‘You can put him anywhere’: Holliday continues impressing at 2B
2:22 AM UTC
SARASOTA, Fla. — Jackson Holliday wanted more action at second base. Two weeks ago, the 20-year-old said it felt like heād been ājust standing out thereā during games.
Unsurprisingly, he passed with flying colors.
On the gameās first pitch, Michael Harris II ripped a hard-hit ball off left-hander Cole Irvin, sending it deep into the hole at second base. Holliday made a spinning stop, retrieved the ball and fired a strong throw to first to nab Harris.
āFirst-pitch swinging, hot screamer at you and knocks it down, able to get the out,ā Irvin said. āThatās all you can ask for.ā
Holliday contributed to another highlight-reel-worthy play in the third, combining with veteran Kolten Wong, a former Cardinals teammate of Hollidayās All-Star dad. Wong made a nice play to scoop a Matt Olson grounder at third, then tossed it to Holliday, who covered the bag at second and made a tough, off-balance throw over to first in time to get Olson.
Despite having zero games of Major League experience, Holliday looked like a seasoned pro. After making 110 of his 137 Minor League starts the past two seasons at shortstop, Holliday is proving he can thrive at second, where heās made eight of his 11 Grapefruit League starts this spring.
āThe throw to first is pretty easy. Itās a lot shorter than shortstop,ā said Holliday, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2022 MLB Draft. āBut just really been working on the feeds. I know they really emphasize being able to turn a double play in the organization, especially at the big league level and when it matters. Making sure our feeds are good and making sure that I can turn a double play every time itās hit to me has been the main focus.ā
Holliday still hasnāt started a double play in a game. But heās initiated plenty of them during infield drills the past month.
Heās good at doing that, too.
āItās kind of unique because on the backfields and in all of his practice work, it looks really clean. It looks like heās played second base for a long time,ā said third-base coach Tony Mansolino, who works with Oās infielders. āIt looks professional, like heās done it for 10 years.ā
Offensively, Holliday has performed as expected in his push to make Baltimoreās Opening Day roster. He is 10-for-34 (.294) with two doubles, two triples, one homer and five RBIs. Heāll have an opportunity to continue showcasing his impressive bat over the next 11 days, including at the inaugural Spring Breakout on Thursday night.
But in order to break camp with the Orioles, Holliday has to be ready to play second, where the team would prefer to have a left-handed hitter who can split time with righty-hitting Jordan Westburg. Holliday has repeatedly shown heās up to the task, which he did again Wednesday.
āShoot, I saw him in [Triple-A] Norfolk a little bit last season. Heās a great defender,ā Irvin said. āYou can put him anywhere and heās going to be able to get the job done.ā
Kjerstad flashes the leather, too
Holliday wasnāt the only Baltimore prospect who played strong defense vs. Atlanta. Heston Kjerstad, the Oās No. 5 prospect and baseball’s No. 32 overall prospect, per MLB Pipeline, made a nice play in left field in the second inning.
Kjerstad hustled to retrieve a Harris two-out knock from the left-field corner. He saw Atlanta’s Eli White being waved around third, so he made a strong throw to Wong with the intention of using a relay to get White at the plate. However, White turned back to third, and because Kjerstadās throw was quick and on time, Wong caught the ball and then tagged out White.
āIn the outfield, there are a lot of plays you can make in the air,ā said Kjerstad, who has put a big focus on defensive improvement this spring. āBut when the ballās on the ground, you can still maybe cut down a runner from getting an extra base or cut down a dude from scoring just by attacking the ball hard and taking good angles.ā
Right-hander Dillon Tate and lefty Keegan Akin continued their scoreless springs with strong showings against the Braves. Tate recorded one strikeout and one walk while working the fifth, and Akin struck out three over 1 1/3 innings.
Tate has allowed only one hit in five Grapefruit innings and Akin has given up only one hit over 6 1/3 frames, as both are making strong cases to be included in the Oriolesā Opening Day bullpen.