Kyle Bradish was looking to build off of his previous start in Anaheim this afternoon for the Baltimore Orioles in the series finale against Washington. Bradish attacked the strike zone early. However as his outing went on he began to get too precise on his spots. Which is shocking because that modus operandi hasn’t worked for Oriole pitchers all year. Bradish’s line: 4.0 IP, 1 H, 4 R (3 earned), 5 BB, 2 K.
Bradish was effective early in the game. In fact, on top of that the Orioles had a lead. Pete Alonso smacked a two-run home run in the first inning. This on the heels of a base bit by Adley Rutschman, who returned from the concussion IL this afternoon.
However as we’ve seen all year, the O’s get out to an early lead only to sort of stop there. Bradish started getting too cute in the third, And it seemed to happen as usual – with two outs. It’s almost as if Bradish stopped trusting his stuff.
He issued two walks on pitches on the fringes. Garcia then smacked a two-RBI double that split the defenders and went all the way to the wall. This on a high slider – which shouldn’t have gone that far. When you try too hard to hit such a fine spot, you sometimes miss. And that can be the result.
To make matters worse, Bradish in a way did seem to right himself. Sort of. He induced the next hitter, Mead, to ground to third. A routine play that would have been the final out of the inning. However Coby Mayo’s throw took a short hop in front of Samuel Basallo, who was making his first start at first base today. The ball got by Basallo, allowing the run to score and giving Washington a 3-2 lead.
On a side note, that’s an error on Coby Mayo. With Rutschman back in the lineup, Craig Alberbaz wanted to keep Basallo in the lineup. Coby Mayo has to know that he has a novice at first. Maybe put a little extra on the throws today.
Bradish continued to be too fine, however. As I said, it appeared he wasn’t trusting his fastball. The misses weren’t egregious, but the pitches were out of the zone. Hence the five walks. It’s a valuable lesson in a way; if you try to be too perfect you’ll be anything but.
Bradish was lifted after a walk in the fifth. The problem of course was that Garcia smacked a two-run home run extending the lead to 5-2. Nothing good ever happens after a walk. On top of that, Garcia would send a solo shot over the wall in the seventh (umpire reviewed).
But the O’s also battled back in the seventh as well. Jackson Holliday’s two-run homer cut the lead to 6-4. However they couldn’t get any closer, falling 6-4. End of the day, you have to pick yourself up and go on. That’s how baseball works. Never allow yourself to reach rock bottom.
The Mayo error stands out. So do the walks. And the pitch selection thus by extension.
The O’s now open a three-game set with the ChiSox tomorrow at Camden Yards. Shane Baz gets the start for the O’s, and he’ll be opposed by Chicago’s Sean Burke. Game time is set for just after 6:30 PM.
