Orioles’ pitcher called for balk twice in one inning
Baltimore Orioles righthander Mychal Givens was called for two balks in the fourth inning.
Givens was called for both balks because he didn’t come to a complete stop while in the stretch before delivering his pitch. MLB says umpires are watching for more balks when runners are on base.
Givens has just one career balk in 419 regular-season appearances.
Some pitchers — particularly relievers — have funky idiosyncrasies in their deliveries and never come to a complete stop before delievering a pitch. That’s technically a balk, but umpires usually let those tics slide.
Not anymore. A complete stop with no movement becomes more significant because the pitch clock operator turns off the new pitch clock once the pitcher’s motion toward the plate begins.
Givens still pitched a scoreless inning of relief while striking out two.
Trout ready for WBC
Angels star Mike Trout was 0 for 2 at the plate in his final tuneup before joining the U. S. for the World Baseball Classic.
The U.S. has exhibitions on Wednesday and Thursday before Saturday’s opener against Britian in Phoenix.
Trout, the U. S. captain, is part of a roster that includes Mooke Betts, Pete Alonso, Nolan Arenado and Paul Goldschmidt.
“It’s going to be special,” Trout said. “We’re just going out there, have some fun, see where it goes. We’ve got a pretty good team, but there’s a lot of great countries out there. We’ll see how it goes.”
Castillo settles in with Mariners
Two-time All- Star Luis Castillo pitched 2 1/3 innings for the Mariners on Monday, allowing four hits and two runs against the Chicago Cubs in his second start. He struck out four and hit a batter.
The 30-year- old righthander was acquired from Cincinnati last summer and signed a $108 million, fiveyear contract. Castillo was 4-2 with a 3.17 ERA in 11 starts after the trade and helped Seattle to its first postseason berth since 2001.
Unlike many of his AllStar teammates, including outfielders Julio Rodríguez and Teoscar Hernández, Castillo opted not to play for the Dominican Republic in the WBC.
“This was a decision that a large group of us came up with,” Castillo said of staying behind. “I feel like my team has all the talent to go ahead and win the whole thing.”
One of the Cubs he faced Monday was longtime Reds batterymate Tucker Barnhart, who signed as a free agent with Chicago in the offseason.
“I think it’s the first time that I faced him,” Castillo said. “We spent a lot of time together. When we were up there he was laughing and I was laughing and we were just having fun.”
Castillo got the last laugh, retiring his former catcher on a slow roller to third.
Popular Braves
The Atlanta Braves plan to stop the sale of season tickets to preserve the availability of single game tick
ets
Braves president Derek Schiller says this is the first time in team history season ticket sales have been cut off before the first game.
The Braves plan to cut off the sale of season tickets on or around March 17. The team says it is on pace to approach the 2022 Truist Park record total of
more than 3.1 million in attendance. The Braves finished fourth in the majors last season with their average of 38,461 fans at Truist Park.
“We are now focused on ensuring that more of our fans who only come to one or two games are able to buy seats,” Schiller said in a statement released by the team.
The Braves say their April 6 home opener against San Diego and some other high-profile games already are approaching sellout or standing room only status.
Flaherty healthy, Quintana not
St. Louis right- hander Jack Flaherty pitched three innings against the Astros
in his first spring training appearance, giving up one run, walking one and striking out five. Flaherty’s outing was pushed back a day because of a calf tightness. ... Mets left- hander José Quintana has a small stress fracture on his fifth rib on the left side, according to the team. He’s headed back to New York for further evaluation.