Shorebird of the Week – May 30, 2013

Once in awhile you’ll find a steal in the later rounds of the amateur draft, a player most scouts overlooked or didn’t think would be good enough to fit. Whatever the case, the Orioles seem to be getting more than they expected out of Maryland product Josh Hader.

Hader, who wasn’t drafted last year until the 19th round, impressed experts enough with his performance last season to be considered one of the Orioles’ top 15 prospects just a year removed from Old Mill High School in Anne Arundel County. Yes, he’s only 19 years old – does that seem familiar to Oriole fans, a 19 year old phenom pitching well for Delmarva?

After being drafted last year, the Orioles sent him down to their Gulf Coast League affiliate in Florida, where he dominated enough (2-0, 2.66 with just 12 hits allowed and 35 strikeouts in 20 1/3 innings) to earn a late-season promotion to Aberdeen. With the IronBirds he was even better, posting 13 strikeouts and just two hits allowed in 5 relief appearances covering 8 1/3 innings. So the obvious question would be how he handled the long season and starting rotation for a more advanced league here with the Shorebirds.

So far, so good. In eight starts Josh has pitched 42 1/3 innings, allowing just 29 hits and posting a 1-2 record with a 2.13 ERA. That’s not to say there haven’t been challenges – while Hader is averaging about a strikeout per inning (42 to date) he’s walking far more batters than he did at the lower levels – 21 thus far. But batters are only hitting .193 against him, and that will play well whatever the level.

His next start could be a test, as the rotation would set him up against a Greensboro team which has given him fits so far in two starts (13 hits and eight runs – five earned – in 10 2/3 innings.) If Josh can make the adjustments required from a good professional pitcher, it may show that his lofty accolades are well-deserved. Hader is slotting himself for success at higher levels, which isn’t bad for a kid from Anne Arundel County.

Rumor has it…

Certain quarters of the Maryland blogosphere are reporting that one prospective participant in the governor’s race is going off in another direction. A website called The Red White Blue as well as Jeff Quinton at RedState have both made the assertion that something I heard when speaking with a representative of another politician was true – Dan Bongino will be announcing his intention to reclaim the Sixth Congressional District seat for the GOP. Shades of Alex Mooney!

This is particularly interesting to me when you consider that just last week Bongino put out a release purportedly critical of Martin O’Malley:

Sadly, the plague of bureaucratic, government corruption is not limited to the IRS and DOJ. It appears that the O’Malley administration is attempting to rival the Obama administration in bureaucratic ineptitude with its newest scandal. The lavish, inappropriate spending of federal “stimulus” funds by Baltimore City school staff on fancy dinners and expensive watches is another sad example of the very real penalty of an increasingly unaccountable and growing government. The growth of both federal and local bureaucracy has created a ‘soft tyranny’ of diffuse responsibility. When government grows large enough to diffuse responsibility among many than the responsibility for managing it effectively belongs to no one.

But that O’Malley criticism was absent in a statement Dan made yesterday on Facebook. Instead, it leaned more in a direction critical of Washington:

The recent spate of scandals is indicative of a trend line moving painfully in the direction of a “Members-Only” government.

In over a decade within the ranks of the Secret Service, and many years in the White House, I was unfortunate enough to have been a witness to this system, which has become strictly insider-driven.

Those who are appropriately “connected” live by a completely different set of rules & government means something completely different to them. The tax code, healthcare policy, election law, environmental regulation and many other areas have been corrupted and are being used as tools to both punish and reward.

There are solutions out there but you must push your Representatives. A simplified tax code, patient-centered healthcare reform, a reduction in the burgeoning administrative state and the rolling back of many administrative functions to the states would reverse this destructive trend and help restore us to vibrant growth and give our children hope that this is not the best it is ever going to be.

Interesting choice of words: “you must push your Representatives.”

Yet the obvious question I first had when I heard this assertion was: Bongino lives nowhere near the Sixth District. There’s nothing stopping Dan from moving to that area prior to the 2014 election, though, nor does the law preclude a “carpetbagger” from representing a district because Congressmen need only live within the state they represent. Perhaps it’s still the second-best Maryland option for a Republican despite Roscoe Bartlett’s 20-point loss last year. (Andy Harris isn’t going anywhere.)

But if you look at election results, the numbers indicate an uphill battle for Bongino: he ran seven points behind Bartlett’s paceĀ in Montgomery County – albeit these are countywide numbers for Dan and his was a three-way race.

On the other hand, Bongino carried Frederick County over Ben Cardin (although not necessarily the Sixth District portion, which Bartlett lost by 20 points.) Bongino was 400 votes behind Bartlett in Washington County, just over 1,000 votes behind in Allegany, and a little over 200 behind in Garrett. In the latter three counties, though, Rob Sobhani drew 19 percent, 13 percent, and 4 percent respectively. These counties also lie completely within the Sixth District, permitting a more direct comparison.

So I’m sure Dan Bongino has the same information I do, and probably more since he has the time and staff to delve into precinct-by-precinct results. The obvious question is whether he can make up twenty points.

One thing Democrat John Delaney has now that he didn’t have in 2012, though: a voting record. But John will have plenty of money, and perhaps the one advantage Bongino would have over would-be challengers like Delegate LeRoy Myers – who decided earlier this month not to seek another term as Delegate – is the success he had nationalizing his Senate campaign.

Of course, all this speculation could be for naught, just as the phony Bongino/Keyes ticket was last month. This is doubly true considering the source, who would likely benefit from Bongino skipping the governor’s race. But if anything it proves that Dan Bongino has some mojo as a prospective candidate for something, whether he stays home or becomes a proverbial carpetbagger.

Maybe Andy Harris should watch his back.