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Twelve Orioles thoughts approaching mid-May

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With the Orioles rapidly approaching the quarter mark of the season, Iโ€™ve offered a dozen thoughts, each in 50 words or less:

1. Dan Straily failed to complete five innings for the third consecutive start, elevating his ERA to 8.23. Some patience was warranted after his spring was disrupted, but the Orioles hoped heโ€™d at least eat innings and just maybe pitch well enough to become a small trade chip. Heโ€™s done neither.

2. The pitching staff has only two 100-pitch outings and seven starts of six innings or more almost 40 games in. I do believe the Orioles are trying to be proactive with health and effectiveness the third time through the order, but starters simply havenโ€™t pitched well enough to go deeper.

3. Baltimore entered Friday โ€” which wasnโ€™t pretty โ€” still ranking last in the majors with a 5.52 ERA, but starters held a 3.65 mark and relievers a 3.14 ERA through the first seven games of May. Baby steps, especially after giving up an obscene 73 homers in the opening 30 games.

4. I was surprised to realize Trey Mancini ended a month-long home run drought Friday, but 11 doubles gave him a solid .437 slugging percentage over those 22 games. Not only has his bat been outstanding, but his right-field defense passes the eyeball test more than how he looked in left.

5. The Orioles are throwing the most changeups in the majors after ranking seventh last year, but theyโ€™re ninth in FanGraphโ€™s changeup value after finishing 28th in 2018. It isnโ€™t only John Means as Andrew Cashner and Dylan Bundy are throwing them more frequently and effectively. Other pitches are another story.

6. Since improving his batting average to .301 on April 24, Renato Nunez has only four hits in his last 48 at-bats. Heโ€™s still among the club leaders in average exit velocity, but heโ€™s really been struggling after a good start.

7. Mychal Givens has recorded more than three outs in eight of his first 13 appearances of 2019. That should look much more appealing to potential trade partners than if he were being used as a conventional ninth-inning closer on a club with few save chances.

8. With recent first-round Grayson Rodriguez and DL Hall striking out a combined 16 over 9 2/3 innings for their affiliates Thursday and 2018 third-round pick Blaine Knight being promoted to Single-A Frederick Friday, thereโ€™s some pitching light at the end of the tunnel if you peer patiently.

9. If you believe the many draft pundits, Iโ€™ve yet to hear an overly compelling argument for general manager Mike Elias taking someone other than Oregon State catcher Adley Rutschman first overall next month. If heโ€™s indeed the best prospect, donโ€™t overthink it.

10. The extended absence of Nate Karns (forearm tightness) was the reason why the Orioles gave the talented, but oft-injured pitcher only an $800,000 contract. Alex Cobb (lower back) making just three starts while earning $14 million this season is a different story.

11. I admire Brandon Hydeโ€™s positivity managing a club constructed with no designs of winning, but the Orioles striking out a club-record 22 times Wednesday probably warranted a little more criticism from him in his post-game press conference, no matter how good Chris Sale is.

12. Jackie Bradley Jr.โ€™s game-saving catch on Trey Manciniโ€™s 11th-inning drive Wednesday goes down as one of the best catches in Camden Yards history when you consider the game situation, but Iโ€™ve yet to see one better than Mike Devereaux robbing Joe Carter in the inaugural 1992 season.

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