New York — Time after time, leadership gets passed down. That’s especially true for those that are sponges; not only willing to learn, but eager to lead.
Pete Alonso grew up in the big leagues alongside some of the greatest players who have ever stepped on a baseball field. In 2019, even as he slugged his way to 53 home runs and won the National League Rookie of the Year award with the Mets, Alonso never presumed to know it all. He leaned on veterans to understand how to be a professional major-leaguer, and how to do things the right way.
Seven years ago, he didn’t know where life would take him. Now, playing with the Orioles on a record-breaking contract, Alonso is bringing all that he’s learned to Baltimore, aiming to shape it into a championship-caliber organization.
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“I was really fortunate,” Alonso told me at Yankee Stadium this week. “I’ve had a lot of great teammates. Max Scherzer, [Jacob] deGrom, [Justin] Verlander. Future Corridor of Famers. And for me, too, Noah [Syndergaard] was an enormous affect. Robbie Cano, Todd Frazier. So these guys, they’d take me out to dinner, convey me locations, introduce me to issues. They had been like, ‘This isn’t solely the way you play, however that is the way you behave.’ It was like, these are the requirements of what it’s essential carry your self as knowledgeable, not simply within the massive leagues, however in New York.
“And I really feel like these skilled life classes, they sort of helped me by means of. It is undoubtedly made a big effect. They had been exhibiting me, that is what you do within the massive leagues. That is how you use. So, for me, I’m paying it ahead. I used to be on the receiving finish for quite a few years, so now it is like, it is my flip.”
Being a mentor to his Baltimore teammates has come naturally for the primary baseman.
It was Alonso’s thought to take the O’s to the Clemente Museum — which is devoted to preserving the life and legacy of baseball participant and humanitarian, Roberto Clemente — after they traveled to Pittsburgh to play the Pirates within the second week of the season. Over time, Alonso has constructed a robust relationship with the museum’s proprietor, Duane Rieder, who the slugger stated, “Makes a number of the finest wine and has unimaginable baseball memorabilia.” The Clemente Museum homes an city vineyard within the cellar, which stunned some youthful gamers.
“It is simply actually an unbelievable hangout spot,” Alonso stated. “I believe it is one of the best one in Pittsburgh. So it is a straightforward factor to do. I would like to have the ability to do issues like that as a result of we did loads of issues that constructed camaraderie on a number of the good groups that we had with the Mets. All good groups, they do stuff collectively.”
The Orioles entered Thursday with a 17-20 report. Very similar to many contending groups across the league struggling to eclipse .500, it’s not the beginning Baltimore had hoped for. However Alonso is reminding his new membership to remain the course. Those that are attending to know how the “Polar Bear” works have appreciated that, even when Alonso goes 0-for-4 with 4 strikeouts on the plate, he’s nonetheless the identical man, conserving his head up, afterward.
Orioles teammates describe Alonso as a vocal chief. He’s usually the primary to talk up on crew bus rides. He’s tapping gamers on their backs after losses, saying, “We’ll get ‘em tomorrow.” He’s spending further time within the batting cages with hitters — significantly after video games, wins or losses — to assist when somebody isn’t having probably the most success on the plate, or if somebody’s scuffling with a sure pitch.
Third baseman Coby Mayo, now in his third yr within the massive leagues, has struggled to hit offspeed pitches this season. He was beginning to get down on himself when Alonso stepped in and supplied a brand new strategy: “How about simply eliminating the pitch?” Alonso suggested Mayo to cease swinging at curveballs and sliders, after which opposing pitchers would possibly change their recreation plans in opposition to the 24-year-old. Mayo has since centered on working himself into higher counts. He’s forcing pitchers to throw extra aggressive pitches within the strike zone.
“As a substitute of worrying about not hitting this pitch properly, principally, it is since you’re not swinging on the proper ones, and also you’re chasing them an excessive amount of,” Mayo advised me, explaining how Alonso has collaborated with him. “So, simply little issues that may aid you see it differently. It is cool that he takes the time to speak to guys about it.”
(Picture by Jamie Sabau/Getty Photos)
Guiding youthful Orioles hitters like Mayo, Jackson Holliday, Jordan Westburg, Colton Cowser and Jeremiah Jackson was one of many main causes proprietor David Rubenstein was comfy signing Alonso to a five-year, $155 million contract in December. Alonso’s $31 million common annual worth marks the most important dedication in Orioles franchise historical past. Baltimore’s roster carries a number of promising younger abilities, and there was a void in management that’s now being stuffed in a means gamers hadn’t seen or skilled previous to Alonso’s addition.
“We might do little issues right here and there, however I would say that is the primary yr after I’ve felt that presence, that management presence,” Mayo stated. “He is been nice. We have not had a man come into that kind of function, making the largest contract in our historical past. So it is undoubtedly a better stage of respect for Pete.”
Orioles supervisor Craig Albernaz considers Alonso his “thought companion.” Being new to the group, accompanied by a brand new teaching workers, the first-year skipper has loved bouncing concepts off the primary baseman. Alonso is “echoing the appropriate messaging, and he additionally needs to speak ball,” Albernaz advised me. Alonso reached the postseason in 2022 and ‘24 with the Mets, so Albernaz is leaning on the slugger to assist the Orioles get again on monitor.
(Picture by Greg Fiume/Getty Photos)
After back-to-back playoff appearances (2023-24), the 2025 Orioles season was a serious disappointment. They completed 75-87, final place within the American League East, and had been eradicated from postseason competition by mid-September. Following a poor begin, supervisor Brandon Hyde was fired final Could. The crew didn’t get well largely as a consequence of an absence of robust pitching and excessive underperformance from their rising hitters.
There was a lacking piece within the clubhouse and, to date, Alonso has seemed like the reply. After a gradual begin on the plate, the slugger is starting to warmth up. Alonso’s three-run blast off Marlins right-hander Eury Perez within the first inning Wednesday was the distinction in Baltimore’s 7-4 win over Miami. He’s hitting .225/.331/.449 with seven dwelling runs and a 119 OPS+ in 37 video games.
“Pete was introduced in to be Pete Alonso,” Albernaz advised me throughout Orioles batting observe within the Bronx this week. “And every part he brings on the sector, it has been an added bonus of him being him, and the way he navigates the clubhouse. It actually comes right down to him being an amazing teammate. He actually needs one of the best out of everybody round him. He needs to assist. He is there to assist. He is not overbearing. As I am speaking now, he is dapping up children and stuff. He has such a giant coronary heart. He cares a lot. And he is such a fierce competitor. He actually needs to win each night time. He is about profitable.”
(Picture by Wealthy Graessle/Icon Sportswire through Getty Photos)
Group service is one other space the place Alonso has at all times been a frontrunner, and he and his spouse, Haley, haven’t wasted any time giving again to Baltimore.
Final month, the Alonso’s donated $10,000 by means of the Alonso Basis to the Baltimore Animal Rescue and Care Shelter, a neighborhood shelter not removed from Camden Yards. They’ve rescued two canines, and so they love animals, so Alonso described the choice to donate as “a fast, simple factor.” And after changing into mother and father final September, welcoming their son, Teddy, into the world, the Alonso’s have shifted their efforts to serving to households and moms. Understanding all that it takes to boost a toddler, they’ve made a couple of donations to a neighborhood Baltimore diaper financial institution.
“Diapers aren’t low cost,” Alonso stated. “So we simply wished to sort of assist out that means, too. We would like to have the ability to do extra, however we’ve simply been so busy. Because the season begins to sort of unfold, and we spend extra time, we’ll have a greater plan of methods to assist out extra.”
Paying it ahead, certainly.
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