The Baltimore Orioles enter 2026 with plenty of questions, most notably in a starting rotation that lacks the depth and dominance it showed in 2024. With uncertainty on the mound, the offense will need to carry more of the load. That makes Jordan Westburg’s health and production pivotal to the team’s success.
After a 2025 season marred by injury, Westburg is poised for a bounceback. His return to full health should provide exactly what the Orioles need: steady, reliable production in the middle of
the lineup that can help compensate for whatever inconsistency emerges from a pitching staff not necessarily in its finished form.
Westburg’s 2025 was frustrating precisely because of what he’d shown in 2024. After a debut slashline of .260/.311/.404 in 68 games as a rookie in 2023, he seized the everyday second base job and delivered a .264/.312/.481 slash line with 18 home runs in 107 games the following year.
Then came 2025, and there the injuries. The specifics varied (a hamstring in May, a jammed finger in June, a sprained ankle in August) but they amounted to the same: extended absences that prevented Westburg from building any momentum. When he was on the field, he was still productive in flashes, but the continuity simply wasn’t there. He had a monster July, and a nice August, but he limped to the finish line, and ended the year with just 85 games played.
The good news is that none of this should be concerning long-term. This wasn’t a degenerative issue or something that required major surgery with a lengthy rehab. It was bad luck, plain and simple.
When Westburg is right, he’s exactly the kind of hitter the Orioles need in their lineup. Like his old scouting report said, Westburg takes a mature approach at the plate, boasts solid contact skills, can drive the ball to all fields, and has over-the-fence pop (albeit more on his pull side).
His 2024 numbers showed a hitter with developing power who could handle both righties and lefties. He posted an ISO over .216, demonstrating legitimate gap-to-gap pop that occasionally turned into home runs. More importantly, he made consistent contact, striking out at a reasonable rate while showing enough discipline to avoid expanding the zone too often. That’s the profile of a player who can hit anywhere from fifth to seventh in a good lineup and provide real value.
Defensively, Westburg gives the Orioles flexibility. While second base is his primary position, he’s shown the ability to handle third base and has even gotten reps at shortstop. That versatility matters for a team that likes to carry an extra reliever and may need its infielders to move around depending on matchups or injuries. It’s not flashy, but it’s valuable—especially over the course of a 162-game season.
The key to a Westburg bounceback isn’t complicated: health plus opportunity equals production. He’ll enter spring training fully healthy for the first time since his debut season, with a full offseason of normal training behind him. That matters more than people might think. After an injury-plagued year, getting back into a regular routine—working on specific aspects of your game, building strength, refining your swing—makes a huge difference.
Westburg also benefits from knowing what’s expected of him. In 2024, he was still establishing himself, proving he belonged in the everyday lineup. In 2026, he’ll arrive as an established piece of the offense, with the confidence that comes from already having succeeded at this level. That mental aspect shouldn’t be underestimated. Players who’ve proven themselves once often take another step forward when they get a clean slate.
The lineup context also sets up well for Westburg. With Henderson, Rutschman, and Pete Alonso anchoring the top of the order, and Colton Cowser continuing to develop, Westburg won’t be asked to carry the offense. He just needs to be steady—get on base, drive in runs when opportunities arise, and provide consistent at-bats that keep the lineup moving. That’s exactly what he did in 2024, and there’s no reason he can’t do it again.
A return to his 2024 form—something like .270/.320/.450 with 20-plus home runs and strong defense—would be exactly what the Orioles need from him. It would stabilize the middle infield, provide protection in the lineup, and give manager Craig Albernaz another versatile piece to deploy. More importantly, it would give the Orioles the depth they need to withstand whatever challenges emerge over a long season.













