Baltimore Orioles: Big innings bite you

It’s tough being the opposition in someone else’s Opening Day, as the Baltimore Orioles were today in Pittsburgh. Kyle Bradish had an easy first inning, and a not-so-easy second inning. And that made all the difference. Bradish’s line: 4.0 IP, 6 H, 4 R, 3 BB, 6 K.

Following a walk to lead off the second, Bradish had Pittsburgh’s Griffin in a deep two-strike count. Griffin of course is the top prospect in baseball, and was making his big league debut. And with a lot of fanfare at that. He took full advantage.

He hit a Bradish pitch that was off the plate, and ended up with an RBI-double. That was followed by subsequent RBI-singles and a double, and the O’s trailed, 4-0. Now to be fair, Bradish corrected himself. But you can’t give up big innings in games.

However Oriole bats did show some life. Needless to say, the Birds didn’t exactly go quietly. Gunnar Henderson and Adley Rutschman smacked RBI-doubles in the fifth to cut the lead in half. However something interesting happened in the bottom of the inning…

…Pittsburgh put two on with one out. Dietrich Enns uncorked a wild pitch, but only the lead runner advanced – which is a massive base running mistake. With a ground ball double-play ending the inning, Enns induced a pop fly to O’Hearn, and that sac fly-RBI extended the lead to 5-2.

Did O’Hearn, a former Oriole, have an idea of how his old team would pitch him in that moment? Possible. Also not possible. But interesting that a mistake turned into a good thing for the team which made it.

Taylor Ward would get the Birds back to within two with an RBI-double in the seventh. Gunnar Henderson was down to his and the team’s final strike in the ninth, before he uncorked a solo home run. That only narrowed the Pittsburgh victory to one run, at 5-4.

The series continues tomorrow at PNC Park. Shane Baz gets the start for the O’s, and he’ll be opposed by Pittsburgh’s Carmen Mlodzinski. Game time is set for just after 4 PM,

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