Welcome to the final Orioles Beat newsletter before Opening Day. The 2025 season is set to begin for the O’s on Thursday, when they’ll open a four-game set vs. the Blue Jays at Rogers Centre in Toronto.
SARASOTA, Fla. -- In 2022, the Orioles were an upstart club that came out of nowhere and flirted with postseason contention. In ‘23, they became the best team in the American League and won the AL East. In ‘24, they reached the playoffs for a second straight year.
But one thing still eludes Baltimore in this era for the franchise: October success.
After getting immediately swept out of the postseason in each of the past two years, the O’s enter the 2025 campaign aiming to make a much deeper run. Not only that, but they want to win it all.
“Our team’s identity is still to come throughout this year,” catcher Adley Rutschman said. “Our goal is to try and eliminate external noise, external expectations, and really just focus on what we want to do. Because our goal is to go as far as we can and win a World Series."
“I think the goal for every one of us is to win the World Series,” said right-hander Zach Eflin, who will start Thursday’s Opening Day matchup in Toronto. “We have a collective energy and thought process of winning every single game. Beating people into the ground, that’s the kind of mentality this team takes.”
What needs to go right? The former top prospects keep taking steps forward
Baltimore didn’t make a ton of splashy moves over the offseason. The biggest reason for that was the belief that the young guys on the roster -- many of whom were once among the top prospects in baseball -- will continue to get better.
Rutschman needs to bounce back from his tough second half of 2024. Colton Cowser must build on his strong rookie season. Jordan Westburg has to build upon his breakout sophomore campaign. Jackson Holliday needs to be more productive than he was during his disappointing debut year. And if Gunnar Henderson can keep getting better -- which is tough to fathom, considering how good he has already been -- the O’s offense should be even more dangerous than many expect it to be.