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Imagine the top level of baseball is called the Major Leagues (MLB). Bryan Baker started with the Toronto Blue Jays, but he only pitched one single inning for them in his whole MLB career. Then Toronto let him go through a process called designated for assignment (think of it as a team saying, “We don’t want this player on our main squad anymore, so others can take him”). The Baltimore Orioles picked him up off waivers (like claiming a discarded toy before anyone else does).
After that, Baker spent four seasons with the Orioles as a regular member of their bullpen—that’s the group of relief pitchers who come in after the starting pitcher. His time there had ups and downs:
Last season, the Orioles were already out of contention (no chance to reach the playoffs), but Baker was pitching well. So they traded him to the Tampa Bay Rays. In return, Baltimore got a comp pick (a bonus choice to select a young player in the 2025 draft). Almost exactly a year later:
On the surface, this looks really bad for Baltimore. Every team’s front office (the bosses who make decisions) dreads this exact scenario: they trade a pitcher away, and suddenly he becomes better than ever, leaving fans asking, “Why couldn’t he do that for us?”
Looking back with perfect hindsight, the trade looks like a terrible error. But the mistake wasn’t the one you might think.
To understand this, we must accept a key idea: the Baker in Tampa Bay is not the same pitcher the Orioles would have had if they kept him. The Rays have a superb pitching development system (coaches and methods that improve throwers). They helped turn Baker into a star. If Baltimore had kept him, he would very likely still be the same so-so pitcher with an ERA (a number showing how many runs he allows per game; lower is better) in the mid-to-high 3.00 range, just like most of his time in Baltimore.
This happens for two reasons:
Baltimore has done this trick too! They acquired Danny Coulombe and Yennier Cano from the Twins for basically nothing and got elite results for years. Also, this isn’t the first time a pitcher left the Orioles and got better elsewhere:
Important: Every team in the league can point to a pitcher they traded or dropped who later thrived somewhere else. Almost every team can also point to a time they grabbed a castoff and turned him into a valuable arm. This happens so often that no team can afford to waste time worrying about every reliever who improved after leaving.
The good news for the Orioles: they got something useful for Baker. They didn’t just release him; they got a first-round draft pick for a decent reliever who was out of contract options. For a team that wasn’t going to win, that’s smart business. They weren’t even planning to trade Baker—but the Rays made an offer they couldn’t refuse.
The player they picked with that pick was later traded back to the Rays, making the story messy, but overall still good. When the dust settled on the two trades, the net result was:
Controllable starting pitching (a starter locked into the team for years) is one of the most valuable assets in baseball. The Orioles used Baker to get the “ammo” to trade for three years of Baz, then signed him for two more years. That’s a good outcome.
Here is where the Orioles slipped up:
Baltimore needed to copy the Rays’ playbook multiple times: find several relievers with okay track records and turn them great. Instead, they grabbed a bunch of arms with no track record (unproven players) and hoped to make them “good enough.”
The Baker and Baz trades can be justified. The Orioles’ refusal to put any significant resources into their bullpen this offseason cannot be.
Q1: What does “designated for assignment” mean in baseball?
A: It’s when a team removes a player from its main roster. Other teams can claim him; if not, he may go to the minors or be released. Think of it as a team saying, “We don’t want this player right now.”
Q2: Why did the Orioles trade Bryan Baker if he was pitching well?
A: The Orioles were already out of playoff contention (no chance to win the title). They received a good offer—a draft pick from the Rays—and used that to help acquire a starting pitcher they wanted.
Q3: Was trading Baker a mistake?
A: No. The trade itself brought value and helped get Shane Baz. The mistake was that after trading Baker and other relievers, Baltimore didn’t build a new bullpen.
Q4: What is a “comp pick”?
A: Short for compensation pick. It’s an extra selection in the annual draft of new young players that a team receives as a bonus in certain trade or loss situations.
Q5: Why do relief pitchers often improve after changing teams?
A: Each team has different coaching (pitching development) and ideas for adjusting a pitcher’s style or pitches. Also, relievers are naturally up-and-down, so a new environment can help them break out.