How the Orioles got top prospect Jackson Holliday back on track

Soon after Jackson Holliday reached the major leagues earlier this season, it was clear there was a problem.

On April 26, the club returned to Baltimore after a series in Anaheim, following another flurry of Holliday strikeouts. The 20-year-old uber prospect was called into the manager's office; he was being sent down.

The demotion was a rare setback for the Orioles, and for one of their top prospects.

As the Orioles rose meteorically from a White Sox-like state a few years ago to today's powerhouse status, they've done so largely through scouting and player development successes. They haven't endured many stumbles in transitioning prospects into big leaguers.

Catcher Adley Rutschman, a former Baseball America No. 1 overall prospect, was a star-level player upon arrival. Gunnar Henderson's transition has been seamless since his 2022 debut: No. 1 prospect, Rookie of the Year honors in 2023, and one of the best players in baseball in 2024.

Holliday's story is different - at least the initial chapter.

Yes, Holliday was younger when he debuted, 20 years and 128 days old on April 10, so it's not surprising there were some struggles.

But Holliday had one specific weakness, one fatal flaw in surviving at the major-league level that had to be addressed.

"I was missing fastballs up," Holliday told theScore. "If you're underneath it, you have no chance."

Consider this April 16 swing and miss under an elevated Chris Paddack fastball for a strikeout:

There's a physical plan, but there's also something else that's key to an effective reset: psychology.

As Jackson's bat faltered early this season, he recalled what his dad texted him: "Just have fun and do what you've been doing since you were a kid. It's just a game at the end of the day. Go out there and have fun, and smile."

While Holliday owns an even-keeled temperament, and while the Orioles didn't believe his confidence was irreparably damaged by his initial struggles, they wanted to him to leave Baltimore with a particular understanding: He didn't need to destroy Triple-A pitching or improve on his past Triple-A numbers. He simply had to focus on one objective: improve against fastballs.

"We're not concerned about beating Triple-A anymore," Asche said of the message.

This was about beating the fastball.

"He's had every opportunity in the world to add pressure to himself his whole career, and he hasn't done it. We were very comfortable giving him that message, knowing he's not going to be fazed by this," Asche said of Holliday's demotion. "He's eager to be a contributing member of this team. He showed up at spring training with that mindset: 'I want to be part of this team.' He took the news in stride and went to work."

With that message, and with the PowerPoint plan sent to Norfolk, Holliday went down and rebooted.

Blood told me: "When Jackson showed up (after the draft), the first meeting we had, we were going through some of our process, and they had Gunnar on the screen. He asked a question: 'What did you do with him? Whatever you did with him is what I want to do.'"

Part of the reset plan was new school.

Foam balls have become important training tools in pro baseball because hitters can practice with full-intent swings free from worry about jamming themselves or mishitting a ball off their shin or ankle.

After he returned to Norfolk, Holliday practiced against foam balls before Triple-A games. They were fired out of high-velocity pitching machines, including a special ball designed to have extreme spin, so that it moves upward and above the strike zone.

The Orioles wanted to exaggerate the issue of contacting high fastballs.

"You have to figure out a way," Asche said about hitting elevated 100 mph foam balls with some 40 inches of carry.

The Orioles are on the forefront of player development, with pitch simulators and biomechanical tools that help get players on track. Holliday employed some of those, too.

But one tool that helped Holliday was remarkably old school: the batting tee.

Holliday took swing after swing off an elevated tee before games to flatten out his bat path and have his swing plane better match high fastballs.

"Honestly, it was just getting back to hitting high tee," Holliday said. "One thing my dad always taught me is if you hit off that, you'll find your path. Then challenge yourself with the machine, and hit the foam balls. Just trying to challenge myself at the top of the zone."

While Holliday was gone, he wasn't forgotten in Baltimore. Orioles hitting coaches were watching video of his practice work and games.

Progress was slow at first.

He saw 259 fastballs in May at Triple-A, batting .273 against them.

He batted a whopping .417 against fastballs in June, and .317 in July.

Asche saw Holliday's leg kick get smaller and his swing begin to better match fastballs.

"If you're missing underneath, we'll take swing and miss over the top, over-correcting in a sense," Asche said. "An analogy we use with a lot of guys is over-correcting your miss. If you swerve this way in a car (to the left), you probably have to swerve harder to the right, to get back into center. Eventually, we find that middle ground. That's how we grow."

They saw Holliday begin spraying line drives around Triple-A ballparks, and saw his exit velocities inch up.

"I felt like I got back to what I was doing (before)," Holliday said. "Covering heaters up, having good direction."

Holliday was back in a good place and the Orioles would soon need him.

On July 31, a day after the trade deadline, Jordan Westburg, another young Orioles breakout player, suffered a broken hand.

Holliday was recalled the same day, suddenly thrust into the everyday second base job.

He hit his first major-league home run in his first game back: a grand slam.

His first big league homer is a grand slam! pic.twitter.com/UhYSrT2MiQ

— MLB (@MLB) July 31, 2024

Entering play Wednesday, in his first six games since his return, pitchers have thrown Holliday 42 fastballs, he's swung at 25, and whiffed only six times.

Five of his six hits against fastballs this season have come since his return.

He even handled a 100-mph fastball from star Guardians closer Emmanuel Clase over the weekend:

Left-handed batters were hitting .097 off Emmanuel Clase before Jackson Holliday ripped this 100.0 mph cutter from Clase for a single.

At 100.1 mph, Holliday's single was the 7th-hardest base-hit off off Clase this season. pic.twitter.com/cPu0yIlA7q

— Jacob Calvin Meyer (@jcalvinmeyer) August 3, 2024

He recorded three straight multi-hit games in the series against first-place Cleveland.

Holliday homered again Tuesday in Toronto, his third bomb in six games since his recall - and the first three of his career.

"We see a lot of similarities to Gunnar," Asche said. "Is Jacks going to be a 30-homer guy? Maybe."

Only time will tell whether all the progress has staying power, but Holliday feels like he's in a better place.

"The second time around, I've been able to be more relaxed, more present, and more comfortable," he said.

With Westburg injured, and with Baltimore in a tight race for the AL East, Holliday's reset isn't just a development project for the club; it needs him to win right now.

"I think this is a big chance for him, and we're going to give him some time," Orioles general manager Mike Elias told reporters following Holliday's return. "This is a time period where he's got some runway in front of him because of the vacancy that we have at second base."

While the Orioles added external help at the trade deadline, it's possible their most impactful addition could come from within: version 2.0 of another No. 1 prospect.

Travis Sawchik is theScore's senior baseball writer.