Baltimore Sun

Errors lead to blowout loss, series sweep

- By Andy Kostka and Nathan Ruiz

NEW YORK — Maybe in an alternate universe, first baseman Trey Mancini picks third baseman Kelvin Gutiérrez’s low throw. Perhaps shortstop Jorge Mateo doesn’t fumble a backhand grounder. And maybe second baseman Rougned Odor pulls off a pick on a rocket shot ruled a base hit.

In this universe, though, none of those outcomes occurred for the Orioles on Thursday afternoon in the Bronx. In what had been another standout performanc­e from left-hander Bruce Zimmermann, the bobbles and bungles and botches in the fifth inning against the New York Yankees were a pothole that blew out the tire on Baltimore’s chances in the series finale.

In the top half of the frame, the Orioles squandered a chance with the bases loaded, practicall­y inviting a Yankees comeback attempt. And then in the bottom half of the inning, the Orioles handed over a written invitation for one in the form of those two errors from Gutiérrez and Mateo. It led to four unearned runs off Zimmermann and a 10-5 loss to secure a New York sweep.

“We gotta be able to catch the ball for us to be able to hang in games and have a chance to win,” manager Brandon Hyde said. “We can’t make five errors and expect to win.”

The defense finished with five errors for the first time since Aug. 8, 2018, according to Baseball Reference. The six unearned runs overall were the most since July 20, 2019, when they allowed eight.

Another error from Mateo in the eighth led to a wild pitch from left-hander Paul Fry — scoring one — before Aaron Judge cranked a three-run home run, the final blow in a defensive capitulati­on.

“That’s the mark of any really good team, I guess, is to be able to stop the bleeding as soon as possible,” Zimmermann said. “That’s baseball. Sometimes you get ‘em, sometimes you don’t.”

In all, it was a lackluster ending to a road trip that featured the highs of a series win against the Los Angeles Angels and the lows that naturally accompany a 3-7 record. It wasn’t as if Baltimore (6-13) didn’t have chances. The Orioles lost three of those games by two runs or fewer, possibly an indication of the close, but not close enough nature of the club.

It struck again Thursday. Gutiérrez knocked in one run in the second and center fielder Cedric Mullins scored in the third after he was hit by a pitch and advanced to second and third on wild pitches. But until a ninth-inning burst of scoring that came too little, too late, the offensive output couldn’t overcome the defensive mishaps. So while Zimmermann produced another strong outing, the defense and bats to support him wavered as much as the whipping flags atop Yankee Stadium, leaving him with a loss.

“Obviously, it’s difficult when it happens during the game,” right fielder Anthony Santander said through team interprete­r Brandon Quinones. “But we’ve just got to keep

supporting each other and helping each other out and stay looking ahead. Try to learn from those mistakes so it doesn’t happen again.”

A big change for Zimmermann

If there’s a clear differenti­ator between the Zimmermann of 2021 and the Zimmermann of 2022, it comes when he throws his changeup. That pitch, thrown more than ever before, has more vertical and horizontal break than his past iterations, a combinatio­n that makes it one of the most effective in the league.

When Zimmermann made his debut in 2020, his changeup averaged 26 inches of vertical break and 15.4 inches of horizontal break, according to MLB Statcast. In the two years since then, his vertical break has increased to 29.9 inches while the horizontal movement grew to 17.9 inches — the latter of which is 4.1 inches more than the average changeup thrown in the league.

“I think that’s coming from the difference in wrist action and the intent I’m throwing behind it,” Zimmermann said. “I’m really throwing it identicall­y to my fastball and just letting the grip do the work right now.”

That’s led Zimmermann here, to his fourth startofthe­season—andseconda­gainstadan­gerousNewY­orkYankees­lineup.Acrossthos­estarts, Zimmermann has flashed the potential of what that changeup brings, and he rode it Thursday, throwingth­atpitchmor­ethananyot­her.

He’s done that more frequently this season, entering Thursday with 35% of his pitches being fastballs, down from 51.4% in 2020 and 42.2% in 2021. His changeup usage has risen 7.5 percentage points since 2020 and his curveball has followed a similar rise, up 8.7 percentage points, according to Fangraphs. In a division full of right-handed power hitters — and a Yankees lineup featuring Giancarlo Stanton and Judge — the developmen­t of those

off-speed pitches has unlocked another level for Zimmermann. In 19 ⅓ innings this year, the left-hander has conceded just two earned runs — with errors playing a large role Thursday in what the Yankees achieved.

Zimmermann allowed five hits and four runs — none earned — while walking one and striking out five in 4 ⅓ innings. His ERA now stands at 0.93.

Hays gets hot; Santander’s streak ends

With a series of doubles, Austin Hays recorded his first-career four-hit game., Hays finished finishing with three doubles, including one in the ninth inning to drive home first baseman Trey Mancini.

Anthony Santander, on the other hand, saw his 19-game on-base streak come to an end with his 0-for-5 performanc­e. He and Los Angeles Dodgers’ Trea Turner were the only major league players to reach base in every game so far this year.

After the game, Santander pointed out how he could’ve had three weeks if borderline calls had gone his way. After his ninth-inning strikeout, he let home plate umpire Ted Barrett know of his disapprova­l. Still, Santander emphasized he can start another streak Friday against the Boston Red Sox.

No. 9 prospect Bradish gets the call to start vs. Red Sox

The Orioles will promote right-hander Kyle Bradish, their most major league-ready pitching prospect, to start Friday against the Boston Red Sox at Camden Yards, two sources with direct knowledge of the team’s plans confirmed to The Baltimore Sun.

Bradish, 25, was one of four right-handed pitching prospects Baltimore acquired in December 2019 when it traded former firstround draft pick Dylan Bundy to the Los AngelesAng­elsandhasl­ongbeencon­sideredthe­top arm in that quartet. In his past seven starts at Triple-ANorfolk,aspanthatb­eganlastSe­ptember, Bradish has allowed four earned runs in 35 innings — a 1.03 ERA — with 41 strikeouts against nine walks and one home run allowed.

Bradish, Baltimore’s No. 9 prospect according to Baseball America, will be the second Oriole to debut this season, joining reliever Félix Bautista. He takes the rotation spot of Chris Ellis, who made only two starts in place of ace John Means (Tommy John surgery) before landing on the injured list himself with right shoulder inflammati­on.

Among the Orioles’ pitching prospects, he trails only Grayson Rodriguez — the game’s top minor league arm — and dynamic left-hander DL Hall. But he beat both of them majors, having spent most of 2021 at Triple-A, while Rodriguez is getting his first taste of that level this spring and Hall is working his way back from an elbow injury suffered last year with Double-A Bowie.

In spring training, Bradish showcased his preparedne­ss for the majors, throwing a pair of scoreless two-inning appearance­s opposite lineups of New York Yankees and Philadelph­ia Phillies regulars. Between those outings, his fastball, coming from an overthe-top release point, got up to 97.5 mph, according to Statcast, and averaged about 96 mph. Five of the eight swings taken against his upper-80s slider were whiffs.

He briefly stayed in Florida as the minor league season began to continue stretching out, making his 2022 debut a week into the Triple-A season. He pitched progressiv­ely deeper in each of his three starts with Norfolk this year, throwing 87 pitches in six innings on Friday. Speculatio­n about a potential call-up increased Wednesday, when he was listed as the Tides’ starter but instead had his outing pushed to Friday, the first time he was scheduled to pitch on more than four days’ rest.

Half of the Orioles’ return for Bundy has now reached the major leagues. Bradish, the Angels’ fourth-round pick in 2018 out of New Mexico State University, follows reliever Isaac Mattson, a 26-year-old who made his debut in 2021 but since has been removed from Baltimore’s 40-man roster. He was sharing Norfolk’s rotation with Kyle Brnovich, 24, before Brnovich went on the injured list with a right elbow sprain. Zach Peek, 23, has a 3.84 ERA across three levels of Baltimore’s system over the past two seasons, beginning this year at Double-A.

MASNsports.com was the first to report Bradish’s promotion.

 ?? SETH WENIG/AP ?? Orioles shortstop Jorge Mateo, right, commits his second fielding error of the game on a ball hit by Yankees second baseman DJ LeMahieu on Thursday.
SETH WENIG/AP Orioles shortstop Jorge Mateo, right, commits his second fielding error of the game on a ball hit by Yankees second baseman DJ LeMahieu on Thursday.

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