at home, might have an opportunity to hit more. Mullins, who became an exclusively left-handed hitter in 2021, hit 22 of his 30 home runs at home, but only one was to left field.

Outfielder Austin Hays would appear to be a player who could benefit from the move. He’s fast and a good defender and should be able to play the new left field and benefit offensively from the new dimensions.

Elias rejected the idea that a deeper left field would benefit Oriole pitchers. However, the Orioles have a number of left-handed pitchers — John Means, Keegan Akin, Zac Lowther, Alexander Wells and Bruce Zimmermann, and top prospects DL Hall and Kevin Smith.

Renderings from the Orioles show the wall will be about 26 ½ feet deeper in left-center, and that the wall’s height will increase from about 7 1/2 feet to as high as 13 feet. The left-field corner, 333 feet from home plate, and the foul pole will remain where they have been. But the wall will quickly reach the 13-foot mark and a distance of 384 feet. Elias said the dimensions of Oriole Park would resemble those of Pittsburgh’s PNC Park. Last season, the Pirates had the third most triples in baseball, 35, 21 of them at home, and the fewest home runs, 124, 58 at home.

The Orioles hit 195 home runs, just about the league average. They hit 122 at home Their 15 triples ranked 25th in the majors. They hit eight at home, an average of one every 10 games.

In this winter of the lockout and little news, it gives fans something to discuss.

International moves: The Orioles’ signing of 16-year-old outfielder Braylin Tavera for a reported $1.7 million appeared to be another positive move.

It’s the third international signing period for Koby Perez, the team’s senior director of international scouting, and he’s making some headway.

He said the the team had been talking with Tavrea and some of the other teenagers they signed on Saturday during the time he’d been with the Orioles. It’s a sad truth that in order to participate in the international market, which the team largely eschewed for years under managing partner Peter Angelos, you have to begin contacting players at 13 or 14.

The Orioles’ new complex in the Dominican Republic has to help, as will signing a top-20 prospect. Tavera was rated 18th by Baseball America among international prospects.

Perez emphasized the youth of those signed by the Orioles, pointing out that one of the top players they recruited in 2021, catcher Samuel Basallo, who is just 17, would be a high school junior in the United States.

Basallo’s signing bonus of $1.3 million last year was the previous largest in team history. He hit .239 with five home runs and 19 RBIs in 41 games in the Dominican Summer League. Basallo has a year of professional experience, and that’s to his advantage if he comes to the United States this year and plays against high school draft picks in the Florida Complex League.

Signing teenagers also requires patience. A 16-year-old might need five or more years before he’s ready for the major leagues.

Once the Orioles get a player they’ve signed under Perez to the big leagues, it will break a long drought. They’ve had many players from the Dominican Republic and Venezuela on the Orioles, but all of them were signed by other teams and acquired by the Orioles.

Not since 2011 have they had a homegrown Dominican play for them, and they’re still waiting for their first Venezuelan signee to wear an Orioles uniform.

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

  • I like the changes to the ballpark. It’s going to help means. How many times did we see him jam a hitter like Judge but judge muscle it out. This helps with the wall scrapper homers. I think it also puts an emphasis on defense which means Stewart’s days in left are numbered. Hays needs to be the everyday left fielder. As far as the international signings Elias is doing exactly what he was hired to do which is build up the talent base both domestically and internationally. And I think he’s doing a good job. Much like college recruiting it takes a lot of time and investment to the players themselves to convince them to sign and most of these are done three years out. So Perez is just getting started. In his MASN all access interview he stated that next year could even be better.

    • I don't think Aaron Judge qualifies as a wall-scraper hitter. A "hitter like" him puts them in orbit. It seems reasonable that there will be fewer home runs in general and more balls dropping in for base hits, but I don't think you can be more specific than that. I also think pitchers and hitters and fielders will be making adjustments that will, after a while, reduce the impact of the change.

  • "Elias rejected the idea that a deeper left field would benefit Oriole pitchers."

    Just leaving that there...

  • It’s becoming easier to see how much of an impact these international signings will have on the organization in the next several years. That’s pretty exciting. It will be intriguing to watch how Prieto does next year, with comparisons to Madrigal. He’s far older and more experienced than the other signings. More influx into the talent pipeline.

  • I just can't get over the change in the ballpark as I think they've laid it out. Specifically, that corner in the fence by the visiting team's bullpen. As depicted in the graphics I've seen, it appears to be close to a 90° angle. That's GOT to be dangerous, does it not? I can imagine the left fielder impaling himself simply by running straight into the point of it. Ouch. It's going to take a boatload of foam to soften it.

    • I would hope it’s somewhat rounded or maybe a slightly less than 90 degree angle. If somewhat angled at the front means it would be somewhat angled at the rear, which would also be beneficial to the fielder.
      I would like to see DJ try his best to maneuver that new area on a few deep fly balls for a few laughs, then DFA him.

    • I was watching football over the weekend with some buddies and we were talking about this exact thing. The angle by the bullpen seems acute and strangely configured, but maybe they couldn’t alter the bullpen dimensions?
      I hadn’t thought of outfielders running into “the point” until now. It will take some time for players to learn the new dimensions for sure.
      I’m hardly an architect, but that angle seems ham handed and awkward. Not exactly a sweeping graceful line.
      Those pinball shots should be entertaining to watch.

      • The Pirates’ PNCPark has a similar wall configuration in left field. I looked at the Pirates’ stadium seating chart on their web and it is there. Elias had mentioned this. I would guess it’s working for them.

        • Travis Snyder just retired last week. He played LF at PNC. The Os could hire him as an “Outfield Wall Advisor” to teach our fielders to be careful as they approach Palmers Point.

    • Yeh, of all MLB teams the Pirates are certainly the most similar to the O’s so by all means let’s emulate them.

  • The Angelos family, having ruined the classiest and most successful franchise in baseball—Mike Mussina’s departure was the last straw—knows they can’t fill seats anyway. Move the Titanic deck chairs out. Who cares?

    • A net loss of 1000 seats, in a park that hold 40K plus, in a league where the top draw is 34K. I don’t think this worries the Angelos family.

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Rich Dubroff

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