If you noticed that Kyle Bradish pitched three innings for the Baltimore Orioles this afternoon against Atlanta, you get a prize! Figuratively, that is. Point being, he pitched one additional inning than he did the first time out. Bradish’s line: 3.0 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 0 BB, 5 K.
Bradish sent Atlanta down 1-2-3 in the first, striking out the side. However he allowed two hits in the second, and an RBI-single by Tromp (former Oriole). Atlanta would proceed to put one more on the board in the second inning at Ed Smith Stadium on a subsequent RBI-so glue by English.
The issue in that inning seemed to be similar with what we saw with this team all season in 2025 (and previously). There wasn’t one hard-hit ball in that inning. The run-scoring hits were both flares, with English’s being just out of the reach of Pete Alonso at first base.
I chronicled this a lot last year – and before. It seemed to happen a decent amount. My personal opinion was that the Orioles played their outfield too deep, presumably for analytics reasons. Neither of those plays were affected by that element. However needless to say, Atlanta plated two runs in semi-cheap fashion – without hitting the ball hard.
Adley Rutschman had a great day at the plate. He made solid contact in the last of the second and stroked a double to center. He would later score on a sac fly-RBI by Coby Mayo (following a single by Ryan Mountcastle). Rutschman would come back up in the fourth and smack a solo homer to tie the game at two. Solid contact, both times.
The Orioles brought Yennier Cano into the game for the sixth. Following a base hit and the runner being sacrificed to second, Cano was called for a balk, sending the runner to third. Like most pitchers being called for a balk, Cano seemed unclear as to what he had done wrong. Replays were inconclusive – which again is often a staple of balk calls.
One way or the other that left the runner at third base with less than two outs. Tromp would come back to bat, and his RBI-groundout gave Atlanta their lead back at 3-2. Atlanta would cement their victory in today’s game with back-to-back-to-back home runs in the eighth inning. Not exactly how you want to finish the game, but it’s fair to point out that all three homers were on pitches up in the zone. As they say, if it’s high let it fly.
Atlanta would tack on an additional run on Lowdise’s RBI-double in the ninth. But speaking of if it’s high let it fly, the Birds did just that also. Vance Honeycutt smacked a two-run home run in the ninth to cut the lead to 7-4. Sam Huff came to the plate in the immediate aftermath and smacked a solo shot of his own, giving the O’s back-to-back homers. They fell on this day to Atlanta however, 7-5.
The takeaway today should be Bradish and Rutschman. Bradish may have surrendered two runs, but as I said they came off of softly hit balls – including the guys who came around to score. There’s nothing you can do about that. You can’t plan for it and you can’t really defend against it. At least in the infield.
Other than that, Bradish was strong. Rutschman had two solid contact at-bats. One was a double (and he later came around to score) and the other a home run. If you’re looking for bright spots, those are two big ones.
Manager Craig Albernaz told the media before the game that he expects Samuel Basallo to return to the lineup tomorrow in Ft. Myers against Boston. Basallo of course was injured in Thursday’s game. The Orioles took a wait and see approach, but luckily the worst seems to have been averted.
Tomorrow the Orioles head to Jet Blue Park in Ft. Myers to take on the Boston Red Sox. Chris Bassitt makes his spring debut and gets the start for the Birds, and he’ll be opposed by Boston’s Ranger Suarez. Game time is set for just after 1 PM.