Mike Baumann was given a new position, and the outcomes were marginally better

The big right-handed reliever wasn’t All-Star material, exactly, but he was one of the Orioles’ most frequently used and reliable arms.

As we get further and further away from 2018, the last draft run by Dan Duquette & Co. (they took Grayson Rodriguez in the first round), it’s becoming possible to give a more complete verdict on what the old Orioles regime did well and did badly.

It was the single biggest knock on the Duquette-era Orioles: they couldn’t draft or develop pitching talent. The ledger includes first-rounders Dylan Bundy, Kevin Gausman, Hunter Harvey, and Cody Sedlock.

Now flash back to 2019, when the Orioles Top 30 prospects list featured these pitchers: DL Hall (#3), Rodriguez (#5), Keegan Akin (#6), Zac Lowther (#8), Dean Kremer (#9), Blaine Knight (#10), Brenan Hanifee (#11), Harvey (#12), Dillon Tate (#18), Luis Ortiz (#19), Zach Pop (#20), Cody Carroll (#21), Branden Kline (#22), Mike Baumann (#27), Alex Wells (#28) and Drew Rom (#29).

It’s hard to look at that list and claim that the haters were wrong. Sixteen pitching prospects in the Top 30 in 2019, and just five pitched a game or more for the Baltimore Orioles in 2023. Of those five, three—Rodriguez, Hall and Kremer—had success. One—Keegan Akin—was injured-slash-bad. And one—Baumann—well, that’s what we’re here to talk about.

Drafted in 2017, “Big Mike” Baumann was the Orioles’ second straight third-round pick out of Jacksonville, following Austin Hays the year before. The Atlantic Sun pitcher of the year in 2014, the 6’4” right hander came with a nice pedigree and a four-pitch starter’s mix.

That said, there were doubts about how well all four would play at the major-league level. Baumann’s MLB Pipeline profile gave him a 60 (out of 80) for his fastball, a 55 for his “above average” slider, a 45 for a “fringy” curveball, and a 50 for a changeup that needed work. Baumann could be starter material, they predicted, “if he can make strides with his command and changeup”; if not, his fastball-slider combo could play in the bullpen.

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