Krivda began his professional career with the
Bluefield Orioles of
Bluefield, West Virginia and went 7–1 with a 1.88 ERA. He was fifth in the
Appalachian League in ERA and two wins shy of the lead. He saved one game, allowed only 48 hits in 67 innings and fanned 79. In 1992, Krivda emerged as a strong prospect. He went 12–5 with a 3.03 ERA for the
Kane County Cougars, striking out a batter per inning, then was 5–1 with a 2.98 ERA in 9 starts after being promoted to the
Frederick Keys. He continued to whiff over a batter per inning. His 188 strikeouts and 17 wins led the Orioles minor leaguers. Krivda continued his fast rise through the minors in 1993. He was 7–5 with a 3.08 ERA for the
Bowie Baysox and 3–0 with a 1.89 ERA in 5 starts for the
Rochester Red Wings. He walked 16 in 33 innings with Rochester but allowed only 20 hits. He had made it to AAA and done well there in just his second full season in the minor leagues. He was second in the
Eastern League in ERA, trailing only
Denny Harriger and beating out top prospects
Brien Taylor and
Frank Rodriguez. Krivda got the start for the American League affiliate team for the
Double-A All-Star Game and allowed two runs in two innings in a 12–7 loss.
Baseball America rated Krivda as having the best breaking ball in the EL. ==1994–1997: Rochester and Baltimore rotation==