With pitchers and catchers reporting next Wednesday, I figured that I’d better check in with an offseason update before the offseason is actually over! Besides, one of my readers has been nudging me to get in gear for a few months, reminding me how “depressing” it is to pull up the site and find Sean Henn’s sad mug looking back at him.
Naturally, there’s been a lot of player movement since last we met here. I’ve updated the all-time roster to reflect the players who are no longer with the organization. Obviously, the most notable is third baseman #6 Melvin Mora, who leaves Baltimore after a decade in orange and black. He’ll be playing multiple positions with the Rockies, who have not yet assigned him a number. #6 appears to be available, though.
I’ve also made some long-overdue edits and additions to the number biography pages (0-9, 10-19, etc.) to reflect the players who have passed through since the beginning of 2009. Those edits include mention of a few number changes that have been announced since the end of the season:
-Miguel Tejada, returning to Birdland as a free agent, is switching to #9. He wore #10 for the O’s between 2004-2007, but says that he had no attachment to it. Maybe he just didn’t want to pay for the Rolex that current #10 Adam Jones named as his price for the digits. This displaces previous #9 Michael Aubrey, who is now listed on the team roster as #24.
-Blue-chip rookie pitcher Brian Matusz will switch from #52 to #17. The latter number, which belonged to then-O’s and now-Giants first baseman Aubrey Huff when Matusz arrived in August 2009, also happens to be the number of Brian’s favorite childhood player, ex-Cubs first baseman Mark Grace.
-Worldwide sensation and second-year catcher Matt Wieters swaps #15 for #32. Wieters wore #32 at Georgia Tech and throughout the minor leagues, but it belonged to not-long-for-Baltimore reliever Jamie Walker at the time of Matt’s Oriole debut last May. If you spent good money on a #15 WIETERS jersey already, don’t fret. You can just tell people that you were in on the ground floor!
I’ve already mentioned Miggy’s return to Camden Yards, but who are some of the other new faces who could be appearing on Eutaw Street this spring? Funny you should ask:
-The O’s acquired veteran starter Kevin Millwood (pictured at top) from Texas for a package headed by struggling reliever #37 Chris Ray. Though the #33 that Kevin wore with the Rangers has been retired here for Eddie Murray, mlb.com lists Millwood as #34, which he previously wore in Atlanta, Philadelphia, and Cleveland. The incumbent #34 (Matt Albers) is listed as #37, for what it’s worth.
-The new first baseman will be ex-Rockie Garrett Atkins, who may find his #27 occupied by returning reliever Mark Hendrickson. Again, consulting mlb.com, Atkins is listed in the now-vacant #25.
-Former Pirates and Braves reliever Mike Gonzalez is expected to fill the closer’s role, and the #51 he’s worn throughout his big league career is available for the taking.
-The only other new acquisition that is considered a “favorite” to make the roster is lefty bullpen arm Will Ohman, a seven-year major league veteran who accepted a minor-league deal with a spring training invite as he seeks to prove that he’s rebounded from an injury-plagued 2009 season. If Ohman makes the cut, two numbers that he’s worn in other stops should be free for him – #13 and #50.
Well, I don’t want to bombard you with too much information after a four-month layoff, so I’ll pull up on the reins here and check back in after camp opens in Sarasota next week. Until then, have fun and stay off the roads if you’re in the path of Snowpocalypse 2010!

Another September has arrived with the Orioles buried deep in the cellar of the American League East. But this month also brings the potential for expanded rosters, which makes it a time of interest as it pertains to this site. The O’s have already called up four players from AAA Norfolk, three of whom have been here before in ‘09: relievers #24 Alberto Castillo, #34 Matt Albers, and #45 Dennis Sarfate. The fourth player has not been seen in Baltimore since 2006. Outfielder Jeff Fiorentino, affectionately known as “Screech” for his resemblance to the nerdy character from “Saved by the Bell”, had worn #16 in previous cups of coffee in 2005 and 2006. However, he has now made history as the first Oriole player to ever wear #70 in the regular season, which he did in replacing Adam Jones during Tuesday night’s loss to the Yankees. Wild stuff.
All of a sudden, Birdland is a much more interesting place to be. Recapping the latest load of roster moves and uni news, and those yet to come:
More to the point: here in April, gone in May. I hope no one got attached to utility player #2 Ryan Freel, who had two hits in fifteen at-bats over nine games before being concussed by an errant pickoff throw in Boston. While he recuperated, Freel let off some steam about his lack of playing time in Baltimore, and when he was ready to return, the Birds dealt him to the Cubs for all-speed, no-anything else outfielder Joey Gathright, who will fill a roster spot at AAA Norfolk. Que sera, sera.
…That’s what Matt Albers spent the last week riding. The Birds’ first transaction of the new season came last Saturday, when they sent #34 down to AAA to make room for fifth starter/uniform filler #24 Adam Eaton. Eaton traded down from #56, which he wore in Spring Training. Much as Brian Bass was the 25th Oriole player to wear #25 on Opening Day, Adam is now the 24th to wear #24. Go figure!
(If the title of this post begs an explanation, watch
Geez, I go to the Ocean for a week and things go topsy-turvy in Camden Yards! Since my last site update, there have been eight changes to the Baltimore roster, with #29 Adam Loewen’s shoulder injury signaling more turnover on the horizon. To sum up:
Things have been pretty slow on the uni-number front; it’s hard to believe that the O’s have gone almost three weeks between roster moves. It’s a good sign that everyone’s staying healthy and that those not named Steve Trachsel are mostly performing, at least. Even though it’s frustrating watching this team pitch and defend well and still lose, I’m trying to remember that a .500 record two months into what was supposed to be a rock-bottom rebuilding year is a bonus. This team is much more fun to watch than most of the patchwork squads that have trudged through in recent years!