Ahead of Wednesday’s game against the Rangers, the Orioles did as they signaled last night and placed pitcher Zach Eflin on the 15-day injured list with right elbow discomfort. The corresponding move is to select the contract of Albert Suárez from Triple-A Norfolk. Suárez was removed from the 40-man roster over the offseason and now is back less than a week into the season.
The Orioles 40-man roster was full before this move, so there needed to be a corresponding move there as well. The team transferred
infielder Jordan Westburg to the 60-day injured list, which now guarantees that he will not return before the end of May. That’s a whole separate conversation, but I think that means the Orioles pretty much know Westburg will not play before this year. If the platelet-rich plasma injection had been working as they hoped, I think Westburg would have been back before that.
There is not an immediate diagnosis on Eflin’s injury. Last night, the team indicated that he would be getting an MRI. Those results could come later on. I don’t expect good news. The circumstance of a pitcher walking off the mound with a trainer without ever making warmup tosses and later reporting elbow discomfort usually only ends up one way.
This is likely not a signal that Suárez will replace Eflin in the rotation. The off day tomorrow means that the Orioles don’t need the fifth starter again until the 7th, which they can worry about on the 7th. In the meantime, Suárez provides some length in the bullpen after the starting rotation was largely not going deep into games its first time through the rotation. We observed in Tuesday’s game the downside of calling on Grant Wolfram or a Grant Wolfram-tier pitcher in the fifth inning.
Dean Kremer seems like the obvious candidate to fit into Eflin’s spot in the rotation, though until the team makes that announcement, they could always surprise us. There is a complicating factor that Kremer can only join the roster within the first two weeks of the season if he is called up to replace an injured player. The easiest way to do that would have been calling him up here, when there is an injured player.
That would have been the obvious thing to do, but then Mike Elias doesn’t have five games with an extra reliever. He could have chosen to do without that. He just was never going to. It’s not how he’s wired.
As far as making space for Kremer with an IL move in a few days, general managers always manage to find an injured guy when they really need one. Here on Camden Chat, the long-running inside joke for this is “stepped into a pothole,” referring to a time that Ubaldo Jiménez was placed on the IL at a convenient time with the explanation being that he rolled his ankle when he stepped out of his car in the player parking lot and into a pothole. You will never convince me that then-GM Dan Duquette did not personally operate the jackhammer that created that pothole.
Elias will find his pothole between now and April 7. I’ll predict Yaramil Hiraldo with shoulder inflammation. For now, Suárez is back. The 36-year-old was a fun surprise guy in 2024 and spent most of last season hurt. It would have been better if the 2026 Orioles didn’t need him on April 1, but here we are anyway. Hopefully he can do his part when asked to prevent specific games and this season generally from sliding off the rails early like last year’s Orioles team did.









