The Capital

Opening statement

Means dominant in first start of season as Orioles blank Red Sox

- By Jon Meoli

BOSTON — An Opening Day starter isn’t always a true ace.

John Means sure looked like one by pitching the way he did in the Orioles’ 3-0 Opening Day win over the Boston Red Sox on Friday.

“He just did an amazing job,” manager Brandon Hyde said. “Just a clinic pitching-wise. The way he changed speeds, gave up the leadoff single and just cruised from there. Just the best I’ve seen him pitch for me [as far as] command of multiple pitches and the way he worked ahead in the count.”

The 27-year-old left-hander gave Hyde the best start of his fledgling major-league career, allowing a single to lead off the game and only one baserunner the rest of the game when Xander Bogaerts reached on an error to begin the second inning.

After that, Means retired 18 straight Red Sox hitters, including five on strikeouts. He made rookie Ryan Mountcastl­e’s bases-loaded, two-run double in the sixth inning hold up for a delayed Opening Day win that was worth the wait for the Orioles.

Means, who was supposed to start Opening Day last July against Nathan Eovaldi but missed the start due to a tired arm, did his part to ensure there would be a pitchers’ duel on the sunny but freezing field at Fenway Park.

It came after a turbulent personal year for Means, who lost his father, Alan, to pancreatic cancer last summer but welcomed his first son, Mason, with his wife Caroline this offseason.

“It was pretty special,” Means said. “Just amazing to have my family here. …

“Fenway Park holds a special place in my heart. It was a really cool experience, something that I’ll have to tell my kids forever.”

Eovaldi kept the Orioles at bay early, and Means matched it despite seeming not to have his best fastball early. He was helped by retiring Kiké Hernández on a pickoff play in that first inning after a leadoff single when Hernández stumbled off the bag and was ruled out by replay review.

Means found his good changeup — his signature pitch — and was able to keep the Red Sox off-balance despite a fastball that’s maxed out around 95 mph over the last year-plus not often topping 93 mph

Friday. His average velocity was down nearly 2 mph, according to MLB’s Statcast data.

Hyde seemed to think that was by design, the same way he did as he ended 2020 on a dominant run in September.

“When you look at the radar gun, it looked like he was throttling down a little bit and pitching,” Hyde said. “For me, that’s what he did the last three starts, four starts last year. [He] was locating a really good fastball already but being able to add and subtract with his changeup and not overthrow it and not make it flat, as well as continuing to get confidence in his breaking ball.

“His stuff plays. It’s about pitching ahead in the count. I love the way John Means throws in, to be able to get them off of the changeup and off of the fastball down and away, where they can’t look at one spot, where they can’t look up [or] down, but there’s multiple weapons that he goes to.

“And that’s what he’s done now. That’s what he did today, and that’s what he did the last few starts last year.”

“I had pretty good fastball-changeup command,” Means said. “I was getting ahead with the curveball, and then kind of putting some guys away with the fastball-changeup. I thought the command was pretty good, and I was just loose, fluid, just kind of letting the game come to me.”

After third baseman Maikel Franco’s error to begin the second inning, Means didn’t allow another Red Sox hitter to reach base before he gave way to left-hander Tanner Scott to begin the eighth inning.

In the interim, Means struck out five Red Sox hitters with an effective fastball-changeup mix. He said it might not have been his most dominant big-league outing since he debuted in Boston in September 2018, but by efficiency and results it certainly was.

By game score, Means’ mark of 80 was the best of his two-plus years in the big leagues and better than any other Opening Day starter turned in Thursday.

The last pitcher to strike out five or more batters while allowing one or fewer hits in seven or more innings on Opening Day was Boston Beaneaters starter Irv Young in 1906, according to Baseball Reference’s Stathead service.

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER/AP ?? The Orioles’ John Means pitches during the first inning of an Opening Day game against the Red Sox on Friday in Boston.
MICHAEL DWYER/AP The Orioles’ John Means pitches during the first inning of an Opening Day game against the Red Sox on Friday in Boston.

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