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Bill Cole and Todd Schuler join Nestor for a discussion about listening to girls in modern America

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Baltimore Positive
Bill Cole and Todd Schuler join Nestor for a discussion about listening to girls in modern America
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Bringing friends and activists together for conversation is what “A Cup of Soup Or Bowl” week is all about and on the final day of our annual week-long chats, Bill Cole and Todd Schuler join Nestor for a spirited discussion about listening to girls in modern America from Costas Inn in Timonium.

Nestor Aparicio, Bill Cole, and Todd Schuler discussed community engagement and charity work on WNST. Nestor highlighted his efforts to support 20-40 charities, including GBMC, Student Support Network, and Jason Los Foundation. Todd shared a personal story about Jason Los, a friend and community leader who passed away suddenly. Bill Cole talked about coaching young girls and the challenges they face, including self-confidence issues. The conversation also touched on political issues, the impact of social media, and the importance of community support and positive change. They emphasized the need for solutions and actionable steps to address societal issues.

Action Items

  • [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Secure sponsorships for the Cup of Super Bowl segments, including outreach to Cole Roofing and Blondell Miller Schuler (work in progress to restore sponsorships)
  • [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Bring Todd Schuler into engagement with the Jason Lowe Foundation (connect Todd to the foundation and relevant contacts)
  • [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Have Student Support Network appear on the Cup of Super Bowl show (schedule and host them on the program)
  • [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Identify and secure 20–40 charities to participate as replacements for Super Bowl week community segments (compile list and confirm participation)
  • [ ] Coach the girls’ basketball team at the Class A/B/C championship event at Howard Community College on Saturday the 14th (lead the team at the game)
  • [ ] Organize annual Preakness party donations and collect supplies/cash to support Student Support Network (coordinate donors and deliver collected items)

Discussion on Community Engagement and Charity Work

  • Nestor Aparicio introduces the segment, mentioning various community initiatives and sponsors, including GBMC, Cole Roofing, and Blonde Miller Schuler.
  • Nestor reflects on his wife’s cancer diagnosis 12 years ago and how it inspired him to start community conversations.
  • Nestor discusses the challenges of balancing work, sponsorships, and charity engagements, mentioning the need to find 20 to 40 new charities.
  • Nestor highlights the importance of community support and how referrals from sponsors and LinkedIn helped him connect with various charities.

Introduction of Jason Los Foundation

  • Nestor introduces Pete from Student Support Network, mentioning past collaborations and a segment on pantries in Baltimore County.
  • Nestor shares a personal story about meeting Jason Lowe’s brother and the impact of Jason Los passing on his family.
  • Todd Schuler praises Jason Los as a good friend and a healthy individual who died suddenly from a septic infection.
  • Nestor reflects on the emotional impact of Jason Los story and how it connects to his own experiences and community work.

Discussion on Community Support and Personal Stories

  • Nestor shares his experience of doing a segment with Jason Lowe’s foundation and the emotional impact of hearing personal stories.
  • Todd Schuler talks about the outpouring of support at Jason Lowe’s funeral and the involvement of his children in sports and school activities.
  • Nestor reflects on the importance of public engagement and how it helps raise awareness and support for various causes.
  • Nestor mentions the need for more sponsorships and support for his community initiatives, highlighting the role of sponsors like Cole Roofing and Blonde Miller Schuler.

Challenges and Solutions in Community Work

  • Nestor discusses the challenges of balancing community work with personal and professional responsibilities.
  • Nestor reflects on the importance of community support and how it helps sustain his initiatives.
  • Nestor mentions the need for more sponsors and partners to help with community work and charity engagements.
  • Nestor highlights the importance of community engagement and how it helps raise awareness and support for various causes.

Reflections on Community Engagement and Personal Experiences

  • Nestor shares his personal experiences and reflections on community engagement and the impact of his work.
  • Nestor discusses the importance of community support and how it helps sustain his initiatives.
  • Nestor reflects on the challenges of balancing community work with personal and professional responsibilities.
  • Nestor highlights the importance of community engagement and how it helps raise awareness and support for various causes.

Discussion on Community Support and Personal Stories

  • Nestor shares his experience of doing a segment with Jason Lowe’s foundation and the emotional impact of hearing personal stories.
  • Todd Schuler talks about the outpouring of support at Jason Lowe’s funeral and the involvement of his children in sports and school activities.
  • Nestor reflects on the importance of public engagement and how it helps raise awareness and support for various causes.
  • Nestor mentions the need for more sponsors and partners to help with community work and charity engagements.

Challenges and Solutions in Community Work

  • Nestor discusses the challenges of balancing community work with personal and professional responsibilities.
  • Nestor reflects on the importance of community support and how it helps sustain his initiatives.
  • Nestor mentions the need for more sponsors and partners to help with community work and charity engagements.
  • Nestor highlights the importance of community engagement and how it helps raise awareness and support for various causes.

Reflections on Community Engagement and Personal Experiences

  • Nestor shares his personal experiences and reflections on community engagement and the impact of his work.
  • Nestor discusses the importance of community support and how it helps sustain his initiatives.
  • Nestor reflects on the challenges of balancing community work with personal and professional responsibilities.
  • Nestor highlights the importance of community engagement and how it helps raise awareness and support for various causes.

Discussion on Community Support and Personal Stories

  • Nestor shares his experience of doing a segment with Jason Los foundation and the emotional impact of hearing personal stories.
  • Todd Schuler talks about the outpouring of support at Jason Los funeral and the involvement of his children in sports and school activities.
  • Nestor reflects on the importance of public engagement and how it helps raise awareness and support for various causes.
  • Nestor mentions the need for more sponsors and partners to help with community work and charity engagements.

Challenges and Solutions in Community Work

  • Nestor discusses the challenges of balancing community work with personal and professional responsibilities.
  • Nestor reflects on the importance of community support and how it helps sustain his initiatives.
  • Nestor mentions the need for more sponsors and partners to help with community work and charity engagements.
  • Nestor highlights the importance of community engagement and how it helps raise awareness and support for various causes.

SUMMARY KEYWORDS

community engagement, charity work, domestic violence, student support, girls sports, political chaos, economic growth, social media impact, youth activism, community assets, legal background, personal injury law, solar energy, community conversations, Baltimore positive

SPEAKERS

Todd Schuler, Speaker 2, Speaker 1, Bill Cole, Nestor Aparicio

Nestor Aparicio  00:00

Go. Welcome out. We are W, N, S, T. Am 1570 task Baltimore. We are Baltimore positive. A little bow tie underneath them. You should say since 26 years. It’s really been 27 years, and we’re here for a cup of Super Bowl candy cane cash from the Maryland lottery. Also, friends at GBMC did a really special segment with my GM GBMC partners on Thursday pizza John’s about domestic violence and abuse and survivors. We’ve been doing some tough, tough conversations this week. We’ve done some Hall of Fame conversation this week. We’ve done some charity well. We’ve done homeless we’ve done student shelters. We’ve done all sorts of things. These guys are two of the guys that helped me power things up. Bill Cole, of course. Cole roofing, Gordian energy, longtime sponsor of the wnst tech service, which Luke is manning over here. And Todd Schuler of blonde l Miller Schuler, and you are damn good lawyers, from what I understand, good lawyer.com All right, I met your brother yesterday, and you’re part of this thing that, and Cole was my consulate about all this. We’re 12 years out on my wife being diagnosed with cancer. Be 12 years November or March 20. And I remember talking to you about, like doing community stuff. And I said, Why don’t go to church? Luke goes on Sunday, but I want to do like a Thursday morning, like my own little cathedral of conversations about the community and making the world a better place and all that it begat, all of the other stuff that we’ve done. Begat Baltimore, positive, really. And then I last week, I realized I’m aied up. I’m working hard, I’m selling. I got all these new sponsors that are coming on, and I didn’t have time to, like, get a lot of charities on, you know. And it got late early. And couple years ago, I did this live eight hours a day. I killed myself. I just, like, I’ve said, I’m not not doing that again. I’m gonna keep this thing calm. But I was looking for 20 to 40 charities, you know, kind of, like, in that range to replace Super Bowl week for conversations, and I threw it out. And it turns out guys like you and people in the community are the reason I found every charity, every charity that came said, Oh, Trish sent me, or Schuler sent me, or Cole sent me, or somebody referred you, or I hit it on LinkedIn, or I saw what you were doing. This fellow here, Pete, is with Student Support Network. I did a thing with them, like six, seven years ago, about pantries in Baltimore County and kids being fed, and I sent them a flyer. They didn’t make a time, and we ended up and I’m like, get over here. We’re going to do this. Of course, we’re going to do this. So Jason Lowe’s foundation is where I want to bring you in Schuler, because I met your brother for the first time last night, and I’m out in Essex with a bunch of Towson people. They came over, they hung out. It was an unbelievable story that I wouldn’t have known about, because there’s a connection point with all of it, that you connected and then that’s really what the spirit of the whole thing was about. Was me shouting, what’s going on in our community, and the best people that I know started saying, well, these people were doing this for kids, and these people are doing this for people. And Jason Loes was one of those. I was cried last night. I mean, this woman lost her husband, and I think about where I was 12 years ago. They begat all of this crap.

Todd Schuler  03:07

And, yeah, yeah. Well, Nestor, I really, really appreciate you engaging with them, because they like you say they really are a fantastic organization. And los himself, he was just such a good dude. This was your friend. He was a friend of mine. He had gone to college. Both him and his wife had gone to college with my brother. And I knew them from Brooke circles, although Cynthia and I went to different high schools together, but before they went to college, but, but, but, yeah, good buddy and genuinely a nice, nice guy. I know you got the story last night, but he, I think when he passed away, his youngest was in eighth grade,

Nestor Aparicio  03:46

ninth grade, it was only two years, less than two years, yeah, I

Todd Schuler  03:49

think yeah, it’ll be first part pregnancy time, right? It’ll be right around May or June that we lost los, but, uh, but yeah, really, suddenly healthy as an ox. He was the first guy I ever knew that did dry January, right? Like he or the whole 30, where you do, like, the 30 days off of carbs and beer and everything and, like, he worked out, he was just in great shape, and he caught a septic infection and died within a couple of days. And it was really, really hard.

Nestor Aparicio  04:19

I lost a friend at 51 my wife’s cousin lost her mate, and he got pneumonia like, and it happened so fast. And I told them on the segment I was like, pneumococcal pneumonia. I see the commercial for and I’m right, it scares the hell out of me a little bit. And then I get this story, and it scares me even more, you know.

Todd Schuler  04:37

And of all the things you know, I’m a hypochondriac. I think you probably are too. Like, I’m always worried that I got something wrong with me and poor lows, the health he was the healthiest guy now, and also the nicest guy. Like when I remember being at his funeral at St Joseph Fullerton. And like, between the kids being involved in sports, being involved in school, between both, both he and Cynthia, very much involved in everything you. It, you know, there was just a crazy outpouring, I mean, and they, they were able to bottle that energy lasted

Nestor Aparicio  05:05

like a pack to Pizza John’s. And they were off camera when I was doing another segment, and they were wine pizza cheesesteaks, doing all that up. And I’m like, You’re for me. And they were all dressed the same, yeah. And then they wanted 10 microphones, and I got three. You have to put a committee together here. But what I realized, and I didn’t even say this in the segment, but what I realized, was that she had never done anything publicly like doing my show, and now that I’m on the last day, and I know you’re nervous, Bill, but everybody gets nervous coming on this show when they don’t do this. And she had really never been on a and that’s why she brought everybody, I think, was to give her some encouragement. That’s like, the whole purpose of all of it is this woman lost her her husband, and everybody surrounding her with love. And not only that, they’re doing they’ve $75,000 or doing stuff like that. And you were the one that sent this over to me. So I guess that’s my seed. Of the 10s of 1000s of you to follow me that they say, Don’t follow me. When you put those things up, I bring people out and make it happen. I think people reach me this week. Is it too late? What a radio next week? In a week after that, week after that, I hope Cole’s gonna sponsor me. I’m trying to get blonde del Miller Schuler back. I’m working on it right now. Mark, where are you? But literally, the sponsorship, and the reason you, I think you support me, it’s not because I hated Trump then or now, or I like the Orioles then or now, or I write books. I think you see this as a community asset, and so do I. And that’s, and it’s, it’s a credit to Chad steel to have thrown me out, to put me back here, to do this work.

Bill Cole  06:43

Really. Well, good. I mean, that community asset, I can, mean, I can get down with that. About your your good looks, but community assets, I’m down community ass, something like that, right?

Nestor Aparicio  06:56

So what’s on your mind, guys, sports, charity, theater, what are we doing? What’s your coaching hoops, right?

Bill Cole  07:02

Yeah, we got parenting last regular season game today, and then if we handle our business, will be the one seed,

Nestor Aparicio  07:10

coaching the ladies, coaching the ladies.

Bill Cole  07:13

We’re next Saturday, the 14th Howard Community College. They have class A, class B and Class C, all the groups championship games down there. It’s a good time. It’s fun.

Nestor Aparicio  07:24

Can I get heavy with you?

Speaker 1  07:26

Sure. Can I get heavy with you? Get heavy baby.

Nestor Aparicio  07:29

Legal background, you know, 100.

Bill Cole  07:32

I got my lawyer here, so let’s go. I like that.

Nestor Aparicio  07:35

I like I might need that. Um, how are the girls you coach? I won’t call them women.

Bill Cole  07:42

They’re girls, 1415, 1617, 18, I guess.

Nestor Aparicio  07:46

I’ve done a segment every day this week, not just on social media, about the Epstein files, and I’ve done that too, but as it relates, as it relates, I’ve done three segments on women getting beaten this week, and what happens when that happens, and where do they go? Where do they find shelter? Where do they find a home if they’re not the breadwinner in the family? What happens after the cops come and they go to the hospital and they go back to the like I’ve done, all of that about women, and then I think of this creep running the country right now. And I think about every minute on my Facebook, there’s another legitimate email from this group of billionaires and protected people, King, sultans, presidents, former presidents all the way Democrat, Republican, black, white, Jewish, not Muslim, Arab, name, anything you want. Everybody was involved in this thing, and it all had to do with 1314, 1516, year old girls, same girls as you coach, same that I same girls that would grow up to be maybe battered, maybe in a badge, maybe run the world. In some cases, I just we’re not listening to women, man, like we’re not like we’re listening to women. This creep wouldn’t be running the country to start with, and it would be way over with right now. And two women have now lost, you know, in succession to him, and we ran a basically cadaver white man to win. I don’t I don’t recognize us, and when you are coaching these young ladies. And by the way, I cut my teeth, pub being the guy asking you questions. Bobby Nick, you remember Bobby Nick? Sure, sure. Yeah. Reason I knew Bobby Nick was he was a wild Lake basketball coach that came up on the show this week too, because somebody was a student at Wild lake as a guest on the show, because it’s Baltimore. And I met Bobby Nick coaching high school girls. I was a high school guy. I was 19 at the time. You know what I mean, like so I didn’t have a daughter. I have a wife. I love women. Everybody knows me, knows I love women. I cannot believe this is going on. Is what are your 14 year old girls think of this? Or they even pay attention to it. Ah. They’ve heard of the Epstein files. They know Donald

Bill Cole  10:01

Trump is, yeah, yeah, sure, yeah. So, like, rural, like, and I’ve been coaching my daughters since they were, like, seven, right? So when they’re seven, it’s a lot easier, right? And I coached boys before that, so had to learn that. And they, I mean, I definitely made them cry, not intentionally, but it happens, girls are so hard on themselves, they have unbelievably, really mean things to tell themselves, like their self talk, like, that’s like, the first thing that we start working on is like, boys dribble down the court, chuck a bad shot up. It’s an air ball, like, it that isn’t even hanging in their brains for half a second. They’re just like, Give me the ball. You’re right? Yeah, they’ll fire it up again, right? They know, they do not hesitate. Girls, if they shoot and it’s an air ball, they’re the weaker minded ones might not play, will not shoot the rest of the game, right, right? Like we had to get over that hump in November. Like, stop telling yourself you’re terrible. Stop to I mean, they just they, it is sometimes, because you hear them, right? They’re coming off the court and they’re going to the bench, and I so I’ll sit, I sit all the way at the far end of the bench, like our

Nestor Aparicio  11:30

head coach yelling, you suck to the other girls. They’re yelling, I suck to themselves, to themselves, right? Yeah, okay.

Todd Schuler  11:35

I watched a poor girl that you coached against foul somebody at mid court and walk off crying. I was at that game, and it’s, it’s terrible, because we are taught confidence in ways that women aren’t right. Like, I’m all for burning down the patriarchy. Let’s do it, whatever, but

Nestor Aparicio  11:53

you have a wife. Come on, man,

Todd Schuler  11:59

but I’m fundamentally, with fighting for your daughter, if, sure, if, if, if we let them, even if

Nestor Aparicio  12:04

you live in Hartford County, you vote the wrong way. I mean, literally, I don’t know what to say. No, I understand. I don’t know how that can’t be universal. I mean, how to pedophilia cannot be investigated. But like I’m I just can’t believe it forever.

Todd Schuler  12:20

For every example you can give about what a bad place we are in. And of course, Epstein, and of course the we’re a

Nestor Aparicio  12:27

place that I couldn’t have fathomed, but we’re that I just couldn’t when I met you guys 20 years that I could not when you’re running for office and trying to get votes from people. The notion that, you know, Al Franken could have a picture like this that’s clearly a joke, and have his career taken away. And this is where we are. I just I can’t.

Todd Schuler  12:49

I just want you to be able to also look for the ways that we are doing better, and the proliferation of girls sports is one of them. Like we also live in a place where trying to

Nestor Aparicio  13:00

take away their right to vote, for crying out loud, last Friday

Bill Cole  13:05

night, we played at the CQ Arena in front of 2000

Nestor Aparicio  13:11

1000, yeah, there was an air ball. Tell me, they don’t yell air ball at her. No, they do it. The boys, though, oh my

Speaker 2  13:17

but. Oh but they do the girls.

Todd Schuler  13:19

The girls too, sure, the girls from Mercy are in

Nestor Aparicio  13:23

mercy got together.

Todd Schuler  13:26

It’s real, and it’s all real because they’ve

Nestor Aparicio  13:29

been watching these NBA girls slug each other. And you know,

Todd Schuler  13:32

it’s a development, right? The boys in the in the audience, the boys watching the game, are engaged in ways that we probably weren’t about girls sports. 30 years the

Bill Cole  13:41

number of people that I get out to that game, and at the end, they’re like, I That was so fun. And I had no idea, like, I would have never went to a girls high school basketball game. Like, where’s

Nestor Aparicio  13:54

the IND games? Big deal. It’s fun.

Bill Cole  13:57

It’s awesome. It’s fun. So people are figuring that out. Look, I I want to come back to what you know, what you said, like, how much do they pay attention to so I don’t really know, I and that, but it that is one of the things that’s sort of bothering me right now, is that there’s a portion of the universe, right? If you go into like, Wall Street or the banks, and you start reading, like, what’s 26 going to be, and what kind of market? And like, what economic, you know? And it’s all green light. It’s all positive. It’s, it’s like, this is going to be a great 2026 then you go into, like, the social stratosphere, I guess. And it’s more like the things you’re saying like, this is chaos. This is terrible, you know. Look at what are the most untrusting

Nestor Aparicio  14:53

the man who saved my wife’s life has his government telling him to not come here. And 71% German people think we are now the enemy, right? So what I can happen quick, what

Bill Cole  15:05

I can’t figure out is, so if you

Nestor Aparicio  15:08

let’s because we’re allowing our leader to be an open pedophile, we’re allowing that

Bill Cole  15:11

if I if I operate, if I operate, checking that if I operate, from the standpoint that both of those concepts are true, right? That we have political chaos, fire on fire, and I have the underpinnings of a healthy economy, growing economy, right? AI’s breathing all this efficiency into stuff and blah, blah, blah. We’re not, we’re not getting rid of the people. We’re making the people better and all that stuff. So those two exist at the same time. That doesn’t, that’s not. I’m looking for historical references where you can, you can look to because I don’t know that those two, if you have political chaos, it should inherently make it hard to do economic, you know, business, it should.

Nestor Aparicio  15:56

I like to think the minute this guy’s gone, things will get infinitely better for everyone who has my skin color and not yours. It’s psychologically but, like, I also know the pushback of what happened down on the steps of January 6 that didn’t really happen there wasn’t really violent, like, like, all of the talking points in in that case, and not to mention the fact of cooking the election, which I know you’ve counted a lot of ballots in your day, touching

Bill Cole  16:27

election, try and land this one thing that so next week. So we’ve got these two competing things right? My sense of apple juice, of this local community is depending on how you spend your time. What you read is the only thing that is currently affecting your mental health, right? Like, if you’re watching political information all the time, and your Facebook feed is

Nestor Aparicio  17:03

my mental health. Does have a passport, and I was gonna go to South America until this creep started bombing my family’s country. And I don’t feel safe walking around South America with an American passport. How about

Bill Cole  17:13

that, all of South America? Because I have people that go to Costa Rica all the time, and they have

Nestor Aparicio  17:18

South America. That’s Central America, but that’s okay.

Todd Schuler  17:20

It’s pretty close. I’m just saying with the political on here.

Nestor Aparicio  17:24

So was the hurricane in Alabama too. I mean, but yeah,

Todd Schuler  17:27

you can’t we were, we were inevitable to this collision. And what, what is? What is happening now is a reckoning. And you talk about the 16 year olds and the 17 year olds walking around. They’re walking out of their schools in Baltimore County to protest the ice brutality, right? What we have gotten to that, what we have is an engaged group of young people that we didn’t have 10 years ago. 20 years ago, we had a lot of apathy in this country.

Bill Cole  17:54

Engaged is a dangerous word to use. How so well engaged is this concept of maybe meeting in the middle, like I’m as interested as you are in giving me the info, I’m concerned that we don’t, most of our young people don’t actually have the choice to engage, because they are fed and The algorithms and the stream and the scroll so they are no longer like openly wanting to engage. They’re just like eating and eating and eating, and people just keep feeding, but they’re chasing to

Todd Schuler  18:33

the streets in ways that they didn’t do earlier, right? In other words, the government’s oppression has galvanized people. It’s radicalized people. It’s radicalized.

Nestor Aparicio  18:45

The whole Minneapolis is, you know, was targeted, clearly, of course, yeah. And the whole

Todd Schuler  18:50

operation was about proving intimidation right for future use, and they did that, but they didn’t count on the counter reaction. And the counter reaction is, people are pissed off. Young people are pissed off. And I say engage, I mean, I mean they’re, they’re

Nestor Aparicio  19:05

like my dad was when he stood in a soup line and her maneuver was lying to him. My dad was 10 years old and starved. I’m doing a cup of Super Bowl this week to honor him in that way for the Maryland Food Bank and for anyone else pantries. I’m gonna have student support network here in a little bit. So I

Todd Schuler  19:20

watched the people of the kids of Eastern High School walk out. I’ve watched them walk up and down Eastern Avenue with their flags and their signs. We didn’t have that 10 years ago, right? And it is a reaction to this.

Nestor Aparicio  19:32

Well, Dundalk was doing the walk out today, and they let the kids out of school early.

Todd Schuler  19:35

And shows Delaney, there’s, there’s a dozen walkouts all over the I’m

Nestor Aparicio  19:40

all in. Bill Ko’s here. Todd Schuler’s here. Blonde Miller Schuler Cole roofing, our friends, our sponsors and partners. We’re doing a cup of Super Bowl. It’s all brought to you by the Maryland lottery. Have candy cane cash, by the way, you guys get get lucky. Get Lucky. Get there’s like a lover boy song, get lucky. I got to give you a hard time talk because your brother was there last night. He was very disappointed, though. That I didn’t know yet, and you guys look kind of like when you have the beards going on, you have similar talking points, but different count. That’s and he said to me, in total company with all these people, he said, I’m the black sheep at a family I’m like, No, not that. And I thought that’s encouraging to see people from Calvert hall that weren’t Republicans. I thought that was great. So I would like, I love that he was offended, that he was offended, that was a very they all agreed that you’re okay and they can live with your brother. But Bud was the good one.

Todd Schuler  20:39

Bud was the good one. He was a wholesome dude, not too out of line. Brooks is crazy. I don’t know. I don’t he leaves a week in his path. So when I get to somewhere where he was hanging out last night, stories the chaos, like, That guy’s your brother, what the heck, you know? Like I thought I was

Nestor Aparicio  20:58

kind of stayed later at Pizza John’s. I would have made that yoga class if I’d known

Todd Schuler  21:01

that Jason Lowe’s foundation throws down. That’s the other thing about them, is they’re not just going out there and doing good. They are, but they’re having a really good time doing it right. The vibes are outstanding with that group. Let me play

Nestor Aparicio  21:13

bottom feeder here for a moment with two of my favorite small business owners here, Essex, all over the area, DUI, injury, corporate, roof, space, solar, all of that. Y’all got rich the last two weeks, didn’t you? Huh? People falling on ice, breaking bones, busting their ass, getting in car accidents, the plows, screwing them up. And then you tell it did this guy here, the ice comes and it lays, and then the moisture happens, and then the thing grows, and then the hole happens, and then you need a new roof. Basically, bad weather helps you cats, you’re like Home Depot

Todd Schuler  21:53

in a weird way. I think. I mean the the amount of people that are falling on this ice, the phone calls that I’m getting, and they’re they’re not easy falls,

Nestor Aparicio  22:02

dude, I live in the woods, and this is the saddest thing ever. I’m seeing animals that are lame because they hurt themselves. Wow. I’ve seen a fox with one hand up, deer in the backyard, one hand up because they can’t navigate the other. You do go out there.

Todd Schuler  22:19

My wife does little field dressing

Nestor Aparicio  22:21

the whole deal, and

Bill Cole  22:25

he’s going out like just ending. No, we try

Nestor Aparicio  22:27

to try to get the fox to get peanuts, but the Blue Jays get to it first, and the squirrel. So we don’t know about the fox but, but I’m literally, this has been a treacherous couple of weeks. You can’t get on roofs, right?

Bill Cole  22:41

Yeah, I was, yeah, for us, it’s, it’s, you know, sure, maybe it’s damaging things. And find that in April, right? And that leads to stuff down next week, when our problem is, and it’s been a long time since I can remember when we got, I mean, we would get 1518, inches, and it would go, but it would be 45 degrees two days

Todd Schuler  23:00

later it’s gonna be here.

Bill Cole  23:03

Yeah, this has been very hard. We have not done we have not done very much work, and I’ve

Nestor Aparicio  23:08

been looking out my own window for a week and not doing much and digging out. I had a funeral with last week. We lost curio founder, and I went to Michael’s funeral in an Uber. And I just been home, you know, I mean, just been trying to, like, mellow out. We had enough milk and food and all that. And I drove downtown Monday to do the first day of cup of Super Bowl. It’s, like, the first time I, like, drove around, and I came down 83 and it’s just white, and I’m looking around, it’s great, gray and white. Get to the bottom. And I pulled up to UB, and I took the corner there Maryland Avenue, and I’m at the red light in front of the Lyric, and the snow was pub, 15 feet high, and it and then I made the left down Maryland Avenue, and it looked like a polar bear war zone. It was like these giant ice blocks of the you know, it literally looked like a, like a, like the Polar Bears

Todd Schuler  23:58

blind spots. And

Bill Cole  24:00

it’s, yeah, it really is, like, the public service announcement is like, come on, please just melt, damn it. Oh, sure, Mel, but just slow everybody. Slow down like

Speaker 1  24:12

I’m walking

Bill Cole  24:15

95 like, put the phones down and slow down like I I’m 695, I literally, in a three minute span. The guy in the slow lane rides up the snow and then just keeps going. I had to destroy his car.

Nestor Aparicio  24:31

Real drive all the other guy makes your testicles 20 times bigger than they ought to be. Well, just because I, you know, don’t what’s doing that

Todd Schuler  24:40

I thought I had, like, an infection or something.

Nestor Aparicio  24:42

It’s a pickup truck. Is what it is. Old age.

Bill Cole  24:46

Slow down. It’s a bit of a it’s the roads for a long time now have been a bit of like just in SAT since the bridge went down, right, yeah, like covid and all that.

Nestor Aparicio  25:00

Like, I pulled up on a pickup truck on Joppa road the other day had a Penn State logo on the back and a giant confederate flag. So I saw the Confederate flag on the back of the truck, and I’m like, I wonder what it says. And I pull up and it says, My heroes wore Gray, beautiful. And I’m thinking to myself, you don’t like America, but, but he was driving like a maniac, and he cut me off, you know, it’s like, one of those things. And I’m like, is that? And I sped up a little bit to the red light, and I’m like, Come on, dude, right? Don’t run me over wide ass truck.

Bill Cole  25:39

Like, maybe, maybe as part of the consequence penalty system for like,

Nestor Aparicio  25:48

vehicle, I think he thought he was driving the South.

Bill Cole  25:51

You have to ride. You have to ride with my 15 year old, as she’s learning how to drive. Yeah, like, if you like, if that was the penalty for people, like these

Nestor Aparicio  26:03

people themselves, and it you guys lost your minds, yeah, you lost your minds about the Waymo thing, yeah, still never getting in one,

Bill Cole  26:12

maybe, I don’t know, in Baltimore, like, not too long ago, like earlier this week, right? Yeah, they’re coming. Yeah. I think this was like a beta test like I’ve only seen one, but, yeah,

Nestor Aparicio  26:23

it’s coming. Yep, I’ll take it tonight.

Todd Schuler  26:26

Yeah, I’m good for just any, any old Uber will do for me, you know, so

Nestor Aparicio  26:30

you’re gonna trust somebody you don’t know, whatever, versus all the science and technology

Todd Schuler  26:36

I’ve Spotify alone, the Spotify algorithms are crappy enough for me to know that the robots aren’t winning yet. I haven’t joined Spotify yet. Gotta do Spotify. Send you a playlist. Nah.

Nestor Aparicio  26:50

I got my iPad. I got my iPad. Apple, Apple Music. Todd Schuler’s here. Blondell Miller Schuler, Bill Koco’s Alright. So plug your businesses. Tell everybody what

Todd Schuler  26:57

you do. Personal Injury. Lawyer, Eastern Avenue, you know, Blondell Miller and Schluter, we’ve been there for 50 years as a business. Obviously, I haven’t been there the whole time, but full

Nestor Aparicio  27:06

disclosure, disclosure, no, your partner, Mark Miller, has been my friend since childhood. Yeah, I’ve known Mark since 1979 Mark and I flew to California together and spent 10 days him dribbling a basketball everywhere from San Diego to San Francisco. Do you know this story? I do. I’ve heard him tell all right, yes, that’s how far back was, 41 years ago. That’s That’s wild. And he helps people every day. And you help people every day when bad ish happens to them and they don’t know who to turn to, they call you, that’s right, and you can be trusted where they go check. There you go. I got into that today about whether Terrell Suggs is worthy of an honor, spray your wife with bleach, pull a gun on somebody at a Starbucks, you’re not worthy of my honor. So if you if I had a vote, I just wouldn’t vote for that. He says that’s not the criteria. I’m like, well, that’s my criteria to honor anybody. So I wouldn’t be very good voter.

Todd Schuler  27:57

I agree with the character issues I might with Bill check Belichick getting snubbed because a weirdo talk about young girls

Nestor Aparicio  28:04

cheating, though, that’s what I’m saying. Like these, these, these, these insurance companies. They’re not there to be your friend, as you always tell me

Todd Schuler  28:11

that I said, they’re a casino. It’s the same concept. They have the algorithms, and they’ve had them for decades. They’re going to take in more in premiums than they are going to pay out every single time, and all they do is, when you watch your Super Bowl and you see your Super Bowl commercials, or half of them are for insurance companies, because only way to make more money is to have more market share, that’s it. There’s no squeezing the system in any other way. They just need

Nestor Aparicio  28:38

every day. Blonde l Miller Schuler, damn good lawyer, and you will sell solar now. Or you want to talk about room, what do you want to do?

Bill Cole  28:47

I don’t know. I mean, I, I think more important right now. Look, roofs go bad, and you need to get new

Nestor Aparicio  28:54

ones. I need one. I need solar.

Bill Cole  28:58

I mean, it’s we’re going to keep doing it, no matter what government programs they kill or legislation they pass, like it doesn’t really matter. We need more electricity. Like everybody sees their bills. It’s all going up. Like it’s out of control. You know, data centers, all that good stuff. So I think more is just landing this idea that, you know, I give you a lot of credit for taking a week and just trying to pull all these nonprofits together and shine some light on some good stuff that’s going on, I kind of feel like if we would talk about that more like, I think the more you talk and are angry. I know why you say the things you say about the government and Trump and all that, I just feel like, if Would it work to just completely ignore it all?

Nestor Aparicio  29:49

No, no, no, that’s dumb, but I don’t have enough time to tell you how dumb that is. I would have to have three beers about that.

Bill Cole  29:56

There is literally no amount somebody this week tell

Todd Schuler  29:58

me to speak of them. Just about ready, literally wrapping this a week,

Bill Cole  30:02

you know amount of energy that you can expend, where you are going to impact, it’s change, anything that it’s a do,

Todd Schuler  30:10

yes, there is no way now is a perfect example of expending energy in a way that’s going to bring about fundamental change.

Bill Cole  30:19

I not. I don’t have a problem with you. I was it okay. I don’t have a problem with you, doing work at the congressional and even Senate level, like reaching out to those and trying to help. You know what I’m using

Nestor Aparicio  30:35

my free speech, and you know what? It’s not free. It’s cost me a lot of money to speak my mind. A lot of money to speak my mind.

Bill Cole  30:44

I’m trying to understand that when all we do is tell everyone how bad everything is. I don’t know

Nestor Aparicio  30:54

positive dude, I’m here all week telling good story. Do you know what student support network is? I?

Todd Schuler  30:59

Do you know how? Go ahead, tell me I have a neighbor who’s a student who was a student support network board member, okay? And we have our Peters, we have our Preakness party every year. This is the one with the crawfish. Yes, okay. Student Support Network may or may not attended one of these identifies Baltimore County students crabs across who were on the, you know, free lunch program, or whatever, and then they basically have a free store where they can go get pantry. Yeah, they can get did the stuff that not school supplies, but or school supplies this and the things that can help. So every year for the past maybe four or five years, my Preakness party, we everybody brings a couple bucks and some supplies, give it to them, and just does a big factor right here. Sure, one of my absolute favorite charities that there is didn’t even

Nestor Aparicio  31:47

go to public schools like me, sweating it out. Dundalk, the hard way, you know, all right, I love you both.

Todd Schuler  31:54

Thanks for having pissed at you. He’s you

Bill Cole  31:57

don’t even have the debate. You just shut me down. You didn’t want to. He didn’t want

Nestor Aparicio  32:02

to debate it. You told me that being quiet is more effective. The hell is that you

Bill Cole  32:06

can talk about,

Todd Schuler  32:09

never gonna be quiet. You can talk

Bill Cole  32:11

about all the good stuff. I want you to talk about

Nestor Aparicio  32:13

the good stuff, but I’m not gonna ignore the bad stuff, like pedophiles running the country. It’s unacceptable to me.

Bill Cole  32:20

It isn’t I understand. Okay, yeah, you

Nestor Aparicio  32:25

understand. You understand. But there

Bill Cole  32:27

is no effing but I’m looking for solutions. The noise talking

Nestor Aparicio  32:32

about solutions is, get your ass and pull his ass out. By, by, whatever you have to pull it out.

Bill Cole  32:40

Fundamentally understand that, like you can’t ignore it, ignore it, right? Like you can’t allow you there. That’s it. I think we are causing irreparable harm to our young people.

Nestor Aparicio  32:53

They’re over in Dundalk. Tell them, like, if I went over to the Home Depot and Dundalk right now, I’d be a target to be pulled out, thrown by my hair. Quick. Come on, man, it’s okay.

Bill Cole  33:05

This is going on here. It’s unacceptable. I know Nestor, trust me. I know trust me.

Nestor Aparicio  33:09

Well, I’m not gonna look the other way. I know and people looking the other way is a problem, and I’m not gonna encourage that.

Bill Cole  33:15

I have never seen I’m going good trouble. I’ve never seen the trouble. I’ve never seen looking change anything looking. Yeah, you said I’m not gonna look the other way. You can look straight at it. You can look the other way. You can talk all you want. I’ve never seen a problem, any get

Nestor Aparicio  33:30

fixed by not focusing on it, right?

Bill Cole  33:33

But though we’re not giving anyone solutions, we’re not giving anyone alternatives.

Nestor Aparicio  33:39

Don vote for these creeps. You know, the solution is to go in and impeach the MFR. That’s the solution.

Todd Schuler  33:46

That’s women give him

Nestor Aparicio  33:49

conjunction to school for

Bill Cole  33:50

this, you can say Detroit, like

Nestor Aparicio  33:53

give a civics lesson. Would you go to school? Calvert Hall. We got to do better Calvert hall with social studies. I’m telling you right now. We got to do better constitution. Can we go? We take that manifest destiny? Tell me, Bill the right

Bill Cole  34:05

something you want you not talk about. Tell me something you want to do that will cause change or act what

Nestor Aparicio  34:14

I want to do, direction you want I want to do, what I’m gonna

Todd Schuler  34:17

Joe’s times a hook I got tomorrow’s for form.

Nestor Aparicio  34:23

Tell me why you love the pony. So we love

Todd Schuler  34:24

the pony. I love the ponies because I love Preakness, and it was a cool tradition when I was a kid to go out there. And ever since, I pay attention to horses when they run. Because, you know, especially this time of year, this time of year, we have the stakes races going on. Things are warming up, and these are the ones that are going to feed your Kentucky Derby. So I like to get my racing formula.

Nestor Aparicio  34:44

I like the people in Maryland to stop lying to me about the racing and what we’re doing with Preakness. I like to get a plan and have a plan go and let’s have a plan. As I said, Baby focus. Every year I come together. Every year there’s some new BS. Every year we’re going to do this. Every year I’ve been doing I’ve been. Money. How many years have been in here? 34 years every year. We’re gonna make the pre and now we’re at point where the Derby winner don’t come anymore.

Todd Schuler  35:07

Well, we need to push, push Preakness back a week or two. All right. Call Belmont about that.

Nestor Aparicio  35:11

All right. Todd Schuler is here. He’s running the ponies. Bill Cole and I have ended our relationship for at least Monday morning again. Back at him. Well, next time Luke sends a text, you’ve disappointed me, Son,

Bill Cole  35:27

you didn’t give me a chance to not disappoint, right? It’s all good. Joe said, we’re ready. Pick it up. It’s fine,

Nestor Aparicio  35:38

all right. I wish I were just being performative. But, you know, give me a hug. That’s a big deal. I did not make it up. Still, wrong. It cost.

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Right Now in Baltimore

Akin, Kittredge go to 15-day injured list as Orioles set Opening Day roster

Akin, Kittredge go to 15-day injured list as Orioles set Opening Day roster

Baltimore will be down an additional bullpen arm with lefty Keegan Akin going on the IL with a groin strain.
Swinging for the fences and a shot at October magic

Swinging for the fences and a shot at October magic

Luke Jones and Nestor discuss bad defense and many hopeful bats of Orioles as Opening Day awaits.

  • [ ] @Nestor Aparicio - Write and send letters to key Orioles front-office executives (including Craig Albernaz, Katie Griggs, Mike Elias, and others) expressing concerns and expectations about the team’s direction ahead of Opening Day.
  • [ ] @Nestor Aparicio - Write and send a letter to Mike Elias this week outlining concerns about the Orioles’ offseason moves and roster construction, ensuring the tone differs from Jason Lockman & Forest’s approach.

Defense and Pitching Leading to Offense

  • Nestor Aparicio discusses the importance of defense in setting up the pitching, mentioning the team's focus on pitching in previous discussions.
  • Nestor highlights the defensive capabilities of players like Kobe Mayo at third base and expresses concerns about Gunner Henderson's defense.
  • The conversation touches on the impact of injuries to key players like Holiday and Westburg on the team's defensive performance.
  • Nestor emphasizes the need for the team to hit well to compensate for any defensive shortcomings.

Kobe Mayo's Role and Defensive Challenges

  • Luke Jones discusses Kobe Mayo's defensive transition from third base to first base due to the signing of Pete Alonso.
  • Luke mentions Mayo's experience playing third base in the minors and his adjustment to first base.
  • The conversation covers the impact of Westburg's injury on Mayo's role and the potential for Mayo to play third base if Westburg doesn't return.
  • Luke highlights the importance of Mayo's work ethic and raw abilities, comparing him to Mount Castle in terms of athleticism.

Defensive Improvement and Coaching

  • Luke Jones emphasizes the need for the coaching staff, led by Craig Albernaz, to improve the team's defensive fundamentals.
  • The conversation touches on the importance of proper footwork and consistent play for defensive improvement.
  • Luke mentions the role of Miguel Cairo and Jason Bourgeois in working with the infielders and outfielders.
  • The discussion includes the need for the team to be at least average defensively to compete effectively.

Offensive Potential and Player Development

  • Nestor Aparicio and Luke Jones discuss the offensive potential of players like Kobe Mayo, Sam Besayo, and Gunnar Henderson.
  • The conversation highlights the importance of these young players hitting well to compensate for any defensive shortcomings.
  • Luke mentions the need for players like Colton Kauser and Cedric Mullins to step up defensively.
  • The discussion includes the potential for players like Taylor Ward and Tyler O'Neill to contribute offensively.

Health and Injury Concerns

  • Luke Jones emphasizes the importance of the team staying healthy, especially after the injuries that plagued them last year.
  • The conversation touches on the need for the team to address any issues with their strength and conditioning program.
  • Luke mentions the importance of players like Grayson Rodriguez and Adley Rutschman staying healthy.
  • The discussion includes the potential impact of injuries on the team's performance and the need for depth in the roster.

Leadership and Team Dynamics

  • Nestor Aparicio and Luke Jones discuss the importance of Gunnar Henderson and Pete Alonso as the heart and soul of the team.
  • The conversation highlights the need for these players to set the tone for the rest of the team.
  • Luke mentions the importance of Adley Rutschman's leadership and durability behind the plate.
  • The discussion includes the potential for other players like Sam Besayo and Kobe Mayo to step up and contribute.

Team Expectations and Potential

  • Nestor Aparicio expresses optimism about the team's potential to be a playoff contender.
  • The conversation touches on the importance of the team getting off to a good start to build momentum.
  • Luke Jones mentions the need for the team to address any question marks, such as the bullpen and the defense.
  • The discussion includes the potential for the team to surprise people with their performance.

Community Impact and Fan Engagement

  • Nestor Aparicio emphasizes the importance of the team's success in revitalizing the city and engaging fans.
  • The conversation touches on the need for the team to create a positive atmosphere at the ballpark.
  • Luke Jones mentions the importance of the team's performance in driving fan interest and attendance.
  • The discussion includes the potential for the team to have a significant impact on the local economy and community.

Final Thoughts and Future Outlook

  • Nestor Aparicio and Luke Jones discuss the importance of the team's performance in the early part of the season.
  • The conversation highlights the need for the team to build momentum and maintain consistency.
  • Luke mentions the importance of the team's performance in shaping public perception and expectations.
  • The discussion includes the potential for the team to surprise people with their performance and exceed expectations.

SUMMARY KEYWORDS

Orioles, defense, pitching, Kobe Mayo, Gunnar Henderson, Pete Alonso, bullpen, injuries, offense, spring training, coaching staff, health, lineup, potential, Opening Day.

SPEAKERS

Nestor Aparicio, Luke Jones

Nestor Aparicio  00:02

Welcome home. We are W, N, S, T. Am 1570 to Baltimore. We are Baltimore positive. We are getting ready for opening day with our friends, the comfort guys at Farnham and Dermer as well as the Maryland crab cake tour. Get back out on the road Koco's. I see you. I'm coming to see you. Marcella, it is spring. Is sprung. We'll be at the ballpark to Camden Yards. We've been talking about all things pitching here, and I think now we're going to let the pitching lead to defense, because Luke, I inked My dear Craig Albernaz or Albie, and I'll be writing letters to all of the wrasse including Pete Alonso. A little welcome to to well, you know, we've had nicknames around here. We've never had one quite as good as the polar bear. I don't think, but, but defensively and how that sets up the pitching. Because we went soup to nuts on pitching, we did an hour on it, you know, from Bradish and Rogers through what Boz is and where the bullpen is, and where Tyler Wells is it even Batista, maybe later in the year. The concern of the bullpen is one thing, concern of the defense and how it gets stressed, and this really leads into our offense and saying, when you strike out this much, the biggest thing you do when you strike out is you don't put the ball in play. You don't tax the defense. They can't make an error if you strike out right? So for me, with defense on this team, I guess it starts with Kobe Mayo at third base. I don't know that there's anyone with a glove in the field. I don't love gunner Henderson's defense. Be honest with you. You know, I'd like to see that improve. Holiday out westburg, out I like both of those guys a lot. That's a massive blow to them and how long they're out and whether they blossom holidays, one, one. I mean, you got to get them a lineup. It's less than ideal, I would say, to start the year, and that doesn't curb my optimism or my enthusiasm for what this can be. But we did talk about, well, you blow two run lead late in the game in a bullpen. Yeah, we're going to pick on some Nestor Herman or some guy we've never heard of in a button that won't be him, but somebody in the bullpen. Yeah, Tyler wells comes in, and the seventh inning, he looks fine. The eighth inning, and somebody kicks it around, and next thing you know, somebody throws the ball into the dugout, and the six four leads evaporated, and the fans are upset, and but kicking the ball around is something that it's hard to win, and it's hard to have a lot of confidence. When the defense isn't great, they'll hit their way out of this, and that's what we're going to get to in a minute. Kobe Mayo is probably citizen a for all of this, because big bat completely playing out of position. I mean, right? I mean, and at least we think it's temporary, and a lot of this really is the backdrop of Westberg and holiday when they're coming back.

Luke Jones  03:02

Yeah, yeah. I mean, a couple things holiday, holidays hitting already. He's going to, he probably is going to be in the lineup for triple A Norfolk for their first game. I think you're going to see him on a similar timeline to gunner Henderson last year. I think he's going to, you know, he's going to have to be in the on the IL for a certain number of days anyway, but it'll give him a chance to ramp up. I'd be kind of surprised if we don't see holiday by mid April. Now, what that will look like in terms of his power and all that that's that's a different discussion point is, I think we're going to see him very soon. Westburg, Mike Elias already confirmed that he's not going to be ready may 1. Right? It's going to be even in the best case scenario, we're probably looking closer towards best case scenario later in the month, right? I mean, who knows? I mean, we just don't know right now. So yeah, you look at Kobe Mayo right now. And one thing I'll correct you on, I mean, yes, he's in, he's out of position compared to what we were perceiving him to be last summer, in a world where we didn't know that the Orioles were going to go sign Pete Alonso, but they had said, Okay, he's going to be a first baseman. He played a lot of third base in the minors, right? I mean, this is not a position that he is, that he's foreign to, right? This is something that where he's worked quite a bit. The difference is you went from and when was it June of last year to basically saying, all right, Kobe, you know, put the third baseman. Glove away. First base is your spot. Moving forward, then you get Pete Alonso. You think, all right, well, Kobe Mayo is probably going to be traded. Kobe Mayo himself even admitted, like, I didn't know what my fate was going to be. Like, I certainly wasn't mad or like, didn't understand the organization going and signing Pete like he's a great player, but it's common like, it's common sense to you as a young, unproven player, to wonder, like, what that means for you, right? So they get to spring training. Obviously, everything happened with Westberg, and now Mayo is back at third base. Now, the good thing is, if there. One silver lining to the Westberg injury is that was right off the bat. He's had an entire spring training, and I had a chance to talk to him, you know, he talked to some of the reporters, but prior to Sunday's exhibition game, and he flat out like he had a good mindset about it, and he said, Look, I know that I'm going to make some errors, right? Albernaz has talked about this with me. I mean, Miguel Cairo is their infield coach. They've worked with him, as I said to you, going back to last summer. I mean, he was out on the field with John Mabry every day, working at first base. Sunday morning before the exhibition game, I saw him at third base taking ground balls and working. I mean, this kid works. I don't question his work ethic at all, and I don't question his ability at all, his raw abilities. And he's an athlete,

Nestor Aparicio  05:45

right? I mean, he's a good basketball player,

Luke Jones  05:46

looking dude, like, he runs well, like, you know, it kind of reminds me of Mount Castle a few years you know, when mount Castle first arrived, like, he kind of thought, Oh, well, he's just this big, plodding guy. And then you realize he's actually relatively fast, like, not stealing bases fast, but could go first to third. Can score from second, right? I mean, like that kind of fast. So he has ability. But, you know, now it's a case of, all right, you've been afforded this opportunity. You've been gifted this opportunity because of where we are roster wise, knowing that westburg best case scenario is maybe, you know, maybe Memorial Day, something like that, right? Maybe mid May at best case scenario, he might not come back at all. If he does come back, third base might not be an option. It might for Westberg, it might be he's a DH or he can only play second base. Or, who knows, right? I mean, we'll find out. But point is, you can't plan definitively that Westbrook is going to be in the lineup at third base for them. So Kobe Mayo has got quite a runway here to you know, and I'm not, let me be clear, that's not unconditional. If he's booting two balls a game, then yeah, to me, you're going to have to pivot. And you know, whether it's Blaze Alexander there, and Mayo's back on the bench or or whatever, but he's going to get an opportunity here, and I think where you look at him, he's going to make some errors. And even talking to Craig Albernaz, you know, I asked him about Mayo's defense, they know he's going to like they know he's not going to be Manny Machado there. They know he's not going to be Brooks Robinson there. But can he show the proper footwork, right? Can he fundamentally do what he needs to do which? If you do that, and you do that on a daily basis and a regular basis, and you do that rep by rep, chances are, over time, those mistakes will start to dissipate a little bit, and you will get more consistent. So he's got to hit, right? I mean, like, part of this equation is you can deal with some shoddy defense here and there. Like, not like, you know, it can't be all the time, but you can deal with some hiccups here and there, if you're going to hit the ball. And that's where you look at Mayo, and you say, he had a great September last year. Again, I get it. It's September, right? I mean, we're, we're skeptical of September anyway, but especially for a team that's that's playing out the string. But he had 300 last September. He had five home runs. He had a 941 ops. He was playing every day at that point, and he did a nice job. What has he done since then? Well, he's been working at third base every day and in spring training going into, you know, like the final exhibition with the Nationals in DC, sitting 389 he's got five extra base hits. He has a 1039 ops. It's spring training, right? I'm not, not trying to make more of it than what it is, but the point is, since September one of last year, Kobe Mayo has really looked like someone who can really be a legitimate part of your lineup. Now, doesn't mean he's gonna believe

Nestor Aparicio  08:49

that two years ago, right? He He's a serious, he's a serious prospect in an organization with all these one ones who haven't really blossomed yet, right? Right? I mean, he's got a bat.

Luke Jones  08:59

I mean, this is the kind of guy, I think, for for all the talk of the young guys that have been in the mate, you know, some of them aren't that young anymore, like Adley rutschmann, he's 28 now. He's not young. That's not young for baseball anymore. But in terms of their core, you know, their core position, guys that have been there now for two or three years, or in the case of rutsman and gunner, a little bit longer than that, even. But you look at Mayo and bisayo, and to me, those are the two guys that, if you want to talk about this lineup going from good, because I think this lineup, borrowing a ton of injuries, is going to be good at at the very least, but what can take them from good to great is guys like mayo and besayo at the bottom of the order, who suddenly are hitting the ball to the point where you say, Oh, are they going to stay at the bottom of the order? Do we need to move those guys a little bit higher in the order? They have that potential. Now, are they both going to realize that this year? I don't know, right? They're young ball players, but they have that kind of upside. With the bat. So for mayo, yes, he's going to have to hit, there's no doubt about that. And yes, he's going to have to defend at least well enough, because I'm going to use a reference that you'll certainly be familiar with, and many listeners will be you can't have him be Mark Reynolds. Which Mark Reynolds in 2011 and 2012 go look at his offensive numbers. I know he struck out a lot at a time when striking out wasn't as well, I don't want to say well received wasn't as accepted as it is today, compared to fifth, you know, 15 years ago. But for what he did with the bat, all of it got wiped out by how bad his defense was at third base. I mean, go, Look. I mean, he, he ended up being slightly above replacement level, or, you know, around there, because everything he did with the bat was just given away by his glove and his arm, right? I mean, so Mayo can't be that. So, I guess you know to, kind of, you know, to then pull back and kind of look at the rest of their defense. Here's what I'm looking for. These guys are athletes, right? These are, these guys are good athletes. It's not as though these guys are a bunch of stiffs that can't move right. This isn't, you know, you kind of think back to Money Rayford, yeah, or look at Billy Dean with, like, in the early 2000s with the A's, like, like, those guys could get on base, but they weren't good athletes, right? So they didn't steal bases, because they weren't really capable of it anyway. And analytically, they said, Well, we're not going to be good at that anyway. We can't be successful 80% of the time. We're not going to try to steal bases, and we don't care as much about our defense, because we want you to get on base. And that was kind of the money ball formula. That's why Scott hattenberg could move from catcher to first base, because they didn't need them to be a good defensive first baseman. They wanted them to get on base. This isn't that these guys are athletes to the point that, let me be clear, this isn't me saying they all are going need to be, or should be, Gold Glove caliber fielders, but I'd like to think these guys can, at least, like, they can be together an average defense, like, just be average, right? Because I think the profile works if it's more closer to average than, like last year, and you know, the second half of 2024 where, you know, they profiled more as bottom 10 in baseball kind of defense. So that is where, you know, not just talking about working with Kobe mayo, but working with all these guys. That's where I am looking at Miguel Cairo, who's their infield coach, Jason bourgeois, who's their first base coach, but also their outfield coach, like I want to see these Craig Albernaz, just overseeing all of it. Generally speaking, I want to see this coaching staff produce a defense that is crisper, doesn't look as sloppy, knows where to throw the ball, all of that, those things that you and I were talking about last year early on, where my biggest criticism of Brandon Hyde was not the failures of all the players, like individually, it was how sloppy that it came out of the gate. You know, you should be at your sharpest coming out of spring training when it comes to, you know, your bunt plays and who's covering where and where to throw the ball and all those different things, right? And they were just so sloppy doing that. It was like, Man, did you guys even go through spring training because you

Nestor Aparicio  13:08

haven't played like it sometimes the fundamentals

Luke Jones  13:11

aren't fun, right? But to me, that was an indictment, not just on the players, but big time on the coaching staff. So if there's something I'm going to judge, Craig Albernaz And this coaching staff on early on, beyond just wins and losses, but looking at the game within the game, it's, are they throwing to the right base? Are these guys running the bases properly, like all those fundamentally, you know, all those fundamental things I want to see, though, those things tightened up. And if they can do that, then I see no reason why this defense, maybe not Mayo at third base, but this defense collectively, why it can't be at least average, right? And you have that, then I think they'll be in position to win a lot of ball games, because, again, these guys aren't stiffs like Colton kauser is a great athlete. Colton kauser should be able to play a solid center field. I'll have some questions about his bat, right, especially going up against lefties. Although it was nice to see a left on left home run from Him on Sunday. That was good to see,

Nestor Aparicio  14:08

but it will get you gunner Henderson in the WBC, because we haven't talked

Luke Jones  14:12

about that either for him too. Yeah, I said to you, like for me, look, I wanted to see gunner play every day in the WBC, but I get it. He hasn't been good historically against lefties. And let's be clear, it was Alex Bregman playing in his place, not Jorge Mateo, you know. So I get it. Orioles fans were mad about that. I understand, hey, he was one of the few guys hitting for them, but I understood that. But to bring it back to the defense, I look position by position. Look Pete Alonso is not a Gold Glove first baseman, but scoop balls in the dirt, especially for Kobe mayo, that's going to be a big thing for them, right? You're going to have to help out your young third baseman, and he knows that, Gunner Henderson, I thought gunners defense was better as last year went on compared to the year before. You know, I thought his defense was trending up for me last year, I want to see that. Continue second base. You know, we haven't mentioned his name yet, Blaze Alexander, for the time being, whether he's playing second or when holidays back, they bump him over to third. If Mayo is having issues defensively, they need him to catch the ball right whatever he gives you with the bat. I think I want to say his bonus, because I think they like his bat. But he needs to get them solid defense. If you're the utility guy, you need to be a solid defender, right? So, and I think he can be that for them. So, you know, that's the infield and then the outfield. I mean, they need cows or whatever the bat looks like. They need him to defend. If he can defend and be solid and be dependable in center field, then I'll live with whatever else he's doing with the bat for the time being. But they need that, because if it's not him, I don't know who it is like, okay, they have leoty Tavares, who's going to be, presumably, the backup center fielder. He's been replacement level the last couple years with the bat. So if it's not him, then you're talking about, okay, Dylan beavers. You know, to me, I think they very much would like to keep Dylan beavers as a corner outfielder. I don't think they feel he can play center field, at least right now. And you know, beyond that, then you're talking about like Enrique Bradfield, who needs to have some success at triple A before we're ready to talk about him as a candidate. So they need kaliser to play center field, and they need them to play it well, because there's not a slap you in the face alternative right now that that makes sense, right? All the all the other alternatives have even more question marks, so they need him to be that they'll play Taylor Warden left I think he'll be fine out there, right field you know, Tyler O'Neill, like our perception of what he was last year. You have to this is a guy who was a Gold Glove outfielder earlier in his career, like he should be able to play solid, a solid right field for them when he's out there. Same with beavers, right well, him and

Nestor Aparicio  16:56

Ward are like these. I don't barely talk about them, but they know. But like, six weeks from now, they might be the two best players, and like, they have that kind of potential, but I just see them as just names, until I watch them five nights a week go out with an Oriole crest on and get two or three hits and win a ball game and hit a home run on opening Day or whatever, because they're these are really capable, big bat 30 home run kind of guys, and they need to be given the bats. They're going to strike out, they're going to pop out, they're going to hit the double play. They do all that. But along the body of the work, we can wake up on, I don't know, Preakness day one of might have 12 home runs by then, because they're, they're that kind of same thing with mayo. I mean, they all have that possibility about them, in addition to gunner Henderson and Pete Alonso,

Luke Jones  17:47

right, yeah. And I'm going to continue to say Sam basayo, okay, no. I mean, I'm

Nestor Aparicio  17:52

just saying he reminds me, and this makes me a really old guy, by the way, of when Manny Ramirez came to the Indians in 90,

Luke Jones  18:01

batting eighth or something

Nestor Aparicio  18:02

like that. I mean, that team by Eric and Lofton,

Luke Jones  18:07

Jim Tony and Manny Ramirez were hitting seventh and eighth for that team. I mean, it was,

Nestor Aparicio  18:10

it was ridiculous, well, and Ramirez was this big bat guy that was young and dumb and and, you know, had Hall of Fame potential and Triple Crown kind of potential, you know, I sort of the bicycle thing, the fact that they rushed him, they gave him the money they he's a catcher, but he's not really a catcher, but we're going to make him a catcher, and then we give $150 million to a first baseman, but he's so young, right? Yeah, and I think the same things Jackson holiday so young that giving these guys chances at that age, like they did with Gunner Henderson, two, three years ago, right? That this will be who them in the long run. And he certainly was the FLA of all the things we've talked about here. He was the flash in spring training, right? Yeah.

Luke Jones  18:58

I mean mayo and beside Oh late. I mean, they hit for, I mean, I watched Kobe Mayo hit a long two run homer off Max free to the Yankees. I mean, you're talking about like their opening day starter, you know, their ace, until Garrett Cole returns and reestablishes himself as the ace. I mean, you know, these guys were, these guys have really capable bats. I mean, it's and again, we're going through all these names. You and I both know. Every single name that we just rattled off is not going to have a

Nestor Aparicio  19:27

great Tyler O'Neal's Museum. He'll be heard around. He hit 201 and he had a whole maybe two years ago, cows or he's a strike out. You know,

Luke Jones  19:38

Bowser will strike out, but he might, he might hit 25 home runs also, right?

Nestor Aparicio  19:43

So then there's the fact whether Gunnar Henderson and Adley rushman are going to be MVP caliber performers in the way that we see their ceilings in their best light, in their best light, in Adley Richmond's best light. This year, he's going to hit 282 with 23 home runs, driving 90 runs. Catch it on your plane. 380 on base percentage.

Luke Jones  20:03

Give me a 380 on date. Look, they don't need Adley rutsman To be an MVP, right? I will take like, just get back to the guy you were two years ago, three years ago, right? Like, I don't need the you're gonna become Johnny Bench or anything. I think that ship has sailed right, at least in that right? Which is, when you compare these young catchers to Johnny Bench, it's always so unfair, right? But we do it, not we. I just in general

Nestor Aparicio  20:29

one, it's even different than weeders for me, no doubt.

Luke Jones  20:32

Oh, I agree. That's That's why I've been so hard on Adley rutsman In terms of how I've talked about him the last year and a half. But, but, yeah, it really is amazing. When you look at the state of this 26 man roster, the position side. I mean, you and I haven't even mentioned Ryan mountcastle. Now, part of that is I don't know if, especially if, these young guys emerge, you know, when we're talking about mayo and SiO. Like, I don't know where the at bats are going to be for Mount castle in that scenario, but point is, there are a lot of different lineup combinations here, and, yeah, they're gonna have to find it. But I'm not sure what's going to happen, right? I mean, I think gunner Henderson is going to be this team's best player, because that's just been the case for the last three years now. I mean, even last year is even a down year for gunner. He still was, you know, their their best position player, I guess, you know, with a nod to Ramon lauriano Before he was traded at the deadline. But I expect Pete Alonso to hit 35 to 40 home runs, because that's just who he's been, right? That's who he was with the Mets. Why the Orioles are giving them $30 million a year, $31 million million dollars a year. You know, Taylor Ward's coming off of a career year. I don't know if he's going to match that in terms of home runs, but he should be a guy that is going to give solid production. He's going to strike out, but he's going to hit for power and do that. But, man, there's also a scenario Nestor, where like Kobe mayo or Sam besayo, one of those guys, like, I'm not going to say both of them, but if there's a scenario where in August, one of those guys is hitting cleanup for this team at that point, because they're just that guy, right, which would be amazing for The overall ceiling and potential for this offense. I mean, there's a lot to like, but I will also say, and just like I talked about the defense, I will go back to the approach and the coaching. You know, Dustin Lynn, their new hitting coach, Brady north, their new assistant hitting coach. We talked a lot about the hitting coaches last year, remember, and that's not to say that the players didn't need to be accountable, because they did, but we kind of talked about it in terms of, this feels broken. So I'm hoping, with all the changes, you know, with the new coaching staff, even if at the end of the day, they're they're preaching something very similar to what the previous coaching staff was seeing was saying they're saying it in a different voice. They're saying it in a different way. They're connecting with players in a different way. And I'm hoping that's going to lead to some more success and some more consistency. Because, man, you kind of look at it and again, people are listening. People are more skeptical right now. They're like, Oh, well, Luke and Nestor are drinking the orange Kool Aid. Yeah, I kind of am right now in terms of just looking at what these guys are capable of being, I'm not saying it's going to work in every single way. I mean, there's a scenario where Colton cows are get sent down the triple A because he's completely lost at the plate. I don't know, right? I mean, there's, scenarios like that for three or four different guys, right? But there are also scenarios that, Hey, young players get better, right? We've seen plenty of young players good, and then scuffle and struggle, and then they're better, and then, boy, before you know it, then they're just an everyday player. And you know, you you don't really think about it anymore. They're not a prospect, they're a they're a definite like, Hey, you're a legitimate Major League hitter. So that's where I look at this team and say, That's why I say, if the bullpen can just be solid, right? It doesn't need to be the best bullpen in baseball. Just don't be a bottom five bullpen. And if the defense doesn't need to be gold gloves across the board, just be average. Don't be a detriment, right? Don't be a liability. Just be solid. If you can do that, then, yeah, that's why I go back to the offense, having the upside it has. And the starting rotation, maybe not the same level of upside there as the offense, but seeing a lot of upside there. You and I spent half a segment talking about that. So there are things to like about this club. Yeah, there are things to not like or things to question as well. But man, I just, I look at this lineup, one through nine, and man, if you can, you know, some of these young guys take the next step. And. Veteran players kind of maintain health is going to be a big part. You know, I've gone a long way in our discussion here. As we're going in opening day, health needs to be there, and that's why I'm a little they're right off the bat in spring training with holiday in westburg, there was very much a sense of, here we go again.

Nestor Aparicio  25:18

Grayson Rodriguez isn't hurt here. Yeah,

Luke Jones  25:20

right, I mean, but they need to stay healthy. That's a big part of this. I'm hoping that through all the changes they made with the manager and the coaching staff, and taking a look at everything that went wrong in 2025 I'm hoping there was some introspective work done on do we need to tweak our strength and conditioning? You know, because, man, we had a lot of hamstrings last year, a lot of obliques, lot a lot of stuff like that. Where you would say, okay, yeah, some of that is part of the game. But, you know, you shouldn't have 25 and 26 year old guys going down with those kind of injuries all the time that that to me, tells me there, there's something going on there. So I'm hoping that they will be a healthier team this year. You know, kind of tough saying that right off the bat, because they do have some injuries here out of the gate, but over 162 Yeah, they've got to stay healthier. There's no doubt, because we can talk about all that kind of potential, like Tyler O'Neill, you and I just said it. Guy has 30 home run potential. He's done it before. He's hit 30 home runs in the major leagues in a season, but he's got to play more than 54 games to do it, so, you know. And part of that is also, hey, he doesn't have to play every day, because hopefully Dylan beavers is going to be a, I don't know if that'll be a straight platoon by any means, but it could be something in that, you know, that looks like that, and that will give you some opportunities to keep Tyler O'Neill healthy. You know, I'm guessing the Orioles are going to try to convince Pete Alonso to DH a dozen times, you know, this year, to to get off his feet a little bit more and give him a little bit of a breather every now and then. So, but they've got to stay healthy. There's no doubt that's a big part of it. I will continue to say about the story of the 2025 team. Yes, there was a lot of underperformance and problems like that. There's no question, but injuries were a big part of what happened last year. That it's undeniable, right? I mean, it absolutely was part of their story last year. So if they're going to bounce back, they've got to stay healthier, which, again, the way it looks on March 26 or April 1 isn't exactly the way you wanted it to start. But over the long haul, you know, we'll see about westburg. But beyond that, this is a team that you hope can stay healthy and keep most of these guys on the field, because I think they've got the potential to be pretty darn good if it can all come together in that way. Luke Jones

Nestor Aparicio  27:41

is here. It's all brought to you by our friends at the comfort guys at Farnan and Dermer, as well as our friends at the Maryland lotto. Be getting the Maryland crab cake tour back out on the road after opening day we get home. I'll wrap up with this. I mean, we sit here, we talk about mayo and cowser and rushman and the question marks and injuries and holiday and Westberg and defense and all of that. What do we really know? It to me, Gunner Henderson and Pete Alonso, they really have to be the heart and soul of this thing. I'll give Ward and O'Neill some oxygen for where they are, and then all the rest of the names, the one ones and the young guys and the potential of this and the the that can all come. But to me, Alonzo and Henderson, as I wrote to Craig Albernaz, that's really where it starts, and Henderson being a lead off guy in this new age of lineups, and the way al bumry doesn't hit lead off anymore, although Weaver had something with singleton back in the 70s, which

Luke Jones  28:42

he was on to, something with that

Nestor Aparicio  28:45

on base percentage he was, he was very much on to that because he had his little note cards. But, but Henderson and Alonso, if I'm putting them both in at 36 and 38 home runs and 111 RBIs and 107 RBIs and I have them both playing 154 games. And like, if that part of it works out, pitching aside for what Rogers needs to be in Bradish and who steps up, and how good effing can be, and when Dean Kramer gets back and all of that stuff, it's one thing, bitching about Dean Kramer, who's a league average starter, and saying, well, will he make it? Will he not? Will he give him the ball? Beat the two guys, Henderson and Alonso, they, they are your engine for me, and they are the biggest part of the engine. Because I'm not counting on Richmond anymore. You can't count on mayo. We're not going to count on kauser. We don't know enough about Ward, but I'll take him over and injure Grayson Rodriguez, I mean, for all of the complaints about Elias, and I have not been hard on Elias, and he's gonna get a letter from me this week, and it won't be written Jason lock and forest style, don't worry. Henderson, I need to step up from where he was last year. And. To look again, like the leader of the team, even though they've imported leadership and give it a lot of money to Pete Alonso that needs to play like Batman and Robin and peanut butter and jelly. For me, it really does.

Luke Jones  30:14

Yeah, no, 1,000% agree. I mean, there's no, no doubt. I don't want to put too much pressure on them, but you know, Cal and Eddie, like, they need to be this, right? Yeah. I mean, that, like, it's, that's what it needs to be, you know, I think gunner, we've talked about it. I mean, he had the, had the rib cage issue right out of the gate last year, and then he had the shoulder impingement, which we never really, you know, didn't find out about that till after the season. That zapped him of his power. He still had a pretty good year, you know, in a vacuum, it just wasn't what it had been the year before.

Nestor Aparicio  30:46

Then I hear that all day long. Yeah, yeah, exactly.

Luke Jones  30:49

Right, right. So, but yeah, they need him to be a guy that I'm not saying he needs to win the MVP, but if Gunnar Henderson's right, like he's a top five to top eight MVP candidate in the American League. That's the kind of player he is. So they need that from him. And I think he'd be the first to tell you, like, he would agree with it us. He would say, Yeah, I got to be that guy for my team. And Pete Alonso same way, like, that's why you gave Pete Alonso $155 million they need to, they need to be the tone setters for this offense. I will say this. I agree with what you said about Adley rutsman from an offensive standpoint, where they do need Adley rutschman to bounce back unequivocally, like an undisputed point is he can't miss two months with oblique issues, like they need him at a minimum to be behind the plate five days a week, or whatever it's going to be all season long, because he's that important to managing the pitching staff right? Because as much as I love besides upside with the bat, if you're in a position where rushman is on this shelf, I don't have the confidence in beside, oh, to handle a pitching staff that regularly, like on an everyday basis. You know, he's the backup catcher for a reason. He's going to be backup catcher, slash DH, for a reason. So they need rutsman For that, that leadership element. They absolutely need whatever he does with the bat. Beyond that, we're going to see, right? I mean, I hope, I hope the guy that he was in 2023 is still in there somewhere, but he's got to show it like that guy's got to return. And until he does, I'm skeptical, regardless of the of what his spring numbers might look like. But yeah, they need gunner and they need Pete Alonso to be the guys, right? They need to be the guys. And it's not to say other guys in this lineup can't have great years. And like I said, if, if, beside hits 30 home runs, or Kobe Mayo hits 30 home runs, and suddenly we're talking about them, one of those guys being hitting fourth or fifth and great, right? But yeah, and I don't know exactly what the lineup is going to look like. I think Taylor Ward, I don't sleep on him as potentially being the lead off guy, and some, you know, especially in some certain matchups. But point is, whether they're hitting first and second, or second and third, or first and third, Gunner Henderson and Pete Alonso need to be those guys, those dudes, right? Baseball, they talk about dudes. Those guys are dudes. They're established dudes at this point in time. So they need to go out there and be on the field every day, which you expect. I mean, Pete Alonso one of the biggest, you know, his calling card, beyond the home runs, has been he's very durable and plays and posts up every day and go ask Buck Showalter, like getting them to take a day off in New York was, was not a fun experience for the managers there, because he just wants to play like he's that he's that old school Cal Ripken kind of guy in that way. But, yeah, if those guys set that, you know, they need those guys to set the tone, and if they do, then it's it's up to everyone else to follow, right? They have to follow the lead. Alonso is going to be the veteran guy, and gunner is the emerging young guy that needs to be more of a leader in that way. So, but it begins with how they play on the field, right? Ultimately, Pete Alonso, you love the leadership, no doubt. But he needs to hit 35 or 40 bombs like that. That's what they're that's why they paid him, right? So, and he knows that, he understands that. So, yeah, those guys have to lead the way. And if they do, if those, if those two guys are the All Star, you know, if not MVP candidate, kind of players that they have proven in the past capable of being then, and that's a heck of a start for your offense, then to just fill in the gaps after that and and see what you can do one through nine.

Nestor Aparicio  34:33

So I'm writing these letters to all the brass. Katie Griggs is going to get hers. My Craig Albernaz is up. Mike Elias, I'm coming for you too. For all of this, Eric Getty, especially, more so than Rubinstein, who is the face and Eric Getty's the person really doing he's the baseball nerd. I would just say this if Eric Getty hears this piece or it gets to me at this point. Or Rubenstein, and this is where the people who hate me, and they're plenty of them, because they still voted for Trump. I see it all over social media, if you're the guy that hates me for saying I've been the guy here for 35 effing opening days doing this job in front of everyone with a radio station that the FCC is gonna come take my license if I, if I criticize our dear leader and the nonsense that's going on. But I've done 35 opening days here now, and you've done a good 17 with me, or whatever it's been. How many years we've had this? There have been so few times where I want to wake up at five in the morning and Medellin, Colombia on the Monday before opening day, and sit and have a legitimate, honest conversation about their potential to be a playoff team, let alone a division winning team or World Series winning team or whatever just to be, I don't have to bullshit anybody to think that they Could even be fundamentally sound, or a 500 team, 25 if not 28 of the 35 years I've been on the radio, they've been a freaking joke. They've been a disgrace, and they're not anymore. And the off season was real, and they signed the $19 million pitcher on Valentine's Day. And they spot. They signed $155 million real dude, not a chump to be their next Frank Robinson or their next star. They gave bisayo money. They they took our money and built a scoreboard and threw you out of the press box and moved it to the left, which moving to the left is a good place to move. It's better than moving to the right. And I mean, even though the thing looks like an airport lounge or whatever, and God bless them. So I would just say this. I wouldn't be such a jerk and such an ass and so angry, and I certainly would have my press pass if, over the last 30 years, they put a credible, honest, big league full effort organization together to give people a reason to be excited. You're excited because you're a baseball nerd. I'm excited. Look at my last name, right? I mean, I love baseball, but what we've endured here over the last 35 years is disgraceful, and the fact that this is one of the few opening day weeks where I can honestly say, if I give them 75 bucks on Thursday and go down there, run around that it's not opening day, and it falls off the table, and we're wondering when lacrosse starts, or if the caps are playing hockey, or who the ravens are drafting, or who got arrested, or who Terrance West punched last week, or whatever, whatever happened, right that this is a credible layoff caliber. They've had an offseason where they've done things you hated their pitching last year. Alan hated their pitching last year. I mean, I've tried to be more balanced, because I have sat here for 35 years watching this disgrace, and this is not that anymore. And for that, I'll tip my cap to arroghetti, and I've talked a lot here with Marty Conway and Eric Fisher about the labor situation, and you and I have done an hour and a half here to start the season where it's Baseball, baseball, and it's Ken Kobe Mayo pick up the glove, and it's can they get Westberg real baseball, things that lead to playoff baseball and a chance to win a World Series, not how much money is Fredo making in being a jerk with the community. Now I want Katie Griggs to step up. Mark. Fine. You're disgraceful that I don't have a press pass at the ballpark on Thursday. Disgraceful. But that being said, I'm covering the team. You're covering the team. You'll ask questions. I'll be out here being the jerk that I am, because it's a response mechanism for me to say I've been through all this shit the last 35 years, and the losing and last year imploding immediately. I hope that doesn't happen again, because I love baseball. You love baseball. It's a long season. We put a lot of time, a lot of effort, a lot of my life, I've forgotten more about baseball than most people certainly over at the fan. So for me, it is, this is a go time for the city, for downtown, for the money we've spent on the ballpark, for new ownership, for all of that. So I'm watching whether they let me in or not. They're going to hear from me, and they're going to know from me, and they're going to know from you. Know from you, and I hope they're as vibrant and as important and as valuable as I've made them out to be most of my life. That's all I'm going to say.

Luke Jones  39:54

My final point, everything you just said, I fully acknowledge, but more specifically. The after the season they had last year on the heels of what had happened at the

Nestor Aparicio  40:04

end of a half a million people going away from the ballpark, right? Last year, it

Luke Jones  40:08

is so incredibly important for this team to get off to a good start this year. No, it doesn't need to be 35 and 10, right? But just get off to a solid

Nestor Aparicio  40:20

start, dude, seven and 14 and 1016,

Luke Jones  40:26

I'm fine with any of that, right, right, right, right. Look at the schedule. How it sets up. Minnesota and the rangers to start off at Pittsburgh, at the White Sox. Then you come home and you play the Giants and the Diamondbacks. Then you go to Cleveland, all right, Cleveland playoff team. Then you go to Kansas City, Rhett, then you come home at the end of the month and you host the Red Sox and the Astros. All right, that last home stand there. But you look at the first four weeks of the season, they're not playing a ton of teams that made the

Nestor Aparicio  40:54

playoffs last year. Yeah, they could play 700 ball the first month, right? Yeah. Get off to a

Luke Jones  40:58

good start. And then I said all the stuff about the Mojo and the chemistry and the guys being more upbeat in the clubhouse, and all a good spring, if you can, if you can springboard into a good start coming out of Sarasota, and start off well, and you're 13 and seven, then you set up really nicely for to have a really good playoff Season, you know, and then, you know, you get to October, then who knows what will happen? I mean, this team could look, at least be perceived a lot differently than how we're perceiving it right now, when you have so many young guys that you're kind of looking at and envisioning the possibilities. But man, just get off to a good start. This city needs it. On the heels of the Orioles last year and the Ravens last fall, dude,

Nestor Aparicio  41:44

drop the mic on that city. Needs it like last that's where I am on it. Get people downtown. People steal their money, get their ATM out. Let them buy truest club. Whatever it is, success has been something that we have not smelled here, and it's pissed me off so much that I walked out on them 20 years ago because they were creeps. They were liars and and I'm not going to defend that, and I'm not going to, I'm not going to advertise it for them, but this team should be a playoff team, and it has all the potential to be that. And I'm bullish on the team so, and I know you are as well. Yeah, yeah.

Luke Jones  42:21

I mean, they have question marks. Most teams have question marks. I think there's a lot to like about this club. And again, get off to a good start, which, Hey,

Nestor Aparicio  42:29

man, you and I don't like about it, like the bullpen. Elias is apparently okay with this, right? It's his job, right? If he, if he thought the bullpen needed more he would go get some more spice, or go ask daddy for more money. And Michael era Getty and, you know, and get it, and that's still all might happen, but it all might happen under the guise of Kobe Mayo has got 20 home runs in June, and they can't figure out where to put Westberg and holiday looks like a one, one, and Richmond bounce back, and Albernaz is manager of the year, and they have five, if not six, starting pitchers. So we'll have to talk about Jim Palmer joining the rotation at some point. He's leaving the boots. Same thing with McDonald all right. He's Luke Jones. We're done with baseball. We'll talk more baseball in October. Now. We'll be back on Friday morning here without question. It's opening day. It's baseball week. My last name still Aparicio. We still love baseball around here. He's Luke. I'm Nestor. Big thanks to all of our sponsors. I'm coming home from Medellin. I hope they let me in back for more. We are Baltimore positive and W NSD stay with us. You.

Can Albernaz manage the Orioles arms into October?

Can Albernaz manage the Orioles arms into October?

We love the starting rotation but about that untested bullpen? Luke Jones and Nestor get you ready for Opening Day and beyond with a full preview of the 2026 Baltimore Orioles and where the Birds will be flying in the American League East this summer – and hopefully, into the fall.
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