The Baltimore Orioles will hire a general manager to serve under president of baseball operations Mike Elias, creating a second executive tier the club hasn't maintained since Dan Duquette's departure in 2018. The move comes as Baltimore enters a three-year window where seven arbitration-eligible players—led by Gunnar Henderson and Adley Rutschman—shift from cost-controlled assets to market-rate obligations.
Elias has operated without a traditional GM since taking the role in November 2018, instead deploying a flat structure with assistant GMs reporting directly to him. The new hire will slot between Elias and those assistants, managing day-to-day roster construction while Elias focuses on long-term strategy and owner David Rubenstein's recent mandate to increase baseball spending. Baltimore's $115M payroll ranked 22nd in 2024; the front office restructure signals preparation for $180M-plus commitments by 2027.
The timing tracks to roster economics, not performance anxiety. Henderson enters his second arbitration year this winter, projected at $8.5M. Rutschman follows in 2026. Jackson Holliday, the No. 1 pick from 2022, reached Baltimore in April and will hit arbitration in 2027. The Orioles developed the deepest farm system in baseball from 2019 through 2023, per MLB Pipeline composite rankings, and now face the bill. A dedicated GM creates bandwidth for Elias to architect extensions—Henderson's comparables (Wander Franco pre-suspension, Fernando Tatís Jr.) signed for $200M-plus before reaching arbitration—while someone else handles trade deadline logistics and 40-man roster churn.
The structure mirrors what Theo Epstein built in Chicago, where Jed Hoyer ran GM duties for four years before succeeding Epstein as president. It's the model Farhan Zaidi used in San Francisco, with Scott Harris (now Detroit's president) serving as GM until 2021. The Orioles are hiring into a buyer's market; at least six credentialed executives were displaced in the post-2024 management churn, including former Rays VP James Click and ex-Angels assistant Perry Minasian's displaced deputies.
Baltimore posted 101 wins in 2023 and 91 in 2024, but exited the playoffs in the Wild Card and Division Series, respectively. Rubenstein, who purchased the team from the Angelos family for $1.725B in April 2024, has told associates he views the next 36 months as the club's championship window and expects Elias to act accordingly. That means payroll flexibility but also roster aggression—the kind that benefits from bifurcated decision-making when deadline day involves 14-hour negotiation cycles and Elias is simultaneously modeling an eight-year extension for a 23-year-old shortstop.
The league's other restructurings this winter tell the story. Buster Posey hired former teammates Curt Casali and Javier López into San Francisco's front office within two weeks of taking the presidency, signaling he'll delegate operations. Across baseball, four teams are hiring new GMs or reshuffling reporting lines. The trend is clear: as team valuations push past $2B and payrolls approach $300M, ownership wants presidents focused on strategy and stakeholder management, not July trade calls with Scott Boras.
Elias is expected to begin formal interviews in mid-December, with a hire finalized before the Winter Meetings start January 9 in Dallas. Candidates will come from three pools: rival teams' assistant GMs (Houston's bench is deep), recently displaced executives seeking re-entry, and Baltimore's own assistant GM group, where Sig Mejdal and Eve Rosenbaum have operational fluency but may lack the external credibility Rubenstein wants. The job description circulating through back channels emphasizes roster construction and arbitration strategy, not scouting philosophy—Elias keeps that.
The hire will report directly to Elias and inherit a 40-man roster with $87M already committed to five players in 2025, per Cot's Baseball Contracts. The new GM's first task: decide whether to extend Rutschman before his arbitration case is filed in January, when comparables will push his hearing number past $12M. Ownership has approved exploratory talks. If Baltimore locks him through age-30, that number lands near $160M. If they wait, they pay him annually and risk free agency in 2028, when the Mets and Yankees will both have money.
Rubenstein bought the Orioles with Ares Management co-founder Michael Arougheti and Carlyle Group co-founder David Rubenstein (no relation). All three attended the 2024 playoffs and asked Elias for a five-year spending model. The GM hire is the structural answer. Watch for the extension offers to follow within 90 days of the new executive starting.