Things aren’t going well for the Orioles, to state the obvious. They currently have a record of 26-38. They are 8.5 games back of the final American League Wild Card spot. They are behind every A.L. team apart from the White Sox and Athletics. FanGraphs puts Baltimore’s playoff odds at 3.1%. Baseball Prospectus is slightly more optimistic at 9.7%.
Barring a surge in the next few weeks, they will go into the trade deadline as sellers. Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic reports that the club is viewing things that way, unsurprisingly. That’s a disappointing outcome but it also presents opportunities.
Teams on the fringes of contention often have to answer tough questions about how aggressively to attack the deadline. Diving in headfirst as a buyer has short-term appeal but runs the risk of investing in a flawed team while hampering the club in the future. Trying to walk a fine line between buying and selling can sometimes end up as a half measure that doesn’t fully work in either direction.
The O’s should have a more straightforward approach. While they will be sellers, there is still a lot of young talent in the system and on the big league roster. The general strategy should be to move guys with dwindling control while keeping the long-term pieces with an eye towards contending again in 2026. Ramón Urías and/or Ryan O’Hearn could be traded, making more room for Coby Mayo at the infield corners. Cedric Mullins should be flipped, opening playing time for the club’s many young outfielders such as Jud Fabian or Enrique Bradfield.
Another interesting name who should be in the mix is Samuel Basallo. An international signing out of the Dominican Republic in 2021, he got a healthy $1.3MM bonus. Since then, he has continued to climb prospect rankings with his excellent work in the minors. In 364 games on the farm to this point, Basallo has a combined .282/.364/.489 batting line and 134 wRC+. That includes a .252/.365/.595 line and 148 wRC+ at Triple-A this year. He has 13 home runs in just 39 games. His 25% strikeout rate is a bit high, but his 14.7% walk rate is almost double the league average.
There have been some question marks about his defense over the years, but prospect evaluators feel he has improved as he has aged. He is still only 20 years old and won’t turn 21 until August. Baseball America currently lists him as the #17 prospect in baseball. MLB Pipeline has him at #16. Keith Law of The Athletic just did a midseason update and had Basallo at #4. Coming into the year, ESPN had him at #17 and FanGraphs at #5.
The Orioles have one of the most talented catchers in baseball in Adley Rutschman, though he’s has been in a slump for almost a year now. The first overall pick of the 2019 draft, Rutschman was doing everything according to plan in his first few years in the big leagues.
From 2022-23, Rutschman hit 33 home runs, drew walks at a 13.6% clip and only struck out 16.2% of the time. His .268/.369/.439 line lead to a 130 wRC+, indicating he was 30% better than league average at the plate. The defense also received strong reviews. FanGraphs credited him with 11.3 wins above replacement over those two seasons, tops among all big league catchers in that time. That number doesn’t even account for intangibles, with Rutschman often complimented for his clubhouse leadership and work with a pitching staff.
For the first half of 2024, Rutschman continued on that pace. Through June 26th, he had a .297/.350/.470 line and 135 wRC+. On June 27th, he was hit on his right hand by a foul tip and had that hand wrapped up after the game, per Roch Kubatko of MASNsports.com (video clip of the play from MLB.com, though the announcer accidentally refers to Rutschman as James McCann). Maybe the timing is a coincidence, but Rutschman hasn’t been the same since. He sat out the club’s game on June 28th but was back in there on the 29th. He slashed .189/.279/.280 for a 63 wRC+ in the rest of the season.
Here in 2025, the two-time All-Star been better but not back to his previous self. Rutschman has a .227/.321/.374 line and 103 wRC+ this year. Some of that may be luck. He has a .250 batting average on balls in play this season, which is well below his previous level and this year’s .290 league average. His 90.8 miles per hour average exit velocity is actually a career high. His 9.4% barrel rate and 40.9% hard-hit rate are also personal bests.
His batted ball metrics were down in the second half of 2024. Perhaps the most logical explanation is that Rutschman wasn’t 100% healthy after taking that foul tip last year, whereas he’s been mostly healthy but unlucky so far in 2025. He’s had a few knocks this year but has avoided the injured list. Maybe his results will even out in the long run and this dip will eventually look like a footnote. For what it’s worth, I personally think that’s the best and most likely explanation.
Even if Rutschman’s slump was just a blip and he’s back to his old self, the Orioles will still likely have to make some decisions about their plans behind the plate. Rutschman is now just over two years away from free agency, as he’s slated to hit the open market after the 2027 season. Despite a late-May call up in 2022, he earned a full year of service by finishing second in Rookie of the Year voting. There hasn’t been any indication that an extension is especially likely. With 2025 trending toward being a lost cause, the O’s may only have two more real bites of the apple with Rutschman.
There’s also Basallo’s health to consider. Though he continues mashing the ball, he has dealt with some injuries, including a hamstring issue and some elbow inflammation. Those issues, particularly the latter, have cut into his ability to get work behind the plate. In order to get him regular plate appearances, the O’s have put him at first base and in the designated hitter slot with some frequency. This year, he has 17 starts as a DH, nine at first and 11 behind the plate. He only has 90 innings in the catcher position this year. Last year, he had 35 starts as the DH, 32 at first base and 56 as the catcher.
That means it’s not a strict either/or situation. It’s entirely possible to imagine a scenario wherein Rutschman and Basallo share the catching duties and the DH slot while Basallo also gets some time at first base. Gary Sánchez was the planned backup to Rutschman this year, but he’s largely been hurt and is an impending free agent regardless. O’Hearn is an impending free agent as well. Ryan Mountcastle can be controlled through 2026 but looks like a non-tender candidate since he was having a poor year and is now going to be on the IL for months. Mayo could take over at first next year with Jordan Westburg at third base. Urias might still be on the roster next year, but the likely departures of O’Hearn and Mountcastle will free up some plate appearances.
Basallo’s bat will seemingly be good enough to play anywhere, but his offensive contributions will be more valuable if he can be a regular catcher. The Orioles might prefer to use the first base and DH spots for Mayo and their many young outfielders. If the O’s wanted to open the catcher position for Basallo, there might be some temptation to consider trading Rutschman.
Doing so this summer is not likely. Trading catchers midseason can be difficult because the backstop would have to learn an entirely new pitching staff on the fly. There’s also the fact that Rutschman’s value is likely down, on account of last year’s struggles and this year’s slow start. As referenced earlier, better days may be ahead, so waiting may be the smart play. With Basallo still a work in progress, there shouldn’t be short-term urgency to get a deal done.
But over the next few years, it’s possible that the pressure builds. Basallo coming up to the majors this year is totally viable, especially if the O’s sell off some pieces at the deadline and open up playing time. If he can hit big league pitching and continues maturing defensively, his viability as a major league catcher will grow. All the while, Rutschman’s window of control will be narrowing. As mentioned, he’s now about two and a half seasons from the open market. He’s making $5.5MM this year and will be due two more raises in arbitration.
As the window of control shrinks and his salary grows, his trade value will drop. That’s a tricky balance the O’s will have to consider. They have long had a big collection of position player talent but have struggled to have enough starting pitching. They have increased spending a bit in the past year but still haven’t made massive investments in the rotation, which has contributed to their unraveling this year.
Trading Rutschman and handing the catching duties to Basallo would certainly be a massive risk right now. But over time, perhaps it starts to look less risky, depending on how Basallo dives into the major league waters.
For other clubs, Rutschman would certainly hold appeal. Free agency usually isn’t a great place to find catching solutions. Backstops tend to show their age a bit more quickly than other players, due to the demands of the position. By the time players get to free agency, they are usually around 30 years old. Rutschman is now 27 and will be 28 and 29 in his final two arbitration seasons.
It’s practically a given that there would be teams willing to surrender controllable starting pitching to acquire Rutschman down the road. If so, the O’s will have to think about the perfect time to make that strike. Zach Eflin, Tomoyuki Sugano and Charlie Morton are all slated for free agency this winter, so the rotation should be the club’s primary target again in the coming offseason, even with Grayson Rodriguez and Kyle Bradish coming back from injuries.
There are no easy answers here and there are still many different ways it could go. But whenever Basallo does come up, he will start to get tested and the O’s will gradually get more clarity on who he can be. As that is happening, the window will be slowly shutting on the Rutschman era, barring a surprise extension. As those strings unravel simultaneously, decisions will have to be made.
Photo courtesy of Joe Camporeale, Kim Klement Neitzel, and D. Ross Cameron, Imagn Images
Adley is not player he was hyped up to be, and it’s nice to see someone else has noticed.
I think Adley will be fine. He has a .364 xwOBA, is above-average in both exit velocity and barrel rate, and is above the 90th percentile of whiff and chase rate. Making good contact+not chasing outside the zone+not swinging and missing frequently is usually a recipe for success.
“Adley is not”…No, he’s not and the #1 prospects in MLB should be referred to as “most hyped prospects”.
DarkSide — Did you not read the article? Clearly not. I’ll help you out.
“His .268/.369/.439 line lead to a 130 wRC+, indicating he was 30% better than league average at the plate. The defense also received strong reviews. FanGraphs credited him with 11.3 wins above replacement over those two seasons, tops among all big league catchers in that time.”
Tops among all catchers in his first 2 years playing. It’s not hype if you deliver.
Somebody else noticed??..that he is valuable! Obviously writing a whole article about a player who has no value would be silly.
Seriously, read the blanking article.
He will bounce back, and teams would still pay top dollar to trade for him right now. If the hand is the issue, it could be a full year or more before he feels normal again, especially since he hasn’t rested it.
@dark
Reading comprehension is a thing.
All these supposed great catchers can’t hold a candle to what Yadi Molina did. He continued to primarily catch his entire career. These days a catcher catches a few years, then becomes a DH or first baseman. No comparison to Yadi. Makes me deeply appreciate the iron man.
Think more teams should look into making a catcher a thirdbaseman like BJ Surhoff and Todd Zeille. Let’s face 3rd base is the worse position in the majors. Find an athletic catcher and get him working at third( obviously not Baltimore) but others. Balls get down third quick, knock it down and throw it over. Should be able to get 80% of the guys. Can switch out in late innings. Heck first gets more balls then third
stubby66: Lots of catchers have made that transition at some point in their careers.
Joe Torre, Johnny Bench, Brandon Inge, and Josh Donaldson are a few of the names.
Yeah I thought of yadi as a comparison to rutschman
Even if his offense isnt that good it is still nice to keep a young defensive catcher that’s a clubhouse leader
CardsnWolves: Mike Piazza did the same thing and was a better hitter.
Piazza went to DH and 1B as his knees couldn’t handle the squatting. And defensively Yadi was superior to Piazza behind the plate. Yadi handled catcher into his 40s. That is unheard of
@PiratesFan – Well, unless one never heard of…
* Bob Boone.
* Carlton Fisk.
* Gabby Hartnett.
* Pudge and Yogi Berra played their last games just before they turned 40
PiratesFan1981: Piazza played 1B in 70 games and was DH for 122, mostly in his final season in 2007 with Oakland.
Those numbers pale in comparison to the 1,630 games in which he was the catcher.
baseball-reference.com/players/p/piazzmi01.shtml
Found Yadi’s mom.
Adley struggles are at home. For some reason his BABIP is terrible at home from both sides of the plate, and obviously the home runs are there either. What’s weird about the home away split is that his hard% at home is close to 50% and away its under 30%. It could be that he’s just had a tough April and May. It’s a pretty good buy low situation.
If they trade Rutschman it will be a mistake if anything they need to be like Milwaukee when they kept Lucroy and Maldonado for 4 years. Chicago should do the same with Quero and Teel also Milwaukee should do the same with Conteras and Quero. The smart catchers is something that gets overlooked too much in the league.
Keeping lucroy wasnt the best for the brewers because he became bad and then lost all his value
Well after the Brewers traded him that is .
The value was lost after he was traded.
I think the Orioles will sell high on Ryan O”Hearn at this year’s deadline – can always re-sign him in free agency – and promote Basaillo to assume his role as a LHH DH/1B with an occasional start at Catcher when Rutschman needs a day off. Hopefully, Rutschman’s expected statistics will translate into betters results in the second half and finish the season healthy. If so, in the off-season, I think they will trade Rutschman and go with Basaillo as their everyday catcher in 2026 and sign an experienced, RHH back up catcher to pair with him.
Trade Adley?! Why?! Because he’s a free agent in 2 years? The second ever #1 pick in the MLB draft for the Orioles…sell him.
If he’s valuable to other teams, maybe the Orioles could use him for those 2 years.
Doesn’t make any sense to trade him. (Well, it does if economics is your only lens to see Baseball through. Thank goodness Economist’s don’t run baseball…oh…sigh)
Orioles won’t resign him they have 0 long term extensions given out
I think they’ll extend Gunnar eventually.
They’ve apparently already attempted to, but Boras is his agent, and you know how that goes for us. I’m not saying it won’t happen, but I’ll be shocked if it does.
Letitbelow — Fingers crossed!
(Probably slightly better odds to sign Gunnar to an extension as a Boras client than the Orioles winning the division this year. Only slightly though)
forealforeal615: But that’s ultimately the player’s decision. It’s not up to Boras.
Michael Conforto nods approvingly.
player has to want that too. Perhaps Adley feels the offer was too low when he wasn’t producing? Maybe the team wants to see how he will age?. With their mid/sm market resources, they have to make sure they pick the right player(s) to extend. Article fails to mention there is like no one behind Basallo. Maverick Handley sounds cool but can’t hit at all. They will drag Basallo’s minors time out a bit and bring up for a full season and give him more time behind the plate in AAA. He hasn’t caught all that much with the injuries.
paosfan — Good take!
I’ll differ a bit on the Catching Prospects below Basallo; Creed Willems (O’s # 11) and Ethan Anderson (O’s #18) are deeper in the Organization development.
And yes, too true on Maverick. (But he might be a genius at catching though…for whatever that’s worth…)
Rutchsman.
Whether he stays here in Baltimore or goes elsewhere, I see him having a Carlton Fisk kind of career. Better than decent but not that difference maker behind the plate to influence a teams win loss total yr in and out.
Him, Weiters, Basallo are all too tall for my liking for behind the plate duty. Give me that 6′ nothing wide as he is tall body type behind the plate. The year the Os invested 2 mil in Basallo, they also spent 1 million on another catcher in the 8th round. Creed Willems. Dats my boyyyy!
C Yards — You like you catchers wide rather than tall?
(I do like me so Creed Willems though!!)
O’sSCYS – absolutely likem squatty. Why? They stay as catchers. Think Molina brothers, Pudge and now this Alveraz cat with the Mets.
110 starts each for Rutschman, Mayo, and Basallo seems ideal. Let Rutschman start 100 at catcher and 10 at DH, Basallo starts 60 at catcher and 50 at 1B, and Mayo starts 110 at 1B. If Basallo can handle catching defensively and everyone is hitting, split the catching 80/80 and take time from the DH spot.
Sad — 1st, the new Ownership group is barely a year in place, and the previous Ownership group didn’t add extensions to the books to help the sale. Seems premature to say they don’t give extensions, especially since both Adley and Gunnar are Boras clients (which adds to the difficulty).
As far as “won’t resign him”, why does that mean you have to sell? He’s a fricken All Star catcher under control for 2 more years! Baltimore needs that level of player since they are trying to compete themselves!
There is nothing wrong with keeping Adley through Arbitration, then getting a Comp Pick. And Arbitration ensures he’s on bellow market rate for this and next year. Seems like there’s value in a good value…
The idea of trading Adley is one of the more ridiculous conversations that I have seen, and the comments section is chock-full of absurdities as a matter of routine. Top prospect? Check. Terrific start to his career for a few seasons? Check. Team leader? Check. Very good defense? Check. Franchise stalwart and focal point? Check.
Hand injury coincides with the downturn, but metrics are still solid? Check. Value at its lowest as a result? Check. Wow – let’s trade him now.
Then the O’s need to extend him ASAP!
Second guessing is easy. First guessing is the tough part but Bobby Witt would look nice at SS right now with Gunnar at 3B. Westburg to second and go in a different direction with the Holiday pick.
While all of that sounds great. The O’s would have regretted not choosing Jackson Holliday. He’s only 22 and in the majors and has held his own and has also became a weapon at lead off. His defense has improved as well in only his second year at 2B. Gunnar and Jackson are going to be a force for years to come.
Can’t argue with that. But Baltimore has gotta get some balls and lock guys up along with trading prospects to get some decent controllable pitching. Win a World Series instead of the top 100 prospects list plus bring back Buck Showalters!! im sorry he would be perfect to right the ship
Gunnar and Witt would have been better.
I know you don’t draft based on position or demographic, but I doubt the Orioles would have drafted a high school shortstop in Gunnar if they had also chosen a high school shortstop in Witt.
Why? SS are usually the most athletic players coming out of high school and can move positions with some reps. Usually CF or infield. The Os drafted Ortiz, and Gunner and Westburg all near the same time and they mostly shared SS in minors. Gunner was playing third some until Westburg came up. Pick the best players and figure out where they fit or trade them later.
That’s all the Orioles draft. Middle infielders, CF’s and catchers. Plus Gunnar was a 3B before they put him at SS.
sultan — They probably couldn’t have gotten both Bobby and Gunnar. Since Adley was college Senior, he had no leverage to get Slot Value for 1-1 pick. Those savings were pumped into signing Gunnar.
I don’t think Witt Jr would have signed for an almost 2 million dollar discount.
So as an O’s fan don’t get me wrong, but Adley seems very Matt Wieters esque in the way that they’re both not the complete package they were hyped to be. Adley is still just 27 though, he’s definitely a better offensive player than his peripherals dictate and better than Wieters was/is the better defender especially at keeping the stolen bases down. Not that its all on the catcher, some responsibility goes to the pitcher to keep runners honest but Adley : 21.9 Caught Stealing %, Wieters: 32.4%. Basallo may in fact be the way to go sooner rather than later, still extremely young at 20 years old. If you can get some really good offers for Adley (doubtful imo) I think you have to at least listen.
Unfortunately I think Adley is miserable playing on the east coast. He raked over the weekend when in Seattle and he wouldn’t stop smiling. Hes just an Oregon dude. He will do great elsewhere but going to be tough to convince a team to give up a ton. I would see if a catchy needy team on the West would trade a few top pitching prospects that are a few seasons away.
As an O’s fan, I still think Adley has the potential to have a very good career. But what you said makes a ton of sense. He was a different person during that Seattle series. While the Mariners don’t have a spot for him with Raleigh (unless Adley would agree to spilt time between catcher and first base…), what about the Giants with Posey? Might be a good fit, though I don’t know who SF would be willing to give up
Perhaps they can find a team to trade a top of the rotation starter for him. Ownership doesn’t seem willing to invest much in frontline pitching.
Two things I noticed:
1. They tend to overlook the human element. Teams are VERY reluctant, regardless of record, to trade their team captain, fan favorite and someone pitchers just love to throw to.
2. There’s very much room for both. Intelligent and hard working as Basallo is, most don’t believe he’s a full time starting catcher yet. But his bat is likely to be too darn valuable by 21/22 to keep out of the lineup so he should DH plenty. There’s also reason to believe that Adley’s offense has taken a downturn due to overuse, something the Angels learned with Logan O’Hoppe the last couple years. So by having Rutschman catch four days a week, DH one day and rest one day, they can keep him healthy. Same with Basallo, catching once or twice a week and DHing the rest is probably the optimal setup.
It took 800 words to say 5 – Basallo moves to first base.