


One for the future
Yacabonis’ path gets a fresh start
Reliever converted to starting role

Without much to look forward to this year in terms of the major league club, which is on its way to one of the worst seasons in baseball history, the
The regular “One for the Future” feature, which began in mid-July, will highlight an Orioles minor leaguer who is on the radar for either prospect status, performance or pedigree.
Next, a look at right-hander Jimmy Yacabonis, whose trajectory was changed some this year when the team tried to convert him from a hard-throwing reliever to a starter.
From there, he went to High-A Frederick and had almost the exact opposite results for the remainder of the season. He ended that Carolina League season with an 8.58 ERA and a 2.19 WHIP as his lack of command was exposed at the higher level, and would continue to be exposed in 2015, when he posted a 4.02 ERA for the Keys.
That meant Yacabonis was back for a third year at High-A before he earned a midseason promotion in 2016 to Double-A Bowie, where things seemed to improve dramatically. He finished that year with a 2.03 ERA at Bowie and brought his season walk rate down from 4.74 per nine innings in 2015 to 2.78 in 2016.
That was enough to put him and his big fastball on the major league radar
But Yacabonis also had the prototypical body for a durable starting pitcher, and Showalter often remarked at the size of his hands as a way of inferring that he could develop the secondary pitches required for the role. Vice president of baseball operations Brady Anderson was also a major proponent of the idea. And considering the success the Orioles had in developing Tanner Scott as a future reliever on a similar plan, once the idea got traction, it seems like it took on an air of “Why not?” in the organization.
Yacabonis had to build his arm strength earlier in the season, and had his progress stunted a bit by a pair of major league relief outings that didn’t go well. But once he settled in, he got into a groove. By the time the team handed him his first start June 28 against the Seattle Mariners, he had a 3.23 ERA in 13 starts, including a 1.99 ERA in seven starts without the interruption of a call-up.
Yacabonis hit a rough patch leading into this most recent spot start Saturday against Boston.