The Orioles announced Wednesday that they’ve selected the contract of catcher Sam Huff from Triple-A Norfolk. Left-hander Jayvien Sandridge, who had been pitching in Triple-A, was designated for assignment to open a 40-man spot. Lefty Nick Raquet was optioned to Norfolk to open space for Huff on the active roster.
Huff’s call to the big leagues means the O’s will be playing a reliever short for at least today. Huff joins the roster as a third catcher alongside Samuel Basallo and Maverick Handley. Adley Rutschman hit the injured list last week due to an ankle issue.
Baltimore signed Huff to a minor league contract back in January. He’s a former Rangers seventh-rounder who’s played in parts of five major league seasons. Now 28 years old, Huff once rated as one of the top catching prospects in the sport and carries a decent .247/.301/.430 batting line in the majors. That production comes in a sample of only 272 plate appearances and despite a 36% strikeout rate, however. Huff’s production has been buoyed by a .350 average on balls in play that he’s not likely to sustain over a long period.
Huff has solid framing grades in his limited major league work but has struggled with blocking balls in the dirt and controlling the run game. He has just an 18.5% caught-stealing rate in his career and has been charged with eight passed balls in 507 innings behind the dish.
It’s been a struggle for Huff in a tiny sample of nine games with Norfolk this year. He’s hitting .156/.250/.168 in 36 plate appearances with the Tides but has a much stronger overall track record in Triple-A. Huff entered the season with a lifetime .258/.338/.476 slash, 56 homers, 60 doubles, a pair of triples, a 10.2% walk rate and a more troubling 29.9% strikeout rate in exactly 1200 Triple-A plate appearances.
The 27-year-old Sandridge joined the O’s in a cash swap with the Angels shortly after Opening Day. He was originally a 32nd-round pick by Baltimore back in 2018 but bounced from the Orioles, to the Reds, to the Padres, to the Yankees and to the Angels since that selection. Sandridge made an extremely brief MLB debut last season, facing a total of six hitters and retiring two of them. He has just two-thirds of an inning and two earned runs in the majors.
Sandridge has pitched in parts of seven minor league seasons but totaled only 243 1/3 total innings. He’s logged a solid 3.96 earned run average in that time and punched out nearly one-third of his opponents — but he’s also issued walks at a 17% clip and plunked another 22 of the 1108 batters he’s faced (2%). Coupled with a whopping 44 wild pitches, it’s more than fair to say that command is a major hindrance for the southpaw.
This season, Sandridge has tossed 1 2/3 scoreless innings with Norfolk, but he’s walked three of the nine batters he’s faced. It’s only a sample of two games, but it’s notable that his heater, which sat just shy of 95 mph in Triple-A and averaged 95.6 mph in last year’s brief debut, is clocking in at an average of 92.9 mph in 2026.
Sandridge is in the second of his three minor league option years. A team looking for some left-handed bullpen depth with a knack for missing bats could roll the dice on a waiver claim or a cash swap like the one that sent Sandridge back to Baltimore in the first place. The Orioles have five days to trade him or place him on waivers. Since waivers are a 48-hour process, the outcome of his DFA will be known within the next week.

I remember when us Ranger fans dreamed of Huff bringing monster power and decent glove to the team. He wouldnt ever be Pudge but he would hit so many taters he would be forgiven not throwing many guys out. But strike 3 hes out is what we mainly saw.
Ironically when Huff arrives Sandridge departs in a Huff
Obviously want to keep Basallo in the lineup at DH with this move.
With Holliday having a set back and maybe out until the all-Star break, I can see them moving on from him in the off-season.
Unlikely as holliday lead the team in hr last year and has 1st end pick dollars invested. Likely would hang around if gunner leaves in fa and takes over ss in a few years.
Injury pain is common with that surgery and while he maybe back soon, not expected to have the same power for 6 monthsish.
I don’t think there’s any chance that Jackson Holliday will be the everyday SS for the O’s. He’s not even a decent 2B.
If/when Gunnar walks it’s going to be someone different. Aloy is probably the only guy in our org currently with a shot.
He never played 2b until aaa briefly before callup. He was a much more highly rated ss prospect. Switching positions isn’t always easy.
Wilfri De La Cruz is going to be a good player. O’s snagged a good prospect off the Cubs in the Kitredge trade.
WDLC is in rookie ball. Another maybe. Hard to say. Guy hasn’t even hit a professional home run yet.. Think it’s just as likely he’s a trade chip for something we need at the deadline. Was a great get for a half season of Kittredge regardless
Anyway Holliday was a bad defensive SS in the minors too.
You don’t trade a 1-1 who has had just one full season in the league and is just 22 years old!
Temporary Giant.
I made my playoff picks today. I had Baltimore making the playoffs as a wild card. I think Baltimore is a good bet at (-115) too.