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The Orioles Are Running Out of Lineup Spots


historically significant
James A. Pittman-USA TODAY Sports

It’s a great time to be a fan of the Baltimore Orioles. This is now the third season since their emergence from the dark basement of the AL East, and they no longer retain their tatterdemalion appearance. The O’s, at 20-11, have been winning by the very straightforward method of beating their opponents into submission, not by collecting more than their fair share of extra-inning and one-run victories. While the pitching staff has been a big part of the team’s success, what has made the Orioles so dangerous is a lineup that leads the American League in runs scored and wRC+. Even better for an O’s fan, they’re terrorizing opposing pitchers with a lineup that’s largely made of players that came up with the franchise and are several years away from hitting free agency. And there’s more on the way, giving the team a rather novel first world problem: having too many hitters and not enough lineup spots.

That the O’s have some of the best young offensive talent in the majors should not be lost on anyone who is into baseball. Adley Rutschman was the runner-up for AL Rookie of the Year in 2022, Gunnar Henderson took the award last year, and Jackson Holliday was the heavy favorite before his poor debut. Holliday could very easily come back and win it in the end, but if he doesn’t, one of the current favorites is yet another young Baltimore left-handed hitter, Colton Cowser. Through Thursday’s games, Cowser stands with the top WAR among AL rookies, with a .277/.351/.578, 164 wRC+ line. I haven’t even mentioned Jordan Westburg, who has an .890 OPS while splitting time between second and third base.

Even with Holliday falling flat in his first 10 games in the majors – something I expect him to rectify in the not-too-distant future – the O’s are leading the league in WAR from players younger than the traditional peak age of 27.

Team Positional Player WAR, 26 and Under
Team PA HR BA OBP SLG wRC+ WAR
Orioles 513 25 .276 .332 .493 137 5.2
Yankees 470 16 .274 .365 .438 135 4.1
Guardians 746 17 .253 .324 .392 109 3.9
Brewers 644 13 .270 .341 .394 111 3.6
Royals 669 20 .237 .302 .406 98 3.0
Nationals 436 11 .267 .324 .413 110 2.5
Rangers 507 11 .252 .332 .396 109 2.1
Reds 502 18 .229 .311 .431 106 2.1
Giants 249 6 .269 .327 .408 113 2.0
Braves 333 4 .280 .351 .377 110 1.8
Padres 451 14 .245 .302 .404 106 1.8
Twins 373 14 .237 .319 .453 122 1.7
Phillies 319 10 .237 .308 .389 98 1.7
Rays 315 9 .262 .334 .397 117 1.6
Tigers 610 16 .216 .301 .372 94 1.5
Diamondbacks 428 5 .245 .331 .346 97 1.2
Astros 260 6 .290 .327 .412 114 1.1
Athletics 615 19 .201 .275 .352 84 0.9
Mariners 199 4 .261 .302 .367 97 0.9
Mets 163 3 .258 .313 .358 98 0.8
Cubs 377 13 .222 .289 .387 91 0.7
Dodgers 149 3 .217 .262 .333 72 0.4
Marlins 270 7 .240 .319 .368 96 0.4
Red Sox 435 13 .220 .281 .391 84 0.3
Blue Jays 435 8 .210 .292 .316 80 0.2
Angels 448 11 .235 .296 .368 90 -0.2
Cardinals 619 10 .203 .277 .315 72 -0.2
Rockies 513 14 .231 .284 .373 71 -0.7
Pirates 476 6 .210 .284 .293 65 -1.0
White Sox 360 6 .195 .243 .299 54 -1.5

In franchise history, including its first year as the Milwaukee Brewers in 1901 and through decades as the St. Louis Browns, the 2023 team ranked seventh in WAR (12.2) from position players younger than 27, and this year’s team is already within shouting distance of halfway to that mark. So naturally, my question is how this team is likely to end up by the end of the season, and whether it would stack up to the best young offensive teams ever. For this, I’ll use our Depth Charts playing time to give plausible estimates of how the O’s will use their lineup for the rest of the season.

Orioles Lineup Projections, 26-and-Under
Player WAR Rest of Season WAR Total
Gunnar Henderson 2.1 5.3 7.4
Adley Rutschman 0.9 4.6 5.5
Jordan Westburg 1.3 2.8 4.1
Colton Cowser 1.3 1.9 3.2
Jackson Holliday -0.3 1.1 0.8
Heston Kjerstad -0.1 0.4 0.3
Coby Mayo 0.0 0.3 0.3
Connor Norby 0.0 0.1 0.1
Total 5.2 16.5 21.7

Even with Depth Charts projecting a much more conservative promotion schedule for Holliday than expected at the start of the season, the O’s have a mean projection of 21.7 WAR from this group of players. That would be the best in team history, edging out the 1973 club with Bobby Grich, Don Baylor, Earl Williams, and Al Bumbry as the headliners. And yes, it’s significant on a historical level as well.

Best AL/NL Teams, 26-and-Under Hitters, 1901-2024
Season Team WAR
1943 Cardinals 29.9
1942 Red Sox 29.6
1912 Athletics 29.3
1910 Athletics 28.3
1941 Yankees 27.8
1928 Giants 25.8
1988 Reds 24.9
1965 Reds 24.8
1910 Giants 24.3
1911 Giants 23.7
1912 Red Sox 23.4
1913 Athletics 23.4
1987 Pirates 23.2
1929 Yankees 23.1
1939 Yankees 22.9
1935 Cubs 22.9
1942 Cardinals 22.5
2016 Cubs 22.1
1921 Yankes 22.0
1974 Reds 21.9
1930 Giants 21.8
2024 Orioles (Proj.) 21.7
1911 Athletics 21.4
1979 Expos 21.4
1978 Expos 21.3

Their 21.7 WAR would be enough to put the Orioles in the top 25, and there’s an argument that this undersells the group. The vast majority of the teams with the most 26-and-under contributions come from the pre-World War II era, when players were called up at younger ages and there was no ticking service time clock. Looking at just the divisional era – which now covers more than half a century – the Orioles rank impressively among recent stables of young talent.

Best MLB Teams, 26-and-Under Hitters, 1969-2024
Season Team WAR Top Players
1988 Reds 24.9 Barry Larkin, Kal Daniels, Chris Sabo, Eric Davis, Paul O’Neill
1987 Pirates 23.2 Barry Bonds, Andy Van Slyke, Michael LaValliere, Bobby Bonilla, Jose Lind
2016 Cubs 22.1 Kris Bryant, Anthony Rizzo, Addison Russell, Javier Báez, Willson Contreras
1974 Reds 21.9 Johnny Bench, Dave Concepcion, Cesar Geronimo, Dan Driessen, George Foster
2024 Orioles (Proj.) 21.7 Gunner Henderson, Adley Rutschman, Jordan Westburg, Colton Cowser, Jackson Holliday
1979 Expos 21.4 Gary Carter, Lance Parrish, Andre Dawson, Ellis Valentine, Warren Cromartie
1978 Expos 21.3 Ellis Valentine, Gary Carter, Warren Cromartie, Andre Dawson, Lance Parrish
1972 Giants 21.2 Chris Speier, Bobby Bonds, Ken Henderson, Dave Kingman, Garry Maddox
2023 Braves 20.8 Ronald Acuña Jr., Austin Riley, Ozzie Albies, Michael Harris II, Braden Shewmake
1973 Orioles 20.7 Bobby Grich, Al Bumbry, Rich Coggins, Earl Williams, Don Baylor
1977 Royals 20.1 George Brett, Al Cowens, Darrell Porter, Frank White, Tom Poquette
1980 Athletics 20.0 Rickey Henderson, Dwayne Murphy, Tony Armas, Mickey Klutts, Jeff Cox
1970 Reds 19.9 Johnny Bench, Bobby Tolan, Bernie Carbo, Dave Concepcion, Hal McRae
1996 Mariners 19.8 Ken Griffey Jr., Alex Rodriguez, Darren Bragg, Manny Martinez, Raul Ibanez
2018 Red Sox 19.8 Mookie Betts, Xander Bogaerts, Andrew Benintendi, Rafael Devers, Tzu-Wei Lin
1975 Red Sox 19.8 Fred Lynn, Dwight Evans, Jim Rice, Cecil Cooper, Rick Burleson
2021 Astros 19.8 Carlos Correa, Kyle Tucker, Yordan Alvarez, Chas McCormick, Jake Meyers
2005 Guardians 19.5 Grady Sizemore, Coco Crisp, Victor Martinez, Jhonny Peralta, CC Sabathia
2019 Red Sox 19.3 Rafael Devers, Xander Bogaerts, Mookie Betts, Andrew Benintendi, Michael Chavis
1969 Athletics 19.2 Reggie Jackson, Sal Bando, Rick Monday, Blue Moon Odom, Lew Krausse
2007 Brewers 18.9 Prince Fielder, Corey Hart, J.J. Hardy, Rickie Weeks Jr., Ryan Braun
1992 Expos 18.8 Larry Walker, Marquis Grissom, Delino DeShields, Moises Alou, Bret Barberie
1973 Dodgers 18.8 Willie Crawford, Joe Ferguson, Ron Cey, Bill Russell, Steve Garvey
2013 Braves 18.7 Freddie Freeman, Andrelton Simmons, Justin Upton, Jason Heyward, Evan Gattis
1979 Twins 18.7 Butch Wynegar, Roy Smalley, Rob Wilfong, John Castino, Ron Jackson

There are some mighty impressive teams on that list, most notably the Big Red Machine and the early 1970s Athletics before free agency.

And even this perhaps underrates Baltimore’s offensive talent. It wouldn’t be surprising to see Holliday destroy in the minors and get a quick call back up, and if he does, he would slide right into the everyday lineup. Otherwise, though, the Orioles are now up to the practical limitation of roster and starting lineup spots. Cowser is an example of this: It would have been hard to get him regular playing time if not for Austin Hays’ dreadful start to the season. (Hayes is now on the IL). Heston Kjerstad was called up to replace Hays on April 23, after hitting .349/.431/.744 at Triple-A Norfolk, yet the former first rounder has gotten only eight plate appearances total in three games — the O’s have played 10 games with him on the roster.

Kjerstad is far from the only Orioles farmhand who likely would have gotten more playing time on a team with a thinner roster. At Triple-A, Coby Mayo is hitting .333/.397/.683 with 11 homers while mostly playing third base, a position at which the Orioles are already overflowing. Connor Norby has split time at second base and the outfield with an .829 OPS at Norfolk, but there’s no obvious place for him to get playing time unless the team decides to cut Ramón Urías. Using up-to-date minor league translations for Kjerstad, Mayo, and Norby, we can get an idea, via some up-to-date ZiPS projections, at what this trio could do if they O’s had playing time to give them.

ZiPS Rest-of-Season Projections – Mayo/Kjerstad/Norby
Player BA OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB OPS+ DR WAR
Mayo .243 .326 .438 460 65 112 25 2 20 76 49 138 3 112 1 2.5
Kjerstad .261 .319 .432 472 69 123 22 3 18 75 34 116 2 108 3 1.6
Norby .248 .309 .410 474 71 118 22 2 17 69 38 127 6 100 -1 1.5

All three players project as league average or better if they started in the majors right now.

While this represents a pretty enviable problem for the Orioles to have, it also can be an opportunity. The organization is deep in hitters, but its farm system does not have anywhere near the same depth when it comes to pitching. We don’t yet have a 2024 farm system ranking up for the Orioles, but in the updated 2023 list, the top 15 prospects featured just two pitchers, Cade Povich and Seth Johnson. Corbin Burnes was a great acquisition, but it doesn’t have to end there; as teams fall out of contention, the possibility exists for Baltimore to add a pitcher who can not only pitch down the stretch or in a possible playoff series or three, but in 2025 and beyond. The surplus of offensive talent should give the Orioles the ability to offer more for the right pitcher than practically any other team in baseball can, and if they do swing a trade, they’d still have so many other hitters in the pipeline that such a move likely wouldn’t make a dent in the team’s long-term outlook in a meaningful way.

Whether Baltimore gets to the World Series after a drought of more than 40 years is still uncertain. But this is the Orioles team that looks the most like the ones of the early Earl Weaver years: It’s a club that’s built mostly from within and overflowing with young stars. That worked out pretty well the first time around.

Source

https://blogs.fangraphs.com/the-orioles-are-running-out-of-lineup-spots/