Happy Pride Night! After a rousing electric guitar version of the Star-Spangled Banner, the Orioles came on out and delivered an inspired Friday win, defeating the Nationals in a tidy 3-1 contest. It wasn’t the most explosive offensive performance ever, but left-handed starter Trevor Rogers certainly brought the energy, going 6 1/3 innings with a fastball that was simply ruthless.
Another great start from Trevor Rogers, his third quality start in a row. As of May, Rogers’ ice-cold start to the season
was making us wonder whether his charmed 2025 was a mirage, but June has been quite the leveler. He now has a 2.05 ERA in five appearances. That’ll work.
Rogers faced the minimum through three innings. This included a drama-free first inning with two pop flies (Rogers nicely battling back from down 3-0 to Curtis Mead) and a swinging K. In the second, Rogers whiffed CJ Abrams with high heat, making me think how tough the lefty Rogers looks against a lefty—but then he did the same, on three pitches to right-hander Dylan Crews!
The Rogers four-seam fastball has been a weapon in June, and it looked devastating today. Of his first 20 pitches, 16 were strikes, and of 87 total, 65. Wow. Trevor Rogers is locked in, people.
Rogers’ counterpart on the mound, the rather inexperienced Andrew Alvarez, who has all of ten career starts, made a strong first impression here at Oriole Park, too. Alvarez whiffed two in a perfect first inning, dotting breaking balls everywhere. Lefties bearing offspeed pitches, and this Orioles lineup? Danger.
The Orioles wasted a scoring chance against Alvarez in the second when Pete Alonso walloped a curveball and with two outs, Leody Taveras walked. But Taveras ran into a third out on the bases, and Alvarez was out of trouble. Baltimore put the leadoff man on in the third, Jackson Holliday legging out an infield single, but Pete Alonso struck out with runners at the corners, and the rally went no further.
Meanwhile, Rogers was working at a furious pace, like he had somewhere to be. The third inning was just a bunch of groundballs. A somewhat lackadaisical throw to first by Gunnar Henderson took Pete Alonso just off the bag long enough to allow Jacob Young to get on base on the E6. But Rogers was unbothered: he teed up another ground ball—double play—and one more grounder to get out of the inning. Unflappable.
The Nationals nicked Rogers in the fourth—Maryland native James Wood doubled, and Curtis Mead followed him with a bloop single—but astonishingly, even with men on second and third and no outs, didn’t draw blood. Rogers just dug in, attacking the zone like a beast. First, he drew a bouncer right at Blaze Alexander, who made a strong, accurate throw home, and Wood was a sitting duck at the plate. Defense! CJ Abrams popped out next, and there were two outs. Crews scorched a ball, 104 mph, into the infield—but right at Jackson Holliday, who made a great stop, and fired to first. De-fense!
The game’s first runs came in the fourth, and they were orange-colored. Coby Mayo had taken some ferocious hacks at Alvarez in his first AB, back in the second, but he didn’t miss a big hanging curveball this time—double. A flustered Alvarez walked Tyler O’Neill on four pitches (one looked to be a strike). A mound visit and two quick outs later, and the rally looked to be toast. But Jackson Holliday walked to load the bases, and from the 9 spot, Blaze Alexander got the big base-knock. Two scored. Don’t get too enamored with Blaze, I’ll just say. Taylor Ward singled with two on, but Alexander got thrown out trying to go first-to-third and no third run would score. Runs, but also boo.
Washington immediately got one back, making it 2-1 in the fifth. With one out, Jacob Young had doubled deep to center. It looked like Rogers would get out of it cleanly when he struck out No. 8 hitter Nasim Nuñez. But the veteran Keibert Ruiz singled him home.
But that was all the Nats would get off Rogers tonight. Determined, I assume, to avoid handing this Orioles bullpen anything like a narrow lead, Rogers came back out for the sixth. I joke, but he’d only thrown 75 pitches when he came back out for the seventh, too.
Maybe Rogers likes a challenge, so he spotted the Nationals a leadoff double. Maybe not. He really struggled to retire Daylen Lile, but a pop out ended Lile’s AB and Rogers’ night. The O’s lefty exited with another quality start: 6 1/3 innings with one run on five hits, seven strikeouts and no walks. Welcome back, Rogers!
I’m sorry to remind you but I must: over the last three weeks, this Orioles bullpen has an ERA of 5.38. Happily, they didn’t look like it tonight.
Also, the Orioles offense made their assignment a little easier by scratching out a third run for insurance. Washington’s Brad Lord had pitched a clean sixth, and tried to give his team length by pitching into the seventh. Bad call, probably. Lord allowed a leadoff single to Taylor Ward before Gunnar struck out in an inconvenient spot. But Pete Alonso walked for the second time, and up to the plate came Coby Mayo. Mayo looked locked into today. He came through, to the tune of a 113-mph run-scoring double, his second of the day. 3-1 Birds.
After that, no drama from this relief corps whatever. Tyler Wells got two quick outs to end the seventh. Grant Wolfram pitched a perfect eighth. So, too, did lately homer-prone closer Ryan Helsley, who, flashing both a nasty breaking ball and 100 up in the zone, drew a quick groundout, a swinging strikeout, and … a slow roller to short. Too many times lately, the Orioles have done stupid things when faced with a play like this. But not tonight: Gunnar barehanded it and made an absolutely perfect throw to first. Ballgame over.
Clocking in at just over two-and-a-half hours, this was a clean, well-pitched, well-fielded game. Just the cure for the Orioles’ recent sloppiness. Watching a game like this, you could easily be tricked into believing the Orioles could actually make some noise down the stretch. Who knows?
So who is your Most Birdland Player, CamdenChat? Trevor Rogers and his 6 1/3 one-run innings (maybe not just SPB [Starting Pitcher Bias])? Coby Mayo, 2-for-4 with two doubles? Blaze Alexander, with the big two-run RBI single, a walk, and a run-saving throw home? Taylor Ward, quietly going 3-for-5 at the top of the order?










