MASN and a New TV Deal
Since 2005, the Baltimore Orioles have had to share a general metropolitan area with the Washington Nationals, formerly the Montreal Expos. Baseball-wise, it doesn’t pose much of a problem. The Expos became the Nationals and joined the NL East Division, avoiding having two teams in the same city vie for the same pennant. It’s just like the New York Yankees and Mets, except for one thing:
The Yankees and Mets have their own individual TV deals.
In 2005, the Expos moved into the Baltimore-Washington DC metro area, which was until then the exclusive broadcast area of the Baltimore Orioles, as per the deal first reached in 1972. With the move, it became necessary for the Nationals to have access to TV broadcast, and a settlement was reached to make the Baltimore Orioles and Washington Nationals co-owners. Because of their previous establishment, the Baltimore Orioles assumed a majority interest in MASN and pay the Nationals a fixed amount (between $20-29 million per year). This agreement was put into place until 2011, when the Nationals were supposed to start receiving payment commensurate with fair market value.
The second problem then arises: the two teams disagree on what constitutes “fair market value”.
After they presented the case to the MLB’s Revenue Sharing Definitions committee last year, the panel decided that the Nationals were owed somewhere around $300 million for seasons between 2012-2016. However, the holding company for MASN disagreed with amount and wound up suing the Nationals and the MLB for “abuses and deficiencies” in the arbitration, including the fact that the law firm representing the Nationals also represents the MLB and all three teams represented by the arbitration panel.
With a court date scheduled for May 18 in the New York Supreme Court, both sides have a lot of money at stake. Fortunately, new MLB commissioner Rob Manfred has said “I think in reasonably short order, there will be a resolution of MASN, either by the litigation being done or some other mechanism.” So, at least things are looking up.
Hopefully the teams can get things worked out sometime this year or next, before either has a chance to enter a bid for the next All-Star Game (San Diego was awarded 2016). Both the Baltimore Orioles and the Washington Nationals are vying for an All-Star game, which has been absent from Washington DC since 1969. Baltimore hosted it when Camden Yards first opened in 1993, but would like to host it again while they are still enjoying their great success in the AL East.
A crushing loss to the Kansas City Royals might have dampened the mood for this offseason, but the O’s will certainly be back next year. We’ll see how the team reshapes this year, with new personnel and, hopefully, a new TV deal.
Royal Flush: The Demise of the 2014 Baltimore Orioles
What a wild ride this season has been. After putting together a 96-66 record that won them the AL East title for the first time since 1997 (take that, Yankees and Red Sox!) and sweeping the dangerous Detroit Tigers in the AL Division Series, the Baltimore Orioles’ glorious season ground to a screeching halt against the red hot Kansas City Royals.
One second–the Kansas City Royals? The wild card team? The wild card team that needed a come-from-behind, walk-off victory to get to the Division Series for the first time in over twenty-five years? How could this happen?
As much as it pains me to say this, at the end of the day, the Orioles were simply outplayed by the Royals in a neck-and-neck contest that really could have gone either way.
Kansas City Royals Defense
The Royals’ defense is going to haunt the Orioles for a long, long time. No matter where the Orioles hit the ball, no matter how hard they hit it, the KC defense was always there.
The Orioles couldn’t even catch a break during Game Three, which just so happened to be the anniversary of infamous Cubs fan Steve Bartman’s interference that sunk the Cubs’ playoff run in 2003: Steve Pearce’s frozen rope to third was caught and Adam Jones’ foul ball was gloved with a diving-into-the-stands play…both by third baseman Mike Moustakas. I had to pinch myself to make sure I wasn’t confusing Moustakas for Derek Jeter.
While the Orioles hit only .429 on hard-hit balls (400 points below their season average), the Royals hit a smoldering .789.
Fielding demons like Mike Moustakas, Alex Gordon, and Lorenzo Cain caught balls that usually fall into gaps, saving countless runs.
Kansas City Royals Pitching
This, in my humble opinion, was the difference for Kansas City.
When you sweep a series where 30 innings out of 37 total innings ended in a tie or a one-run difference, it’s bullpen pitching that makes the difference, especially when no starter for either team went six complete innings.
In the end, the Royals’ relievers went 3-0 this series with a 1.13 ERA. Hats off to Royals closer Greg Holland for becoming only the third pitcher to accrue four saves in a postseason series.
Kansas City Royals Offense
Where the Orioles were being robbed with flashy defensive plays, the Royals were cashing in. They were fortunate enough to have some broken-bat bloop hits that found the gaps that had eluded the Orioles. While the Orioles hit only .429 on hard-hit balls (400 points below their season average), the Royals hit a smoldering .789.
As disappointing of a series as it was for us Orioles fans, it was a big win for all baseball fans everywhere. I’ll be rooting for the Royals in the playoffs—they understand the wait for dominance that we Orioles fans have experienced far more than the Giants, who’ve made three World Series in the last five years.
Where’s the fun in that?
Baltimore Orioles are the 2014 AL East Champs…what’s next?
So, it’s official. After dropping the final six games of what appeared to be a promising season in 2013, the Baltimore Orioles have won the AL East title, marking the first time since 1997 that they’ve clinched the division and just the second time since 1997 that a team other than the Yankees and Red Sox has taken the division (the Rays won it in 2008). What makes it better is that, with five games left this season, the second-place Yankees are a devastating thirteen games behind the Orioles. Thirteen! Sorry, Jeter. Now, before you go attributing this gap to Yankees and their inability to find quality talent despite their massive budget, I would remind you that there are concrete reasons to the Orioles’ success. They have overcome team-altering injuries (Manny Machado, Matt Wieters) and had to deal with a totally avoidable suspension (Chris Davis), but they have built a team to withstand this kind of adversity.
Pitchers
The Orioles have benefited tremendously from the bevy of quality pitchers they have. This season, the Orioles staff has held opponents to a .244 batting average, 5th in the American League, and have earned a team ERA of 3.44, 3rd in the American League and 7th in the entire MLB. Yet, Baltimore ranks 25th in the MLB in Quality Starts (defined as a start in which the starting pitcher throws at least six innings while allowing fewer than three earned runs), so where is this supposedly great pitching coming from?
The answer: the dynamic duo of Zach Britton and Darren O’Day. These two, even after losing fellow reliever Andrew Miller to a trade with the Red Sox, have performed admirably. Setup man Darren O’Day has held batters to a .179 batting average, earning 24 holds and maintaining an ERA of 1.76. Closer Zach Britton has recorded 36 saves, 7 holds and has allowed only 45 hits in 74+ innings. Batters are hitting only .179 against him, helping him to an ERA of 1.70, well below his average ERA of 4.87 during the previous three seasons.
Hitters
That being said, it has not been all pitching for the O’s. With so few quality starts this year, Baltimore really needed its hitters to step up, and boy, have they ever.
The Orioles currently rank 9th in the MLB with a .258 team batting average and 7th in total runs scored (686), but have been guided by a collection of sluggers that negate most of the non-quality starts. Guys like Adam Jones, Nelson Cruz, Steve Pearce, J.J. Hardy, and Nick Markakis have produced admirably, helping the team to the 3rd best slugging percentage in the league at .423. Say what you will about his past, but Nelson Cruz has been a beast this season, mashing 40 home runs, picking up where the now-suspended Chris Davis left off when he hit 53 home runs. Steve Pearce has also been a pleasant surprise after a disappointing 44-game season last year. He’s hitting for an average of .297 and has smacked 20 home runs, giving him a solid WAR at 6.
In the end, we’ll need to see how the Orioles handle themselves in the playoffs. Each of the hitters mentioned in this article were in the playoffs when the Orioles last made it (Nelson Cruz lost to the Orioles with the Texas Rangers in the one-game playoff), so this isn’t their first “rodeo”. However, it remains to be seen how a team that missed the playoffs last year and lost two stars in Machado and Davis will perform against star-studded teams like the Angels and Tigers. Either way, it’s time to break out the playoff gear!
Let’s go O’s!
Orioles Sweep White Sox Behind Cruz HR
Wednesday night the Baltimore Orioles finished off a clean sweep, beating the Chicago White Sox 4-3. A lot of credit can be attributed to Nelson Cruz – the man who blasted his 33rd home run of the season.
Cruz, who matched his career high for homers, currently leads the league in that category. He is one homer ahead of Jose Abreu and Giancarlo Stanton.
After the game, however, Cruz said that he could care less about the home run numbers – he’s just happy that the Orioles are cruising (pun intended).
And it wasn’t just Cruz that was on top of his game. The Orioles also got homers out of Adam Jones and Steve Pearce. To date, the Orioles have launched 161 baseballs over the outfield fence.
But the Orioles also got some quality pitching from starter Wei-Yin Chen; he went 7 and 1/3 innings, allowing three runs on six hits. Zach Britton came in for the save, his 27th save of the season. Chen started off sloppy, allowing a two-run home run in the first inning to Avisail Garcia. He ran into trouble again in the 8th inning, allowing two singles – one to Alexei Ramirez and one to Alejandro De Aza. That’s when Darren O’Day entered the game and struck out Jose Abreu and Garcia to end the inning.
The White Sox have been slipping lately and are now nine games under .500.
The Orioles also gave some updates on Manny Machado, saying that his sprained right ankle has been recovering slowly. It has not responded favorably to treatments and exercises. As for the White Sox, outfielder Adam Eaton could be coming off the disabled list next week. He’ll be starting his rehab assignment in AAA very soon. Eaton has been struggling to recover from a strained right oblique and can supply some offense to a White Sox team that needs it desperately.
The Orioles have the day off today before traveling to visit the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on Friday. Kevin Gausman will be matching up with Jake Arrieta. Arrieta has been having a good year, posting an ERA of 2.6 for the season.
The White Sox also have the day off today before traveling to New York to go up against the Yankees. John Danks will be facing off with Shane Greene. Danks has struggled since the start of July, posting a 6.2 ERA over the last seven weeks. Good news for the White Sox, though: Carlos Rodon, the third overall pick in this year’s draft, could be making an appearance in the majors before the season ends.