Good morning Birdland,
Our five-game nightmare is over! The Orioles got back into the win column on Tuesday night, beating the Marlins 9-7. The offense gets the credit for the win. Each time the Marlins would claw their way back into the game, the Baltimore bats would nudge it just a little further away.
Pete Alonso and Samuel Basallo combined to go 5-for-7 with three doubles, a triple, two walks, five runs, and six RBI. They were terrific. Despite that success from Basallo, who was a homer shy of
the cycle, O’s manager Craig Albernaz turned to Adley Rutschman off the bench in the ninth inning. That would prove to be a wise decision! Rutschman came through with the go-ahead RBI single that put the game out of reach once and for all.
It was far from a perfect game for the offense. Colton Cowser had three more strikeouts. Coby Mayo went 0-for-4 with a strikeout. What the team does with those two is tough to say. They are trying to get them going, but nothing at the big league levels seems to be working. If there was an ideal alternate solution, it feels like the club would have pulled the trigger on it by now.
On the mound, Chris Bassitt was quite bad. His command, particularly on breaking pitches, was terrible. He was lucky to only give up the four runs in his four innings of work. His season ERA is up to 5.91. The Orioles didn’t expect Bassitt to be an ace or anything, but they need more length and quality from the veteran, especially given their current rotation makeup with Trevor Rogers, Dean Kremer, and Zach Eflin on the IL.
Negativity aside, the Orioles won a game. That is a good! Believe it or not, despite all of the awful things that have happened to them recently, at 16-20 they are just one game back of the final wild card spot in a brutal American League. There is time for them to figure things out. Beating an equally flawed Marlins squad was a good step in that direction. Hopefully they do it again tonight.
Links
Basallo flirts with cycle as O’s chase Alcantara before mounting late rally | Orioles.com
Here is the MLB version of last night’s recap, which includes some quotes from within the Orioles clubhouse. Albernaz credits the team for being “locked in on every pitch” despite their recent struggles. The offense shows these sorts of glimmers on occasion. The potential is there for them to carry the team. Finding consistency is another matter.
Leftovers for breakfast | Roch Kubatko
Roch shares oodles of stats, including some about the decision to pinch hit Rutschman for Basallo. The numbers don’t really back up Albernaz’s decision, but it worked. Ultimately, those are the sorts of decisions that managers’ get paid for. Credit were it’s due.
Top MLB starting pitchers who are candidates to be traded at the deadline | The Athletic
This is a pretty straightforward article. Good pitchers near free agency that are on bad teams are candidates to be traded. Rogers is mentioned. Whether the Orioles trade him or not, they need him to be better than he has been. I think he will be. Most of his peripherals are better than his top line numbers.
Orioles birthdays
Is it your birthday? Happy birthday!
- Yohan Ramirez turns 31 today. The journeyman reliever has played for eight different clubs across seven big league seasons. That includes a five-game stint with the Orioles in 2024.
- Gerardo Parra is 39 years old. The Orioles traded for the outfielder at the 2025 deadline, sending Zach Davies to the Milwaukee Brewers in exchange. Parra would struggle in his brief time with the Birds, hitting .237/.268/.357 across 55 games.
- Mike Kinkade is 53. He came to the Orioles as part of the Mike Bordick deal with the Mets in 2000, but would play in just 64 big league games as a utility bench option before being released after the 2001 season.
- Tom Bolton turns 64. The southpaw tossed 23.1 innings for the Orioles in 1994.
- The late Leo Burke (b. 1934, d. 2023) was born on this day. A native of Hagerstown, Maryland, Burke began his major league career with 12 games played for the Orioles between 1958 and ‘59.
This day in O’s history
2012 – The Orioles beat the Red Sox 9-6 in 17 innings. Both teams have to use position players on the mound. The Orioles opt for Chris Davis, who goes 0-for-8 at the plate but delivers two scoreless innings. The Red Sox turn to Darnell McDonald, who coughs up a three-run homer to Adam Jones.












