Jump to content

Michael Baumann and Erik Bedard


Just Regular

Recommended Posts

First of all, I think I speak for a lot of posters when I say that I love your writing voice.    A lot of times I read posts without really looking first at who wrote them.   I’ll be reading one of yours and think to myself, “only OrioleDog would put it that way.”    And then I’ll look and confirm it.   And I’m invariably correct.

Second, that’s an interesting comparison.   I’ll only add that I’d bet if you looked at his own decade, Bedard’s K/9 would rank much better than 32nd, as K/9 is an ever-growing phenomenon. 

I fully agree that the health of Baumann’s elbow will be a huge factor in 2021.   
 

  • Upvote 3
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Bedard was absolutely dominating AA when he got hurt.  He was about to vault into BA Top 25 or so status at mid-season. 

MB has put up strong numbers, but has not received near the prospect recognition Bedard was approaching.

Eager for MB to get his chance and hope he can become a solid SP3.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

59 minutes ago, Ruzious said:

Regardless of the Bedard comp and freshly squeezed orange juice, I really want to see Bauman and Lowther get every opportunity to play in Baltimore in 2021.  I echo Frobby's first paragraph - well said.  

I agree with Frobby's last sentence.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I love the OP.

The one nitpick I have, which I expected Frobby to make, was that the Eastern League was a hitter's league for a long time until 2019. In 2019, it became a pitcher's league, so you would expect H/9 to go down. So Bedard out performed everyone even when it was a hitter's league. 

I think Bedard was ahead of Baumann, but Baumann is still improving. I love that he's in our system. I just fear the health factor. Time will tell.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 12/31/2020 at 9:21 AM, Frobby said:

I just got to reminiscing on Bedard’s place in my Orioles fandom and my connection with OH.

2001 was a dark time to be an Orioles fan.   The O’s had let Mike Mussina get away that winter, and most of the team’s veterans had been traded away for second or third rate prospects the previous August.   The team was in the throes of its fourth straight losing season, and really the first one where they weren’t even flirting with .500.

To that point, I had never paid all that much attention to the minor leagues.   But I began mining the internet to see what help might be on the horizon.    Somewhere, I found some stats for the different farm teams, and though it was clear that the O’s didn’t have much talent in the minors, there was Bedard, who was having a successful campaign at Frederick after a strong year at Delmarva the prior season.    From that point forward I checked in on him periodically, but he was still just a name on the page.   I couldn’t have told you what he threw, or what he looked like.   

I began looking around for scouting reports on Bedard and the few other decent Orioles prospects.    Somewhere along the way, I stumbled on Orioles Hangout and its top prospects list, that gave thumbnail reports on Bedard and all the other prospects, as well as some accounts of various things going on in the minors.   That was my first exposure to OH, and very much connected to Bedard.    

From then on, I would check OH periodically for minor league news.   That’s probably where I learned in mid-2002 that Bedard had torn his UCL and needed TJ surgery, just a huge disappointment after the way he was dominating at Bowie.  Somehow, I was completely unaware that OH had a discussion board.    It took me two years to realize that, and my first posts were around season end of 2003.    At that point, Bedard was throwing a few rehab innings in the minors after missing a year from his TJ surgery.   

Well, the rest is history.   Bedard unexpectedly made the opening day rotation in 2004 and I followed him intently.   My trickle of postings on OH quickly grew into a flood, not just about Bedard but any Orioles-related subject.   And here we are.   

So to me, Bedard is one of the reasons I found OH, and one of the very first minor leaguers who I ever tracked carefully.    He’ll always have an outsized place in O’s history for me, for that reason.  And I’m so glad that my hunt for more information led me to OH.

Happy New Year everyone, and let’s hope we have a few Bedard-level pitchers floating around our system.  




 

Funny you say this, because I'd say the exact same thing, just a few years later. We were shopping Bedard around the time my oldest brother passed away very unexpectedly, and he was the only other big Orioles fan in my life. I found this board to get better Orioles news and started to join the message board conversations shortly after. Erik Bedard news absolutely drew me into this site, and I'll always remember it that way.

I'm not sure what was the craziest time on the OH: the Bedard Trade or Courting Mark Teixeira. Both were riddled with "insider info" on a daily basis, but Teixeira was probably crazier. 

  • Upvote 1
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Sanfran327 said:

Funny you say this, because I'd say the exact same thing, just a few years later. We were shopping Bedard around the time my oldest brother passed away very unexpectedly, and he was the only other big Orioles fan in my life. I found this board to get better Orioles news and started to join the message board conversations shortly after. Erik Bedard news absolutely drew me into this site, and I'll always remember it that way.

I'm not sure what was the craziest time on the OH: the Bedard Trade or Courting Mark Teixeira. Both were riddled with "insider info" on a daily basis, but Teixeira was probably crazier. 

You shoulda been here for the Tejada/Javy not Pudge/Vlad breaking our heart/Palmeiro 2/Ponson 2 sequence 17 years ago.   Those were more lurker days for me, but the four weeks we hoped Tejada's coattails could catch Vlad were spirited.   

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 hours ago, OrioleDog said:

You shoulda been here for the Tejada/Javy not Pudge/Vlad breaking our heart/Palmeiro 2/Ponson 2 sequence 17 years ago.   Those were more lurker days for me, but the four weeks we hoped Tejada's coattails could catch Vlad were spirited.   

Did anyone ever discuss Mark Teixeira’s free agency around these parts?

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.



  • Posts

    • 100%! I say abolish divisions, play a fully balanced schedule and take the top 4 or 6 or 8 or whatever teams in each league to the playoffs. 
    • The question was asked, a few months ago, whether winning the division was necessary. A lively debate resulted, some saying the division didn’t matter(“just make the playoffs and anything can happen”) and some taking the opposite view. I wanted the Division and I’m disgusted the play has been so bad. And I haaaate the Yankees( sports hate. I’m sure they are all great guys in person.) It will not magically improve, and I despair of winning more than two more games…not even 90 wins. And in a Homer–prone park, how many homers will the Os give up? The thought is not comforting. And there’s little reason to think things will improve against the Tigers or Royals. But at least: 1) next year they will hopefully have Bautista and the position players healthy. 2) The farm has very few MLB-ready players so there won’t be so much bouncing back and forth. Hopefully the guys can settle in and just play. 3) the Os will be looking for a fourth consecutive winning season, which hasn’t happened since the 70s So there’s that…
    • I was about to post a similar thread, but despite my memory issues, I recalled this thread.  I still find myself enjoying sports less and less.  The issue is not my teams, but myself.  It's a sad reality that I'm bothered when my team doesn't win, or does win, but wins in a way that is not how I wanted them to!  LOL!  It's ridiculous.  Frankly, I'm somewhat ashamed. The O's are very likely going to the playoffs.  But instead of being happy about that, I'm more concerned with how awful we've been and how little I expect from them as the post-season draws near.  A real fan loves his team and sticks with them, through thick and thin.  It's absolutely okay to be critical, even frustrated, at times, but when those are the default and dominant expressions, it makes me feel... less than.  It's like this with all my favorite teams (O's/Ravens/Terps).  It's therapeutic, in a way, to reveal such truths.  But the quest to find a way to enjoy sports again, to enjoy what my teams are doing, is a process that is taking longer than I'd hoped.  
    • I wouldn’t say I’m fired up.  I’d like to do enough to (1) win the season series (which only takes one win), (2) clinch a playoff spot (which probably only takes one win, depending what other teams do, and (3) improves our chances of getting the no. 4 seed (which might take a couple of wins, depending how other teams do).   
    • It feels like a foregone conclusion that the O’s sneak in with the third wild card spot and then lose the wild card series. So it just doesn’t really matter all that much what happens from here on out.    Then again, get hot at the right time and this could still be a World Series contender. I have to see some fire in this team before I entertain that thought though.
    • I am not really fired up per se.  I am just hoping that something happens that is different than what we have seen for months.  A late comeback to win the game.  A big inning of 4 runs or more.  Some big hits from Adley or Holliday.   1 win means we win the season series against everyone in the East for the second year in a row.  That would be great.  And even if we lose, I am hoping that watching the Yankees celebrate in front of them and the fans celebrate around them fires them up.   
    • I feel like I asked once years ago, but can someone please explain the acronym “MFY?”
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...