Juaron Watts-Brown’s Double-A line still doesn’t look pretty, and that’s the first thing that jumps off the page. He’s sitting on a 6.22 ERA with Chesapeake, and the broader picture has been messy: too many walks, too much damage in the air, and not enough steady fastball command to feel great about him as a conventional starter.
And yet, the last four outings have hinted at something more interesting.
Over that stretch, Watts-Brown has worked 21.1 innings with a 2.95 ERA, a 1.13 WHIP, 27 strikeouts, and just five walks. The strikeout rate has been 31.0%, the walk rate 5.7%, and the swinging-strike rate a sharp 16.0%. Those are the kinds of numbers that suggest real bat-missing ability, not just a lucky run.
That’s why the bigger question is starting to come into focus: should the Orioles begin preparing him for the role he may actually fill in the majors, which looks more like a multi-inning reliever than a traditional starter?
His latest start offered a clear snapshot of both sides of the equation. The slider stood out as the pitch that changes the whole look of the outing.
It had sharp diving action with some horizontal finish, and it bothered hitters from both sides of the plate. Against right-handers, he could work it low and away.
Against left-handers, he used it down and in as a back-foot pitch. It wasn’t just a chase offering, either.
He could land it for strikes when he needed to, then use it to expand the zone later in the count.
That’s a legitimate major league weapon.
The fastball sat mostly 94-96 mph, and while it can look a little straight, he was around the zone with it and used it well enough to set up the slider. The best sequences came when he got ahead with the fastball, changed the hitter’s eye level, and then finished with either a slider below the barrel or a fastball up above the hands.
One fourth-inning sequence showed exactly why he remains so intriguing. He opened a right-handed hitter with a fastball on the inside corner, dropped in a slider for a strike on the outside edge, came back up and in with the fastball, and then finished the at-bat with a 96 mph fastball for a swinging strikeout.
That version of Watts-Brown gets your attention.
The rest of the starter mix, though, still leaves plenty to be desired. The curveball can work as a third pitch to steal a strike, but it comes and goes.
At times it gets loopy, and it doesn’t look like something he can lean on consistently. The changeup is the bigger concern.
He showed it in the latest look, but the feel wasn’t there. Several came up high or missed their spots, and it didn’t look like a dependable pitch against left-handed hitters.
That’s a real issue for a starter. A right-hander can get by without a plus changeup if he has premium fastball traits, top-end command, or multiple dominant breaking balls.
Watts-Brown has good stuff, but not quite enough margin for error. The fastball is usable, not overpowering.
The command is a bit below average. The slider can miss bats, but asking him to navigate lineups multiple times without a reliable changeup puts a lot of pressure on everything else.
That’s why the bullpen path makes sense.
At 24, he’s at the point where role development matters. It’s no longer just about whether he can show four pitches in the minors or stack five-inning outings. It’s about getting him ready for the role he’s most likely to have in the majors.
Starters and relievers live very different lives. Starters have days to prepare and a set routine.
Relievers have to get loose fast, bounce back quickly, handle uneven usage, and sometimes enter with runners already on base. That’s a different skill set, and it has to be learned.
If the Orioles think Watts-Brown’s future is in the bullpen, they should start building him for it now. Let him get used to shorter rest.
Let him pitch more often. Let him learn how his stuff plays when he’s attacking in one- or two-inning bursts instead of conserving himself for five or six innings.
That doesn’t mean forcing him into a one-inning role right away. He might be most valuable as a multi-inning or bulk reliever.
The fastball-slider combination gives him a strong base, and the curveball and occasional changeup provide enough variety to keep hitters from sitting on one look. He doesn’t need to be reduced to a pure two-pitch arm.
There’s also a chance the fastball ticks up in shorter outings. If he’s sitting 93-96 as a starter, maybe he can live more consistently at 95-96 in relief, with a little extra when he reaches back. Add a slider that already misses bats, and the profile becomes a lot more appealing.
The Orioles still have to be honest about what they’re seeing, though. The 6.22 ERA, the lack of a dependable changeup, the slightly below-average command, and the fly-ball issues all make him a tough sell as a stable big league starter. The smarter move may be to stop stretching the starter projection and start maximizing what he already does well.
Fastball. Slider.
A curveball now and then. A rare changeup.
Attack hitters. Miss bats.
Cover multiple innings.
That could be a useful bullpen piece as soon as next season.
Watts-Brown still has starter traits, but his most likely major league future may be in relief. The Orioles should seriously consider making that shift now, not because he’s failed as a starter, but because his best pitches may play faster and sharper in a bullpen role.
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