Former Orioles starter Kyle Gibson reached out to Andrew Kittredge after he signed to share his thoughts on the clubhouse the reliever is set to join.
After spending the first seven seasons of his MLB career with Tampa Bay, Andrew Kittredge has a strong knowledge of the recent history between the Rays and Orioles, a pair of American League East rivals.
While the Baltimore Orioles have made a few key moves this offseason, signing Tyler O'Neill, Andrew Kittredge, Charlie Morton and Tomoyuki Sugano, they still have work to do. They lost Anthony Santander to the Toronto Blue Jays and also failed to re-sign Corbin Burnes,
The Orioles signed right-handed reliever Andrew Kittredge to a one-year, $10 million contract with an option for 2026 on January 13th. Kittredge spent seven seasons with the Tampa Bay Rays, and last year with the St.
Andrew Kittredge discusses why he chose Baltimore and how he expects to fit in with the Orioles' bullpen after signing a one-year, $10 million deal
Veteran right-hander Kyle Gibson reached out to new Orioles reliever Andrew Kittredge shortly after he signed with them in free agency to shower praise on his former teammates.
Baltimore hired Jones, 39, as a special advisor to the general manager and community ambassador, the team announced Monday. He also agreed to join the on-field staff as a guest coach for spring training, which begins Feb. 12 when pitchers and catchers report to the Orioles’ facility in Sarasota, Florida.
He went 13-7 with a 3.17 ERA in 28 starts while posting a 3.1 WAR and striking out 194 batters. The right-hander was traded from the Tigers to the Dodgers at the deadline and he helped guide Los Angeles to a World Series title, even pitching a gem in Game 1.
Right now, it seems like the Baltimore Orioles are done this offseason. Even though their name continues to be at the center of trade rumors surrounding some of
New Baltimore Orioles reliever Andrew Kittredge had a tangential relationship with the team before he signed his one-year deal with the O’s earlier this month. He spent last year with the St ...
The first workout for pitchers and catchers is in three weeks. Players will take their physicals and head outdoors. The newcomers will get acclimated to a different city, camp and group of teammates.Fortunately for them,
The weather is warming this week, which whets the appetite for spring training.Temperatures might touch 40 today. Be sure to lather on the sunscreen.There might be some deep burns in today’s mailbag.