The Philadelphia Phillies may be playing better since Don Mattingly took over for Rob Thomson, but the roster still has some obvious pressure points. The pitching staff remains shaky, the outfield needs help after right fielder Adolis Garcia’s season-ending lat injury, and any contender in that spot would also be looking for more pop in the lineup.
That’s why Baltimore Orioles left fielder Taylor Ward surfaced in a recent ESPN trade-deadline piece from Kiley McDaniel and Jeff Passan as a possible fit for Philadelphia ahead of the Aug. 3 deadline.
Ward brings a profile that makes sense for a club looking for offense without locking itself into a long-term commitment. Last season, he posted 103 runs batted in and 36 home runs. The batting average sat at just .228 and the strikeout rate was high, but he still drew walks at a strong clip, and that has long been part of his appeal.
This year, the numbers look a little different. Through 95 games, Ward has raised his batting average to .256 and owns a .385 on-base percentage. He has 25 RBIs and six home runs, but he has already walked 73 times, nearly matching the 75 walks he drew in 157 games last season.
"Ward has been very consistent, offering above-average offensive value for the sixth year in a row," McDaniel and Passan wrote for ESPN. "His defensive value is slipping into the fringy-but-fine area, while his spike in walk rate has helped make up for his drop in barrel rate.
The components for power are still here, so I think his power numbers will get some positive regression in the second half. That said, Ward is a player whom the acquiring team is probably happy doesn't come with a multiyear commitment, both to lower the price in prospects and also because he has turned into a different player for the first half of 2026 than the one the O's acquired in the winter."
Ward is in the final year of his contract, which gives a team like Philadelphia some flexibility heading into the winter, especially with the possibility of a salary cap being instituted. At the same time, that setup also means a club could rent him for the stretch run and then watch him leave in free agency.
There is one concern, though. Ward is 32 and has never played in the postseason. Before this year, he spent his first eight seasons with the Los Angeles Angels, a team that has not reached the playoffs or won more than 85 regular-season games since 2014.
That kind of background always leaves one lingering question: how will he handle October when the stage gets louder?
In Other News...
Orioles Make Troubling Pitching Move As Keegan Akin Situation Deepens
The Orioles added another arm to the organization on Monday, acquiring right-hander Cam Sanders from the Pirates for cash considerations and sending him to Triple-A Norfolk. Sanders had been designated for assignment by Pittsburgh, and Baltimore is giving itself a little extra depth in the system at a time when the pitching staff is getting stretched.
The more pressing issue is Keegan Akin, who was moved to the 60-day injured list because of an elbow injury. He is scheduled for a medical evaluation that will help determine the next step, and for an Orioles club already trying to manage its pitching depth, the situation adds another layer of uncertainty to a bullpen that could use some stability. [Read more 🡒]
Orioles Writer Just Put A Stunning Timeline On Samuel Basallo
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The next step is less about raw talent than about the everyday grind that comes with becoming a lineup fixture. Basallo is still working through pitch selection and the defensive side of the position, but the trust around him is growing as he keeps showing he can handle bigger moments. Baltimore does not need to decide his ceiling right now, only whether his recent surge is the start of something much larger, and that is where the intrigue really begins. [Read more 🡒]
Orioles Fans Have Seen This Mike Elias Pattern Far Too Often
For Orioles fans, the frustration is starting to feel familiar in a way that is hard to ignore. Since Mike Elias took over in 2019, Baltimore has too often been stuck in the same place at the same point on the calendar, rarely above .500 by the 95-game mark and usually hanging near the bottom of the AL East while the rest of the division pulls away.
The larger concern is not just where this season sits now, but how closely it fits the pattern that has followed Elias from the start. Baltimore has not finished a year with more than 78 wins under his watch, and even with the organization trying to build around a young core, the margin for error keeps shrinking as injuries pile up and the standings tighten. [Read more 🡒]
