Buster Olney’s tweets make Orioles apologists sad and angry

You are currently viewing Buster Olney’s tweets make Orioles apologists sad and angry

One of my most enjoyable things to do right now is to read the angry tweets responding to baseball writer Buster Olney when he posts about the Baltimore Orioles.

Here’s one he posted this morning:

Olney rightfully takes issue with the Orioles’ deliberate tanking to secure high draft picks.

Mike Elias and Sig Mejdal

On November 16, 2018, the Baltimore Orioles hired Mike Elias as their general manager and executive vice president. Elias then hired former NASA engineer Sig Mejdal as his assistant general manager, specializing in analytics. The two worked together in the Houston Astros organization.

Elias immediately applied what he learned in Houston with the Astros to the Orioles. That is, put a team on the field that is so terrible that they will have the worst record in baseball. Major League Baseball will then reward them with the top draft pick in the following year’s amateur draft.

This philosophy is detailed in Ben Reiter’s book Astroball: The New Way to Win It All.

Buster Olney's tweets make Orioles apologists sad and angry

I read the book before the Orioles hired Mike Elias and before the Astros’ cheating scandal story broke.

Make no mistake: the Orioles aren’t losing by accident. They are built to fail. I don’t mean the players themselves are purposely trying to lose. I’m 100 percent confident they are trying their hardest to succeed. The problem is that many of the Orioles’ players shouldn’t be playing at the major league level. For example, a 29-year-old rookie pitcher.

Buster Olney's tweets make Orioles apologists sad and angry - Bent Corner
Mike Elias

The Baltimore Orioles have the lowest 26-man payroll in baseball at $19,573,471.

The Orioles could have hired free agents to make this season more palatable for fans to watch, but that would jeopardize the chance at locking in the overall number one draft pick in next year’s draft.

Mike Elias appears to believe in the philosophy that if you’re not going to compete for the division title, you should try to lose as many games as possible. As of last night, the Orioles have lost 17 games in a row.

Losing on purpose is a terrible thing to do

As a baseball fan, that philosophy sucks. A Major League Baseball regular season is 162 games long. As a fan, when you sit down and watch a game, you want to believe your team has at least a 50-50 shot at winning that game. You’re not thinking about next year’s draft. You want to watch quality baseball played by professionals. The problem with the Orioles is they’re not trying to deliver that. Mike Elias doesn’t care about the here and now. He only cares about the future.

Securing high draft picks doesn’t mean a team will field a team of perennial All-Stars. Mike Trout, the best player in MLB, was drafted by the Los Angeles Angels 25th overall in the 2009 MLB draft.

Buster Olney's tweets make Orioles apologists sad and angry - Bent Corner
Mike Trout

In that same draft, the Orioles chose high school pitcher Matt Hobgood with the fifth overall pick. He never advanced out of the minor leagues. Cedric Mullins, the best player on the Orioles, was drafted in the 13th round in the 2015 draft.

Cedric Mullins

Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees was drafted in 2013 with the 32nd overall selection.

Aaron Judge

 

In conclusion

I point to players like Trout, Mullins, and Judge to illustrate that you don’t have to tank to draft good players. Buster Olney is correct for calling it out. You don’t have to abuse your fanbase by losing on purpose to build a good team.

It’s unethical.

Share This Post

Rick Rottman

My name is Rick Rottman, and this is my personal website. I was born and raised in Southern California, but I've lived most of my adult life in Maryland.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.