The Orioles are close enough to the American League race to make this deadline matter, but not close enough to make the choice easy. Baltimore has to decide whether this is the moment to use some of the farm system to help a 2026 club, or whether standing pat is the safer play. Either route carries real risk: do nothing, and they could miss the playoffs by a game; push too hard, and they could burn through future value without even getting in.
That’s why the conversation starts with prospect capital, and more specifically, which young players the Orioles can afford to move while their stock is climbing. Three names stand out.
Ike Irish is the clearest trade chip of the group. Baltimore made him the first pick of its 2025 draft, and there was enough buzz around him that landing him at No. 19 felt like a win.
He’s already looked strong in High-A and has started appearing on top 100 lists, which gives him real appeal in a deal. The bigger reason he makes sense as a trade piece is fit: he’s a left-handed C/1B/OF, and the Orioles already have catcher and first base spoken for for the next five years and beyond.
They also have two left-handed corner outfielders under contract for the next 4-6 years. That leaves Irish blocked almost everywhere he can play.
The only argument for keeping him would be hoping he keeps rising fast enough to become even more valuable later, but without much defensive value, that seems like a shaky bet.
Creed Willems fits the same basic problem, only more urgently. He’s been in the organization for a long time, and his Triple-A season has been his best since low-A.
The bat has come alive - he’s hitting for average, power, and getting on base - even if the defense behind the plate still isn’t pretty. But Willems is limited to catcher and first base, and those spots are already occupied.
On top of that, he’s Rule-5 eligible this offseason, and with the way he’s performed in Triple-A, he’d be a tempting pickup for another club in a heartbeat.
Ethan Anderson is the most improved of the three, and maybe the most interesting. A second-round pick in the 2024 draft, he had a rough 2025 minor league season and posted an OPS under .700 at a level where he should have been more advanced.
This year, though, he’s broken through in Double-A, hitting .262/.362/.502 while spending most of his time catching. Production like that from the catcher position is hard to ignore.
Even so, Anderson runs into the same wall as the others: Basallo and Alonso block him at the only positions he can handle. That’s part of the larger issue with all of these catchers - they’re offense-first, defense-questionable players, which makes it hard to imagine squeezing them into the Orioles’ future, even alongside Adley Rutschman.
That’s the real thread running through all three names. Baltimore doesn’t need to move them because they’re bad.
It needs to move them because they’re good, and because the path to playing time in Baltimore looks closed. Right now, each one is trending up.
That’s exactly when the Orioles should be willing to deal from strength, instead of waiting for the value to fade.
In Other News...
Blue Angels Turned Camden Yards Into A Baltimore Moment Fans Wont Forget
Camden Yards had an extra soundtrack Saturday, and the Orioles made sure everyone in the ballpark knew it was coming. Before the game against the Nationals, the club alerted the umpires and Washington about the noise from the U.S. Navys Blue Angels flyover tied to the Sail250 event, then passed the warning along to fans on the video board as the planes prepared to cross over the stadium.
The reminder proved necessary in the middle of one plate appearance, when home plate umpire Jansen Visconti had to call time several times as the roar overhead interrupted the action. Orioles outfielder Colton Cowser also had a little fun with the moment, saying he wished he could have sent one out while the planes were flying by, even if he came up just short of making the scene even more Baltimore. [Read more 🡒]
Orioles Cant Ignore These Two Season-Defining Problems Any Longer
The Orioles have reached the point in the season where two problems keep showing up in different forms, and neither one can be brushed aside much longer. Gunnar Hendersons spot near the top of the lineup has become part of the conversation because the offense needs more than name value from a player in that role, while the rotation continues to look stretched as Baltimore tries to keep games from getting away early.
Kyle Bradishs latest start only deepened the concern on the pitching side, with another erratic outing that ended quickly after he issued five walks in four innings. There is growing reason to think the club may need to get creative with how it manages the staff, including the possibility of a six-man rotation if help arrives in time, but for now the Orioles are still stuck trying to solve issues that are hard to ignore and even harder to mask. [Read more 🡒]
