The Orioles keep getting hit by injuries, but Blaze Alexander has become one of the few steady answers in the middle of all that chaos.
Baltimore is 40-48 and sitting fourth in the American League East, a spot that reflects how rough this season has been. Zach Eflin and Jordan Westburg are done for the year.
Félix Bautista could join them, while Ryan Mountcastle and Chris Bassitt remain sidelined. Then came another scare on July 1, when Ryan Helsley was warming up for the ninth inning against the Chicago White Sox and had to shut it down because of discomfort in his throwing elbow.
The Orioles still won 6-1, but Helsley never got into the game.
That’s the backdrop. Inside the clubhouse, Alexander says the noise outside doesn’t matter.
“I don’t think anyone here is worried about what other teams are doing,” Alexander said. “The focus is on this team - full focus here. If we do what we know we can do, at the end, we’re going to look up and be in a really good spot.”
When Baltimore acquired Alexander from the Arizona Diamondbacks on Feb. 5, the expectation was simple: he looked like a useful depth piece, someone who could move around and fill in when needed. He had played parts of two seasons in Arizona and never appeared in more than 74 games in a year.
Then the Orioles’ infield depth chart got blown up almost immediately. One day after the trade, Jackson Holliday suffered a hamate injury. Westburg followed with an elbow injury not long after, and suddenly Alexander was getting the kind of run nobody had planned on when he arrived.
He’s made the most of it.
“I think at the beginning of the season, new season on a new team, I was worried about trying to impress [and] put myself in the lineup at all times,” Alexander said. “I’m so much better when I’m backing the ball up, hitting the ball in the middle of the field, just competing at the plate. Things are working.”
The numbers back that up. The right-handed hitter is batting .306/.360/.435 with a 22.3 percent strikeout rate and a 46.9 percent hard-hit rate. In 64 fewer plate appearances than last season, he already has more doubles and triples (14) than he had last year (13).
A small mechanical tweak has helped drive the turnaround. Alexander has focused on staying back longer and keeping his weight on his back hip, which has sharpened his pitch recognition and helped him handle velocity better. The swing-and-miss has come down with it, as his whiff rate has dropped to a career-low 26.5 percent.
That cleaner approach has shown up in the rest of his profile, too. His strikeout rate is down by 10 percentage points, his average exit velocity has risen by 2 mph, and his expected slugging percentage has climbed from .374 last season to .444 this year.
The Orioles also value what he brings defensively, and that part of his game has become just as important as the bat. Alexander has bounced between second base, third base and shortstop all season, taking on whatever spot the team needs without hesitation.
“If I put him behind a plate, he’ll figure it out,” Orioles manager Craig Albernaz said. “He’s just a baseball gamer.”
Albernaz also pointed to the confidence Alexander carries on defense.
“He has all the confidence in the world when he’s on that defense,” Albernaz said. “He wants the ball hit to him.”
For a team that has spent much of the season trying to survive the injury grind, Alexander has turned into more than a fill-in. He’s become one of the reasons Baltimore still has something to play for.
“Any time you’re winning, the vibes are a whole lot better in the locker room,” Alexander said. “Hopefully, we’re going to start playing our best baseball now. I’m real confident in that.”
In Other News...
Orioles Need To See This From Jackson Holliday Before 2027 Plans Clear
Jackson Holliday is back with the Orioles after missing the first two months of the season with an injury, and the return has come with the kind of scrutiny that follows any top prospect in Baltimore. He is still young for his experience level and the organization has long viewed him as a major part of its future, but the early version of his comeback has not looked like the breakout many expected.
What the Orioles need now is a clearer sign that his bat is moving in the right direction, especially in the way he handles pitches and puts balls in play. For a club trying to map out its next few seasons, Hollidays development is not just about getting him healthy again, it is about finding out whether he can still grow into the role they once seemed ready to hand him. [Read more 🡒]
Orioles May Have Learned Something Concerning About Trey Gibson
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What makes Gibson worth watching is that the stuff has not disappeared, and his Double-A success earlier this season suggested a pitcher who could miss bats and limit damage when everything was synced up. The concern now is less about whether he belongs in the organizations future plans and more about how long it will take for his command to catch up, because that will determine whether he is just depth for now or someone who can truly push for a rotation job down the road. [Read more 🡒]
Astros Could Force Orioles Fans To Rethink The Trade Deadline
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One of those names would make sense for a Houston team looking to add offense, even if the power production has not matched last years pace. The other has been working through a rocky overall line, but a strong June suggested there may still be more upside there than the season-long numbers show, which is exactly the kind of profile a contender can talk itself into when the deadline starts to tighten up. [Read more 🡒]
