It’s uncanny how many times the Baltimore Orioles have fallen the past couple of years at the hands of soft contact. We saw it again tonight in Chris Bassitt’s maiden start in Baltimore, against Texas. Bassitt’s line: 4.1 IP, 6 H, 4 R, 4 BB, 3 K.
Bassitt struggled with his control, uncharacteristically putting runners on base. Even when he recorded outs, he went deep into counts and ticked his pitch count up. Ironically the first run of the game came on the heels of a Bassitt error. Burger hit a comebacker in the first inning with a runner on third, but Bassitt’s throw home came in hot. The error gave Texas a 1-0 lead.
And that right there illustrates this game – and my point. Opponents getting aboard on little flairs barely getting over the infielders’ heads. And here on a comebacker the Oriole pitcher is trying to gun the runner out at home, and the throw is so hard it’s errant.
But the Orioles got on the board in the first as well, albeit by more traditional ways. Gunnar Henderson’s solo homer tied the game at one. However Bassitt struggled with his control, as I said above. With two on in the second Nimmo’s RBI-single gave Texas the lead back at 2-1. However an RBI-single by Burger and a sac fly-RBI by Pederson later in the inning ran the score to 4-1.
Gunnar Henderson’s RBI-single in the fifth cut the lead to 4-2. However that was all the Birds could muster. Texas would tack on an insurance run in the ninth on Smith’s RBI-single. That came on the heels of an infield hit that put a runner in scoring position.
It was that sort of game for the O’s. Whether it was soft contact or infield hits, Texas found ways to get on base. And they took advantage. This while the Orioles struggled against Texas starter Jack Leiter, who was outstanding. He’s also the son of former big league pitcher Al Leiter. And he looked a lot like his old man tonight.
The series continues tomorrow night at Camden Yards. Zach Eflin gets the start for the O’s, and Texas is yet to announce a starter. Game time is set for just after 6:30 PM.
