ORIOLES
Elias aims to get O’s ‘up to speed’
New GM’s goal is for club to catch up with rest of MLB
In the middle of his first winter meetings in charge of the Orioles, one that that included the hiring of manager Brandon Hyde as he continued to build the organization in his image, executive vice president and general manager Mike Elias had to do a lot of explaining on his philosophy regarding coaches and player development.
A month into his time with the Orioles, Elias is doing just as much answering about overall philosophy as anything specific.
Who he is has been hard to separate from what he was a part of in Houston, and the idea that the Orioles are going to try to replicate that success doesn’t do much to distinguish him from the Astros.
The time for all that will come, but in an interview with The Baltimore Sun this past week, Elias addressed some of his hopes for the organization in the context of analytics, his baseball background and the way he views the game, as well as how he feels the organization he's inherited will take to the concepts he expects to introduce.
It's a great question, and I think your analogy about an arms race is an apt one. Are we behind right now in the analytics arms race? Yes. We're going to get up to speed as quickly as possible, and really, the challenge for us and the onus on us as baseball executives is to figure out ways to get a little bit ahead. And that's tough, because all other teams are doing that as well.
Meanwhile, there's talent and [intellectual property] crossing over from team to team. It's tough. But I know of no one better than worrying about that than Sig. I'm happy that we have him. I'm confident that once we get our infrastructure built out, we will become a team that other clubs are looking to learn from.
Look, this is still a sport that human beings play, so first and foremost, we must always remind ourselves that we're in a business of people. But also, hitting in particular is a really complex endeavor, and it involves physical characteristics, traits that are intrinsic to the person's body, their genetics, the condition that they're in and then the shape of their swing, the speed of their swing, and then a whole bunch of stuff that happens from the neck up. It's really hard to quantify all of that, at least right now, in such a way that outperforms the judgment of an experienced talent evaluator, somebody who knows a lot about baseball, has accrued a lot of experience watching baseball and can envision changes happening in the future. I think we're a long way off from that perspective losing value, and for me personally, my scouting experience allows me to participate in that process pretty well.
It's a big management challenge, and I think a lot of the success [Astros general manager] Jeff Luhnow had in his career in Houston when all of us were there in Houston is we were so successful of getting staffs in place like you're talking about — somebody for whom the use of advanced information, the use of technology is part of their day-to-day approach of being a coach. That input is not coming from a third person, or some angle that is made to reach around the coach, or must be filtered through the coach. It's the coach themselves that wants the information and knows how to use the information and translate it to the players that he knows best. It's a big management challenge to educate the coaches that have not been exposed to that experience, but many of them do a great job of picking up on it and incorporating it into their work.
Even before all this information and technology exploded onto baseball, a player's makeup, which is a term we use for kind of his mental characteristics, was always important. Them having the mindset of getting up in the morning of, “What can I do to make myself better?” Now, that does involve having the ability and the willingness to study some of the information that arms them with very specific paths to improving their skills. So the players that understand this and seek it out, I do think see an advantage. But this generation of players, this is very normal for them.