Baltimore Orioles: The milk has been delivered

In game one of a twin bill, Brandon Young was outstanding for the Baltimore Orioles. In short, he gave up two unearned runs – which were very unearned, if you will. He left the game in the top of the seventh to a standing ovation. Young’s line: 6.2 IP, 5 H, 2 runs (0 earned), 2 BB, 4 K.

This is exactly the sort of start that the Orioles want out of their starters. With only four strikeouts, the Detroit hitters were putting the ball in play. And they were largely recording outs. Until fate stepped in.

With one on in the fourth, Young induced Dingler to smack a soft liner to Pete Alonso at first base. With a runner on first base, Alonso allowed the ball to fall in front of him – which was a smart play. Because why not try and record a double-play.

This is a different game if not for the fact that when the ball bounced, it took a strange bounce, directly past Alonso. When he finally got to the ball, he tried to throw the lead runner out at second, but one-hopped the throw. It went as a fielder’s choice and an E4.

Again, smart play by Alonso. Smart to let the ball fall, that is. Many people will criticize that, however that’s based on the result. Others will say that despite the opportunity to turn two, he should have taken the sure out because as we saw anything can happen. But you have to manage to the rule, not an anomaly; the ball bouncing like it did is an anomaly.

However the fact is that Vierling’s subsequent run-scoring single gave Detroit a 1-0 lead. Keith would tack on a sacrifice fly later in the inning, and the O’s trailed 2-0. The Pete Alonso play at first may have been an anomaly, but it also cost the Orioles two runs.

Gunnar Henderson would get the O’s on the board in the sixth with a solo home run. Brandon Young was finally pulled in the top of the seventh with well over 100 pitches under his belt. That’s a career high. And needless to say, he deserved the win.

Keegan Akin retired the side on one pitch to finish the seventh, but then walked the leadoff man in the eighth. That runner of course came around to score on an RBI-single. The O’s pulled to within 3-2 on an RBI-single by Taylor Ward in their half of the frame. And we went to the ninth.

While it had been a slog of a game to that point and Oriole bats had been far from in shape, the home team bats last. Jackson Holiday walked, and immediately stole second base – without a throw no less. Following another walk to Leody Taveras plus another out, Craig Alberbaz once again put his runners in motion. And this time BOTH of them advanced without a throw. Bringing Colton Cowser to the plate with the tying and winning runs in scoring position.

Cowser’s struggled across the board this year to this point. Does that mean he couldn’t do some damage with this at-bat? Of course not. And the game hinged on something happening on his end.

And it did. Cowser didn’t just hit a walk off three-run homer. He hit it 457 feet into oblivion. It was almost a moment worthy of The Natural, with Robert Redford. It’s a moment that won the series for the Birds, and set them up to potentially sweep the series tonight.

The series concludes this evening in the nightcap of the twin bill at Camden Yards. Trevor Rogers gets the start for the Orioles, and he’ll be opposed by Detroit’s Troy Melton. Game time is set for just after 6 PM.

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