The Orioles are heading into the second half with a fresh arm in the bullpen and a rotation setup that’s starting to take shape for their series opener in Houston.
The club recalled right-hander Cam Sanders from Triple-A Norfolk, and he’ll wear No. 73.
Sanders had his contract purchased from the Pirates on Monday, then was designated for assignment by Pittsburgh on Saturday after the club acquired Jacob Gonzalez and Brandon Eisert from the White Sox. In nine relief outings, Sanders posted an 8.68 ERA and 2.036 WHIP, with 10 walks and 13 strikeouts in 9 1/3 innings.
Over 15 games across two seasons, he owns an 8.44 ERA and 2.063 WHIP.
The move leaves Grant Wolfram as the only left-handed reliever in the Orioles’ bullpen. Baltimore had optioned left-hander Nick Raquet over the break, though the corresponding move wasn’t announced until today.
Dean Kremer gets the ball tonight, and his numbers against Houston are eye-catching. He’s 4-0 with a 2.59 ERA and 0.936 WHIP in six career starts against the Astros, and he’s given up one run in 14 2/3 innings in two starts in Houston.
This season, Kremer has a 4.09 ERA and 1.000 WHIP in four starts, with a quadriceps strain sending him to the injured list in between. His last outing was a rough one: a career-high four home runs allowed against the Cubs, after he held the White Sox to one run in six innings.
Houston will counter with right-hander Peter Lambert, who has put together a 3.14 ERA in 15 starts in his first season with the Astros after four years with the Rockies. Lambert, a former second-round pick, also pitched in Japan last year.
Left-handers have managed just a .143 average and .507 OPS against him this season, while right-handers are hitting .261 with a .751 OPS. His only career outing against Baltimore came April 30 in the first game of a doubleheader at Camden Yards, when he allowed two runs and two hits in 4 1/3 innings.
The Orioles enter with some momentum, having won four straight to reach 46-51. They’re fourth in the division, 11 1/2 games behind first place and two games out of a Wild Card spot.
Their starters have been rolling this month, posting a 3.36 ERA that ranks seventh in the majors. Baltimore has also won 20 challenges to avoid strikeouts, most in the majors, according to STATS.
Houston sits at 47-51, third in the American League West and 1 1/2 games out of a Wild Card berth. The Astros dropped two of three to the Orioles in Baltimore back in April. Their offense has been powered by 133 home runs, third most in the majors, but the pitching staff has struggled badly with a 4.81 ERA, 27th in the league, and a 1.41 WHIP, 26th.
Yordan Alvarez has been scorching since June 1, batting .346. He leads the American League with 31 homers, the most by an Astro before the break, passing Lance Berkman’s 2002 mark of 29. Jose Altuve is 9-for-20 with three doubles and a homer against Kremer, while Jeremy Pena is 1-for-15.
The Orioles are 15-26 all-time in Houston. Brandon Young threw 7 2/3 perfect innings at Daikin Park last season, but he has been bumped ahead of by Kyle Bradish in this weekend’s rotation. Young will start against the Red Sox at Fenway Park.
Baltimore’s weekend plans continue Saturday afternoon with Trevor Rogers facing Spencer Arrighetti, followed by Kyle Bradish against Hunter Brown on Sunday afternoon.
The club also finalized two draft signings: left-hander Zane Adams, its sixth-round pick, for $370,000, and utility player Carlos Sanchez, a 10th-rounder, for $47,500. According to Baseball America’s Carlos Collazo, Adams’ slot value was $396,300 at pick No. 171, while Sanchez’s slot value at No. 290 was $198,900.
The Orioles have also built a season-long four-game winning streak that has lifted them to 46-51, and STATS notes they’ve made the playoffs four times when they were on the outside at the break - in 1973, 1974, 1983 and 1996. The first three came from division deficits, while the 1983 club finished 42-34 in the first half and went on to win the World Series.
In Other News...
Orioles Deadline Debate Just Got More Complicated Than Fans Expected
With the August 3 deadline closing in, the Orioles are still stuck in the kind of limbo that makes this time of year so tricky to read. It is not yet clear whether they will lean into buying, selling or trying to split the difference, and that uncertainty has only sharpened the focus on the players who could actually move if the front office decides to act.
Trevor Rogers has emerged as the most appealing name in that conversation, especially after a rough May gave way to a much better run lately. Taylor Ward also has a path to drawing interest because of his qualifying-offer status and the kind of timely pop he showed with a go-ahead two-run homer, while Andrew Kittredge sits in the more familiar deadline lane of a reliever who is available but probably not a major return. A few other Orioles are effectively off the board because of injuries or contract realities, which only makes the remaining decisions around the roster feel more complicated. [Read more 🡒]
Orioles Draft Just Put Two Outfielders On Notice
The Orioles early draft haul sent a pretty clear message about where the organization wants to go next in center and corner outfield. Baltimore used two of its early 2026 picks on high school outfielders and added a polished college center fielder, a noticeable shift from the clubs recent preference for college power bats. Eric Booth Jr., the seventh overall selection, already sits atop Baseball Americas Orioles prospect list, and the front office now has a fresh wave of athletic outfield talent to work with.
It also leaves a few familiar names with less room for error. Baltimore has spent years trying to turn outfield upside into reliable big league production, and the results have been uneven enough to raise real questions about development and hitting consistency. With Jud Fabian, Vance Honeycutt, and Nate George all part of that broader conversation, the new draft class does not just add depth, it turns up the pressure on the prospects already in the system to prove they can force their way into the picture. [Read more 🡒]
Orioles Just Made Another Quiet 40-Man Move Worth Watching
A quiet roster shuffle turned into a noteworthy one for Baltimore, which is adding an outfielder from Kansas City and tucking him into Triple-A Norfolk after the move. The transaction gives the Orioles another layer of organizational depth at a time when the 40-man picture is already tight, and it also reflects how quickly a strong minor league season can put a player on the radar.
The players path to Baltimore has been a little unusual, too, with a minor league contract clause helping set the deal in motion once Kansas City had to make him available to the rest of the league. He has forced the issue with his work in Double-A and Triple-A this year, and now the Orioles have to sort out the roster mechanics around the addition while deciding how much room they want to keep open for what comes next. [Read more 🡒]
