Orioles Fans Can Already Feel The Tension In Gunnar's New Role

Gunnar Henderson's stint at the leadoff position may be short-lived as offensive struggles persist for the Orioles at Camden Yards.

Gunnar Henderson’s turn in the leadoff spot has given the Orioles a little more on-base life, but it hasn’t solved the bigger problem hanging over this lineup. And with a long homestand coming before the All-Star break, the ripple effects of the move could matter even more at Camden Yards.

The immediate issue is what the shuffle did to the rest of the order. Taylor Ward, once a 35-homer bat, has seen his power get stripped away as an Oriole, and now he’s sitting in the three-hole.

That’s a tough fit anywhere, but it looks even worse with that massive left-field wall in Baltimore looming over every home game. Rookie skipper Craig Albernaz and the front office are going to have to live with the consequences if this setup keeps dragging the offense down.

The Orioles have scored three runs or fewer in six of their last nine games and four or fewer in seven of nine. Henderson’s move up one spot hasn’t changed that much, and it may be costing him power without giving the club enough in return.

He’s getting on base more, and he’s making a point to see more pitches. His walk rate had already started climbing back in early June, though, so this isn’t exactly a brand-new breakthrough created by the lineup card.

Since the switch, Henderson has scored in five of the six games. He’s added a few doubles and had a two-walk game, too.

But the home run output still isn’t there: three homers in his last 35 games since his last two-homer night. For a player the Orioles needed to be an MVP-level force, that’s not close to enough.

The Camden Yards split makes the whole thing harder to ignore. Henderson should feast there, but his home and road slugging and OPS are basically the same.

At this point, if the leadoff move doesn’t unlock more power at home, it’s hard to see the point in keeping it. His 17 walks against 19 strikeouts since the start of June are excellent, but the profile is starting to look a lot like Ward’s: enough on-base skill to matter, not enough impact to cover the rest.

There’s also the base-running piece, and that part has not gotten better. Henderson was picked off again over the weekend, despite Albernaz going out of his way to praise him and try to calm things down afterward. For a player with this kind of skill and athleticism, seven steals, four times caught stealing, and five pickoffs is a bad look.

The move was supposed to take pressure off him, but leading off doesn’t do that. It also hasn’t opened up the DH spot nearly enough; Henderson has been the designated hitter only six times, and that needs to happen more often.

His numbers with runners in scoring position don’t help the case either. He has a .382 OPS with two outs and runners in scoring position, and batting first won’t create more RBI chances.

Ward’s home numbers only make the situation uglier. He has four doubles at Camden Yards and nothing else in the extra-base department there.

He has eight RBIs at home this season. For a hitter in a walk year, that’s a brutal hit to his value.

If the Orioles are committed to this look for the rest of the homestand, they’re taking on real risk. A lineup with Henderson first, Blaze Alexander second, and either Adley Rutschman or Samuel Basallo third would at least make more sense. Alexander, after all, has been on base nearly 40% of the time for more than two full months, and he’s earned a real look near the top.

Whatever Albernaz does next, it has to produce something. Since May 1, the Orioles have been held to three runs or fewer 29 times, which leaves them in the bottom 10 in MLB. They’re 5-24 in those games.

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Contender Now Linked To One Orioles Bat Fans Feared Losing

The trade deadline is starting to draw some familiar names into the rumor mill, and for Orioles fans, one of the more uncomfortable ones is a bat they have grown attached to. CBS Sports Mike Axisa recently pegged Taylor Ward as a possible fit for a Phillies club that has improved under Don Mattingly and looks like a buyer, with the appeal tied to his on-base ability and right-handed swing even as his home run total has dipped.

For Baltimore, the intrigue is less about Philadelphias needs than what Ward represents if the market keeps warming up. He is viewed as the kind of rental a contender can chase before he reaches free agency after the season, which is exactly the sort of profile that tends to stir deadline noise around a player who has become part of the Orioles everyday picture. The question now is how aggressive that pursuit gets, and whether Baltimore is forced to weigh short-term value against the kind of return that could make moving him easier to stomach. [Read more 🡒]

Orioles Suddenly Have A Taylor Ward Problem At The Worst Time

Taylor Ward gave the Orioles exactly the kind of early boost they were hoping for, working his way on base at a strong clip and producing enough in April to look like a real middle-of-the-order fit. Since then, though, the bat has cooled, and the difference has shown up in both his power and his ability to get on base, which has made his once-promising start feel more fragile as the calendar moves toward the trade deadline.

That slide has already been noticed outside Baltimore, too. ESPNs latest trade-chip rankings have Ward slipping from 12th in the first edition to 24th now, a reminder that his market is changing along with his production. The Orioles would love to see him straighten things out over the next stretch, not just because they need the offense, but because a stronger finish would give them a much better position when the deadline conversations really start to heat up. [Read more 🡒]

Orioles Bullpen Concerns Just Grew As Another Lineup Shuffle Looms

The Orioles bullpen picture took another hit with Keegan Akin now seeking a second opinion on his left elbow, while Colin Selby remains on the 60-day injured list and Ryan Helsley is still working through treatment on his right elbow. For a club already trying to patch together innings, the latest medical updates only add to the pressure on a relief group that has been asked to absorb a lot this season.

At the same time, Baltimore is trying to manage the rest of the roster with an eye on a Cubs matchup that brings a left-handed starter into the mix. The lineup card reflects that balancing act, with the Orioles turning to several younger bats and moving pieces around as they look for the right combination, even as the bullpen uncertainty keeps hanging over the day. [Read more 🡒]