NOTES
Former All-Star Escobar added for infield depth
Full-squad date will arrive with nearly full team in camp
Escobar, 32, is not exactly the type of fringe player that typically signs a minor league contract in February. He’s a former All-Star and Gold Glove shortstop who gives the Orioles experience and additional middle-infield depth.
“Alcides Escobar will add a great veteran option to the middle-infield competition we have brought into this camp,’’ executive vice president and general manager
Escobar owns a .258 career batting average and has been a durable player over 11 seasons with the Milwaukee Brewers and Kansas City Royals. He played all 162 games in three of the past five seasons and averaged 154 games over the nine seasons since he became a full-time major league player.
Last season, Escobar batted .231/.279/.313 with 29 extra-base hits and 34 RBIs while playing four positions — shortstop, third base, center field and second base — in 140 games.
That marked a bit of a dropoff for the glove-first infielder who had averaged 34 extra-base hits and 52 RBIs with a .644 OPS from 2014 to 2017.
How Escobar will fit into Elias’ rebuilding plan remains to be determined, but he joins a roster that features only one middle infielder with significant major league experience,
The full-squad reporting date is today, but most of the 62 players on the camp roster have been in Sarasota for the past week and all but seven are here already.
The only unexcused exceptions as of Saturday afternoon were infielders
Díaz, 22, had an uneven performance during the month he spent at Double-A Bowie last season, but he’s in the mix for an outfield role and wants to take advantage of it.
“The whole purpose for me being here is to try and make the team from the very beginning, make the roster, get along my teammates, help my team,’’ he said. “That is the whole purpose of my being here.”
Though he went from a team that reached the World Series last year to a team that lost 115 games, he said he’s happy to be with a club that offers so much opportunity to a young player.
“We’re just going to be careful with him,’’ Orioles manager
“Not at this time,’’ Hyde said. “In the next couple days, if we feel like we have too many innings, that’s a possibility. There are so many games, so much time to look, we don’t need to force anything.”