baltimore orioles
- Branden Kline spoke to The Baltimore Sun about how the measures of success change for players like him, how and why he's better than before, and how his injuries and subsequent return changed his outlook on life and the game.
- The Orioles are expected to have all but a few players in camp in time for Monday's first full-squad workout. Sunday is the mandatory reporting date and only a few players have not arrived yet.
- Longtime Orioles broadcaster Joe Angel looks back on his four-decade broadcasting career.
- Orioles first baseman Chris Davis said he was sick and thus unable to report to camp any earlier than he did, and that he hopes he's learned to embrace more solutions to his problems at the plate while doing more to block out negativity.
- Think you know your Baltimore? Try answering our weekly trivia question.
- Longtime Orioles radio voice Joe Angel won't return for the 2019 season, the team announced Thursday, having spent 19 seasons on the Orioles Radio Network and causing a shakeup on the team's broadcast.
- The Orioles held their first workout of 2019 for pitchers and catchers on Wednesday. Get caught up on how it went.
- Every February in Sarasota, young pitchers arrive at Orioles camp for spring training with the idea that a big league rotation spot is there to win — until a late-signing free-agent pitcher snatches it up and consigns them to the minors. This year, that isn't expected to be the case.
- This Orioles camp may be the first in a decade where Adam Jones won't be taking a prominent role in the happenings in Sarasota.
- For the rebuilding Orioles, it's all about the kids, but the thirty-somethings on the roster still have a lot to offer,
- Orioles pitchers and catchers reported to spring training Tuesday in Sarasota, Fla. Get the latest from Sun writers Jon Meoli and Peter Schmuck.
- Orioles right-hander Luis Ortiz didn't make a good first impression when he was acquired from the Milwaukee Brewers in the Jonathan Schoop deal. He was overweight and out of shape, but arrived at training camp this spring with a new body and a new lease on his baseball life.
- Players at the Orioles camp have the opportunity to improve and win jobs, and everything from the coaching hires to the data available for them will put them in a position to do that. It's just going to be a process on their end, too.
- From the young outfielders to trade chips, here are five storylines to watch entering the first spring training of the Orioles' modern era.
- Orioles fans aren't going to have much to cheer about if they concentrate the won-loss column this year, so they have to reset their expectations this spring.
- Remember when Chuck Thompson, John "Boog" Powell and De De Sneeringer were in the news?
- The Maryland women's basketball team announced an upcoming two-year series with Connecticut starting in the 2020-21 season. The Terps and the Huskies will meet
- The first time I saw Frank Robinson play was at Memorial Stadium on my 9th birthday in May 1966. I remember vividly his aggressive base running and beef with the umpire after being called out. That play and reaction personified the take-charge attitude that Frank Robinson brought to the game.
- Think you know your Baltimore? Try answering our weekly trivia question.
- What they're saying about the death of Frank Robinson, the only player to earn the Most Valuable Player award in both leagues and a Triple Crown winner for the Orioles in 1966.
- The Hall of Famer, who died Thursday at 83, hit the only home run anyone ever hit out of Memorial Stadium, and the legend lives on.
- Orioles outfielder Frank Robinson had those skinny legs and a gingerly gait that made it seem as if his feet always hurt. But the ferocity with which he played baseball belied his appearance.
- Orioles Hall of Famer Frank Robinson died Thursday morning at age 83.
- Hall of Famer Frank Robinson led the Orioles to their first World Series title in 1966, was the first African-American manager in both the American and National Leagues and managed the Orioles for parts of four seasons. Here’s a timeline of his career.
- Frank Robinson may be in ill health but for baseball fans, his legacy is certain to live forever.
- The outfield will be the best collection of players the Orioles have in camp.
- Veteran catcher Jesús Sucre signed a minor league contract with the Orioles on Friday that includes an invitation to major league spring training, the team announced.
- On the 'Analytics in Baseball Operations' panel Saturday at Orioles FanFest, assistant general manager Sig Mejdal and senior director of international scouting Koby Pérez outlined how the analytics that will drive the Orioles' rebuild can produce results on the field.
- Everything about the Orioles' offseason indicates that a reunion with Adam Jones isn't in the cards, no matter what either side says.
- The 11th-ranked Maryland women's basketball team (18-2, 7-2 Big Ten) will return home to host Wisconsin (11-10, 2-7) on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Xfinity
- Struggling Orioles first baseman Chris Davis had plenty to say about his past struggles but was vague on details as to how he plans to fix them.
- Saturday's Orioles FanFest marked the public beginning of a new era of Orioles baseball under new executive vice president and general manager Mike Elias and manager Brandon Hyde. And it just so happens to be driven at this point by the main commodity the event is built on: hope.
- Orioles general manager Mike Elias said the team was monitoring the free-agent market for value, but the club could be ready for spring training today if no other signings came through.
- It was the newness of it all that made Orioles FanFest feel so different Saturday at the Baltimore Convention Center.
- Near the end of the Orioles’ season-ticket holders’ Q&A with executive vice president and general manager Mike Elias and manager Brandon Hyde on Saturday at FanFest, a longtime Orioles fan boiled down their greatest challenge as simply as anyone could.
- Orioles minor league outfielder Trey Whitley, who is on the roster of the rookie-level Gulf Coast League Orioles, has received a 50-game suspension without pay following a second positive test for a drug of abuse in violation of the program.
- Former Orioles and Yankees star Mike Mussina will go into the Baseball Hall of Fame this summer without a logo on his cap for his enshrinement plaque.
- The Orioles announced Wednesday that their coaching staff under manager Brandon Hyde will include Tim Cossins, Doug Brocail, Don Long, Arnie Beyeler, José Flores, José Hernández, Howie Clark, and John Wasdin.
- The hot dog once billed as 'here to stay' isn't after all as Baltimore mourns the loss of its beloved Esskay Orioles franks.
- Former Orioles ace Mike Mussina split his career between Baltimore and the New York Yankees. He said Tuesday he can't choose one over the other for the cap on his Hall of Fame plaque, and he's far from the first to face such a dilemma.
- Mike Mussina, the right-handed pitcher who anchored the Orioles rotation in the 1990s and remains the last homegrown ace the franchise developed, will join Mariano Rivera, Roy Halladay and Edgar Martínez in the Baseball Hall of Fame’s Class of 2019.
- Mike Mussina, who will be inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in July, won 18 games in his first full major league season in 1992 and veteran starter Rick Sutcliffe could see back then that this day would come.
- Mike Mussina, who could be enshrined in the Baseball Hall of Fame this year, is still the last homegrown Orioles starter to even make an All-Star Game.
- "Turkey Joe" Trabert made his Fells Point bar a gathering place for Baltimoreans of all sorts who enjoyed talking.
- Former Orioles star Manny Machado is having trouble finding the market for his services on the free agent market, and even if the numbers being bandied about are substantial, it's not adding up.
- Individual tickets for all 17 of the Orioles’ 2019 spring training home games at Ed Smith Stadium will go on sale Saturday, Jan. 26 at 10 a.m.
- Three years after the Orioles and Chris Davis agreed to his club-record, $161 million deal, the ramifications on the Orioles' payroll, their rebuild and the game of baseball continue to grow.
- The top spot on the waiver claim list this offseason has landed the Orioles some possible fringe help in 2019 with Austin Brice and Hanser Alberto, two additions since the new year.
- Infielder Hanser Alberto was claimed off waivers by the Orioles Friday, hours after the Yankees designated him for assignment to clear a roster spot for former Orioles Zach Britton.
- Only three Orioles players were eligible for salary arbitration this year--Opening Day starter Dylan Bundy, closer Mychal Givens, and infielder Jonathan Villar.