It’s a brave new world for the Orioles’ farm system.
After years of the Orioles’ position player prospects outshining their counterparts on the mound, the tide has started to change in the upper minors. At Triple-A Norfolk in particular, there’s an impressive array of pitching prospects who appear poised to contribute to the Orioles sometime in the near future.
The Tides begin their 2026 tonight with a three-game series against the Nashville Sounds. Let’s take a look at the break-camp roster for the Orioles’
Triple-A affiliate:
Catchers
Silas Ardoin, Maverick Handley, Sam Huff, Creed Willems
The Tides listed Ardoin, Handley, and Willems on their opening roster on Tuesday, but since then the O’s have sent the veteran Huff to the minors as well. Four catchers seems like overkill, so someone is likely going to be the odd man out. The only prospect among the group is Willems, the Orioles’ eighth-round pick in 2021, who is coming off a solid season at Double-A Chesapeake (16 HRs, .779 OPS). MLB Pipeline ranks him as the club’s #19 prospect. The 22-year-old will get a chance to test his bat at the Triple-A level, but if the Orioles need a third catcher at some point, they’d likely go with Huff or Handley, who both have major league experience.
Infielders
José Barrero, Ryan Noda, Bryan Ramos, Willy Vasquez, Luis Vázquez, Weston Wilson
After the original Norfolk break-camp roster listed only Noda and Vasquez, the O’s sent a slew of other infielders to Triple-A when they made their final cuts before Opening Day. These guys are minor league journeymen; there are no actual prospects here. Vázquez, who broke his hand after getting hit by a pitch in the Orioles’ penultimate exhibition game, won’t be available for a while. Wilson, a former Phillie, was a candidate for the Birds’ utility infield spot before being reassigned on the final day. So too was Ramos, a waiver claim from the Cardinals who was out of options. Ramos cleared waivers yesterday and will stay in the organization.
Outfielders
Enrique Bradfield Jr. (Camden Chat’s #7 prospect), Jud Fabian, Jhonkensy Noel, Will Robertson, Reed Trimble
Norfolk’s best position-player prospect is in the outfield, where Bradfield will hope to improve upon his 10-for-56 performance in a 15-game sample at Triple-A last year. The 24-year-old’s blazing speed and elite defense are MLB-ready right now, but he’ll need to show a little more on offense before the O’s are comfortable subjecting him to major league pitching. Bradfield figures to make his Orioles debut at some point this season, but whether it’s as a regular starter or as a defensive replacement off the bench will hinge on how he performs at Norfolk.
Another intriguing name here is Trimble, a former top-30 O’s prospect whose career has been sidetracked by injuries. Between left shoulder surgery in 2021 and a hamstring injury in 2024, he has never played more than 90 games in any of his four professional seasons. He is incredibly good at one thing, though: stealing bases. Trimble is a perfect 61-for-61 in stolen base attempts in his minor league career. The Orioles added him to the 40-man roster this past winter to protect him from the Rule 5 draft, so they must think the 25-year-old still has some promise.
A fellow former top-30 prospect, Fabian, has all but stalled out at Triple-A, posting a .628 OPS since arriving in Norfolk in 2024. The second round of the 2022 draft, in which the Orioles selected both Fabian and the since-released Max Wagner, was not one of Mike Elias’s finest efforts. Rounding out the Tides’ outfield group is Noel, a.k.a. “Big Christmas,” who hits prodigious dingers every so often but doesn’t do much else.
Pitchers
RHP Jose Espada, RHP Cameron Foster, RHP Nestor German (#11 prospect), RHP Trey Gibson (#5 prospect), RHP Jackson Kowar, RHP Dean Kremer, LHP Andrew Magno, RHP Chayce McDermott, RHP Enoli Paredes, LHP Cade Povich, RHP Albert Suárez, LHP Josh Walker, RHP Levi Wells (#16 prospect), RHP Cameron Weston, RHP Brandon Young
Oh yeah, here’s the good stuff. In a stark contrast to last year, the Norfolk rotation is stacked with prospects. Gibson, German, and Wells make for a stellar trio of homegrown right-handers, all drafted (or in Gibson’s case, signed as an undrafted free agent) and developed by the Orioles. We’ve been waiting for a Mike Elias-drafted starting pitcher to make it to the majors, and it will likely happen this year. Gibson is the closest to MLB ready, though his eight-game debut at Triple-A last year was a struggle (8.90 ERA). Trey will take the mound for the Tides’ opener tonight.
I still can’t believe that Dean Kremer is back in Triple-A. I mean, I understand why it happened, but it’s just weird. Other than rehab stints, it’s his first time in the minors since 2021. His stay is expected to be short, as he’ll probably be back in the majors once the O’s need to give extra rest to their other starters, or if one of them gets hurt. It speaks to the Birds’ improved rotation depth that they didn’t have room for an essentially MLB-average starter like Kremer. And Povich and Young, who combined for 32 mostly unimpressive starts for the Orioles last year, will also serve as depth if needed.
Meanwhile, if there’s any hope for former top pitching prospect Chayce McDermott, he’s running out of chances to show it. The O’s converted him to relief last season and he performed well at Triple-A, only to cough up eight runs in just two appearances in the majors. He’s been passed on the bullpen depth chart by guys like Espada and Foster, who were part of the Birds’ bullpen competition in spring training, as well as Kowar, the hard-throwing righty who cleared waivers yesterday. The veteran Suárez returned to the O’s on a minor league deal and will likely be one of the first up when the Orioles need another arm.









