Baltimore Sun Sunday

Orioles starters plagued by pitch count woes

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early-season off days allowed Showalter to give starters extra rest when he deemed necessary, the Orioles are five games into a run of 20 games in 20 days. That stretch will test the rotation and a bullpen that will have to throw extra innings if the starters don’t pitch deeper.

“I can’t tell you how many times there’s been a pitch fouled off up here by their guys and our guys, and I say, ‘That’s strike three in Triple-A,’ ” Showalter said. “They tick off that tough pick and they force you to make it again and again. It’s like a war of wills; who’s going to win that battle? But you know, when there’s 27 of those a night, it wears on them. … Sometimes the hitters don’t cooperate with you and when its five, six, seven pitches every time, you can control the time in between it, but also some guys just aren’t equipped to pitch through that.” the bat completely. There’s just different ways to look at it.

“You either have to make your stuff move more so you can miss the barrel of the bat completely or make it less good so it can hit the bat more and get an out. So it’s hard, and when you face a team multiple times — four, five, six times a year — they’re going to know you and there’s not going to be any secrets. It’s tough.”

Not only do the at-bats escalate pitch counts and lead to shorter starts, but there’s a mental strain added to the physical one.

“I think I can speak for all of us when I say that we’re trying to get a guy out in four pitches or less,” Gausman said. “And that’s the goal. Sometimes it happens in one pitch, sometimes it happens in 12. So you just have to keep battling. I don’t know. That’s a tough question. … It’s definitely frustratin­g sometimes. Sometimes you feel like when you get to the 10th pitch, it’s almost like either take your base or just get out. So it’s frustratin­g, but you just have to keep focused and make your pitches.

“I think the deeper count you go into generally, the more foul balls you’re going to have. I know speaking for myself personally, when I’m not around the strike zone and I’m getting behind guys 1-0, 2-0, 3-0, you’re trying to get back into the count and then it’s just kind of protect mode.”

The easy was to look at it is to say the Orioles starters lack an “out pitch” to end at-bats more quickly, but this rotation’s strength is pitching to contact and letting the team’s defense — particular­ly the infield — make plays behind them, and that’s how they’ve been successful in the past.

The Orioles rotation entered Saturday with the lowest strikeout rate in the American League and the third lowest in the majors at 16.9 percent. But it’s not much different than last year’s 19.3 percent. Also their whiff rate — the percentage of swing-and-miss strikes out of total pitches — was 8.2 percent this season, ranking 27th out of 30 major league clubs while last year’s 8.5 percent was 29th in the majors. Orioles starters allow base runners, but their 74.8 percent left-on-base percentage was sixth best in the AL.

“When you get yourself into certain situations, you want to have that put-away pitch,” Tillman said. “But I think the notion of a put-away pitch is kind of stupid, because I want to get a guy out on the first pitch. I guess a lot of times, if you need to have a put-away pitch, it’s not necessaril­y a good position to be in. I’d rather get two outs and not let a run score than try to put a guy away and then put another guy away.” baseman Starlin Castro’s 21.78 percent. But it’s not exclusive to this division. The Kansas City Royals have three players who foul off more than 20.87 percent of pitches, and it’s no coincidenc­e that they had 30 foul balls against Bundy in a game last month.

“These guys are good, too,” Tillman said. “I think the ultimate goal is to get somebody out. My goal is in three pitches or less, but a lot of times they don’t want to get out in three pitches or less. So you’ve got to make better pitches, get ahead, stay ahead. I think where a lot of it comes to is when you’re trying to strike guys out and throwing not like they say, letting the defense work. You’re trying to pitch to contact, but a lot of times when you’re trying to get out of it, a lot of times you try to throw strikeout pitches a lot of the time. With some hitters, it works. With the aggressive hitters, you can do that, but with the other ones it can turn into seven-, eight-, nine-pitch at-bats.”

Bundy said it’s part of the job having to face teams like the Red Sox and Yankees — and previously the Royals — that will work counts and foul pitches off. He said that’s why it’s important to have a lower-velocity “batting practice” fastball that a pitcher can locate and induce quick contact outs early.

“If you get one early and can locate it, [it’s like], ‘Here’s it is, hit it,’ but hopefully not too far,” Bundy said.

McDowell said it’s difficult to identify how to overcome the high number of foul balls, especially given the Orioles’ philosophy of pitching to contact. But he said the most important key is continuing to emphasize getting ahead in the count and attacking the strike zone.

“What do we have to do? Continue to attack,” McDowell said. “This game is somehow, it seems cyclical, where sometimes you make good pitches and you make foul balls. Sometimes you make good pitches and good things happen and hopefully that’s the mindset we continue to have. Just go ahead and continue to strike the zone. There’s a big importance on strike one, getting ahead of hitters so that we can get into our counts and be aggressive over the course of the game — into the zone so that we do limit pitches per at-bat, limit pitches per inning, and hopefully limit pitches per game and allow us to get deeper in the game.”

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