The Orioles appear to have reached an agreement with Dylan Coleman, as revealed by the right-hander himself on his Instagram account. The 28-year-old Coleman has been looking for a new team since being released by the Astros last August, and presumably his new deal with Baltimore is a minor league pact.
Coleman threw one inning of scoreless ball in the Astros’ 8-0 win over the Blue Jays last April 3, which marked his only big league appearance of the 2024 campaign. Houston optioned Coleman back to Triple-A the next day, and he struggled to a 6.50 ERA and a garish 23.9% walk rate over 36 innings with Sugar Land before being designated for assignment and released over the summer.
These extreme control problems have increasingly plagued Coleman’s career over the last few seasons. His walk rates were middling during his time in the Padres’ farm system, and in his only extended stretch of MLB action. Coleman posted a very solid 2.78 ERA over 68 relief innings for the Royals in 2022, and while a .247 BABIP and 12.8% walk rate stood out as warning signs, it seemed like Coleman was carving a niche for himself in the Kansas City bullpen.
It all went south in 2023, however, as Coleman had an 8.84 ERA in 18 1/3 frames for the Royals, plus a 4.70 ERA over 30 2/3 innings with Triple-A Omaha. Coleman’s walk rates ballooned to an untenable 19.8% in the majors and 21.8% in the minors, and the Royals parted ways entirely by trading him to the Astros in December 2023.
Coleman’s fastball topped the 98mph mark when he made his Major League debut in 2021, though his velocity dropped to a 95.7mph average in Triple-A ball last year. That still counts as a pretty live fastball, and Coleman recorded some big strikeout numbers in the minors along with a 24.2% strikeout rate over his 93 2/3 career innings in the Show. The Orioles must feel there’s enough there to take a flier on Coleman in spring camp, as his 2022 numbers hint at his potential if he can limit his walks.
They got Dylan C’s!
I wanna eat chicken burgers!
I wanna dance with somebody! – Win Houston
IiiiiIiiii will always love you breeeeeeeegman–also win Houston
Don’t Fear the Cheaters – Blue Oyster Rangers
A scoreless inning! My cat threw a perfect inning once
9 furballs in a row? Impressive…
An immaculate furball? LOL That’s nasty.
If it was an away game, the rosin bag would be filled with catnip.
Who are the 5 best hurlers of all time? Think about it. Dylan, Dylan, Dylan, Dylan, Dylan. Cause he throws hot fire!
You got your Dylan, Os!
Well I guess that wraps up the ALE for Baltimore. Was hoping for a competitive race, but apparently not.
BAL has been a real head scratcher the last couple of seasons. They have a great core of talented young players under team control, but the clock is ticking. IMO it wouldn’t be too difficult to add/trade for the necessary pieces (top flight pitching?) to turn that team into a perennial title contending monster. However, GM Mark Elias always seems to just tinker around the edges and come up short. Not all his fault obviously. Maybe he’s hamstring by frugal ownership? All I know is, their championship window seems to be running down. Am I wrong?
Dylan Coleman – The best pitcher ever to come from Potosi, Missouri
Donnie Wall is and pitched in the 1988 WS. I only know because I looked up the city. Potosi is representin’!!
I didn’t know Donnie Wall was born in Potosi. Wall played high school ball at Festus High School in Festus, Missouri, which is in Jefferson County, which borders Washington County, which is where Potosi is located. I remember Wall because I used to live in Festus in the 80s and early 90s. I then moved from Festus to nearby Saint Francois County, into a school district that is a conference rival of Potosi. I remember Coleman used to dominate the area high school baseball and basketball games..
Hello, Bryan Baker 2.0
Sick of the dumpster diving . The “Master Baker!”
every team dumpstrer dives for back up relief pitching, they can put in the minor leagues.including ny. and la.thats standard practice.
Can you just announce in the deal that you signed a spring training arm?
Since when does a “live fastball” mean high velocity?
I mean—it’s usually a part of it, but traditionally it means a fastball with life, that is, lots of movement. Nowadays this meaning is drifting to just mean high velocity. There’s more to pitching than just throwing hard.
Oh brother.
It is appearance that Mike Elias does not even have minimum standards for his warm bodies.