Thursday, June 24, 2010

Second Orioles Game of the Season

Orioles 11  Florida 5

Natalie had free tickets for the Orioles game tonight that she got from her company's attorney. The whole family went. They were some of the best seats we've ever had and the parking pass, Lot "A", is right next to the stadium. And, prepare yourself, we won. Tejada, in particular, was great but even Craig Tatum went 3 for 5. Lots of fun.


I came close to catching a foul ball, closer than I've ever been before. The ball went straight up so it was a toss up of  not having it land on my head or catching it. At the last second I reached over with my left hand and almost caught it. I think I touched it but the guy in the seat right behind me caught it with both hands and screamed in my face "I got it!" Douchebag. Natalie also had a run in with a foul ball. She was coming through the tunnel from the concourse when a ball landed at the entrance. She should have dove for it.

I was shocked by two things at the game. The sound guy played a Stranglers song (Golden Brown) and some moron stole the "O" magnet off my car. That was the second one that was stolen - the first one was stolen while the car was parked on Harford Rd. during the Hamilton festival. No surprise there - Hamilton has always been full of dirtbags.


From the Baltimore Sun
Photos by Gene Sweeney Jr.










O's offense breaks out in 11-5 win over Marlins


Tejada drives in 4 runs, team has 17 hits to back Millwood


When Orioles right-hander Kevin Millwood threw quality start after quality start earlier this season, only to get handed no-decisions and losses because of a lackluster offense, he didn't complain, didn't point fingers.

On Thursday, it was payback time for Millwood, who survived five shaky innings in an 11-5 Orioles win that ended an 11-game losing streak to the Florida Marlins.

An offense that had scored just 33 runs in Millwood's first 12 starts has scored 27 for him in his past four outings, the past two of which have resulted in Millwood's only victories of the season.

"It was terrible because early in the year he was giving up two and three runs and getting the loss every time," said reserve catcher Craig Tatum, who had a career-high three hits, including two doubles. "So for us to play the way we did and finally get him his second win, well, he deserves it for how he has pitched for us."

The Orioles (20-52) avoided a sweep by the Marlins (35-37) while picking up their 20th win -- a distinction the 2009 Orioles, who lost 98 games, achieved May 26, almost a month earlier than this year's club.

Playing before an announced 15,397, the much-maligned offense tied a season high for hits with 17, scored in double digits for only the second time this year and had six hits in one inning for the second consecutive night.

Third baseman Miguel Tejada led the way with four hits, including a backbreaking three-run homer in the eighth that ended a career-long homerless drought of 205 at-bats. Tejada had four RBIs on Thursday after driving in four runs in his past 30 games.

"It feels great just because I think tonight was a night that we're all waiting for," said Tejada, who had last homered against Boston's Daniel Bard on April 30. "We just haven't been hitting the way we are supposed to be hitting, but tonight we all contributed."

Center fielder Adam Jones also did his part with three hits and two RBIs, including his 11th homer of season, a solo shot in the sixth against Alejandro Sanabia, who was making his major league debut.

The homer, which came on Jones' mini-bobblehead giveaway night, was the anti-called shot.

"The first pitch, I was asking the [fans] right next to the dugout behind the on-deck circle, 'You want me to swing or bunt?' They said, 'Bunt,' so I tried to bunt," Jones said. "Good thing I fouled it off because the next pitch, I hit it out."

It was that kind of offensive night for the Orioles, who were down 3-0 in the third when they sent 10 men to the plate and scored five runs against Florida starter Nate Robertson (5-6), who had shut down the Tampa Bay Rays in his previous outing.

"We beat the best team in the division five days ago, and then the team that's in last place in the division kicks your tail," said Robertson, who allowed five runs in 21/3 innings. "It's a funny game. That's why I don't like when people say, 'Oh, they're terrible,' or, 'They're a bad team.' They're just inconsistent, because everybody up here is good. They grinded out a win."

The Orioles' offense had to rally because Millwood put them into a 3-0 hole through the first two innings. He yielded two runs in the first and has allowed 20 first-inning runs in his past seven starts after giving up none in the opening inning in his first nine starts.

He threw 116 pitches, just 52 percent of them for strikes, his worst strike percentage of the season. It was his shortest outing since a five-inning stint on Opening Day,

"The big deal was not locating," said Millwood (2-8), who allowed four runs on eight hits and two walks. "It's become a problem my last four or five [starts]. It's something that I've got to figure out and get fixed so I can go more than five or six innings."

Still, he had a two-run lead in the fifth and nearly handed it back. He walked the first two batters and gave up a one-out RBI single to Dan Uggla.

But with two outs and two on, Millwood threw his 116th and final pitch of the night -- a 93 mph fastball -- past 20-year-old Marlins phenom Mike Stanton for the third out.

"I was going to try to stick with him as long as I could to try to get him the win. But if he walked Stanton, I would have had to get him," interim manager Juan Samuel said.

The bullpen took over from there. Jason Berken threw two scoreless innings with three strikeouts, David Hernandez threw a perfect inning with two strikeouts and Matt Albers finished by allowing one run on two hits in the ninth.



Dan Connoly



Tuesday, June 22, 2010

First Orioles Game Of The Season


Florida 10 Orioles 4



Predictable. A gang of us went to the game, including Mom in her wheelchair. It was Ty Wigginton tee-shirt night and it was hot, incredibly hot. After the game, the Marlins fired their manager, bench coach, and hitting coach. And they won.




From the Baltimore Sun
Photos by Gene Sweeney Jr.










Marlins floor Guthrie, O's, 10-4

Starter allows 6 runs, tying season high; Florida closes door vs. bullpen

All the excitement the Orioles generated in their first game back home lasted about as long as Matt Wieters' seemingly harmless fly ball in the second inning hung in the air before carrying into the left-field seats.

Aside from Wieters' three-run home run off Anibal Sanchez, the Orioles did very little right in their 10-4 loss to the Florida Marlins on Tuesday night before an announced 14,821 at sleepy Camden Yards.

Jeremy Guthrie had one of his worst starts of the season, putting his team into a four-run hole in the second inning and allowing six earned runs in the game. The bullpen made sure the Orioles had no chance to come back by surrendering three runs in the ninth inning with Matt Albers failing to retire any of the three hitters he faced.


The defense was again spotty, with second baseman Scott Moore failing to make a key play in the Marlins' four-run second inning and committing a run-scoring throwing error in the eighth.

And the offense managed a respectable 10 hits but went into a slumber in the middle innings against Sanchez when the outcome was still in doubt.

Throw all those elements together and you had a typical performance by these lowly Orioles, who fell to 19-51 after dropping the first contest of a nine-game homestand. They have lost nine of their past 10 games with the Marlins and are 5-17 against them all time.

Overall, the Orioles have dropped 20 of their past 24 games and eight of their past 10 in a season that grows uglier by the day.

"Not a very good showing there the first couple of innings," said Juan Samuel, who fell to 4-12 as the Orioles' interim manager. "For some reason, Guthrie didn't look right, missing his spots. But he settled down after that. We just couldn't hold them. He just did not look good there the first couple of innings. I started to worry a little bit, but then he kind of settled down there and gave us some good innings."

All-Star shortstop Hanley Ramirez landed the big hit in the Marlins' four-run second with a two-run double. He finished 3-for-4 with three RBIs and is 9-for-17 (.529) with 14 RBIs in five games against the Orioles over the past two seasons.

Guthrie, who has lost five straight decisions to fall to 3-9, surrendered a season-high-tying six earned runs on seven hits and two walks over six-plus innings. He also drew the ire of both the Marlins and plate umpire Doug Eddings after he hit Jorge Cantu in the left side with the first pitch after Ramirez's double down the right-field line gave the Marlins a 4-0 advantage in the second.

There was no further incident, and Guthrie said he was not surprised by Eddings' warning.

"The situation probably looks bad," Guthrie said. "They get a few runs like that, and the ball gets away inside. It's not surprising. It doesn't affect the way I approach the game. I am still going to throw inside. It is still a part of my game. It wasn't a big deal."

After Cantu was hit, Guthrie retired 13 of the next 14 hitters he faced before he was chased by Gaby Sanchez's RBI double with no outs in the seventh that made the score 5-3. Ramirez followed with a run-scoring single off Jason Berken to finish Guthrie's line.

"I thought the location was better later in the game," Guthrie said.

"I made terrible pitches with the slider, especially in the inning that hurt me. I didn't really make great ones with it later on, so I just pretty much tried to quit throwing it. Pitch execution was definitely the biggest difference between the second and the other innings."

While Guthrie settled down in the middle innings, so did Anibal Sanchez, who was never in much trouble after the second. In that inning, Ty Wigginton hit a leadoff double (on his T-shirt givewaway night) and Adam Jones singled, putting runners on first and third with one out.

Wieters then jumped on Sanchez's first pitch and sent a high fly ball to left-center field. It figured to at least score a run on a sacrifice fly, but Chris Coghlan kept drifting back to the wall before his leaping attempt came up short.

It was Wieters' sixth homer of the season and his second consecutive three-RBI game. It was also the Orioles' first homer of three runs or more since Luke Scott's grand slam off Seattle Mariners reliever Brandon League on May 13. It was just their fourth homer of three runs or more all season.

"First and third, I was just trying to hit a fly ball," Wieters said. "The ball was carrying a good way tonight, so I thought I had a chance. [That] it carries out is a good feeling. I think that's going back to not trying to do too much, not trying to hit home runs. It's the double and home runs that carry, so just try to hit the ball to the gap and get the ball to carry."

Jake Fox, whom the Orioles acquired from the Oakland Athletics earlier in the day, did the same when he was called on to pinch hit for Cesar Izturis with two men on in the seventh and the home team trailing by three runs. Fox drove a pitch from Taylor Tankersley deep into right-center, but Marlins center fielder Cody Ross made the catch at the wall.

The Orioles were a few feet from tying a game that got hopelessly away from them when the Marlins scored one run in the eighth on Moore's throwing error and three more runs in the ninth off Albers and Frank Mata.

"After [Wieters] hit the home run, I thought we could stay in the game," third baseman Miguel Tejada said. "They get a chance, they get a couple guys on base and score a lot of runs."

Jeff Zrebiec