Trevor Rogers returned from the IL to start tonight against New York for the Baltimore Orioles. End of the day, Rogers had one bad inning. One. Rogers’ line: 4.0 I, 6 H, 6 R, 3 BB, 3 K.
For starters, we found out just prior to game time that tomorrow’s game time has been changed. The Orioles coordinated with the league and with the NYY and changed tomorrow’s game to a 1 PM start time. This due to the threat of rain late in the day tomorrow.
The O’s played from behind from the get go. Rogers surrendered a solo homer to Goldschmidt on the first pitch. He ambushed the ball, setting the tone for the ballgame. However Rogers sent New York down with only a base hit surrendered in the wake of that for the remainder of the inning.
New York loaded the bases in the third, and Bellinger grounded into a fielder’s choice which scored a run. It was almost a double-play, but the angle just didn’t allow the Orioles to turn it. Rosario would tack on an additional run in that sequence with an infield RBI-single. He grounded the ball to Coby Mayo at third, but again the angle just didn’t allow him to record an out.
I said an additional run in that sequence. That doesn’t mean those were the only runs in the inning. Grisham’s three-run home run extended the lead to 6-0. I think people have a naive idea that you can simply record outs on the base paths at will when runners get on. But the fact is that anything can happen when just get on base. And for the past few years, anything HAS HAPPENED to the analytics-driven O’s with guys on base.
New York committed multiple errors in the last of the third, allowing the Orioles to load the bases with nobody out. For a brief moment it appeared that the O’s had a shot to get back in the game. Remember how on Saturday they loaded the bases with nobody out against the Athletics, and they let them off the hook? Yeah, about that…it happened again. Taylor Ward flied out and Adley Rutschman grounded into a double-play.
You can’t let your opponents off the hook. Especially when they themselves aren’t in a giving mood. There isn’t one mental or physical mistake that the Orioles have made over the last two years, for which they haven’t been held accountable. Yet opposing teams make similar mistakes, and they get away with it.
The O’s would put two on the board in the last of the sixth. Samuel Basallo’s RBI-single followed by an RBI-double by Tyler O’Neill cut the lead to 6-2. Which ended up being the final.
Incidentally, the Orioles are also going on something like 20 or 21 straight innings without challenging a pitch with the ABS challenge system. To be clear, I think it’s smart to be conservative when it comes to this. You want to have at least one challenge in the later innings. That’s a no-brainer,
But the Orioles are letting obvious bad pitches stand without a challenge. Even at moments when it would be okay to challenge them. I’m not sure if players are being told never to do it, or if there’s a computer algorithm which says the probability of winning is greater without a challenge. But bad calls are being allowed to stand. And opposing teams are having them overturned, to the Orioles’ chagrin.
The series concludes tomorrow at Camden Ysrds. The Orioles are yet to announce a starter, but whomever he is he’ll be opposed by New York’s Max Fried. Game time is set for just after 1 PM.
