The Baltimore Orioles extended a small lifeline to a beleaguered opponent this afternoon. Boston of course dismissed almost their entire coaching staff yesterday. Kyle Bradish walked a tightrope through most of his outing, which eventually came to an end. Bradish’s line: 5.0 IP, 4 H, 3 R, 4 BB, 3 K.
I say he walked a tightrope because Bradish did allow runners on base. Taylor Ward threw a runner out at third in the second inning after a fly out, resulting in a double-play. In other situations Bradish was able to reach back and get a strikeout or fly out.
Similar to yesterday, Boston ran all over the Orioles today. As the game wore on, anytime someone got on base, he’d steal second on Samuel Basallo. That’s a huge problem going forward. The book on the Orioles is becoming that their catchers can’t hold runners.
Durbin stole second in the fifth after getting on base with an infield single. He smacked a grounder to Gunnar Henderson, who dove to field it but fumbled over his feet. Durbin would score on Monasterio’s RBI-single giving Boston a 1-0 lead.
Later in the inning Duran would ground into a force out at second. It should have been a double-play; but Gunnar Henderson couldn’t turn it in time. Had he shoveled it to second instead of taking it to the bag himself would he have turned two? Tough to say. But he couldn’t turn two, and Contreras’ subsequent two-run home run extended the lead to 3-0.
The O’s did make an attempt to get back into the game. Samuel Basallo smacked a solo home run in the fifth. However with a runner on first in the sixth Rafaela hit one all the way to the wall, and Dylan Beavers seemed to fumble it. That scored a fourth run, and Mayer’s RBI-single extended it to 5-1.
Gunnar Henderson would put the O’s back on the board again twice. He uncorked a solo home run in the sixth, and an RBI-single in the eighth inning. But the little things and details in the game added up. Whether it was an unturned double-play or too many stolen bases on Basallo, little things like that did the O’s in this afternoon.
And it’s not a game the Orioles should have lost. Boston was listless on the heels of their manager and his coaching by staff being canned. They were ripe for the picking. And the Birds couldn’t muster much. End of the day, you move on and improve.
