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Orioles Developing New Culture Under Buck Showalter

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SARASOTA, Fla. — The Orioles have a 75 percent new infield, a new closer, a new designated hitter and a new coaching staff.

Before they make the step to contender in the American League East, Baltimore will need a culture change.

Buck Showalter is doing what he can to change an atmosphere created by (and the cause of) 13-straight losing seasons.

Instead of a team-wide meeting before Monday’s first full-squad workout, Showalter had everyone come to the clubhouse Sunday evening. They piled into buses and went to a local movie theater.

Center fielder Adam Jones wondered if they were seeing the Justin Bieber movie. Instead, after Showalter introduced the front office and staff and made a short speech, the team watched a specially made video.

In between World Series-clinching moments from Orioles championships and clips of some Baltimore on-field brawls were inspirational speeches from movies such as “Any Given Sunday” and “Miracle.”

 

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Spring Battles Not Always Worth Tracking

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Detroit Tigers second baseman Will Rhymes
For the next seven weeks, we will get breathless updates about who is in the lead to be the Yankees‘ No. 5 starter, or the Mets‘ second baseman or the Pirates‘ closer.

Know what? Doesn’t matter.

Those constant tweets on how guys “look,” and stories handicapping a race for a roster spot are really two months of obsession over competitions whose winners are often only temporary.

“Things change so much during the course of the season,” Orioles manager Buck Showalter said. “You make trades. Guys get hurt. (In spring training), you’re trying to cover the ‘what-ifs.’ It’s kind of a moving target. It could change in three days.”

Want proof? We tracked 36 key spring-training “battles” from 2010. Of those 36, just nine of the “winners” held that role for the entire season (two others were Jaime Garcia and Mike Leake, young pitchers that stayed in the rotation until being shut down in September to save their arms, and Nationals closer Matt Capps and Dodgers second baseman Blake DeWitt held their jobs until being traded away at the end of July).

 

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2010′s Managerial Exodus Will Give Dugouts Different Look Next Spring


All this week, the FanHouse staff will look back at the most significant baseball storylines of 2010.

When the 2010 baseball season started, four of the top 14 managers all-time in terms of win total were at the helm of big league teams.

When 2011 starts, only one of those four, St. Louis’ Tony La Russa, will still be on the job. Bobby Cox, Joe Torre and Lou Piniella all have retired.

That turnover was just part of one of the most active managerial seasons in the sport”s history. Twelve of the 30 managers who were in charge to start 2010 are gone, as are two interim managers.

Only 1992 and 2003 ever saw more movement managerially, 13 men losing their jobs in each of those years as clubs looked for the proper leadership.

 

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Orioles Try Not to Whiff on Mark Reynolds

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LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — If the Orioles were wondering what the going rate for an impact hitter in free agency was coming into the Winter Meetings, their struggling rivals a Beltway to the south left little doubt on Sunday night.

Seven years and $126 million for Jayson Werth set the bar high, probably way too high, for Baltimore, which has already missed out on an attempt to land Victor Martinez earlier this winter and figures to see a similar conclusion to its pursuit of Paul Konerko, perhaps in the next few days.

The O’s, like their neighbors in Washington, are in a tough spot when it comes to player acquisition. Baltimore is not an attractive destination for free agents, meaning it is stuck having to overpay Werth-style if it wants to bring in elite targets. It also does not possess the depth of talent either at the major league or minor league level to go out and swing a trade for someone like Adrian Gonzalez without seriously damaging its chances of competing in the cutthroat AL East.

So it is within that context that the Orioles went out and sealed a deal several weeks in the making for Mark Reynolds Monday. Reynolds — 27, acquired from Arizona — is a player they hope will boost a sagging offense that ranked second-to-last in runs scored in the AL last year, and particularly struggled in the power department — ranking 10th in the league in home runs.

 

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FanHouse TV: Buck Showalter Breaks Down LCS Round

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Orioles manager Buck Showalter was a special guest on The MLB Hour this week, and who better to dissect the ALCS than a man who has managed both participants — the Yankees and Rangers — during the course of his career. Click below to watch Showalter’s analysis of both League Championship Series matchups.

 

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The MLB Hour: Buck Showalter Joins Us for ALCS, NLCS Previews

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The latest edition of The MLB Hour features a visit from Orioles manager Buck Showalter. Before taking over the Baltimore rebuilding project, he previously managed both ALCS participants, the Yankees and the Rangers, so he has a unique perspective on the series that begins Friday.

Showalter and FanHouse TV’s usual panel of experts also break down the Giants-Phillies NLCS matchup, discuss what lies ahead for the Division Series losers and make their picks for both League Championship Series. Click below to watch:

 

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The MLB Hour: Orioles Manager Buck Showalter Joins Show Thursday

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If all goes according to plan, Buck Showalter will have the Orioles playing in mid-October sometime soon. In the meantime, the Baltimore manager will drop by the latest installment of The MLB Hour to help the FanHouse TV crew break down the postseason picture.

As a former manager for both ALCS participants, the Rangers and Yankees, Showalter should have a unique insight into each team.

Be sure to check out MLB FanHouse on Thursday evening for Showalter’s thoughts on the playoffs and what the future holds for the Orioles, in addition to the usual analysis and discussion from our panel of experts with the next round of the postseason set to begin on Friday.

 

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Orioles’ Alfredo Simon, Buck Showalter Suspended After Beanball Exchange

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NEW YORK (AP) — Baltimore pitcher Alfredo Simon has been suspended three games and Orioles manager Buck Showalter has been penalized one game after a run-in this weekend against Toronto.

Simon and Showalter also were fined undisclosed amounts by Major League Baseball after home run leader Jose Bautista of the Blue Jays was plunked Sunday.

Simon has appealed his penalty and can continue to play until the process is complete. Showalter will miss Baltimore’s game Monday night at Tampa Bay.

Bautista was twice hit by pitches in the game against the Orioles.

Toronto pitcher Shaun Marcum was fined an undisclosed amount for hitting Baltimore’s Luke Scott, which prompted a warning by umpires against further trouble.

 

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Twelve Thoughts: Peavy Retrospective, Showalter, Lilly Loving L.A.

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Jake PeavyNow that five ace pitchers have been traded in the last 13 months, one of the early trades, the stunner that sent Jake Peavy to the White Sox last summer, somehow is even more incredible.

Comparisons between the price paid for Peavy and the prices paid for Cliff Lee (dealt three times in that span), Dan Haren, Roy Halladay, or Roy Oswalt are a waste of time, because there’s no comparison. The White Sox swallowed all of the $56 million guaranteed Peavy at a time when no other club was calling for the right-hander, who had full no-trade powers, a bum ankle that likely will require surgery and a violent delivery to go with a history of DL-level shoulder and elbow ailments.

Willing to eat money and accept a case of Old Style beer from Chicago in lieu of actual talent, the Padres instead moved all of the contract and obtained four pitchers led by left-hander Clayton Richard (9-5 with a 3.60 ERA for $424,000 this year).

Aside from freeing up San Diego’s payrolls in 2011 and 2012, the salary relief helped the Padres to sign three above-slot draftees and later starting pitcher Jon Garland (who saw that San Diego’s ballpark is best for him), and retain stars Adrian Gonzalez and Heath Bell for this year when Peavy’s $15 million salary would’ve put the club well over budget.

o. Speaking of the $38-million Padres, they are exploiting the “Winning Is Secondary” market inefficiency.

“Winning is the only thing that matters to every guy in this clubhouse,” said David Eckstein, a second baseman whose two World Series championship rings reinforce the message.

Don’t tell the Little Leaguers, but winning is secondary to a lot of big leaguers.

“You know why the Cardinals have such a good clubhouse?” Eckstein told FanHouse. “Because winning is all that matters to the best player on that team (Albert Pujols).”

 

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Orioles Seem to Have Man for Their Plan

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Buck ShowalterBALTIMORE — If the Orioles aren’t careful, they’re going to run out of excuses for losing.

On the verge of their 13th straight losing season at a majors-worst 32-73, the O’s made official what is supposed to be their next step toward ending that dubious streak, unveiling new manager Buck Showalter on Monday.

Thanks to the woeful Pittsburgh Pirates, Baltimore isn’t quite the most moribund baseball town in North America, but that’s hardly a comfort to fans here, and, in a year that in many ways represents rock bottom for the franchise, belief that things will ever turn around is at an all-time low.

But listen to Showalter, and maybe you start to have a little faith.

“Because a club has struggled for so long, everybody thinks that everything there is bad. Everybody gets guilty by association, but you’re innocent by association, too,” he said in his introductory press conference. “That’s not the case here. There are a lot of good things, and I’ve done my homework. We all have strengths and weaknesses. I think the most important thing an organization can do in a lot of cases is evaluate yourself … and know who you are going forward and how you’re going to go about doing it.”

 

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