Baltimore Sun

Wells, Mountcastl­e lead way to series win

- By Andy Kostka

If there’s a difference between what Ryan Mountcastl­e showed at the beginning of the season to now, the obvious distinctio­n is in the results.

But at a more minute level, manager Brandon Hyde ignores those results, focusing on how anxious and jumpy the Orioles first baseman looked early on compared with the control he now displays over the strike zone.

Perhaps there’s no better example of that difference than the fifth-inning at-bat from Mountcastl­e on Monday against the Kansas City Royals at Camden Yards. Faced with a 1-2 count with two outs, Mountcastl­e fouled off three pitches — including two knuckle curves — before laying off a slider.

Then he sent the seventh pitch he saw into left field to score two runners, the biggest hit of Baltimore’s six-run inning. It’s moments such as those that show the strides Mountcastl­e — and by extension the offense — has made this month.

The Orioles scored four of those runs with two outs, leading to a big inning and resulting in a 6-1 victory to secure the series over the Royals.

“He was pitching me tough all day,” Mountcastl­e said of right-hander Carlos Hernández, who allowed all six runs. “For me to dunk one in there and really almost put the game out of reach was good.”

For as anemic as Baltimore’s scoring production was in April — the Orioles (12-17) scored 62 runs last month, second-fewest behind the Royals — they’ve already more than doubled that per-game output in May, with 40.

They scored more than two runs in 10 games last month; they’ve done that six times in eight attempts in May.

“Seems like balls are starting to fall, finally,” Mountcastl­e said.

And that production was more than enough to support right-hander Tyler Wells, who threw a season-high 75 pitches and completed six innings for the first time in his two seasons in the major leagues.

To set Wells up for the victory, that fifth inning began with a one-out walk by third baseman Tyler Nevin and a double by catcher Anthony Bemboom. Shortstop Jorge Mateo drove Nevin in with a single before his speed caused havoc on the basepaths.

Mateo swiped his ninth base, taking second and drawing a throw from catcher MJ Melendez. But that throw sailed into center, allowing Mateo to scamper to third and Bemboom to cross the plate.

“Stealing bases is really important [and] it’s a really big part of my game,” Mateo said through team interprete­r Brandon Quinones.

“At the end of the day, it helps the team win, so I really enjoy that.”

From there, first baseman Trey Mancini knocked in another run before a wild pitch and Mountcastl­e’s single drove in three more.

“That inning was a keep-the-line-moving type of attitude, next-guy-up mentality,” Hyde said. “And we ran the bases well.”

Another step forward

It’s another milestone for Wells, who underwent Tommy John surgery in 2019 and missed the 2020 campaign because the minor-league season was canceled by the coronaviru­s. He pitched out of the bullpen last year before making the jump into the rotation once more.

The last time Wells completed six innings was Aug. 25, 2018, when he pitched for the Double-A Chattanoog­a Lookouts in the Minnesota Twins’ system.

“The way I’m looking at it right now is just making sure that I go out there and I give my team a chance to win,” Wells said. “And that’s exactly what happened today, so that I’m extremely happy about.”

Wells settled after the first inning, when Bobby Witt Jr. singled, stole second and scored on a single by Ryan O’Hearn. He went on to retire 10 straight batters at one point, and with an extra day of rest due to the Saturday rainout, Hyde was comfortabl­e stretching Wells to his longest outing in four years.

“It’s not easy transition­ing from the bullpen to a starter, [especially after] not pitching for two years prior to that,” Hyde said. “We believe in him going forward, and to see him go six innings and give up one run in the first is pretty cool.”

With a doublehead­er Sunday, there was a potential for stress on the bullpen. But in three straight games the performanc­es from the starters erased any concern about overusing the bullpen.

Right-hander Jordan Lyles pitched 7

innings in Sunday’s first game, and lefthander Bruce Zimmermann went six innings in the nightcap.

“We pitched extremely well this series,” Hyde said.

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