Trevor Rogers didn’t pitch poorly for the Baltimore Orioles this afternoon. But he had just enough things go awry to hurt the O’s. Some within the bounds of his control, and some outside of it. Rogers’ line: 6.0 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 2 BB, 4 K.
San Diego’s Taylor led off the second inning with a bunt – which seemed fairly unorthodox. However the ball went back to Rogers, with Pete Alonso also making a play on the ball. Which meant that Jeremiah Jackson probably should have covered the bag. He didn’t, and Taylor was safe.
He would later score on another play involving Jackson at second. Duran grounded the ball to second, but it hit the bag and went into center field. My question is why did Jackson allow the ball to hit the bag instead of fielding it before it got there? Nevertheless, it went as an RBI-double. Tatis would tack on an RBI-single before the inning ended and the O’s trailed 2-0.
Jackson would quasi-redeem himself in the last of the fifth with a solo homer. However Duran would come on again in the seventh with one on. This following a walk – and nothing good happens after a walk. Duran smacked a two-run homer, breaking the game wide open.
The Birds would get one back in the bottom of the inning on Gunnar Henderson’s RBI-single. However Henderson and Jackson Holliday would combine to commit three errors in the top of the ninth. Tatis appeared to hit into a double-play when he lined out to Blaze Alexander in right field to end the inning. But…
…San Diego challenged the tag at the plate. And the umpire ruled that Wagner slide in safe by a fingernail before the tag at home plate. The O’s went 1-2-3 in the ninth, dropping the series. And the homestead before going out west.
Oriole pitchers, including Rogers (who pitched well) aimed for the fringes of the plate all day. Many of them missed. That combined with the bizzare stretch in the second inning surrounding Jeremiah Jackson…in various ways, this game was lost on the fringes.
Here’s another intangible point. San Diego indubitably seemed to use the theatrics in yesterday’s game (surrounding the hit batsmen) as fodder going into today. And you have to wonder if part of the reason Craig Stanmen fought as hard as he did with the umpiring crew was to fire up his team. Needless to say, the result today would indicate that it did.
Instead, Craig Albernaz seemed to try to diffuse the situation in his postgame comments – this last night. The professional term would be that he took the high road. Which in general is a virtuous thing both in life and in baseball. But is it possible that he inadvertently allowed the wind to be taken out of his team’s sails, and put into the sails of an opponent?
