Friday, May 27, 2022

Linfielder Greg Crawford quoted in story about basketball star


 


Linfielder Greg Crawford quoted in story about basketball star

In the Oregonian 5/27/2022 story posted below, Linfielder Greg Crawford (Class of 1972) described as a “former local radio and television personality who is an aficionado on basketball in Oregon” is quoted extensively. He talks about the late Freeman Williams (see photo), who played men’s basketball 1971-1978 for Portland State University. Crawford, who lives in the Portland area, was Linfield men’s basketball manager for the 1968-1969, 1969-1970 and 1970-1971 teams. In his senior year, 1971-1972, Ted Wilson, head men’s basketball coach, impressed with Crawford’s knowledge, made Crawford the team’s advance scout.
Crawford is shown in a photo here with Erik Spolestra, head coach of the NBA Miami Heat and a grad of Beaverton’s Jesuit High School and the University of Portland.

....
Vikings: Placing Portland State basketball legend Freeman Williams’ career in proper perspective: ‘He was an icon
By Aaron Fentress, Oregonian, 5/27/2022
They gathered for a meal at a Southwest Portland restaurant to reconnect, talk about the past, and most of all, reflect on the career and personality of Portland State basketball legend Freeman Williams, who died at the age of 65 last month of bone cancer.
Four former teammates and their late coach’s son told stories a few weeks ago of Williams’ on-court exploits — the good, the sublime and the bad — and reveled in his talent and persona as a shining star at a mid-major basketball program tucked away in plain sight, but often overlooked in downtown Portland.
That reality made it easy to overlook Williams’ dizzying scoring numbers, especially for those who weren’t around to witness his performances in the late 1970s that earned him a place on the All-America team with the likes of Larry Bird and Magic Johnson.
No highlight videos exist on YouTube. Finding photos of Williams playing at PSU is also a chore. Perhaps the strongest archival log of his career is a four-inch-thick scrapbook filled with newspaper clippings, box scores, photos and game programs owned by former teammate Derreck Brooks.
It’s a shame because Williams wasn’t merely a Vikings legend. By any measure, Williams should be recognized as one of the greatest college basketball players ever to come out of the state. Right up there with former NBA All-Stars in Oregon State’s Gary Payton and Oregon’s Terrell Brandon.
Williams’ 3,249 career points rank second all-time behind only LSU’s Pete Maravich (3,667). He reached those scoring heights before the NCAA universally implemented the three-point line in 1986. Given that many of Williams’ deep jumpers came from NBA three-point distances, his point totals in college would have gone up tremendously, even without changing his style of play, had he operated during the three-point era.
Evaluating Williams’ overall legacy in the state’s history comes down to a few factors. First, did the level of competition he faced matter? Secondly, were his scoring numbers padded because he could shoot at will against competition inferior to that found in major conferences? And, was his overall impact in Oregon basketball lore limited by playing in an 1,800-seat gym rather than a basketball arena? For those who saw him play and played with him, Williams’ greatness cannot be challenged, especially in Portland State lore. For former PSU quarterback great Neil Lomax, there is no debate in this area.
“Everyone always says, ‘Neil Lomax’ and ‘June Jones’ are the face of Portland State athletics,” Lomax said. “No, no, no. It’s Freeman Williams. He was an icon.”
WILLIAMS TO PSU Williams had major-college talent but went overlooked by such programs. That made him the type of player PSU coach Ken Edwards hoped to reel in.
Edwards’ recruiting strategy — limited by an $800 budget — included sending handwritten letters to the top 20 scorers in Los Angeles in hopes that some would bite. He did so even without having seen many of them play.
“If they can play in L.A., they can play,” Ken Edwards would tell his son, Greg Edwards, a ball boy for the team who went on to coach high school basketball and run camps in the Portland-Vancouver area.
Brooks, another overlooked talent, also fit that bill. Brooks, from Fremont High in Los Angeles, and Williams, who attended Manual Arts, were friendly rivals who squared off several times in high school.
When Williams got his shot going, Brooks said, he would look to close the distance between them.
“Each time I would step out another five feet, and he would move five feet back and still hit the shot,” Brooks said.
After one meeting, Brooks said he left the game feeling that he had done a decent job defending Williams, only to learn that he had scored 37 points.
“I was like, ‘What?’” Brooks said. “I was pissed! But he was a good shooter even then.”
In 1973, Brooks and point guard Chucky Smith, Williams’ high school teammate, went to Portland State after not receiving offers from UCLA, USC and the like.
“People would say, ‘Why are you going up there?’” Brooks said. “I’d say, ‘John Wooden isn’t calling me. I’m going to go where I can play.’”
Both Brooks and Smith played right away and helped lure Williams to Portland.
“The whole idea was that we were going to start a tradition,” Brooks said. “Freeman came and it was a different dynamic.” The 6-foot-3 Williams averaged 16.8 points as a freshman, taking 16.7 shots per game. That proved to be just the beginning.
“I didn’t really know how good I was until I arrived at Portland State,” Williams said in the documentary “Inner City Champions.”
As a sophomore, Williams took 28.9 shots per game and averaged 30.9 points per contest.

“He kind of took over,” Brooks said.
As a junior, he put up 38.8 points per game, which ranks sixth all-time in NCAA history. His average of 35.9 the following season ranks 15th. He led the nation both seasons and received third-team All-America status as a junior in 1977 and second-team honors as a senior in 1978.
The Williams show proved to be electric and often led to a packed house on the Park Blocks. So much so that at times, the fire marshal issued occupancy warnings.
Greg Crawford, a former local radio and television personality who is an aficionado on basketball in Oregon, said he saw every home game that Williams played.
“I’m not quite sure we ever knew what we had here,” Crawford said. “He was pretty spectacular. In a lot of cities, he would have been a box office phenom. But he wasn’t here.”
“WILLIAMS FROM THE PARKING LOT” Greg Edwards recalled a game in which he sat on the bench folding towels when Williams walked over and sat down beside him.
“Little Edwards, that’s a golden arm right there,” Williams said, pointing to his right arm as he let it swing.
“Yeah,” Edwards recalled saying, “you can shoot.” From anywhere past halfcourt.
Williams had no conscience in discerning between a good shot and a bad shot. For Williams, if he could see the basket and get off the shot, it was a good shot.
Lomax was a freshman at Portland State in 1977 and played in the football team’s famed offense that produced wild passing numbers with its run-and-shoot offense. The basketball team was the equivalent on the basket court, Lomax said.
“My memories were of just going to watch him light it up,” Lomax said. “They were a fun team to watch. Running up and down the court. They were run-and-shoot basketball. Flying around.”
Lomax remembers many on the football team scurrying over to the arena to watch Williams play.
“We would get done with practice, or a game, or winter workouts, get dinner and then go watch him play if they had a home game,” Lomax said. “And that place would be packed. You had to go to the games. It was the biggest thing on campus to go watch him play.”
But Lomax missed the night when Williams scored 81 points against Rocky Mountain on Feb. 3, 1978. According to Brooks, Williams had about 40 at halftime and coach Ken Edwards wanted the team to help him go for as many points as possible.
That night, the game began with a relatively small crowd at home. But as word spread around campus that Williams was putting on a show, the crowd swelled.
“Even though we blew them out, the crowd got bigger as the game went on,” former PSU center Bob Sisul said. “By the end of the game, people were standing and watching. They came onto the court afterward. It was like we had won the NCAA title or something. It was amazing.”
Williams’ deep shots brought the fans to their feet.
“We didn’t have a logo on the court, but he would be taking shots from where the logo would have been,” Lomax said. Former PSU center Mike Richardson recalled a shot that Williams hit just inside halfcourt with three defenders on him. When it went in, Richardson recalled the public address announcer saying: “Freeman Williams from the parking lot.”
“The fact that he made those shots encouraged him to take those shots,” Richardson said.
Williams’ abilities couldn’t be ignored. However, his gaudy statistics could be questioned given the competition. Was Williams truly that great or was he merely very good because he could take as many shots as he wanted against inferior competition?
Such an argument could be made while favoring the likes of Payton and Brandon. How many points could they have scored while playing at PSU rather than in the Pac-12?
Williams’ teammates say such arguments are nonsense because Williams also put up strong numbers against major powers. In fact, six of his top 41 scoring games came against major college programs:
• 49 at USC, Jan. 20, 1978 • 39 vs. Oregon State, Dec. 16, 1976 • 39 vs. Kentucky, Dec. 16, 1977 • 38 at Oregon State, Dec. 5, 1975 • 36 at Arizona State, Jan. 4, 1977 • 35 at Arizona, Jan. 27, 1976 “The tough games were when he came out,” Sisul said.
TEAMMATE ENVY
Williams made good use of the shots that he took, and he took as many as he wanted.
“He had the super green light,” former PSU guard Terence Burns said.
But that also raised the question: Did teammates ever complain that Williams shot too often?
“Yeah,” Brooks said without hesitation. “To me, it wasn’t the ideal situation, because you had one person scoring and we had other guys who could do stuff,” Brooks said. “But those are coach’s decisions.”
Brooks recalled a game when Williams went 19 of 49 from the field. Brooks’ argument was that he could score a lot of points if given that many shots. Probably so. But would he, or anyone else on the team, have matched Williams’ scoring output? Coach Edwards’ answer was no.
Greg Edwards said his father would tell players that he didn’t believe they could get off 45 good shots, let alone make enough to match Williams’ point production.
As a shooter, Williams was freakishly good for that era. Greg Edwards said the slick-shooting guard could have averaged 45 or 50 points with the three-point line.
“Now it’s used as a weapon and it’s emphasized, and now people play outside-in when before they played inside-out,” Edwards said. “Freeman played like Steph Curry and Klay Thompson, those kinds of players. That’s what Freeman was.”
Williams didn’t rely solely on his outside marksmanship. He also used his speed, quickness and leaping ability to create shot opportunities that others couldn’t generate. For that reason, Crawford said he believed Williams deserved the green light Edwards afforded him.
“I could see why people became irritated, but he was just so good,” Crawford said. “It was incredible. He could score from three feet or 30 feet.”
Several teammates acknowledged just how creative and talented Williams could be.
“They always talk about how good of a shooter Freeman was,” Sisul said. “But he was very, very athletic. He had to get himself open for those shots. And every team we played, every arena we went into, they would put their best defensive player or two on Freeman to stop him. They don’t just let you shoot the ball like that. You have to work for most of those shots.” When defenders got too close, Williams could drive the lane and score.
“He could go dunk on you, too,” Burns said.
Said Crawford: “I loved the way he could drive to the hoop, too. It seemed like he was cutting through butter.” Sisul, PSU’s career leader in rebounds (767), believed Williams would have been a dynamic wide receiver or defensive back in football.
Lomax agreed.
“If he was one of my receivers, he’s catching 12, 13 balls per game,” Lomax said. “He was such a great athlete.”
The big men simply had to accept that their roles were to set screens for Williams, grab rebounds and then get the ball to Williams.
“That’s how you stayed on the floor,” Sisul said.
Richardson said that, as a center, he knew he wouldn’t get the ball on offense. But that was OK.
“The thing is, nobody could say that it was a mistake to let Freeman shoot the ball,” Richardson said. “He hit so many incredible shots that you couldn’t believe.”
Other positions also simply had to accept that Williams was the centerpiece of the offense.
“He didn’t pass the ball, but he didn’t miss many shots, either,” Brooks said.
Williams was big man on campus but carried himself with humility. But he and his roommates did like to throw a good party.
“We got kicked out of every apartment building we lived in,” Brooks said.
Then one apartment owner offered them a house to live in where they could make as much noise as they wanted. And they did. Their house was the place to be. And Williams never acted as if he were better than anyone.
“He had a good heart and he had a big laugh,” Sisul said. “And if you were in the room, you were smiling. And he was very charismatic. He just had that aura about him.”
That presence also resonated on the court.
“If you didn’t know who Freeman Williams was before the game started, you could tell just because of the way he handled himself,” Sisul said. “It was amazing. Just the confidence that he had when he stepped on the court.”
Williams did have a nasty streak on the court. Burns, who prepped at Portland’s Benson High School, recalled being encouraged to go hard at Williams in practice but also beware that he could become volatile.
“He might punch you,” Burns said.
But most of all, Williams was a relatively humble man who enjoyed his ice cream. Richardson recalled that whenever he drove Williams home after a practice or a game, he would want to stop for ice cream along the way.
“He was a good guy, basically,” Brooks said.
FLEETING NBA SUCCESS The Boston Celtics looked past Williams’ college address and selected him at No. 8 during the 1978 NBA draft.

Only eight college players from the state of Oregon have ever been drafted at No. 8 or higher, with just four coming since 1970.
Oregon has had 14 first-round picks but just three drafted No. 8 or higher: Greg Ballard (No. 4, 1977), Jim Barnett (No. 8, 1966) and Jim Loscutoff (No. 4, 1955).
The University of Portland produced Ray Scott, selected fourth overall during the 1961 draft. Crawford mentioned Payton, Oregon State’s A.C. Green, Brandon and Stan Love as the best he ever watched play, along with Williams.

“I would say he’s got to be right up there, one, two or three with anyone that’s ever played here as far as collegiate players,” Crawford said.
For Crawford, the greatest validation of Williams’ talent came during his short stint in the NBA.
“I heard some people say, ‘He didn’t play tough competition,’” Crawford said of Williams’ college career. “But look at what he did in the pros.”
Williams had the potential to put together a stellar career. He averaged 18.6 points per game during his second season (1979-80) as a reserve playing just 25.8 minutes per game. He played 24.1 minutes per game in his third season and produced 19.3 points per game.
He scored 51 points at Phoenix on Jan. 19, 1980.
Former NBA guard John Lucas II, who later would help Williams overcome drug addiction, played against the PSU star. Lucas said most NBA players didn’t know much about Williams because of his mid-major beginnings. But he proved right away that he could play in the NBA.
“He could always go right and he could always score,” said Lucas, an assistant coach with the Houston Rockets.
Williams once scored 30 points on Lucas and the Golden State Warriors on Dec. 5, 1981.
“He was a walking bucket,” Lucas joked.
Williams’ professional career never truly took off, however. Stardom never materialized.
After his playing days ended during the 1985-86 season, Williams began having problems with drugs and alcohol. “It was like I lost everything,” Williams said in the Inner City Champions documentary.
Richardson said he believed based on conversations with Williams that moving from city to city prevented him from establishing roots and that led to him getting involved with the wrong crowd.
After his NBA career, Williams enrolled in the John Lucas Clinic in Houston.
“John Lucas was instrumental in getting him off of drugs and trying to keep him off,” Richardson said. “And Freeman listened to him. He respected Lucas and Lucas was a mentor to him.”
Lucas, who also went through recovery, said Williams entered his recovery program around 2000. He wasn’t doing well at all. Lucas said the NBA reached out to him to help Williams.
“People don’t come see me on a winning streak,” Lucas said. The two bonded and became friends during that time. Lucas said Williams did well in the program and maintained his sobriety for years afterward.
“He had a good spirit about him,” Lucas said.
GONE TOO SOON Williams’ life became bumpy from then on. He would disappear for spurts. He had a small role in the 1992 hit movie, “White Men Can’t Jump,” as a fictional playground basketball legend named Duck Johnson. Richardson recalled Williams being around and giving his daughter, Melissa, basketball pointers while she played at Lake Oswego High School. He even showed up at a game to cheer her on. Burns told of a man who
maintained his competitive edge but had also developed a temper. Williams played on a recreational league team Burns ran. At times, he would challenge opponents to fights. Burns ultimately kicked him off of the team because his competitiveness made him too volatile.
On another occasion, Williams went to Burns’ home in Washougal, Washington, just to help paint a white picket fence. Williams took his time, Burns said, enjoying being outdoors and doing some work for a friend.
“He just wanted something to do,” Burns said.
Williams’ teammates learned of his death in various ways. A phone call. Text message. Facebook post. In each case, the news seemed surreal. “It’s a bitter pill to swallow because he was young,” Brooks said. Gathering together to talk about their fallen teammate brought laughter tinged with sadness. They recalled when he began having health problems years ago. But they had heard recently he had been doing much better.
Now he is gone.
The reality stings, but his former teammates carry the memories and the knowledge that they played with one of the all-time greats in Oregon history.
“I love him,” Burns said, “and admire him to this day.”

Warm welcome?




Warm welcome?

Letter to editor of McMinnville N-R/News-Register, May 27, 2022

Do McMinnville, Newberg and Lafayette appreciate visitors? Yes.

Are “welcome signs” a good way to welcome visitors? Yes.

From the internet, I read: “The welcome signs surrounding a city can be important markers signifying much more than its population or city seal. Oftentimes, these signs are used to communicate the beliefs and ideals a community holds and shares.”

Look at the photos I took of McMinnville, Newberg and Lafayette “welcome signs” on May 21. Should McMinnville’s sign on Highway 99W be more welcoming?

Tim Marsh
McMinnville



 

Wednesday, May 25, 2022

For whom is Blaine Street in McMinnville and Blaine Street on Linfield McMinnville campus named?

In McMinnville, there’s a public/city part of Blaine Street and a private/Linfield College part of Blaine Street.

The public/city part of Southwest Blaine Street is near the Linfield campus and can be reached via West Linfield Avenue. The private/Linfield part, on the college’s campus, intersects with West Linfield Avenue.


Apparently the City of McMinnville ceded part of Blaine Street from what was a completely city-owned street. Therefore, it’s a guess Blaine was named by the city and not by the college.



Archivist at Linfield can find no connection between a person named Blaine and the college.

There’s a Blaine Street in another Yamhill County city, Newberg.

There are two Blaine towns/entities in the state of Oregon, one in Curry County and one in Tillamook County.

At one time there was a toll road between McMinnville and Blaine of Tillamook County. Dr. E. E. Goucher of McMinnville was the “moving spirit in the construction of the toll road.” There’s a street in McMinnville named for Goucher.

It appears both the Curry County Blaine and the Tillamook County Blaine were named for James G. Blaine, who was the Republican candidate for President of the United States three times. One of those times was 1884 when he lost "by a whisker (only 60,000 votes)" to Grover Cleveland.

Blaine served as U.S. Secretary of State during the presidential administrations of James Garfield and Benjamin Harrison.

"The Republican League Register, a Record of the Republican Party in the State of Oregon, 1896" shows a James G. Blaine Club of Portland.

According to the Portland Tribune, in the early 1960s, Stewart Holbrook, an Oregon logger, author and popular historian established the fictitious “James G. Blaine Society.” Goal of the society was to discourage people from moving to Oregon. "It was named after James G. Blaine, a U.S. Senator from Maine, who, during his 1884 campaign for U.S. president, visited every state in the Union except Oregon."

Part of the public/city part of Blaine intersects with Southwest Taft Street, perhaps named for William Howard Taft.

Taft, as U.S. president, visited Salem in 1909 and 1911, according to the Willamette Heritage Center. He also visited Salem in 1920. This was before he was appointed chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. There’s no record that while in Salem Taft made side trips and visited McMinnville.

Do you know when/what year the City of McMinnville created Blaine Street and for whom it is named? And, do you know when the city ceded part of Blaine to the college?
 
 :::::::::
 
In May 2023, Wildcatville took the photo (below) of the SW Blaine Street & SW Aspen signs. They are a couple blocks behind Michelbook House (on SW Linfield Avenue), home of Linfield Admissions.

 

 
 

Monday, May 23, 2022

Orioles reset: Work scouting Adley Rutschman — before and after star turn — begins to pay off for Baltimore (Baltimore Sun 5/23/2022)


 Orioles reset: Work scouting Adley Rutschman — before and after star turn — begins to pay off for Baltimore

By Nathan Ruiz, Baltimore Sun, May 23, 2022

As Adley Rutschman tore up the College World Series, starred for the national collegiate team and became the center of amateur baseball to establish himself as the favorite to be the first overall pick in the next year’s draft, the man who eventually made him that didn’t bat an eye.

“I barely paid attention to anything he did,” Mike Elias said Sunday, almost four years after Rutschman’s star turn and a day after he made his major league debut for the Orioles.

At the time, Elias was an assistant general manager for the Houston Astros, with amateur scouting among the areas he oversaw. He had been a part of three first overall selections there, but with the Astros coming off a World Series title in 2017 and seeking another in 2018, he figured devoting time to Rutschman would be fruitless with Houston’s first pick in 2019 likely coming late in the first round, long after the catcher had come off the board.

Then, in November 2018, Elias became the Orioles’ executive vice president and general manager, inheriting not only a team that had lost 115 games, but also the first overall pick in 2019.

“I immediately started thinking about him,” Elias said.

As he settled into his new job, Elias “kind of jokingly” texted the Astros’ West Coast scouts to ask whether the Orioles should draft Rutschman or Cal first baseman Andrew Vaughn. Texas high school shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. eventually joined the mix, as well, with Elias saying any of that trio could’ve gone first overall in a given year.

But he was locked in on Rutschman early, just as Brandon Verley, then the Orioles’ Northwest area scout, had been. The Rutschman name was revered in Oregon circles; Ad Rutschman, the catcher’s grandfather, led Linfield College to national titles in both football and baseball. But Rutschman made an impression on his own in one of the first games Verley watched his senior year at Sherwood High School, catching six innings, hitting a homer, and taking the mound and striking out the side with a mid-90s fastball and plus breaking ball in the seventh. His intangibles — the leadership, the confidence, the instincts — shined through as he did so.

“He just stands out,” Verley said. “It’s hard to explain.”

Verley said there were “three or four teams that were willing to put a big investment in him” out of high school, but Rutschman’s Oregon State commitment was strong enough that no team drafted him until the Seattle Mariners took a shot in the 40th and final round.

With Adley Rutschman in Baltimore and ‘blue skies ahead,’ eyes turn to Grayson Rodriguez, next wave of Orioles’ prospects https://t.co/oNsxNp424p

— Baltimore Sun Sports (@BaltSunSports) May 22, 2022

He played both football and baseball as a freshman in Corvallis, Oregon, catching for the Beavers’ College World Series team but struggling offensively. Verley noted how the high school seasons in the Northwest are about 20 games, compared to 35-game seasons in Florida, where he’s now based for the Orioles. That works out to be three seasons’ worth of a difference over the course of a high school career.

“They just don’t have as many games under their belt at that point in their career, so yeah, he had some things to do,” Verley said. “He really honed in on his catching skills and becoming a leader and learning that position at the college level his first year, and he didn’t swing the bat great. But then, after he was comfortable and with his ability defensively and kind of really focusing on being a catcher, remaining a catcher and fine-tuning those, then his bat took off.”

As a sophomore, Rutschman hit .408/.505/.628 for the Beavers, setting a College World Series record with 17 hits to earn Most Outstanding Player honors as Oregon State won the national title. He did so while the Orioles’ 2018 season fell apart early. Suddenly, Verley wasn’t just scouting a potential first overall pick, but one Baltimore might actually be able to take in that spot.

“People were already talking about it,” Verley said.

That offseason, with the No. 1 selection secured, the Orioles revamped their front office, bringing in Elias to oversee a rebuild. He promised to build an “elite talent pipeline,” with the first piece of that likely to be whoever they took atop the 2019 draft.

That winter, Elias flew from Baltimore to Portland, then drove the hour and a half to Corvallis to meet Rutschman for the first time, with Verley and Dave Bloom, a California-based scout, joining them in the coach’s office at Goss Stadium.

During his time with the Astros, Elias had been part of several similar meetings. Rutschman’s stood out.

“Because of all of the high picks in Houston, I have a lot of experience sitting down with some of these players that go really high in the draft, and I kind of have a lot of comparisons,” Elias said. “It was one of the more [impressive] meetings that I’ve ever had. Just the intelligence, how quick his mind works, the composure that he had, the sort of confidence that he had, the way that he treated the people around him. Wasn’t surprising, but it was a very impressive meeting.”

Faced with astronomical expectations, Adley Rutschman and the Orioles try to minimize pressure.

“I see these things, I’m like, uh, he’s just a human,” said Randy Rutschman, Adley’s father. “He was playing with Legos five years ago.”https://t.co/eponcQ8cGu

— Andy Kostka (@afkostka) May 22, 2022

Verley had been seeing those traits for years. Working for a new front office and scouting the player who would represent the club’s most significant decision in that group’s first season, he admittedly felt pressure. Elias did, too, knowing firsthand the difficulty of making a top pick.

“Even when you have kind of an anointed No. 1 guy,” Elias said, “it’s never as clear as it looks.”

But Rutschman’s play — he hit .411/.575/.751 with twice as many walks as strikeouts to win every amateur award he could — and personality put them at ease.

“He was, I guess, as easy as a guy that you could scout, but there’s always complications to every player,” Verley said. “But I believed in it so much that it took away from being nervous about, ‘Oh my gosh, are we sure that this is the guy?’ I had no doubt in my mind that he was the best player in the draft at that time.”

It took almost three years from that selection for Rutschman to reach the majors, with perhaps the final week of the wait the most excruciating with the fan base circling dates they expected him to arrive.

Now that he’s here, Verley is looking forward to watching just as much as anyone else.

“I’ve always kind of felt like a fan, to some degree, of Adley Rutschman,” Verley said. “Even during the process of scouting him, I was still a fan, which we try to separate as scouts as much as we can and take that bias out, but at some point, you’ve got to fall in love with the kid, especially having a chance to watch him and be that that close to his every move that spring.

“I’m an Adley Rutschman fan, just like any of us are. I’m really excited for his future.”

What’s to come?

A week without any Orioles’ walk-offs. After closing their latest homestand with three in four games, the Orioles take the road to visit the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox.

The latter series features five games in four days, with a doubleheader Saturday at Fenway Park accounting for the first of six games that were reshuffled into Baltimore’s schedule as a result of the season’s delay from the league’s lockout.

What was good?

Rougned Odor, glue guy. The man responsible for the Orioles’ “Call of Duty”-themed binocular celebration and home run chain is now contributing with his bat. He entered this homestand hitting .189, then recorded a hit in each of this week’s seven games, going 8-for-25 while slugging .640 and delivering both of Baltimore’s walk-offs against the Tampa Bay Rays, a team they hadn’t won a series against since their first meeting of the shortened 2020 season.

“Roogie brings a lot of grit and just hard-nosed baseball to this team,” Austin Hays said. “You see how well he’s been hitting late in games, big-time situations, pinch-hitting situations, and I think that has just gone to the rest of the hitters in the lineup. I think he’s a huge piece of that, just mindset-wise and just never quitting.”

https://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/orioles/bs-sp-orioles-reset-adley-rutschman-scout-draft-20220523-ntm5lhckmng63nwsqexrshvu64-story.html