Three months into the Orioles’ offseason, the club has yet to make a major splash. Baltimore has addressed several of its roster needs with the signings of outfielder Tyler O’Neill (three years, $49.5 million),
The Baltimore Orioles were seen as a team in desperate need of starting pitching as Corbin Burnes hit the open market and always appeared unlikely to return, ev
The Orioles struck out on a pair of trade acquisitions over the last two seasons. Jack Flaherty bounced back in a big way last season. Can Trevor Rogers do the same?
The Toronto Blue Jays want a trade return that exceeds what the San Diego Padres got for Juan Soto in regard to inquiries for Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Here are three teams that should match their asking price.
Roki Sasaki, the No. 2 player on Yahoo Sports' Top 50 free-agent rankings, is headed to Los Angeles. He announced his decision on his Instagram on Friday. Sasaki turned down the Toronto Blue Jays, San Diego Padres,
Question: Rich, let’s be realistic. Mike Elias has constructed a 2025 team that’s not as good as 2024. Other than Zach Eflin, he blew it at the trade deadline. This offseason was supposed to be a big splash.
World Series titles might be won in October, but the debate over who might get there in 2025 has already commenced. Most MLB teams, however, will likely fall somewhere in between contender and pretender.
The Orioles are paying Zach Eflin like a front-end starter in 2025, but he will need to take on a greater workload to assume the title of an ace.
The tracking for this log was reset for the 2024-25 offseason on 10/30/24. Listed in reverse chronological order. 1/13 - RHP Andrew Kittredge signed to one-year, $10 million contract. C Blake Hunt designated for assignment.
For the Orioles, who have already increased spending under first-year owner David Rubenstein and have potential extensions for some of their young stars to consider, a long-term commitment to a player such as Santander might not have fit their plans. But a shorter-term deal, while forcing some creative roster adjustments, might make more sense.
Andrew Kittredge and the Baltimore Orioles finalized a $10 million, one-year contract on Monday. The reliever gets a $9 million salary this year and the agreement includes a $9 million team option for 2026 with a $1 million buyout.
So far this offseason, the Orioles’ additions to their pitching staff had all been starters, having previously inked Charlie Morton and Tomoyuki Sugano to one-year deals with plans to slot the right-handers into the rotation.