Orioles make pitching coach changes, with Chris Holt remaining as director of pitching

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Neither of the Orioles’ pitching coaches will be back on manager Brandon Hyde’s staff in 2024, though one will remain in the organization.

Chris Holt will focus on his duties as Baltimore’s director of pitching and no longer also serve as the club’s major league pitching coach, while assistant pitching coach Darren Holmes is the lone other member of the staff not expected to be back next season, a source with direct knowledge of the team’s plans confirmed to The Baltimore Sun.

Holt, 44, was one of Mike Elias’ first hires after the latter became the Orioles’ executive vice president and general manager in November 2018, with Holt having served as a minor league pitching coach and coordinator in the Houston Astros’ system while Elias was in their front office. Holt has since played a major role in both Baltimore’s pitching program overall and the growth of individual pitchers, notably helping left-hander John Means in the spring of 2019 to fine-tune the changeup that has become his signature pitch.

Holt was Baltimore’s minor league pitching coordinator in 2019 before becoming the organization’s director of pitching in 2020; in that role, he oversees pitching development throughout the organization. His return to that role as his sole focus comes after three seasons as Hyde’s pitching coach.

In 2021, the first of those campaigns, the Orioles’ pitching staff ranked last in the majors in ERA, but their performance in 2022 marked the sport’s biggest year-to-year improvement in more than 90 years. Several young starters, such as Kyle Bradish, Grayson Rodriguez, Dean Kremer and Tyler Wells, took steps forward in 2023.

Holmes, 57, was also involved in that progression. He has been with the Orioles since 2020, serving as their bullpen coach that season before spending the previous three years as assistant pitching coach.

Before joining the Orioles, Holmes was the Colorado Rockies’ bullpen coach from 2015 to 2019. After his 13-year pitching career — which included a stint with Baltimore in 2000 — Holmes spent nearly a decade as the Director of Sports Performance at Acceleration Sports Institute, with his background in biomechanics eventually leading to a consulting job with the Atlanta Braves.

It’s not yet clear whether the Orioles intend to replace both Holt and Holmes on the major league coaching staff, though the organization does have at least two notable internal candidates for any opening.

Justin Ramsey, Triple-A Norfolk’s pitching coach and Baltimore’s upper-level pitching coordinator, joined Holt as one of the first coaching hires of Elias’ front office. He has worked closely with Holt and Holmes in his efforts with the Tides’ pitchers, with Rodriguez, the club’s top pitching prospect at the time, often crediting Ramsey for his improvements after a return to the minors.

Pitching strategy coach Ryan Klimek has played a significant role in the Orioles’ game planning for opponents over the past two seasons, drawing praise from the club’s pitchers and Hyde; 2023 was Klimek’s seventh year with the Orioles, beginning as a player development intern in 2017.

Hyde, 50, is set to manage the Orioles for a sixth season in 2024, a season he could spend as the reigning American League Manager of the Year after guiding Baltimore to 101 wins and the AL East crown this year. His coaching staff also includes bench coach Fredi González, major league field coordinator/catching instructor Tim Cossins, major league coach José Hernández, hitting coaches Matt Borgschulte and Ryan Fuller, offensive strategy coach Cody Asche, first base/outfield coach Anthony Sanders and third base/infield coach Tony Mansolino.

MASNSports.com first reported the changes to the Orioles’ coaching staff.

Around the horn

The Orioles claimed left-hander Tucker Davidson from the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday. Davidson, 27, has a 5.98 ERA in 55 career appearances (17 starts) with the Braves, Los Angeles Angels and Royals. Baltimore’s 40-man roster is full.
Earlier this week, the Orioles signed right-hander Nate Webb to a two-year minor league contract. Webb, 26, missed 2023 after undergoing Tommy John elbow reconstruction in the spring. Yet to appear in the majors, Webb reached Triple-A in the Royals’ system in 2022.

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Minnesota fisherman loses walleye down North Dakota storm drain — and gets it back

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VALLEY CITY, N.D. — After a North Dakota fishing trip, Valley City native Shawn Grim often goes to his favorite hometown haunts like the Pizza Corner restaurant.

Grim, who now lives in Osakis, Minn., had just rolled into town after a good walleye catch Sunday, Oct. 15.

“I had this gorgeous, 22-inch walleye, which, you know what, that’s as big as you keep. Everything else goes back in,” Grim said. “A 4 1/2 pound walleye. It was a nice fish, and it’s big.”

Outside of the pizza shop, Grim thought it would be a good photo opportunity.

“I am holding this fish, getting ready for a picture, and all of a sudden it flip-flops down onto the street. Okay, not a big deal, and I go down to grab it, and boom, boom, boom, right into the drain,” Grim said.

This sounds like a great fishing story, but was there proof?

Area businesses had no security footage. But recently, the city of Valley City installed traffic cameras, and they captured it all.

WDAY News showed Grim the traffic video of the fish flop.

“That was it, that was the, ‘You’ve gotta be kidding me,’ moment,” Grim said.

Grim is a seasoned angler with his own fishing license plates.

“I can see it through the slots here. You can see the light coming through in there. I can see the fish. It was flopping,” Grim said.

He wasn’t going to let this walleye go.

“So, I go over to my car, go to my tackle box, and I pull out my Rapala. Three treble hooks — this thing catches fish. Is it going to catch one in a storm sewer? We’re going to find out,” Grim said.

He did what any angler would do. Trying to snag the fish and pull it back up to the street.

“I’m sitting here, trying to snag it, and I snag it. I get the fish. And then it pops out, and it’s like, ‘Okay it’s possible,’” Grim said.

Sure enough, the traffic camera recorded him using his rod and reel and treble hook to re-catch that walleye.

“Pull it up slowly, grab the fish by the back of the head and slowly pull it out of the (storm drain). So then we stand up, (and) we take the picture away from the gutter,” Grim said.

Along with the final photo, he got a fish story for the ages.

“Even the goofiest things, like fish down a drain. It’s like you got that story, and it’s like sometimes it’s even better than the fish you caught,” Grim said.

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Girls state tennis: Rochester Mayo finally breaks through for 2A title

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Making its 26th state tournament appearance in 27 season, Rochester Mayo finally broke through and won it all on Wednesday. The top-seeded Spartans topped the No. 2 seed, perennial power Edina, 6-1 in the Class 2A final at Baseline Tennis Center.

Rochester Mayo had previously downed Edina a couple times this fall and was the prohibitive favorite Wednesday, but the Hornets made the Spartans work for it.

With Rochester Mayo leading 3-1, the final three matches all went to a decisive third set. The Spartans needed to win one of them to claim a championship — they won all three.

Claire Loftus and Aoife Loftus set the tone up top for the Spartans, cruising to victories at No. 1 and No. 2 singles.

Class A

The Blake School prevented the Rochester sweep, as the second-seeded Bears upset top-seeded Rochester Lourdes 5-2 in the Class A final at Reed-Sweatt Tennis Center in Minneapolis.

Four of Blake’s five points came via straight-set victories, including wins from Nana Vang and Fatemeh Vang at No. 1 and No. 2 singles.

After rainy week, Twin Cities could see first snowfall of season on Saturday

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After a rainy work week in the Twin Cities, the metro might see its first snowfall of the season this weekend.

Tuesday’s record-breaking showers — which dumped 1.34 inches at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport — gave way to an overcast Wednesday, and a second round of heavy rainfall was expected to begin late Wednesday night and continue off-and-on into Friday, according to the National Weather Service.

Light snow is possible Saturday, said Joe Strus, a weather service meteorologist in Chanhassen. But don’t expect to be building any snowmen just yet.

“Flurries to snow showers, somewhere within that realm,” he said. “We’re not looking at major accumulation.”

Another dusting is possible on Halloween, but it could just as easily fall as rain if temperatures don’t dip low enough.

“It definitely bears watching,” Strus said, adding that he’s not expecting a major winter weather event either way.

That isn’t the case this week in much of North Dakota, where a winter storm warning has been posted until Friday afternoon. Forecasters expect 6 to 9 inches of snow driven by winds gusting to 40 mph. Far northwestern Minnesota could pick up 3 to 6 inches of snow.

Temperatures are expected to cool in general this weekend into next week. Saturday morning could finally bring the first fall freeze in the Twin Cities. Lows in the upper 20s are expected. Minneapolis-St. Paul typically see the first freeze between Oct. 1-10.

In advance of the additional precipitation, the weather service is reminding people to clear their neighborhood storm drains of leaves and other debris. The public can “adopt” storm drains at adopt-a-drain.org.

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