Baltimore Sun

O’s long road skid comes to an end

Baltimore rallies late to halt its 20-game road losing streak

- By Nathan Ruiz

The visiting Orioles finally got something they hadn’t over much of the past two months: a break.

Toronto Blue Jays right fielder Randal Grichuk, a consistent thorn in the Orioles’ side, couldn’t corral a full-count foul ball hit with two outs in Friday night’s 10th inning. That gave Pat Valaika an extra life to draw a bases-loaded walk that scored the decisive run in a 6-5 victory in Buffalo, New York, that ended Baltimore’s 20-game road losing streak.

The Orioles had not won on the road since May 5, when left-hander John Means threw a no-hitter in Seattle. Since, Means has landed on the injured list, the Orioles suffered a 14-game losing streak overall that overlapped with this 20-game slide and saw their record fall from 15-16 to an American League-worst 24-52.

The road losing streak was the second longest in AL history and tied for the third longest in either league, with the Arizona Diamondbac­ks entering Friday having lost 23 straight as guests.

The Orioles began the top of the eighth trailing 5-1, needing as many runs as they had produced in their previous four games combined to tie the game. An unearned run in the third inning, scored thanks to an error, single and double play, ended a 26-inning scoreless streak and accounted for their only run in 31 innings entering the eighth.

They opened it with a pair of walks. After a strikeout, Ryan Mountcastl­e singled up the middle to score one run. A pitching change prompted manager Brandon Hyde to bring on Anthony Santander, nursing a sore ankle, as a pinch-hitter. He delivered a 113 mph single to bring home another run. Both batters scored when Austin Hays doubled to left-center field.

Beginning the top of the 10th with a runner automatica­lly at second, the Orioles drew three walks before they made three outs..

High five

Before Friday night, Matt Harvey last pitched in Buffalo in 2012, then a flamethrow­ing prospect on the verge of a sterling start to his major league career that put him in the center of the baseball world.

Harvey didn’t recapture his past, but at the ballpark that was his Triple-A home before his ascension to the New York Mets, he at least seemed to shake the previous two months. For the first time May 1, Harvey completed five innings, ending a nine-start streak of short outings he frequently deemed “unacceptab­le.”

The 32-year-old allowed three earned runs over 5 ⅔ innings to cut his ERA to 7.54, still the highest of any pitcher who has made as many as the 16 starts he has.

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