With last night’s start for the Baltimore Orioles, Trey Gibson has the distinction of starting games in his first year both at Yankee Stadium and Dodger Stadium. Last night he wasn’t great. Beginning and ending with the fact that the game plan seemed to be to stay out of the strike zone overall unless absolutely necessary. But he did pitch out of a major jam, which is telling. Gibson’s line: 5.0 IP, 7 H, 3 R, 4 BB, 8 K.
Gibson seemed almost to have been told to not throw the ball in the strike zone. Granted, Los Angeles is probably the best team in the league. But you can’t surrender base runner after base runner and think that by putting the ball in play you’re going to record outs. With two on in the first inning Gibson felt compelled to throw a fastball to Muncy, who jumped on it for a two-RBI double.
Backing up just a bit, the Orioles also seemingly cause more headaches for themselves trying to game the system. Beginning with Taylor Ward trying to stretch a single into a double on the first at-bat of the game, and being thrown out at second. Ward led off the ballgame with a solid base hit which was quickly cut off. Odds are that made him think he could get to second, but was thrown out. That killed a rally before it started.
One inning later with one out and a runner on first, Pages lined an RBI-double to Jeremiah Jackson in left. First off, the pitch was out of the strike zone; when teams anticipate hittable pitches out of the zone, they know where to look. However that run (while ruled an RBI) came because Jackson slightly slipped and bobbled the ball, albeit briefly. It was a close play at the plate which was confirmed on review.
Again, you can’t game the system. The Orioles have been ravaged once again by injuries this year, such as Heston Kjerstad and Dylan Beavers. (Not to mention Chris Bassitt, Dean Kremer, et al.) But the answer isn’t playing infielders like Jeremiah Jackson in the outfield. In fact, they’re doing guys like Jackson no favors, as playing out of position makes them look inept as fielders. You have to put people in a position to succeed in anything.
Gibson proceeded to load the bases in the third with nobody out. However at that point for once, things started to work out. Gibson relied on almost exclusively breaking pitches. With the bases loaded, he struck out three hitters to get out of the inning. It’s fair to say that Gibson caused the traffic on the bases. But also fair to say he single-handedly got himself out of the jam.
Oriole bats came alive in the sixth with a two-run home run by Gunnar Henderson. He was followed by Pete Alonso, who smacked a solo homer which tied the game at three. One inning later, Jeremiah Jackson’s two-RBI single put the O’s in the lead at 5-3. A late lead…at Dodger Stadium?!
Part of the reason that Jackson was in the outfield was so his bat could get into the lineup. Whomever sends the lineup in probably sees that two-RBI single as justification. And needless to say, it is good that Jackson pulled that off. But my point remains the same; you can’t think that defensive metrics aren’t going to sneak up on you when guys are out of position in the field.
The Orioles carried that lead into the ninth. Remember, Ryan Helsley gave up a couple of home runs in his last outing against Seattle, but the O’s held onto win. He gave up a solo homer to Betts to cut the lead to 5-4. He also issued two walks in the inning.
With two outs, Rushing smacked a single to Tyler O’Neill in right, allowing the tying run to score. O’Neill all but air mailed the throw to the plate, which arrived up the third base line. Samuel Basallo did what he could to field the ball, but it wasn’t enough to prevent the winning run from scoring, and the O’s dropped a 6-5 game late at Dodger Stadium,
That final play is obviously more memorable given the fact that it ended the game. But the more glaring thing is Jeremiah Jackson’s slight mishap in the outfield in the second inning. That cost the Orioles a run by the slimmest of margins.
Is it fair to suggest that he showed why they needed to get him in the lineup with his go-ahead hit? Sure. But that illustrates the fact that the front office needs to put more of an emphasis on defense. If Jackson’s bat is that valuable, DH him. Make no mistake that an infielder playing in the outfield made a small mistake that cost the Orioles a run early. And the Orioles proceeded to lose a very winnable game by one run.
For the record, there’s not much blame that can be put on Jeremiah Jackson. He’s the guy who was set up to fail in a sense. The Orioles’ front office is trying to outsmart the system. You just can’t do that. When you put an infielder in the outfield, he doesn’t suddenly become a natural outfielder. Was there a hot dog wrapper on the field which caused Jackson to briefly slip, or did he briefly slip because he wasn’t playing his natural position? You can’t game the system.
Incidentally that final play – it’s one that many people think Basallo should have made. Maybe it is. But why did Tyler O’Neill decide to rush a throw home?
The series continues tonight at Dodger Stadium. Trevor Rogers gets the start for the O’s, and he’ll be opposed by Los Angeles’ Yoshinobu Yamamoto. Game time is set for just after 10 PM.
