Straily, Orioles agree to 1-year deal
BALTIMORE -- The Orioles plugged the hole in the back end of their rotation and added a badly-needed arm on Friday by signing veteran right-hander Dan Straily, the club announced.
The club did not disclose financial details of the move, but SiriusXM¡¯s Craig Mish reported the deal would pay Straily $575,000 plus an additional $250,000 if he¡¯s traded. Rule 5 utilityman Drew Jackson was designated for assignment in a corresponding move.
Straily, 30, is 42-36 with a 4.23 ERA across seven Major League seasons with the A¡¯s, Cubs, Astros, Reds and Marlins. He most recently made 56 starts over the past two seasons for Miami, going 5-6 with a 4.12 ERA last season while missing time to a right forearm strain. The right-hander profiled as a fit in Baltimore since he was released by the Marlins at the end of Spring Training, given the Orioles¡¯ uncertainty on the pitching side and their organizational emphasis of pitch spin.
Though his counting stats are pedestrian (career 93 ERA+), Straily elicits some of the higher spin rate marks on both his fastball (70th percentile) and curve (80th percentile), per Statcast. Those numbers (the fastball, especially) jive with Straily¡¯s fly-ball style: he¡¯s posted the 10th lowest ground-ball rate among starters with 100-plus innings since 2016. He¡¯s also proven rather durable, averaging 29 starts starts per season since 2016.
¡°We pursued Dan Straily immediately once he became available,¡± Orioles general manager and executive vice president Mike Elias said in a statement. ¡°He¡¯s the type of accomplished Major League starter who will help stabilize our pitching staff. We are hoping to work him into our rotation soon.¡±
For the first time this season, that rotation is now five-full: Straily slides naturally behind Alex Cobb, Andrew Cashner, Dylan Bundy and David Hess, pushing Mike Wright and Nate Karns officially into full-time relief roles. The Orioles were forced to use openers in the early going with Cobb on the injured list; his return Thursday from a strained right groin and Straily¡¯s addition should make that less common.
The club also has John Means, Wright and Jimmy Yacabonis as multi-inning options out of the bullpen. All are candidates to start in a pinch if necessary, and all have been used heavily in the early going. Baltimore has asked its bullpen to cover 31 1/3 innings across its first seven games, tied with the Rangers for the most on a per-game basis in baseball.
¡°It¡¯s been a grind week,¡± Orioles manager Brandon Hyde said Thursday. ¡°Our bullpen guys have thrown a ton of high-stress innings. Everybody has thrown a lot.¡±
They simply needed another arm, particularly after designating right-hander Pedro Araujo for assignment Wednesday and optioning his replacement, Matt Wotherspoon, to make room for Cobb that same day. Araujo -- who was DFA¡¯d with less than two weeks of Rule 5 Draft eligibility remaining -- was returned to the Cubs then reacquired from Chicago for international bonus pool money. He¡¯s been assigned to Double-A Bowie.
Acquired from the Phillies in December, Drew Jackson¡¯s Rule 5 Draft clock lasted just nine days. Jackson played sparingly in the early going, the 25-year-old hitless in three at-bats with a walk after breaking camp in a super-utility role. Jackson, who made the jump from Double-A this season, played six positions this spring. He must now be offered back to Philadelphia for $50,000.
¡°It was tough to take Drew off the roster,¡± Elias said. ¡°His versatility has always been attractive and he has shown tremendous effort and had a great attitude. He has a bright career ahead of him ... it is never easy to carry Rule 5 Draft picks all year.¡±