The Oncoming Storm: Part Three
It has been said many times, many ways that the 2012 season
for the Baltimore Orioles was improbable at best. By going 29-9 in one-run
games the Orioles accomplished something that no team in recent history has
ever been able to pull off. This either meant that the O’s were supremely,
irrationally, lucky or there was something else going on that the now
stat-crazed MLB establishment just couldn’t put their fingers on. Whether it
was luck or some kind of byzantine skill a team that was widely picked to lose 100
games last year won 93 and took the endless New York Yankees to game five of
the ALCS.
Now, can they do it again?
Normally when a team wins 93 games there is a sense of
certainty surrounding the club the following year. There is a sense that, all
things being equal, similar results should come for the new season. That cannot
be said for the Orioles. Given the unnatural progress they made last year the
baseball elites are still looking at the Orioles with a sideways glance trying
to find the mirrors through the smoke. The Orioles are sitting at a major
turning point right now, do they stick with the formula that worked, buy the
big free agents, or make the big trades?
Standing pat
General Manager Dan Duquette stated yesterday that he is
“happy” with the current roster, though he is still looking to make deals and
improve the team. For all intents and purposes it appears that manager Buck
Showalter is fine standing pat as well. The Orioles did lose Mark Reynolds
after the team decided to non-tender him. While Chris Davis would be able to
return to his natural position at first, and Manny Machado would be the opening
day third baseman, that does leave a rather large hole at DH. Reynolds
definitely did not have his power-stroke for much of the 2012 campaign which is
most likely the reason the Orioles let him go. But without his bat in the
lineup what would a DH look like with the current roster?
The primary candidate would be Wilson Betemit. When Betemit was
signed last year it was assumed that this would be his primary role but
injuries and the ineffectiveness by others forced him into the field much more
than I believe was originally intended. Betemit gets on base at an average
clip, roughly the .330’s, but nothing astonishing. He still has some power,
though coming off a surgically repaired wrist it will be interesting to see how
he recovers. Betemit is not an ideal DH, frankly I always thought Mark
Reynolds was a more prototypical DH but that ship seems to have sailed, but
Betemit has the ability to fill the role in a respectable level.
The wild card in this is Nolan Reimold. Reimold is a fan
favorite. The oft’ injured Reimold has shown flashes of dominance in parts of
three seasons with Baltimore. Last season was, again, cut short with a season
ending-neck injury. Reimold is primarily a left-fielder, but with the
re-signing of Nate McLouth Reimold should logically be pushed into the DH role.
He was off to an absolutely torrid start in 2012, but only played in 13 games
all year. As much as everyone wants to see Reimold pick up right where he
left off last year I don’t think the Orioles can rely on him in any tangible
way.
The rest of the Orioles roster does not seem to have a real
DH bat on it beyond those two. Needless to say, while standing pat might not be
the worst option in the world, the Orioles will be missing a big bat in the
middle of the lineup. That is unless Nolan Reimold can come back strong and
stay healthy.
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