The Orioles are about to juggle their roster again, and Dean Kremer appears to be next in line for a return.
Kremer is expected to be reinstated from the 60-day injured list Wednesday morning and start that day against the White Sox to finish the series. The move isn’t official yet, but it lines up with what happened after he threw a bullpen session Monday at Camden Yards and completed two rehab starts with Triple-A Norfolk.
Cade Povich followed the same basic path before the Orioles brought him back from the IL, though Povich was optioned to Norfolk after his return. Kremer should avoid that extra step.
Manager Craig Albernaz said Kremer was among the pitchers being considered. With Thursday off, the Orioles could also push Trevor Rogers back to Friday.
Kremer has already made two starts for Baltimore this season. He then strained his right quadriceps during a workout day and opened the year at Norfolk after what was described as a late and shocking camp cut.
The bigger issue now is creating room. The Orioles need a spot on the 40-man roster, and one possible route is transferring Chris Bassitt to the 60-day injured list after his back procedure. Bassitt had a bone spur removed in Green Bay, Wisconsin, and president of baseball operations Mike Elias sounded encouraged about the recovery.
“He’s feeling great, he’s acting great,” Elias said on Saturday. “He’s in there walking around.
You wouldn’t know anything happened. So it’s a pretty minor procedure, and we’ll see where he’s at in a couple weeks and see if and when he can start throwing, but we’re feeling pretty good about things right there, and I think there’s still a very strong possibility we get him back and we get him back in better condition before the end of the season.”
If Baltimore doesn’t go that route, another option is designating one of its recent additions for assignment. That kind of roster churn has become part of the daily grind.
Here’s where the 40-man roster stands right now:
Pitchers: Keegan Akin, Chris Bassitt, Shane Baz, Kyle Bradish, Yennier Cano, Cameron Foster, Rico Garcia, Trey Gibson, Ryan Helsley, Andrew Kittredge, Anthony Nunez, Cade Povich, Nick Raquet, Trevor Rogers, Albert Suárez, Josh Walker, Tyler Wells, Cameron Weston, Grant Wolfram, Brandon Young, Yosver Zulueta.
Catchers: Samuel Basallo, Dom Keegan, Adley Rutschman, Chadwick Tromp.
Infielders: Blaze Alexander, Pete Alonso, Christian Encarnacion-Strand, Gunnar Henderson, Jackson Holliday, Jeremiah Jackson, Coby Mayo.
Outfielders: Dylan Beavers, Colton Cowser, Heston Kjerstad, Tyler O’Neill, Johnathan Rodriguez, Leody Taveras, Reed Trimble, Taylor Ward.
The Orioles claimed Zulueta off waivers from the Cubs on Sunday, one day after claiming Keegan from the Rays.
That constant shuffling has shown up on the active roster, where Baltimore has been running with different combinations of catchers, outfielders and infielders. Jeremiah Jackson was the latest player to get squeezed out, optioned Sunday for two main reasons: he wasn’t seeing much time with Jackson Holliday healthy and Blaze Alexander heating up since the beginning of May, and the club wanted a third catcher with Adley Rutschman just back from the concussion injured list.
Jackson’s playing time had been erratic. He was in the lineup on May 30, then disappeared until June 14, then was out again until the 19th. The consecutive starts came only because Holliday was dealing with groin tightness.
Keeping Chadwick Tromp gives the Orioles insurance if Rutschman runs into any more concussion symptoms, something that also happened to Heston Kjerstad, or if Samuel Basallo is injured or again bothered by discomfort in his left wrist. Albernaz had Rutschman catching last night with Basallo at designated hitter, and Basallo started at first base Sunday for the first time this season while Rutschman was behind the plate. Tromp’s presence also helps if Baltimore needs multiple catchers in the lineup at once.
Tromp signed with the Orioles on June 10 after the Braves designated him for assignment. He played in six games for Baltimore last summer, part of the franchise-record seven catchers the club used, and he also ended up on the injured list then with a lower-back strain.
“It’s weird, finding where you’re gonna fit,” Tromp said after collecting two hits Saturday. “I think that’s been the main thing for me, finding an organization where I can fit in or just fit whatever they’re looking for. I went back to the Braves and obviously they DFA’d me, but as soon as they did, Baltimore called me right away.
“Through the offseason I kind of went over last year and I felt really good here. I felt really good with the guys, the teammates.
They’re awesome. And I think they see something in me that they appreciate.
They know how hard I work and what I bring to the table, also, and I try to make people better, try to make our pitchers better. Just like giving them a really solid game plan.
But yeah, being here again is awesome.
“I do feel like we can play better baseball and then we have a lot of young and hungry guys. We’ve just got to put it together. That’s all.”
Jackson remains well-liked in the clubhouse, and one teammate made his feelings clear about the move, saying, “He doesn’t deserve that.”
Maybe not. But roster decisions like this are part of the job. Kremer got sent down at the end of spring training when he didn’t deserve it, Tyler Wells was optioned earlier this season, and Jackson should get another shot too.
In Other News...
Another Ripken Is Stepping Into A Meaningful Orioles Chapter
Ryan Ripken has quietly carved out a new place around the Orioles during the clubs recent games, taking on color commentary duties for MASN and making his regular-season debut in the booth. For fans who remember the name from a different era of Orioles baseball, it has added an intriguing layer to a broadcast crew that already knows how much history hangs over this franchise.
Ripkens path to that chair ran through the minor leagues, with stops in the Nationals and Orioles organizations before he moved into media. The broadcast setting has also put him back in contact with familiar baseball faces from his playing days, giving this latest chapter a personal feel even as it leaves plenty of room for what comes next. [Read more 🡒]
Orioles Reach Another Embarrassing Low As Camden Yards Turns On Them
The frustration around Camden Yards has been building with each loss, and the latest stumble only sharpened it. Baltimore dropped its third straight game and slipped eight games below .500, a grim place for a club that came into the season with bigger expectations than this. When the play on the field goes sideways and the boos start rolling in, it is a reminder that the margin for patience can disappear quickly in a place that has already seen too much disappointment.
Craig Albernaz did not try to talk the crowd out of its reaction, saying Orioles fans have every right to boo when the team plays this way. The bigger question for Baltimore is how long it can keep asking supporters to absorb the noise while the roster searches for answers, and president of baseball operations Mike Elias is still talking about adding before the trade deadline. For now, the Orioles are left trying to block out the distractions and convince everyone around them that there is still enough time to change the mood. [Read more 🡒]
Orioles Are Headed For A Rotation Decision Fans Wont Ignore
The Orioles starting pitching has been asked to carry more than its share this season, and the strain is starting to show in the way the club talks about its options. Kyle Bradish is closing in on a workload that feels awfully aggressive for a pitcher coming off Tommy John recovery, while Trevor Rogers has already been the kind of arm the staff has had to think about backing off at times to protect both confidence and innings.
With Dean Kremer on the verge of returning from a long absence, the rotation picture only gets more crowded, and it is hard to ignore the case for a six-man setup as the team sorts through a difficult year. Rookie Trey Gibson looks like the easiest arm to option out when that move comes, but the Orioles also have bigger decisions looming if they want to keep evaluating young pitching, including a look at Nestor German after the deadline and a possible bullpen path for Chris Bassitt if he comes back. [Read more 🡒]
