Most of the decisive blows in this evening’s Baltimore Orioles’ loss to Chicago came after starter Dean Kremer had departed. Yet, he still got the loss. Kremer’s line: 5.0 IP, 6 H, 4 R, 1 BB, 4 K.
Crow-Armstrong smacked a solo home run in the top of the third, giving Chicago a 1-0 lead. The O’s would tie the game in the bottom of the inning when Gunnar Henderson grounded into a double-play with runners at the corners, tying the ballgame at one.
Pete Alonso smacked a two-run home run in the fourth which gave the O’s a 3-1 lead. Yet that was the only thing the O’s were able to do that inning. They had additional runners on, but couldn’t convert.
However Chicago could. Once we went to the fifth, that is. The first two pitches of the inning, one by Conforto and the second by Kelly, were hit out of the ballpark. Consider that – THE FIRST TWO PITCHERS. Meaning that in the snap of a finger, the game was tied. That fast. To make matters worse, Crow-Armstrong smacked a third solo homer later on the inning, and Chicago led 4-3.
The most intimating part of the game was that inning. The beginning of that inning, that is. Whomever is calling pitches (from the dugout or above) should be advised that those were back-to-back home runs ON THE FIRST PITCH. Meaning two pitches, and two home runs. To lead off an inning.
Conforto, Kelly, and others are either guessing right, OR they know what’s coming. Has the current regime not seen or understood that yet? Do they not see how incriminating it is to throw two pitches to lead off an inning and have two solo home runs?
Solo home run aren’t supposed to beat you. But when you have multiple solo home runs in a game (heck, in an INNING), that adds up. I would severely caution the current regime going forward, that someone COULD be tipping pitches. Notice I didn’t say stealing signs. I said tipping pitches. That fourth inning was perhaps the most incriminating part of the game.
I’ve insinuated since early last year that people were tipping pitches. Notice, I’m not suggesting that signs are being stolen. I’m saying that the Orioles are somehow tipping pitches. Someone’s doing something which indicates what’s coming, AND/OR where it will be. The alternative is that opponents are getting lucky. Argue amongst yourselves which is more likely, and/or which is more incriminating.
Chicago put up five runs in the seventh. They loaded the bases early in the inning and scored on Crow-Armstrong’s sac fly-RBI. Grant Wolfram uncorked a wild pitch netting another, and Suzuki’s three-run home run extended the Chicago lead to 9-3. For the record, the slider that Suzuki hit out of the ballpark was on a two-strike count. How many two-strike and/or two-out rallies have we seen against the O’s this year?
The O’s did battle back. Or they attempted to, at least. Tyler O’Neill smacked two solo homers – one in the seventh and one in the eighth. Coby Mayo would also smack a two-run home run in the eighth, and Ward’s RBI-single combined to cut the lead to 9-7. The O’s went quietly in the ninth, and have now dropped the first two games of this series.
Keep in mind that the margin of victory for Chicago was two runs. Think back to those two solo homers to begin the fifth inning. Two pitches, two home runs. And I maintain that the two hitters (Conforto and Kelly) either got lucky or knew what was coming. Assuming it’s the latter, that’s incriminating. To whomever is truly guiding this franchise.
If pitches are being tipped, it goes without saying that it’s unintentional. However the pitch selection (or more realistically how the pitches are being guarded) needs to change. Granted, some might argue that the late runs were in garbage time. But the margin of victory was still two no matter how you market it. Something needs to change.
The series concludes tomorrow night at Camden Yards. Trevor Rogers gets the start for the O’s, and he’ll be opposed by Chicago’s David Peterson (a southpaw). Game time is set for just after 6:30 PM.
