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Notes
Duquette elaborates
on economics of rebuild
Showalter: Defensive shifts may be restricted
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Orioles executive vice president
In the half-hour session for fans before Saturday night’s game at Camden Yards, Duquette elaborated on the plans he outlined in a conference call after the Orioles traded franchise shortstop
It begins with the trades, but to hear Duquette tell it, it’ll be much more than that.
“Ownership understands here that we’ve been putting a lot of resources in the major league payroll, probably more resources than the market really supports,” Duquette said. “Why would we do that? Well, we would do that to keep the core of the team together and try and maintain our competitiveness.
“So now we have taken a step back. We said, ‘OK, we’re not going to try and do as much today with our major league payroll, but we’re going to put our resources into tomorrow.’ So we’re redirecting those resources into our scouting operation, into our recruiting, into our player development. We’re going to be active on the international recruiting market. We’re going to be active in more technology and facilities, in our training program. So hopefully these investments will help us develop more and better players, so we can be competitive against the good teams in the [American League] East.”
The Orioles are lagging terribly on several of those fronts, and concede as much in a lot of cases, but Duquette said the decision to invest so much on the big league side was an “ownership decision” and a “conscious choice” to put resources into the major league team. The Orioles’ Opening Day payroll increased every year from 2013 to 2017, according to Cot’s Baseball Contracts, with the team spending a club-record $164 million on its 2017 major league players. This season’s figure decreased to about $149 million.
Duquette said the big-market landscape the Orioles play in with the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees in their division means the Orioles need to be smarter with how they allocate their money. That money is in the organization, he said, but had gone toward the major league payroll in recent seasons.
“They may be getting rid of them next year,” Showalter said. “There’s been a lot of talk about just having two infielders on each side of the bag. How do you feel about that? I know
While the Orioles first baseman being robbed of hits is something the team would like to see stop, considering he’s a pull hitter who entered Saturday batting .156, there are plenty of other things Showalter brought up. He talked about the possibility of expanding or contracting MLB, realignment of divisions and whether the designated hitter should continue to exist.
He said he’s on the competition committee because “when you’re as old as I am, they feel sorry for you. But a lot of those things are being discussed.”
“You find out why some things don’t happen,” Showalter, 62, said. “I call it the arteries of the decision. Very easy, let’s just get rid of the DH. What about the 15 DHs and their families? … There’s a lot of arteries to those decisions, but believe me, they’re being talked about.”
It’s a quick turnaround, but Showalter used the short outing Wednesday as an opportunity to push back rookie