Shane Baz was good last night for the Baltimore Orioles in Kansas City. He also had his starting catcher, Adley Rutschman, back from injury. Baz didn’t get a quality start, but he pitched well enough to win. Baz’s line: 6.1 IP, 8 H, 4 R, 2 BB, 4 K.
The Birds put two on base in the second, and Coby Mayo smacked a three-run home run. The Orioles led 3-0, and appeared to be off to the races. However Kansas City chipped away. Massey’s sac fly-RBI in the bottom of the frame cut the lead to 3-1. That was aided by a Baz wild pitch, advancing the runner to third.
Garcia’s RBI-double in the fifth would cut the lead to 3-2. he would later steal third base, and then score on a sac fly-RBI by Pasquantino. That tied the game in the fifth.
Kansas City took a brief lead in the seventh on Witt’s sac fly-RBI. Aldo a derivative of a stolen base. However one inning later it was the Orioles who got the lead back – albeit also briefly. Adley Rutschman’s two-run homer gave them a 5-4 lead.
But again, a brief lead. Massey’s solo home run in the last of the eighth tied it back up at five. Ryan Helsley came in to pitch the ninth in a tie game, and walked the first two hitters. He did buckle down and strike out the next hitter, but the two runners advanced into scoring position on a wild pitch. Yes, a strikeout and a wild pitch in the same moment. Helsley would later uncork another wild pitch which ticked away from Rutschman, allowing the winning run to score.
The scoring in this game was consistent with how both teams do things. The Orioles relied on the home run ball. Kansas City took advantage of runners getting on base, and advancing on base. Every runner is a potential run. And when you allow those runners to advance, you come closer and closer to allowing that.
The series concludes this afternoon at Kauffman Stadium. Chris Bassitt gets the start for the Birds, and he’ll be opposed by Kansas City’s Michael Wacha. Game time is set for just after 2 PM.
