BALTIMORE -- The Baltimore Orioles' second straight 100-loss season featured 11 double-digit defeats, 14 successive losses against the New York Yankees and not a single series sweep.

No one ever promised the first year of this massive rebuilding project was going to be pretty.

"We're still losing games, way more than we want to," rookie general manager Mike Elias said. "This is not fun. It's not easy to crawl out of."

Fielding a team with very little star power and a conservative salary structure, Baltimore went 54-108 -- an improvement over last year's 47-115 disaster but nevertheless the second-worst record in the majors behind the Detroit Tigers.

Elias fired 25 members of the front office and scouting staff and promised new hires in an effort to match up with the AL East contenders. Now he enters his first full offseason with Baltimore confident that the organization has taken a significant step toward becoming the latest edition of the worst-to-first Houston Astros, the franchise from which he came.

"It was a very positive year. A lot was accomplished across the organization," Elias insisted. "We had no real international scouting function, a minimalist analytics group. All of that's changed. We've got our program going internationally. We're building towards a bigger analytics staff. The farm system's taking a huge jump this year."

Whether that translates to increased success in 2020 and beyond remains uncertain.

Some other things to know about the Orioles as they enter an important offseason:

ARMS RACE

Losing Opening Day starter Alex Cobb to injury early in the season weakened an already thin rotation and put a strain on an inadequate bullpen.

"Everybody knows that to be competitive in this league, in this division, you have to have pitching and you have to have guys that are able to throw strikes," first-year manager Brandon Hyde said. "You have to have bullpen guys be able to come in and shut the door down, hold leads and keep you in the game. I feel at some point we will get to that."

The first order of business is finding a few up-and-coming pitchers capable of keeping the ball in the park. Baltimore yielded a major-league-record 305 home runs this season.

FUTURE STARS

The Orioles hope to soon tap into their minor league system to supplement an offense that got unexpected help this season from Hanser Alberto (.305 batting average), Anthony Santander (20 homers, 59 RBIs in 93 games), Renato Nunez (31 HRs, 90 RBIs) and September call-up Austin Hays, who hit .309 and was solid in the outfield.

"Going into this year, what we wanted to see was some guys step up and establish themselves as major league players and establish themselves as guys we can look forward to in a couple years being impact players on a good major league club," Hyde said. "That's happened."

In Baltimore's minor league system, top overall draft pick Adley Rutschman is just getting started, and International League player of the year Ryan Mountcastle is only 22.

SAGGING ATTENDANCE

Orioles fans have not embraced the rebuild. Attendance at Camden Yards was 1,307,807, a drop of 256,385 from 2018 and the lowest in a full season since 1978, when the team played at Memorial Stadium.

"The people coming out here, they love this team. The people in this city love this team," Elias said. "They know that this needs to be done. I'm confident that they're going to come back, and they're going to come back in a big way."

MANCINI A BUDDING STAR

Trey Mancini had a banner year, batting .291 with 35 homers and 97 RBIs as the face of the franchise.

"I'm looking forward to seeing him on a winning club," Hyde said.

DAVIS DILEMMA

Chris Davis batted .179 and hit only 12 home runs in the fourth season of a seven-year, $161 million contract.

Cutting him loose does not seem to be an option yet, not with all that guaranteed money still coming to the fading two-time major league home run champ.

"He's got a lot left on his contract, that's the reality," Elias said. "I don't take that lightly. So we're going to keep working with him."