Five things we learned from the Orioles' opening week of 2024 Skip to content

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Five things we learned from the Orioles’ opening week

The offense rises and falls with Gunnar Henderson and Adley Rutschman

Manager Brandon Hyde, pointing to fans before opening day against the Angels, and the Orioles had an exciting first week of the season. (Kim Hairston/Staff)
Manager Brandon Hyde, pointing to fans before opening day against the Angels, and the Orioles had an exciting first week of the season. (Kim Hairston/Staff)

The Orioles jumped to a 4-2 start on their opening homestand, mixing blowouts with late-inning heroics as they began their defense of a surprise American League East title.

Here are five things we learned from the first week of their season.

The Orioles’ offense rises and falls on what Gunnar Henderson and Adley Rutschman do at the top

When the Orioles scored 24 runs over their first two games, Henderson and Rustchman combined to reach base 10 times in 18 plate appearances. When they laid a pair of one-run eggs, their top two hitters reached twice — a pair of Henderson walks — in 16 plate appearances.

It’s no deep insight to say a functional offense is reliant on its most talented hitters. But the Orioles, seventh in the AL in on-base percentage last season, become particularly thin on table setters when Henderson and Rutschman aren’t reaching. Ryan Mountcastle, Anthony Santander, Austin Hays and Ryan O’Hearn are far from dead spots, but not one of them posted an on-base percentage higher than .328 last season. Jordan Westburg’s minor league performance suggests he could help, but he’s still growing as a major league hitter.

This isn’t an issue of lineup construction. Manager Brandon Hyde simply does not have a bevy of naturally patient hitters to draw from. Even the 22-year-old Henderson is a work in progress as a leadoff hitter. “He’s maturing as a hitter,” Hyde said when asked why he installed the 2023 AL Rookie of the Year at the top of his lineup. “He’s got a chance to go deep. He’s got a chance to do things exciting on the bases. And I just want to see him hit as much as possible.”

Sound logical, but as wonderful a talent as Henderson is, he’s still feeling for the sweet spot between discernment and aggression, which means the Orioles aren’t always going to put pressure on opponents from the top of their lineup.

The elephant in this room is the club’s top prospect, Jackson Holliday, who posted a .442 on-base percentage across four minor league levels last season. He’s precisely the type of hitter the Orioles need to avoid empty innings, and fans have already grumbled about his absence on the days when Hyde’s lineups have not clicked. The Orioles’ logic in sending Holliday to Triple-A was defensible but will become less so if he’s there for long.

The club’s sparkling record obscured the fact it was not an offensive juggernaut in 2023. That reality became all too stark when the Texas Rangers slugged the Orioles right out of the playoffs in three games. Henderson and Rutschman are the start of a more potent scoring apparatus, but that machine won’t be whole without new parts from the farm.

Orioles Jackson Holliday plays in first game of the Grapefruit League 2024 Spring Training season at Ed Smith Stadium in Sarasota, Fl. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)
Orioles top prospect Jackson Holliday helped the Triple-A Norfolk Tides to a historic opening week. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

Who knew a Triple-A lineup would overshadow the defending AL East champs?

We touched on Holliday, baseball’s top prospect, who’s slugging .800 and getting on base at a .448 clip as he theoretically refines his approach against left-handers in Norfolk.

But he’s not remotely the hottest hitter in a Tides lineup that seems to crank out more absurd box scores by the day.

Hyde was asked about this minor league wrecking crew Wednesday, after Holliday, Connor Norby, Heston Kjerstad and Kyle Stowers had all homered in a 10-6 win over Charlotte. “When you send the message to them of not making the team,” he replied, “you want them to take it the right way and prove people wrong, work on the things we asked them to work on and do it with a great attitude.”

The Tides followed up by scoring 26 runs later the same day. Holliday scored five. Kjerstad drove in 10. Stowers, this spring’s power sensation in Sarasota, homered three times and drove in seven. Coby Mayo, the team’s slugging corner infielder, had a “quiet” day with five hits.

Prove people wrong? These guys are banging on the door to Baltimore with a sack of sledgehammers.

Through five games, Kjerstad was slugging 1.208, Stowers 1.080, Norby .913.

Fans have noticed, intensifying their demands for call-ups whenever the major league lineup scuffles. This is the good problem general manager Mike Elias and his staff have created: a winning team in Baltimore that could become significantly more potent once Holliday, Mayo, Stowers, etc. push their way into regular roles.

The “regular” part is the sticky wicket for Elias, Hyde and the very good players who helped the Orioles to 101 wins last season. There aren’t enough at-bats to go around at the moment, a reality we’re seeing with one of the club’s other top prospects, outfielder Colton Cowser, batting just eight times in the first six games.

The best version of the 2024 Orioles probably includes Holliday, Mayo, Norby and Stowers, but that will require unhappy decisions on players such as Ryan O’Hearn, Cedric Mullins and Jorge Mateo, all of whom helped the club end its ugly stretch of losing. Unspoken competition between those veterans and the prospects pressing from Norfolk is not going away, and it’s a sign this organization is, top to bottom, the healthiest it has been in decades.

Mar 28, 2024: Orioles starter Corbin Burnes reacts after striking out Angels' Zach Neto in the third inning. Burnes finished with 11 strikeouts in Orioles 11-3 victory in their 2024 season opener at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)
Orioles ace Corbin Burnes was lights-out in his debut on opening day against the Angels. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

This isn’t the dream rotation, but it’ll work for now

No, it was not fun to watch Cole Irvin allow hard contact on more than half the balls the Royals put in play Tuesday night as he lost on a dreary night at Camden Yards. Fans could be forgiven for fantasizing over an accelerated recovery timeline for Kyle Bradish, who pitched so superbly down the stretch last season. The end goal is to have Corbin Burnes, Bradish (nursing a sprained ulnar collateral ligament) and Grayson Rodriguez fronting a rotation that could go pitch for pitch with anyone in the playoffs. A healthy John Means — he was knocked around in his first rehabilitation start for Norfolk — would add another quality starter.

But pitchers get hurt. It’s one of the bedrock rules of baseball. The rotation and bullpen you envision in March are almost never the ones you’re working with for six months. Patching is expected, and that’s what the Orioles did on their opening homestand, with their pitchers keeping them competitive, even on rougher days.

Burnes and Rodriguez pitched gems in their first starts, reinforcing our notions that Burnes is the No. 1 the club lacked and Rodriguez is the young starter with the best chance to join him at that level. Burnes was not as sharp in his second outing, allowing seven hits in the first three innings after waiting out a five-hour rain delay. But he didn’t walk anybody, limited the damage to two runs and was pitching better when he left the game in the sixth inning than he was in the first. That’s what you want from an ace who isn’t finishing off hitters at his usual rate, and the Orioles rallied to win.

They did the same two days earlier, with Dean Kremer working past his homer-prone tendencies (27 allowed in 172 1/3 innings last year) to keep them close.

This rotation will need to survive scarier offenses; the Angels and Royals finished ninth and 10th, respectively, in the AL in runs scored last season. But we saw the Orioles piece together workable pitching last year, backed by very good defense and a thriving bullpen. They did it without Burnes and without this version of Rodriguez for the first half of the season.

The formula will be different this year — it always is with pitching — but nothing from the first six games should inspire panic.

Baltimore Orioles' James McCann, left, celebrates with Anthony Santander, center, after McCann hit a walk-off single that drove in two runs during the ninth inning of a baseball game against the Kansas City Royals, Wednesday, April 3, 2024, in Baltimore. The Orioles won 4-3. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)
Orioles catcher James McCann, left, celebrates with outfielder Anthony Santander after McCann hit a walk-off two-run single Wednesday night against the Royals. (Nick Wass/AP)

The first week only matters so much, but at least the Orioles didn’t hobble from the gate

A week means little in the course of a baseball season. Every year, great teams are terrible and terrible teams great over five- or six-game spans. Opening week magnifies everything: blowout wins fuel World Series dreams, dreary losses foreshadow greater disappointments. We have to tell ourselves again and again that six games are just 3.7% of a long, long slog.

That said, recent history tells us that teams aspiring to greatness best not be dreadful when the curtain rises on a new year. Of the 47 teams that won at least 90 games over the past five full seasons, almost one-third started 3-3, but only one, the 2023 Philadelphia Phillies, started 1-5. None started 0-6.

The Orioles came into this season with astonishing narrative momentum thanks to their 2023 breakout, their spring training dominance and the sale of the club to David Rubenstein. They practically broke the euphoria meter when they scored 11 runs and then 13, backed by splendid pitching outings, in their first two games. If they’re playing deep into October, we’ll remember this as a week that foretold it all.

In reality, they just needed to be not terrible, and they easily leaped that hurdle.

Larry Lucchino was one of the most important executives in Orioles history

It’s difficult to convey to younger fans how big a deal Camden Yards was when it opened in 1992. Who knew a ballpark could tap into the game’s century-old majesty and make it feel brand new at the same time? Somehow, that was the experience watching games in the shadow of a refurbished downtown warehouse, and the Orioles, coming off a difficult period, inspired an architectural revolution around the sport.

There’s justified talk that Janet Marie Smith should go into the Baseball Hall of Fame for her role in creating Camden Yards, rehabilitating Fenway Park and other projects on baseball’s design vanguard. But Smith would be the first to say, as she did many times this week, that Lucchino, who died Tuesday at age 78, was her steadfast partner in the mission.

Lucchino came to the Orioles as a close friend and law partner of owner Edward Bennett Williams and took over as club president in 1988, the same year Williams died. With the Colts’ departure still a fresh and bitter wound, a new ballpark for the Orioles was paramount.

“It was Lucchino, by all accounts, who fastened onto the notion of building a stadium of distinction from the outset,” author Peter Richmond wrote in “Ballpark,” his excellent history of Camden Yards’ construction.

He did not come in with the full vision. Richmond detailed Lucchino’s early aversion to keeping the warehouse, for example. But there was no more forceful advocate for the concept. “The Orioles don’t drive Yugos,” Richmond quoted him saying as he entered one meeting with architects, “and we won’t play in one.”

Lucchino was never the principal owner of the Orioles. He won’t be remembered for assembling any of the club’s great teams. The wider baseball world probably associates him more with leading the Boston Red Sox when they broke their World Series curse. But there’s no more important event in the last 35 years of Baltimore baseball than the design and construction of Camden Yards.

For his role in it, Lucchino deserves to go down with Jerrold Hoffberger, Harry Dalton and Frank Cashen, Williams and Peter Angelos as essential off-field figures in the Orioles’ story.