Kyle Bradish actually pitched better than the numbers indicate today at Yankee Stadium. Not great, but better than the numbers might indicate. He didn’t get much help. Bradish’s line: 4.0 IP, 6 H, 5 R (4 earned), 4 BB, 4 K.
Bradish gave up a solo homer in the second to Bellinger. A walk and a double in the third put two runners in scoring position. Rice struck out for the second out of the inning, however a run would score on a pass ball by Adley Rutschman. After an intentional walk, Bellinger’s RBI-double extended the lead to 3-0.
Granted, Bradish put the runners on base. But a run scoring on a pass ball in the wake of a strikeout doesn’t exactly reflect on him. Needless to say, it’s a team effort. Unless of course you’re hitting solo home runs, which Pete Alonso did in the fourth to cut the lead to 3-1.
Bradish, along with just about every other pitcher on the staff, doesn’t attack the strike zone. Oriole pitchers are trying to live under and outside of the strike zone. Opposing teams know this, which is why they at times look unbeatable against the Orioles. That’s why you see so many wonky plays. The ball goes all over the place. That’s why so many times balls are just outside the reach of fielders, or line drives split defenders.
You can’t win games that way. It could also be why we see so many two-out rallies. Teams know what to look for. They have analytics also. And they can almost predict what’s coming. That should be glaring to the people in the front office who chart out the direction of the organization, especially as it happened again in the last of the fourth when Grisham smacked a two-run home run with two outs to extend the lead to 5-1.
Following a second solo homer by Bellinger in the fifth, the O’s did try to come back in the sixth. Tried. They loaded the bases with nobody out. However Pete Alonso would only plate one with a GIDP. However later in the inning Samuel Basallo would smack a pinch hit RBI-double, cutting the lead to 6-3.
Dylan Beavers walked to lead off the seventh, and would later steal two bases. Taylor Ward would ground out, scoring Beavers. It’s risky to attempt two steals – but Beavers did, he was safe, and he later scored, bringing the O’s to within two at 6-4.
Bellinger was a pest all day. With two on in the home half of the seventh his infield RBI-single extended the lead to 7-4. It ticked off of Jeremiah Jackson’s glove. Valiant effort, but just out of reach. Again, you wonder if the strategy of staying out of the strike zone doesn’t work counteractive to the Orioles’ intentions. All guys have to do is make contact and get the ball in play – and all bets are off.
Later in the inning Chisholm’s RBI-single would extend the lead to 8-4. Tyler O’Neill flubbed the ball slightly in right field. When he played the ball back into second base, Gunnar Henderson seemed to forget there was a runner behind him at third. The sad thing is Bellinger (the runner) didn’t appear to be looking to score. When Henderson didn’t make an attempt to throw home, he broke for the plate and scored easily. Ruled an RBI and a run scored on an error – charged to O’Neill.
The error may have been on O’Neill, but Gunnar Henderson can’t have mental lapses like that. And he wasn’t the only one who did things like that – today, or this season. You have to focus and pay attention. That’s something that shows up in the scorebook as an E9, but it’s an intangible thing which can’t be allowed to happen.
The Orioles need to start attacking the strike zone and clean up the mental lapses – and fast. When you look at the great Oriole rotations of the past, they had power pitchers – like Jim Palmer and Mike Flanagan. As hellbent on analytics at all costs as the current Front Office is, would it shock anyone if their attitude is they’d rather guys fly or ground out to save pitches?
That’s a theory – not an absolute. Strikeouts usually take a lot more pitches. So since efficiency is at a premium, the only explanation for infernally having your pitchers throw pitches outside the zone is you want to get them to put the ball in play early and record an out.
Again, this needs to be figured out quickly. It would also attest for how often we see soft contact. Opposing teams are doing everything they can to just put the ball in play. And the fielders are positioned in spots not anticipating wayward contact. Accounting for the number of softly hit singles, AND two out rallies.
On top of that, the Orioles are calling up pitching prospect Trey Gibson to make tomorrow’s start. A rookie, making his big league debut, against New York, in the Bronx. And being asked to be a stopper.
The series continues tomorrow at Yankee Stadium. The aforementioned Trey Gibson gets the start for the O’s, and he’ll be opposed by New York’s Max Fried. Game time is set for just after 1:30 PM.
