In a way, you have to credit Baltimore Orioles’ starter Al Suarez. He had a very rough first inning, which in effect ended up being the game. But he did hang in there enough to go five innings, sparing the bullpen – a little bit, at least. Suarez’s line: 5.0 IP, 10 H, 5 R, 3 BB, 3 K.
Houston led 1-0 after the first pitch in the last of the first after Altuve cranked a solo homer. He ambushed the first pitch of the game. And that was a motif for Houston hitters all day; swing early and often. And it worked – all day. All weekend, actually.
Diaz would add an RBI-single later in the inning, Pena and RBI-double, and Dubon an additional RBI-single. All of those runners got on base and got in as a result of getting at it early in the at-bat. After one, the Birds trailed 4-0.
Suarez also elevated many of his pitches. He was throwing strikes – too many of them, if anything. But they were elevated in the strike zone. When you have a team set on hitting everything you throw out there, that’s a deadly combination.
Diaz would tack on a sac fly-RBI in the fifth, and the O’s finally got on the board in the sixth with a solo home run by Jordan Westburg. However Houston would get their margin of victory back in the bottom of the inning on an RBI-double by Pena. Diaz would tack on a sac fly-RBI in the eighth. For what it’s worth, that’s a run that probably didn’t need to be scored, however Houston opted to manufacture a run up five plus in the later innings,
The Orioles have performed valiantly this month, with the schedule being what it is. Their lone off day was this past Monday, and they don’t have another one until next Monday. This series should show them more than ever that they need to acquire pitching at the deadline. If not before.
Houston started this season in a rough manner. But they’ve been getting hot of late, and are working their way into the playoff race. There are lots of teams out there such as that, who are hovering around, and potentially trying to decide if they should buy or sell.
In short, let’s say a team like Houston (or Boston, or even Tampa) decides they’re going to go for it and buy. Does that put them automatically in a stronger position than the Birds? NO. But as we saw last year, all it takes is to get hot at the right time – which the Texas Rangers did. If another team makes the right moves, they could easily ambush the Orioles in October – similar to what Houston did this weekend.
And I have news for Orioles fans…that means they’ll have to part with prospects. You can’t have it both ways. You can’t keep everyone all while trading for quality players. Something has to give, and it all but has to be on the side of trading for pitching. Perhaps multiple arms. Keep in mind that two starters (John Means and Kyle Bradish) have undergone Tommy John’s this month.
You can’t be reactionary either. None of this means you need to make trades this week. But why wait until the deadline? It’s easy enough to say that the Orioles have more to offer than other teams, because they do. But do you really want to let things go straight down to the deadline and let things fall where they might?
The O’s now head home to open up a three-game set with Cleveland. Cade Povich gets the start for the O’s, and he’ll be opposed by Cleveland’s Tanner Bibee. Game time is set for just after 6:30 PM.
