VERIFIED DEAL: The Baltimore Orioles have formally decided to trade the best veteran pitcher to the Chicago White Sox in exchange for…

Assessing the performance of Mike Elias and the Baltimore Orioles front  office

The Orioles may have the most dynamic offense in baseball

Added power, continued aggression, and unparalleled depth has the Orioles offense among the game’s elite early in 2024.

The Orioles offense was a lot of fun in 2023. They were aggressive on the bases, often going from first to third or taking the extra base whenever possible. They came through in the clutch, the redeeming factor of Adam Frazier’s tenure in Baltimore. And, most importantly, they scored a solid amount of runs, finishing seventh in MLB. But that version of the lineup stopped short of being dominant. Things feel different so far in 2024.

First things first: The Orioles are scoring more runs this year. They are fifth in MLB in runs scored, but they have played fewer games than all but one team (Braves) above them. In terms of runs per game, they are averaging 5.81, nearly a run higher than what they finished with in 2023 (4.98).

Assessing the performance of Mike Elias and the Baltimore Orioles front  office

The biggest difference between the two seasons is power production. The 2024 Orioles are atop the league with 33 home runs, and they are second—behind Atlanta—with a .464 slugging percentage. Last year they were 10th in slugging (.421) and 17th in home runs. The most home runs on the team was just 28 by both Anthony Santander and Gunnar Henderson. A handful of players are on pace to exceed 30 bombs this year.

That depth is also a distinguishing factor on this year’s team. Every lineup that Brandon Hyde puts forward has the potential to do damage unlike any one else in the league. The Orioles are the only team with eight hitters that have both 50 or more plate appearances and a wRC+ of 120 or better. Eight! That is nearly an entire lineup full of players 20% above league average in terms of creating runs.

Assessing the performance of Mike Elias and the Baltimore Orioles front  office

And what are these players doing to create so many runs? Putting the ball in play…like a lot! No other team walks less than the Orioles (6.5%), which has caused their on-base percentage to lag a bit behind their other metrics (.318, 15th in MLB). Fortunately, they also don’t strike out too much (20.8%, 10th-lowest). Both numbers are lower than the 2023 team (8.4% BB rate, 22.4% K rate).

That change feels like a concerted organizational effort. Just recently Hyde said that Colton Cowser had been too patient last year when he walked 16.9% of the time—similar to the 16.0% walk rate he had in Triple-A in 2023—but batted .115/.286/.148 in his initial taste of the big leagues. He’s walking just 7.1% this year. Henderson has seen his walk rates decline from 12.1% in 2022 to 9.0% in ‘23, and now to 7.3% in ‘24. Adley Rutschman is walking half as much, from 13.4% last year to 6.5% this year.

Walk rates only take about 120 plate appearances to stabilize. Most of the O’s top players will hit that threshold in about a week, so while there is certainly still room for change, a big swing in outcomes seems unlikely.

Assessing the performance of Mike Elias and the Baltimore Orioles front  office

The ability to put the ball in play does pair nicely with some insane exit velocities. The O’s 90.5 mph average exit velocity is the highest in baseball, and their 44.5% hard hit rate is second in MLB—again behind Atlanta (sensing a theme here?).

While the Orioles have seemingly gotten more aggressive—and stronger—in the box, they have maintained their feisty base-running. According to FanGraphs Base Running metric BsR, the Orioles are the league’s best base-running team at 3.2 BsR. Unsurprisingly, Henderson and his hair-on-fire style of going bag-to-bag paces the team at 1.2 BsR, but Jorge Mateo (0.9), Jordan Westburg (0.8), Colton Cowser (0.7), and Cedric Mullins (0.4) have been big contributors as well.

Assessing the performance of Mike Elias and the Baltimore Orioles front  office

An element of BsR is grounding into double plays, something the Orioles just do not do. They have ground into just five double plays on the season, the lowest in MLB and three fewer than any other team (the Yankees lead the league with 24). That is likely the result of two things: the Orioles low ground ball rate (40.4%), and the fact that their roster is littered with speedsters.

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