Rich Dubroff

Former Oriole Hunter Harvey faces old friends; Mullins sits against left-hander Corbin

WASHINGTON—Pitcher Hunter Harvey was a prime Oriole prospect. Their No. 1 draft pick in 2013, Harvey was limited by injuries throughout his time with the team and from 2019-2021, had just 26 relief appearances.

Last November, Harvey was claimed off waivers by San Francisco and, on March 22nd, was claimed by the Washington Nationals.

On Tuesday night, Harvey surrendered his first home run of the season to Orioles first baseman Ryan Mountcastle, a close friend. It tied the score, 3-3, and the Orioles went on to win, 4-3.

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“I think I got him out in minor-league camp one time,” Harvey told reporters after the game. “He hit a single that went through the legs of the outfielder and got a triple, and he’s been talking crap since, and that was 2015.

“We’ve been together on the same team for the last four or five years. We always talked about, ‘What if we got to face off?’ And we did. He might have won tonight, but it’ll be the last time.”

Harvey’s reaction to Mountcastle’s home was one you might not expect.

“I started laughing. That’s the first time I ever laughed giving up a home run,” Harvey said. “I just couldn’t — it was hard to hide that emotion just because we’re so close. We talk so much trash.

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“He looked at me and was laughing and I knew my phone was going to get blown up, and I knew he was going to wear me out. I was like, ‘This is the worst-case scenario.’ I’d also been telling him I was going to hit him. I probably should have just done that.”

Austin Hays, whose bloop double drove home the go-ahead run, also played with Harvey in the Orioles’ organization.

“It’s always weird, I think during [batting practice], before the game and seeing them in the other dugout,” Hays said. “Once the game actually starts, all that goes away and just the competitive side comes out.

“The thing with Hunter and Ryan last night was a little different because they’re best friends. I got to Hunter’s wedding and he was in Hunter’s wedding, standing up there with him. That was a little bit different.”

Hays doesn’t think the hitter has an advantage after having played with a pitcher. He said Tampa Bay’s Shawn Armstrong and Toronto’s Kevin Gausman have changed their pitch mix since leaving the Orioles.

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“Armstrong, everything that he threw when he was with us was straight, trying to get hop, and now he’s throwing cutters and sinkers,” Hays said. “Gaus, now he throws a splitter 40 percent of the time. It changes. You’ve got to treat him like you would any other opponent. They might not be the same pitcher, and you might not be the same hitter that they were or you were when you played on the same team.”

Manager Brandon Hyde noticed that Harvey looked bigger when he talked with him before Tuesday’s game.

“I don’t like to see Trey Mancini come up in a big spot against us,” Hyde said. “Hunter Harvey’s really good, so I’d rather them go to someone else. It’s fun to run into people you’ve had good relationships with.”

Mullins sits: Last season was Cedric Mullins’ first as a pure left-handed hitter, and he hit .299 with a .931 OPS and .277 with a .788 OPS. This season, Mullins is batting .289 against right-handers with an .806 OPS, and just .203 against left-handers.

Hyde has been sitting him against some left-handed starters, and is doing it against Washington’s Patrick Corbin on Wednesday night.

“A lot of sliders away he’s had some trouble with,” Hyde said.

Ryan McKenna is in the lineup instead of Mullins, and he’s batting .278 against left-handers.

“If I’m going to trade Mullins out, it’s going to be for somebody that’s going to be able to play center field and play it well,” Hyde said.

Call for questions: I’ll be answering Oriole questions later this week. Please email them to: Rich@BaltimoreBaseball.com.

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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.

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