The Orioles have reunited with Jorge Lopez, as Joel Sherman of the New York Post (X link) reports that Baltimore has claimed the right-hander off waivers from the Marlins. Jordan McPherson of the Miami Herald reported earlier today that Lopez looked like the odd man out on the Marlins’ roster in some capacity, as the Fish needed to create roster space for Johnny Cueto’s activation from the 15-day injured list. The Orioles designated right-hander Logan Gillaspie for assignment to create a spot for Lopez on the 40-man roster.
Lopez’s tenure in Miami ends after a little more than two months, as the Fish acquired the righty from the Twins in late July in a one-for-one swap for Dylan Floro. In hindsight, it was a deal that hasn’t really worked out for either club, as neither reliever recaptured their old form after donning a new uniform. Floro has posted a 6.30 ERA over 10 innings in Minnesota, while Lopez had even greater struggles, delivering only a 9.26 ERA in 11 2/3 innings for Miami.
It was a little over a year ago that Lopez was an All-Star, by dint of his outstanding 1.68 ERA over his first 48 1/3 innings pitched of the 2022 season as a member of the Orioles. Given Lopez’s unimpressive career track record prior to 2022, however, Baltimore saw him less as a breakout star and more as a sell-high trade chip, so the O’s moved Lopez to the Twins at last year’s trade deadline. Speaking of trade hindsight, that swap has already become an infamous move for Twins fans, as Yennier Cano was one of the four prospects sent back to the Orioles in return for Lopez.
While the Orioles front office took some heat at the time for dealing an All-Star closer (or being deadline sellers in general) when the club was contending for a playoff spot, those criticisms have certainly diminished given Cano’s breakout and Lopez’s lack of success basically since the moment he left Camden Yards. The O’s now hope that Lopez can rediscover some of his 2022 magic to help a bullpen trying to get by without injured closer Felix Bautista. Lopez isn’t going to step back into a ninth-inning role, of course, but he could provide some depth behind Cano and Danny Couloumbe as the temporary late-game closing duo. The Orioles will be using Lopez for the stretch drive alone, as he isn’t eligible for postseason play since he was acquired after September 1.
Is there hope for a Lopez bounce-back? Unsurprisingly, his metrics have dropped off sharply in most categories from 2022 to 2023, as his big advances in strikeouts and limiting hard contact have both fallen back to earth. Lopez threw his sinker 50.5% of the time in 2022 and got plus results, though the pitch has now become much less effective, with Lopez throwing it only 34% of the time this season. The righty has instead increased the use of his four-seamer to pretty disastrous results, as opposing batters have been teeing off on the pitch to the tune of a .400 batting average.
Rediscovering the All-Star version of Lopez may not be as simple as a change in pitch arsenal, but the Orioles are taking a relatively inexpensive plunge in hoping that he can provide at least adequate relief. In making the waiver claim, the O’s pick up the roughly $578K remaining on Lopez’s $3.525MM salary for 2023. The 30-year-old is also eligible for arbitration one final time this winter, though it seems likely that he’ll be non-tendered. The fact that the Orioles (who have one of baseball’s best records) were even able to claim Lopez is a further sign of how his star has fallen in a year’s time, as it means that just about every other team in the league passed on Lopez before he was available for Baltimore to claim.
Since Lopez surely wouldn’t have been tendered a deal from the Marlins, the move provides a bit of salary relief for the Fish as they get an early jump on some offseason business. It also allows Cueto to return without any further roster maneuvering, as Cueto is set to start today against Washington in his first outing since August 15. The veteran righty has been sidelined due to a viral infection that scratched him from his previous start, and eventually required a 15-day IL stint to give Cueto time to fully recover.
Gillaspie made his MLB debut in May 2022, and has since been shuttled back and forth several times between the Orioles’ big league roster and Triple-A Norfolk. The right-hander had a 3.12 ERA over 17 1/3 innings in 2022 but only a 6.00 ERA in nine frames of action this year, and his career Triple-A line sits at a 4.90 ERA over 71 2/3 innings, with a 23.08% strikeout rate and an 8.01% walk rate. An undrafted player who broke in with the Brewers’ farm system in 2018, Gillaspie has been a member of Baltimore’s farm system since 2021.
Joshy
What a cliff
amk1920
What a trade deadline for the 2022 Twins. Trade Steer and CES for damaged goods Mahle. Trade high for a clearly fluke RP.
King Floch
lol nice, the O’s basically rented Lopez out for a year and got Yennier Cano and Cade Povich for it.
BrianStrowman9
Nunez too. Lotto ticket pitcher in A ball that has a chance to make the bigs.
PaulyMidwest
The reds robbed them blind
fre5hwind
I didn’t even know he got waived…
mgomrjsurf
If Claimed on Thursday would of been available in Postseason.
3768902
This will be a great A/B/A test of Orioles coaching staff.
getrealgone2
Twins’ front office strikes again.
Slider_withcheese
I hope he reconnects with the woman who was nursing her baby while simultaneously eating a slab of ribs the last time he was in an Orioles uniform.
ChangedName
Orioles playing chess while everyone else plays checkers with relievers and valuing them accordingly over the last two seasons.
Gwynning
Boomerang, duck!
killertofu
The coaching in Baltimore will get him back on track and him being closer to Johns Hopkins for his child will help as well. I like the move considering Bautista is done for the year even though the Orioles brass hasn’t said anything on the matter. This move only furthers that Bautista sustained a year ending injury imo.
benhen77
Finally come full circle.
wjf010
yennier cano was NOT a prospect….has to be an age limit
MacGromit
regardless, the O’s certainly came out ahead in that trade. and there were plenty of people complaining about that move. It wasn’t like the Eric Bedard trade but I hope in time, we all look back and view it as a lite version of that fleecing.
love it if their pitching coaches can get something useable for the remainder of the regular season from Lopez. if for not other purpose than to give our bullpen some rest.
C Yards Jeff
Tillman and Jones. Two mainstays during that 5 yr winning period last decade. An Andy MacPhail gem. He got us JJ Hardy too.
basemonkey 2
I wouldn’t call the Bedard a fleecing. It was a good trade, not some legendary move.
C Yards Jeff
Yep, a good trade. What was legendary in Orioles lore was the hiring of MacPhail. Not even a whiff of post season action since the late 90s when Peter Angelos’ ego chased Davey and Pat out of town. After over a decade of crazy experimentation of how to run a FO, Peter finally capitulated and brought in a POBO of Gillick’s stature by hiring Andy.
kennyk67
His tenure in Miami ended after a little over a month, not two.
Goin' to Sheetz
Welcome back, Jorge! Gillaspie’s spot on the roster was going to be short anyway. Means and Wells are heading back soon.
Jacksson13
So the Twinkies do a favor for Lopez by trading him away for virtually nothing so he is close to his family and the Marlins turn around and throw him away for nothing.
Homerunbunt
This season is nuts guys, I love it
oscar gamble
You think the Marlins would have put him on waivers before the playoff deadline to give Lopez a chance at playing in the playoffs?