O's City Connects 2.0 a nod to Camden Yards' charms

2:01 PM UTC

BALTIMORE -- Oriole Park at Camden Yards has been one of MLB’s most gorgeous ballparks since first opening its gates on April 6, 1992. It looks just as great now as it did then, especially after the extensive upgrades and renovations it underwent this past winter.

So, it only made sense for the Orioles to incorporate their home ballpark -- “The Ballpark That Forever Changed Baseball,” as they call it due to its uniqueness and charm -- into the team’s second iteration of Nike’s City Connect uniforms.

On Thursday, the O’s unveiled their new City Connect unis, which tie in multiple features of Camden Yards, including a color scheme of orange, dark green and cream.

Here’s a breakdown of everything incorporated into Baltimore’s newest uniform, which will be worn for the first time during Friday’s 7:05 p.m. ET series opener vs. the Giants at home.

The name
Across the center of the jersey is “BMORE,” as the Orioles wanted to rep every neighborhood of Charm City with this shorthanded name for Baltimore. An ornithologically correct Oriole bird is perched atop the “R,” marking the return of this logo to a uniform set.

The home run patch
One of Camden Yards’ most unique features is Eutaw Street, as fans walk up and down the street that runs parallel to the iconic warehouse before, during and after games. Any player who hits a home run there gets a brass plaque, which is marked with his name, his team and the distance and date of the homer, and it’s happened 134 times.

The new City Connect jersey has a home run patch on one sleeve, inspired by the Eutaw plaques. In addition to “Baltimore Orioles,” the patch reads “From The Stoop to The Yard,” as these uniforms are honoring the spirit of the city’s beloved stoops on houses. And the distance is “410,” of course, tying in the area code of many Maryland phone numbers.

The T. Rowe Price patch
Baltimore-based company T. Rowe Price has had a patch on the Orioles’ jerseys since 2024. The new City Connect ones will have the sponsor, but the company and the club teamed up to reimagine T. Rowe Price’s blue and white logo to feature black and orange (O’s colors) and green (the color of the Camden Yards seats).

The trim
Not only is the trim of the uniforms orange for the Orioles, but it draws inspiration from the brickwork of the iconic warehouse, incorporating that pattern into the concept.

Jocktag
This area of the jersey features the historic, 19th-century clock that has sat atop the Camden Yards center-field scoreboard since the ballpark’s opening. The clock underwent upgrades this past offseason and was reinstalled prior to Opening Day 2026.

The clock in this logo reads “CHARM CITY” and “BAL” across the 12 traditionally numbered spots.

The Camden “B”
The orange “B” logo featured on the hats, the helmets and the trim of the jerseys is inspired by the Baltimore Baseball Club of the 1890s. It’s a symbol of the city’s rich baseball history, and the mark was built into the green end seats in the ballpark when it first opened.