It wasn’t always a guarantee that Brandon Young was going to make it deep into tonight’s game for the Baltimore Orioles in Cincinnati. Young had a rough second inning, needless to say. But to Craig Albernaz’s credit, he stuck with the young right hander. And it paid off. Young’s line: 5.0 IP, 8 H, 4 R, 3 BB, 5 K.
I’ve said many times that pitchers will have ten good starts, ten bad, and ten in between. That last category is where the success or failure of your season lies. Tonight Brandon Young was able to work through some choppy waters and stuck around enough to qualify for the win.
In short, the story of this game is pitchers’ vulnerabilities being taken advantage of. The O’s did it early against Cincinnati’s Greene, who was making his first start of the season. Gunnar Henderson led the game off with a walk, and Pete Alonso walked later in the inning with two outs. Samuel Basallo then smacked his second home run in as many games, this one of the three-run variety. And the Birds led, 3-0.
Cincinnati would get one back in the bottom of the inning on an RBI-single by Suarez. However the Cincinnati rally would continue in the second. Following a leadoff single, Trevino’s RBI-double would cut the lead to 3-2. Friedl’s RBI-triple would tie the game at three, and Cincinnati would take the lead at 4-3 on De La Cruz’s RBI-single.
The startling thing was the O’s surrendering the lead in one fatal swoop after taking it. We’ve seen that far too often this year, and in many cases the O’s couldn’t come back. Tonight wasn’t one of those times.
The turning point in the game overall was a fourth inning at-bat by Jackson Holliday, The O’s had two on with nobody out, and Holliday was attempting to lay down a sacrifice bunt – which is not something Holliday usually does. While he struggled to get the bunt down, the pitcher Greene uncorked a wild pitch – allowing both runners to scoot into scoring position. That saved the Orioles an out, and it still got the job done.
Holliday would end up walking, and Blaze Alexander’s subsequent two-RBI single gave the O’s the lead back at 5-4. Adley Rutschman tacked on a two-RBI double, and Pete Alonso an RBI-single. That expanded the Orioles’ lead to 8-4.
The impressive part is that the Orioles came back. And they did it with a big inning, something which has evaded them a lot of the year. And as I’ve said often this season, things happen when you get guys on base. Jackson Holliday isn’t a great bunter. To Craig Alberbaz’s credit, he told Holliday to get a bunt down so as to have the O’s stay out of a double-play. But things can happen with guys on base – in this case a wild pitch. And that began the rally.
Cincinnati would tack one on in the seventh on an infield RBI-single by Suarez. End of the day this is a series with two teams in similar spots. However the Orioles showed that they were the better team. Thus far at least. This was a good team win, and hopefully one on which they can build.
With the 8-5 win, the Orioles have won the series in Cincinnati. Tomorrow is yet another shot at winning four in a row. It would also be a series sweep if the O’s can win. Incidentally this game couldn’t have been won without Colton Cowser making a diving catch with runners on base in the ninth, saving at least one run.
It was also announced during the game that catcher Adley Rutschman was selected to his third All-Star game, representing the Orioles. A well-deserved honor, and one that manager Craig Albernaz announced to the team prior to the game starting. Rutschman will be at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia on the AL All-Star team on July 14th.
The series concludes tomorrow afternoon at Great American Ballpark. Kyle Bradish gets the start for the Orioles, and he’ll be opposed by Cincinnati’s Nick Lodollo. Game time is set for just after 1 PM.
