The Baltimore Orioles were expected to be one of the most active teams come the 2024 trade deadline. 

A team which had its starting rotation decimated by season-ending injuries to Tyler Wells, Kyle Bradish and John Means, the Orioles needed to acquire some pitching. GM Mike Elias has been working the phones, making offers and fielding calls, but also is not giving away the farm either. 

After landing Seranthony Domínguez and Cristian Pache from the Philadelphia Phillies, Elias would follow up with a trade for Tampa Bay’s Zach Elfin (who won his first start as an Oriole yesterday). But Elias wasn’t ready to stand pat either.

It is being reported by multiple sources that the Orioles have acquired left-handed starter Trevor Rodgers from the Miami Marlins in exchange for infield prospect Connor Norby and outfielder Kyle Stowers. 

Rodgers is a former first-round draft pick (No. 13 overall), who has two years of club control after this season. The 26-year-old is 2-9 through 21 games this season, possessing a 4.53 ERA across 105.1 innings of work.

In June (3.56 ERA) and July (3.38 ERA), the former All-Star had ERAs under four and has gone nine straight outings allowing no more than three runs (eight of them were two runs or less).

The Orioles now have a lefty starter to add to their starting rotation that looks to roll out Corbin Burnes, Grayson Rodriguez, Zach Eflin, Dean Kremer and now Trevor Rodgers.  

If Rodgers can continue to pitch how he has the last two months, he will be more than helpful in aiding the Birds not only into the postseason but through it. The Carlsbad, New Mexico, native finished second in the NL Rookie of the Year voting in 2021 by posting a 2.64 ERA in 133 innings.

Norby, 24, was the O’s No. 5 overall prospect, according to MLB Pipeline. The former 2021 second-rounder has spent most of the season repeating Triple-A, although he’s gotten a few brief looks with the Birds due to injuries, appearing in nine games. Norby is under the Marlins’ control through 2030 and will likely receive regular playing time at second base for the rest of the season.

Stowers, 26, was drafted by the Orioles in the second round out of Stanford in 2019. Known for his raw power from the left side, the California native has been unable to secure regular playing time on the stacked O’s roster since his 2022 debut. Stowers will finally get that chance with Miami.

According to MASN’s Roch Kubatko, the Orioles are selecting the contract of utility player Terrin Vavra from Triple-A Norfolk to replace the spot of Norby on the big league roster. Catcher Blake Hunt, who was acquired earlier this season for Mike Baumann, has been placed on the taxi squad, with James McCann’s availability in limbo after getting hit in the face by a 95 mph fastball yesterday.

We welcome Rogers to Baltimore and look forward to him helping in the pennant race. We wish Norby and Stowers the best of luck in their careers as well. 

What do you think of this move? Let us know in the comments below! Make sure to follow The Baltimore Battery on Facebook, Twitter (X) and TikTok, and use the hashtag #baltimorebattery when sharing our content!


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4 responses to “Orioles acquire Trevor Rodgers from Marlins”

  1. enthusiastsweetlyd2ec706ef3 Avatar
    enthusiastsweetlyd2ec706ef3

    Would have liked to see a better return giving up both Norby and Stowers. Other teams making trades seem to be giving up lower level prospects. I think it was an over-pay.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Stephen Heckman Avatar
      Stephen Heckman

      I get the concept, but Norby and Stowers were not going to get the playing time here they warranted. Rodgers is a former first-round pick with two more years of control left. Stowers has two years of club control left, and with Beavers, Bradfield Jr., Kjerstad, Cowser and more, there was no room for him. Holliday will be back in the bigs at second, and with Westburg, Mateo and even Urías (personally would prefer Norby), once again no room. The fun part is that according to baseball trade values, Rodgers is valued at $18 mil, where Norby is valued at $10.1 mil and Stowers $0.1 mil, so we actually underpaid for Rodgers. Personally, if they threw in a reliever, I’d be happier.

      Like

  2. Ken Holsopple Avatar
    Ken Holsopple

    Hate, hate, hate to see both those players go. I think the O’s overpaid, but considering the logjam in the infield (Norby) & the outfield (Stowers), the move is palatable. Regardless, I can a future where we rue the day we let Norby get away.

    All I can really hope for now is that both Holliday & Mayo pan out.

    Decidedly, undecided ….
    BRR

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Stephen Heckman Avatar
      Stephen Heckman

      I can definitely see where you’re coming from on that, and I do agree. The log-jam made it easier to make the trades we did.

      Overall, I can say that I’m not disappointed but still in a waiting and see approach. Rogers is a former first-round pick and All-Star, so hopefully, we help him rediscover what made him that. He had been pitching well the last couple months. I think, as long as he stays healthy, he could be a good addition.

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