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Ryan O’Hearn Leveled Up … Again

By Steve Adams | June 12, 2024 at 4:05pm CDT

It’s been just shy of a year since MLBTR’s Darragh McDonald wrote, “The Orioles may have found the lefty bat they wanted” when writing about Ryan O’Hearn’s then-nascent breakout in Baltimore. Acquired from the Royals in exchange for cash on the heels of a DFA, O’Hearn was subsequently designated for assignment by the Orioles as well before being passed through waivers unclaimed and sent outright to Triple-A Norfolk.

It was the sort of ostensible unremarkable trade that is made hundreds of times over the course of a calendar year and quickly forgotten — until it wasn’t. As most are aware — certainly every Orioles fan — O’Hearn indeed emerged as the left-handed bat Baltimore had sought. At the time of Darragh’s piece last year, O’Hearn was slashing .308/.348/.542 with six home runs in 115 plate appearances. It wasn’t a big sample and he wasn’t walking much (5.2%), but O’Hearn’s batted-ball data supported much of that early flurry. He finished the year in strong fashion, seeing regular playing time against right-handed pitching and ending the year with a stout .289/.322/.480 slash — 18% better than league-average, by measure of wRC+.

For a player who’d hit .211/.282/.351 with a 27% strikeout rate over the four prior seasons in Kansas City (2019-22) before being designated for assignment, last season was a stunning breakout. The Orioles would’ve been thrilled just to have that one year, but O’Hearn came to Baltimore with four-plus years of playing time, making him controllable through the 2024 season. It was a no-brainer to tender him a contract and go through the arbitration process with him, and even if he reverted back to his 2019-22 form or regressed some at the plate, the entire gambit of acquiring him would’ve been well worth it based on 2023 alone.

O’Hearn, however, hasn’t reverted to his 2019-22 form. He hasn’t regressed closer to league-average. He hasn’t maintained the status quo and or even taken just a small step forward. Rather, he’s taken his game to an entirely new level, not just in terms of his raw run-production but also his approach at the plate.

In 189 plate appearances this season — all but 11 coming against right-handed pitching, it should be noted — O’Hearn is batting .287/.384/.489. He’s been 38% better than league-average, per wRC+. He’s already belted nine homers, six doubles and a triple.

He’s also struck out 19 times. In 189 plate appearances. Lest you think that was a typo, let’s write it out: nineteen times.

O’Hearn, who entered the 2024 season with a lifetime 25.6% strikeout rate in the big leagues, has at 30 years old simply become allergic to strikeouts. He’s also nearly doubled his walk rate from last year’s 4.1% to 7.9%. That feat isn’t as eye-popping on its own, given O’Hearn’s penchant for drawing free passes earlier in his career (11.5% from 2018-20), but it does serve to further underscore the evolution of his approach at the plate.

By measure of Statcast, O’Hearn chased 32% of pitches off the plate in 2023. This year, that number is down to 26.5%. He’s making contact on balls out of the strike zone at a career-best 64.4% clip, and his ability to connect on pitches within the strike zone has also ticked up. This year’s 90.6% mark is a career-best and sits more than five percentage points north of the 85.3% league average.

The uptick in volume of contact has come at the expense of some of his quality of contact, but that’s not to say O’Hearn is getting by with a series of well-placed bloops and weak grounders. His 90.4 mph average exit velocity and 41.9% hard-hit rate are both strong — they’re just down from last year’s respective marks of 91.9 mph and 51.5%. He’s in the 72nd and 75th percentile of MLB players in terms of exit velo and hard-hit rate, plus the 85th percentile of hitters in terms of whiff rate. Even with less life on his average batted ball, the increased frequency of contact leads Statcast to project O’Hearn in the 94th percentile or better in terms of his expected batting average, slugging percentage and wOBA.

It bears repeating that some of the reasoning for both his quality of contact and his gaudy expected stats is that O’Hearn is shielded nearly entirely from left-on-left matchups. His career performance in such situations (.168/.236/.286) rather emphatically shows that he’s benefited from Baltimore’s aggressive platooning. That somewhat specialized role doesn’t detract from his usefulness however, and when coupled with the nonexistent cost of acquisition, O’Hearn continues to cement himself as one of the current front office regime’s savviest acquisitions.

Speaking of savvy, any discussion of O’Hearn’s production should also touch on the slugger’s contract status. As noted before, O’Hearn came to Baltimore with two seasons of club control remaining. However, the two parties weren’t able to agree on a middle ground in arbitration prior to exchanging figures. O’Hearn filed for a $3.8MM salary to the Orioles’ $3.2MM figure. The two parties ultimately avoided a hearing at the eleventh hour, agreeing to a $3.5MM salary for the 2024 season — the midpoint between their submitted figures — as well as a club option for the 2025 campaign.

That would’ve been O’Hearn’s first free-agent season, but the O’s now have control over next year at a $7.5MM price point. O’Hearn would boost that option value by $500K upon appearing in 120 and 150 games. The latter of those two numbers won’t happen. O’Hearn has already been absent from 14 Orioles games. He’s on pace to appear in 127 games, however, making the first of those $500K escalators still not only attainable but likely.

The club option was notable at the time but hardly a lock to be exercised or even emerge as a borderline decision. But, as MLBTR’s Anthony Franco quipped to me when chatting about O’Hearn’s newfound contact skills, few realized he was going to “turn into Luis Arraez with power.” That’s a bit of an overstatement of course — Arraez has fanned at a ridiculous 5.7% clip since Opening Day 2023 — but O’Hearn currently possesses the seventh-lowest strikeout rate of the 248 hitters with at least 150 plate appearances this season. Of the 30 players in that set who have a strikeout rate of 15% or lower, the only one hitting for more power than O’Hearn (by measure of ISO) is Cleveland’s Jose Ramirez. Securing what now looks to be a wildly affordable club option for a third season in order to avoid a hearing over a $600K difference in figures looks like a raucous bargain for the Orioles.

O’Hearn may be a limited player by virtue of his platoon splits and lackluster defensive ratings both in the outfield corners and at first base, but he’s developed one of the most unique skill sets in the game and made himself a vital member of one of MLB’s top offenses. On two different occasions in the 2022-23 offseason, any club could’ve acquired O’Hearn for nothing more than cash or a waiver claim.

The Orioles clearly didn’t expect this level of outcome — they wouldn’t have designated him for assignment if they did — but they deserve credit for seeing value where others didn’t. Much of the focus on Baltimore’s success is rightly placed on young core of players either drafted by the O’s (Adley Rutschman, Gunnar Henderson, etc.) or acquired via trade (Corbin Burnes, Kyle Bradish, Cade Povich), but hitting the jackpot on a small-scale pickup like O’Hearn is the sort of move that can be a separator, providing a high-end complementary player to help take an impressive core to the next level.

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Post a Comment

49 Comments

  1. Samuel

    1 year ago

    Keep writing it……

    The O’s coaches know how to work with players to make them productive.

    Last year they even had Aaron Hicks straightened out.

    It’s more than they platooned him. Has to do with hitting the ball hard and getting it in the air.

    6
    Reply
    • Astros Hot Takes

      1 year ago

      I’m a huge fan of Mike Elias/ Sig Mejdal / Jeff Luhnow highlight reels.

      5
      Reply
    • Samuel

      1 year ago

      Also has to do with Kaufman Stadium having the most playing space on the field in MLB. Royals hitters were encouraged to hit to all fields – in the gaps and on the line.

      Camden Yards now has a deep LF. LH batters are encouraged by the current regime to get the ball in the air and pull it into the short RF dimensions.

      Reply
      • Samuel

        1 year ago

        The interesting thing is that after the O’s claimed him, they put him back on waivers but no one claimed him.

        1
        Reply
        • Astros Hot Takes

          1 year ago

          where have you been all these months, Samuel? I’ve missed your presence around here.

          Reply
        • Samuel

          1 year ago

          Thanks.

          Just got sick of baseball. The fans, announcers, writers, etc. seem to be dummying down the sport at a breakneck pace.

          I love watching the O’s and Phillies and following what their FO’s and coaching staffs do. Used to feel that way about the Rays, but the jettisoning of their SS (understandable) simply ripped that franchise apart.

          2
          Reply
        • Sideline Redwine

          1 year ago

          an unfortunate truth, you are correct: once that Wander situation hit, the Rays have never been the same. This season they look as bad as pre-Carl Crawford days.

          1
          Reply
        • danumd87 2

          1 year ago

          I’m a Baltimore boy who grew up loving the Os but moved to Philly in my teens a couple decades ago. I love my Os and Philly sports – besides the Phillies bc the fans are the dumbest baseball fans in the country imo and I hate when teams just try to buy a WS.

          Reply
        • Windowpane

          1 year ago

          Samuel has always been a shape-shifting front-runner. For years he was touting the Twins and Cards as being the best run organizations. He never mentions them now. Instead, he has shifted to the O’s and Phillies because they’re obviously hot teams.

          1
          Reply
        • Billg7987

          1 year ago

          They were revokable waivers though, I believe. If someone had claimed him, they could have pulled him back and kept him in the bigs. They might have done this.

          Reply
  2. C Yards Jeff

    1 year ago

    Glad he’s an Oriole. Exudes a focused confidence at the plate. Shows up in big moments. Comes across more like an assassin than hitter.

    6
    Reply
    • CravenMoorehead

      1 year ago

      Sounds like he’s the second coming of Bill Brasky

      2
      Reply
      • C Yards Jeff

        1 year ago

        Nah, nothing superhuman going on here. Just a ballplayer comfortable in the moment seemingly unaffected by the situation at hand. And me, well I’m not a cigar smoking and scotch swilling Brasky Buddy, that’s for sure.

        2
        Reply
        • CravenMoorehead

          1 year ago

          Bill Brasky was a two ton man-mountain who could palm a medicine ball!

          4
          Reply
  3. DiarrheaJenkins - Oceangate Survivor

    1 year ago

    The worst part about him playing well is Orioles fans will yell the “O” in his name like they yell the “O” in the star spangled banner like a bunch of apes.

    Other than that, glad to see him put it all together.

    2
    Reply
    • baked mcbride

      1 year ago

      Diarrhea is jealous of the O. Literally stinks to be you. I went to a Mariners/Red Sox game in Seattle last year and did it, on cue and in an O’s hat. People looked at me funny, but who cares. It’s awesome and you know and you’re jelly.

      Know what else is awesome? Our cheer. Let’s Go O’s!!!! Is succinct, forceful and simple and when O’s fans are all in rhythm behind the birds, it’s a beautiful and powerful thing. Way better than the idiotic “Let’s Go -insert two syllable team here- CLAPCLAPCLAP,” Dumbest crap ever!

      You know what else is awesome? Our theme song! Give the Orioles Magic song a spin or 50. What a classic!

      2
      Reply
      • DiarrheaJenkins - Oceangate Survivor

        1 year ago

        @baked. Relax, it was a light-hearted joke.

        Also, baseball cheers are garbage compared to euro football cheers. I want to hear all fans work together to make a chant that makes players cry because it’s so insulting.

        1
        Reply
        • baked mcbride

          1 year ago

          Boy howdy, if runny, poopy takes are your your thing, then do your thing, Diarrhea; no one gives a hoot about stupid soccer!

          And if you think I’m at all serious…LET’S GO O’S!!!!!!

          1
          Reply
        • DiarrheaJenkins - Oceangate Survivor

          1 year ago

          I give a hoot, but whatever. Remember to strap that helmet on tight and enjoy the O’s game, champ. We are all proud of you!

          Also wearing team gear to a game where your team isn’t playing is sad. Like a pathetic “look at me, I’m different”. The “pick me girls” of fans.

          1
          Reply
        • Guard the Vogt

          1 year ago

          Wow, finally found an annoying Orioles fans

          1
          Reply
      • Ignorant Son-of-a-b

        1 year ago

        Yeah you can diarrhea in your hat again after the Mariners finish off the Orioles in American League Championship Series this year.

        1
        Reply
        • DiarrheaJenkins - Oceangate Survivor

          1 year ago

          Yeah McBride, you better diarrhea in your hat! You said you wore a an orioles hat to a mariners-red Sox game, so that means you have to diarrhea in your hat and marry your mother in law!

          Reply
        • MacGromit

          1 year ago

          M’s will figure a way to blow the West. give’em time

          Reply
      • Tomdocmac

        1 year ago

        When the Orioles are going good, they bang out the ballpark. When things are bad, the sounds of crickets. Fair weather fans. Yankees, Red Sox, dodgers bang out the place every night no matter the record. I actually got playoff tickets in Baltimore versus the A’s over 50 years ago and got them at the stadium on the day of the game. Terrible baseball town.

        Reply
    • Bohs and Os

      1 year ago

      As a young Os fan I thought yelling O during the national anthem was disrespectful. As I was told by many it’s not a show of disrespect. It’s a matter of pride in your city. A nod to Francis scott Key who witnessed the battle of baltimore and wrote a poem about the resiliency of a young nation under attack. It’s more then a rallying cry for sports fans. It a show of support that no matter what the people are still there never wavering. I yell the O during the national anthem not because I’m an orioles fan but as a proud baltimoron.

      3
      Reply
      • DiarrheaJenkins - Oceangate Survivor

        1 year ago

        I don’t think it’s disrespectful. What’s disrespectful is natty bog stealing the Pringle’s guy and all you act like it’s your thing.

        Thats my culture!

        Reply
        • graybuffalo

          1 year ago

          Natty Boh predated the Pringles guy by over three decades.

          3
          Reply
        • DiarrheaJenkins - Oceangate Survivor

          1 year ago

          Not the logo that was just the head like pringles. That logo was a full person. Like an old timey baseball person. I’ve heard all the arguments, I lived in Baltimore for a while. Actual Baltimore not Frederick or another development town.

          Reply
        • DiarrheaJenkins - Oceangate Survivor

          1 year ago

          I didn’t fight in WW2 to have people tell me what chip or beer logo came first.

          2
          Reply
        • basemonkey 2

          1 year ago

          I call BS. If you had fought in WWII, even if drafted in the last year of 1945, you’d be 97. But to have really fought, you’d at least be 99-100.

          Reply
        • DiarrheaJenkins - Oceangate Survivor

          1 year ago

          I was born many decades after WW2, which is why I said I didn’t fight in WW2.

          Reply
  4. Clofreesz

    1 year ago

    Despite this, he still somehow has a negative WAR according to Baseball Reference.

    1
    Reply
    • uvmfiji

      1 year ago

      Career negative.

      Reply
    • vtadave

      1 year ago

      Just shows you how bad he was from 2019-2022

      4
      Reply
      • Sideline Redwine

        1 year ago

        …or how misleading the “stat” is. It’s subjective, it’s not a statistic.

        Reply
        • jdgoat

          1 year ago

          His highest OPS over that four year stretch was .650. He was a bay only player who was bad with the bat. Certainly doesn’t seem misleading at all.

          1
          Reply
  5. skinsfandfw

    1 year ago

    Well written article and such a great redemption story. Go Os!

    3
    Reply
  6. wvsteve

    1 year ago

    He’s going to be an attractive free agent this coming off season

    Reply
    • SewaldSwansonSwoon

      1 year ago

      What part of “club option for 2025” was hard to understand?

      3
      Reply
      • wvsteve

        1 year ago

        Didn’t see it but don’t be such a jerk.

        Reply
  7. Tom the ray fan

    1 year ago

    Max Muncy 2.0

    1
    Reply
    • skinsfandfw

      1 year ago

      Except for the part that he doesn’t K and actually hits for avg

      Reply
      • Tom the ray fan

        1 year ago

        In the sense that he was given up on but is turning out to be a well above average hitter…

        Reply
  8. Nosferatu Zodd

    1 year ago

    Just another player the Orioles have reclaimed. It’s not just about drafting well or signing FAs. Most of these guys have the talent. They just need it unlocked. He hits righties really well. Not to good of a defender or same side. So platoon him 1B/RF/DH and PH for him in late games or use him late game as a PH.

    1
    Reply
  9. Go Go Power Rangers

    1 year ago

    Well written article. Enjoyed reading it. Love hearing about players finally figuring it out. Hopefully O’Hearn can keep it up.

    Reply
  10. CarolinaCubsandKush

    1 year ago

    O’s really know how to get solid production out of most of their guys. I wanna say the Cubs have maybe 3 guys batting above .230. Can’t get production from anybody right now. Wild reading players like this take off unexpectedly. That’s why teams take flyers on guys though. Sometimes, you just never know.

    Reply
  11. Diabetic Rockstar

    1 year ago

    Seems like this fits more in a Fansided or SB Nation Orioles Fan Blog post than something on MLB Trade Rumors.

    There’s literally nothing here related to any current transaction, rumor, signing, etc. Its just a “omg I love the Orioles and I love Ryan fluff piece.

    Reply
  12. basemonkey 2

    1 year ago

    O’Hearn is just another of a lot of shrewd moves this current regime has made. They’ve got a serious brain trust of talent evaluators and data analysts in Baltimore. The whole roster and farm is now filled with moves like this. Not that everything hits, but they get value out of a lot of moves.

    Reply
  13. MLBTR needs to hire editors

    1 year ago

    Clearly he’s not a trade candidate and this makes no mention of an extension, so why is MLBTR talking about him? Are they getting some payola from his agent? “My player is good, and if you write nice things about him at a site front office staffers read religiously, we’ll give you a cut of the increased arb salary you’re helping him get.”

    This reads like a weak attempt to be like Fangraphs. These are just regurgitated stats the writer found there or on Statcast. Stop trying to be something you’re not, MLBTR. Report the news and when you do analysis, analyze transactions, which you’re better at than anyone. Enough with this unethical, player-friendly tripe.

    Reply

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