The Baltimore Orioles and starter Grayson Rodriguez put Houston on notice this evening. On notice that despite the fact that Houston won the game, the Orioles could take them to the brink. And that it’s the O’s who have the AL’s best record – for now. Rodriguez, for his part, pitched to a quality start. Rodriguez’s line: 6.0 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 2 BB, 4 K.
The O’s got at it early and often. Ryan Mountcastle’s two-run homer in the last of the first gave the Birds a 2-0 lead. James McCann’s fielder’s choice-RBI in the second extended the lead to 3-0. McCann would later score on Adley Rutschman’s two-run homer.
Houston would put two across in the third on an RBI-single and a sac fly-RBI. However the good is that Rodriguez limited the damage. Which is what you want out of your starter. He pitched to the scoreboard, which at the beginning of the inning said 5-0. He bent but didn’t break.
McCann would add a sac fly-RBI in the fourth, extending the lead to 6-2. Houston would inch closer in the eighth with Peña’s RBI-single. However it wasn’t until the ninth that they really made their move. Ironically however, it may have been a base running error of their own which indirectly helped Houston win.
With two on and one out, Alvarez sent a deep shot to center. Jorge Mateo had earlier made a an amazing catch on a similar ball, but couldn’t come up with this one. However the runners held up thinking the ball was going to be caught. Had the lead runner been off on contact, he would have scored. And that’s probably what should have happened.
Mistake on Houston’s part, right? Especially with Felix Bautista on to close the game. Yeah, about that…Tucker’s subsequent grand slam gave Houston a 7-6 lead. And by extension, a 7-6 win.
No guarantees in life; so who knows what would have happened? But the fact is that maybe they pitch to Tucker differently with one run in or something along those lines. Furthermore the first runner was on as a result of a walk – and nothing good happens after a walk. In this case, it was a broken bat single, then a deep shot to Mateo in center. Then a grand slam.
Manager Brandon Hyde was ejected in the sixth inning arguing a safe call at second base. Replays seemed to indicate that he had an argument. He said after the game that he didn’t feel the ejection was warranted given that the umpire had his back turned when he was thrown out, and he took a long time to make a call as it was.
The series continues tomorrow at Camden Yards. Jack Flaherty gets the start for the O’s, and he’ll be opposed by Houston’s Cristian Javier. Game time is set for just after 7 PM.
