The biggest move the Orioles made Tuesday wasn’t a trade.

Jackson Holliday, the No. 2 prospect in baseball, is on his way to Baltimore to potentially rejoin the Orioles, two sources with direct knowledge confirmed to The Baltimore Sun.

The team has yet to announce a roster move, and it’s unclear when he could rejoin the club. The Orioles play Wednesday afternoon at Camden Yards before heading to Cleveland to face the Guardians for a four-game series beginning Thursday. Holliday was not in the lineup for Triple-A Norfolk on Tuesday night.

Holliday, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2022 draft, is hitting .271 with a .908 OPS in Triple-A this season. If he’s recalled, it will be his second stint in the major leagues after the 20-year-old struggled in his first MLB action earlier this year.

Tuesday was a wild day in Baltimore as the Orioles made five trades, acquiring left-handed pitcher Trevor Rogers, left-handed reliever Gregory Soto, outfielder Eloy Jiménez, outfielder Austin Slater and minor leaguer Patrick Reilly. Connor Norby being traded to the Miami Marlins along with Kyle Stowers for Rogers opened up a spot at second base for the Orioles, especially after Jorge Mateo, who dislocated his elbow last week, was moved to the 60-day injured list.

Enter Holliday, who could have the opportunity to take the Orioles’ second base job and run with it.

His first stint in the show went about as poorly as it could. In 10 games, he recorded only two hits in 34 at-bats while striking out 18 times compared with only two walks.

Holliday’s promotion in April was met with intense hype as the son of seven-time All-Star Matt Holliday made his debut in Boston, but as each hitless game went by, the concern level rose. A prospect who never struggled in the minor leagues — one who jumped from Low-A to Triple-A at age 19 while hitting .323 with a .941 OPS last season — was suddenly swinging under fastballs and whiffing over breaking balls.

He returned to Triple-A Norfolk tasked with gaining his confidence back and tweaking his swing. In 63 games since his demotion, Holliday has hit .259 with a .421 on-base percentage — thanks to 63 walks against 69 strikeouts — with an .876 OPS.

“Just trying to get back to the sort of things that I was doing last year,” Holliday said earlier this month. “Kind of like the angle of my bat, making sure that it’s in a better position. I think everything else is in a good spot. I think there’s just small things when it comes to hitting that get out of whack. I feel like that’s what happened with the big leagues. I got exposed a little bit with that and hitting in bad positions that caused me to look like I was overswinging or doing other things. But it’s part of the game and hitting is really difficult, but just trying to get back to some things that I was doing last year.”

The Baltimore Banner was first to report Holliday was on his way to Baltimore.