Baltimore Sun

No room for error

Austin Voth throws 5 scoreless innings but bats, bullpen falter

- By Andy Kostka

CINCINNATI — The splitter has been nearly untouchabl­e this season for righthande­r Félix Bautista, but at a certain point, even the best pitches can be clobbered. The Orioles reliever had thrown three straight elevated fastballs to Cincinnati Reds first baseman Brandon Drury, so ahead in the count, Bautista tried to change eye levels.

The splitter — which should’ve dipped beneath the zone — instead hung up for Drury. And with that one mistake in a 2-2 game, one of Baltimore’s best relievers was forced to turn and watch Cincinnati’s

game-winning home run fly over the left field fence at Great American Ball Park.

Before that long ball, Bautista had allowed one homer in his previous 27 innings. The next was bound to come, but as he covered for an Orioles offense incapable of producing much, the margins left no room for error. Drury rounded the bases, Baltimore went down in the ninth and the Reds took a series victory with a 3-2 win Sunday.

“We’re not doing [the bullpen] any favors,” manager Brandon Hyde said. “We’re not scoring. You have to be able to score. You have to be able to get a lead and be able to add on. We’re not doing enough offensivel­y, honestly, to help out our pitching.”

Half an inning earlier, a comeback seemed nearly inevitable. That’s what the Orioles (51-51) have done so frequently this season, with 23 come-from-behind wins on their ledger. Anthony Santander tied the game at 2 with a long blast to right field in the eighth inning, but the bullpen cracked, allowing three runs after a strong five innings from starter Austin Voth without much offensive support.

In three games in Cincinnati — one of the most hitter-friendly parks in Major League Baseball — the Orioles managed 10 runs. The Reds’ pitching staff entered Sunday with a major-league worst 5.16 ERA.

But the situationa­l hitting wasn’t there, which added the pressure placed on

Bautista and the rest of the bullpen. The Orioles struck out 10 times a day after punching out 11 times, requiring perfection from Bautista and the other relievers.

“I wanted [the sinker] a little bit lower than it was, and I left it up a little bit,” Bautista said through team interprete­r Brandon Quinones. “It was still a good pitch in my opinion. I have to give credit to the hitter. He did a really good job hitting that pitch.”

With the loss, Baltimore dropped a series against a club that dealt its best pitcher to Seattle and is 21 games under .500. With the trade deadline approachin­g on Tuesday, the Orioles have a more complicate­d decision ahead of them. They could conceivabl­y still push for a wild-card spot, but defeats to losing clubs don’t help that case.

A pitcher’s duel

One was a top prospect, another a midseason waiver claim. And yet when they met Sunday, there wasn’t anything separating Reds rookie left-hander Nick Lodolo and Voth.

They kept posting zeros on the board, managing more strikeouts than hits, and it resulted in the best outings of their seasons — if not careers. That’s especially the case for Lodolo, a 24-year-old who had made seven other major league starts. He carved through Baltimore’s order and weaved his way through infrequent trouble, punching out Ramón Urías with two runners on to end the sixth, for instance.

“We didn’t do much offensivel­y until he was out of the game,” Hyde said. “He has a really good arm and [he’s] a good-looking young starting pitcher.”

But similar can be said for Voth, who ran out of opportunit­ies with the Washington Nationals, was designated for assignment and now finds himself part of a rotation in Baltimore that’s competing for a playoff spot.

The average exit velocity off Voth on Sunday was 80.1 mph — the league average is around 87 — and he did most of his best work with his curveball. He induced four whiffs and drew six called strikes with that offering, throwing it over a third of the time.

“It was a weapon for me to use, for sure,” Voth said. “And then I was mixing in some changeups as well, and that’s a key pitch I’ll need to continue to use moving forward.”

The 30-year-old completed five innings for the second time this season and allowed four hits with no walks and six strikeouts — the first time Voth has pitched five scoreless innings since Aug. 8, 2020.

Before Voth joined Baltimore in June, the right-hander’s ERA had ballooned to 10.13. He had long been a spot starter or long reliever for the Nationals, but his career went sideways — then tipped over — when he allowed 21 earned runs in 18 ⅔ innings for Washington this season.

He soon found himself on waivers, then with the Orioles, then in the rotation. On Sunday, it was the bullpen that uncharacte­ristically bent, with two runs off righthande­r Bryan Baker and another from Bautista. But Voth laid the groundwork.

“In the past, it’s always been execution of my pitches to the middle of the plate,” Voth said. “Now, I’m trying to focus more on the four corners of the strike zone, and I think that’s really helping me.”

 ?? ANDY LYONS/GETTY ?? Orioles left fielder Ryan Mountcastl­e laughs after swinging at a pitch and falling down in the eighth inning against the Reds in Cincinnati on Sunday. Baltimore tied it at 2 in the frame but allowed the go-ahead homer in the bottom half of the inning in a 3-2 loss.
ANDY LYONS/GETTY Orioles left fielder Ryan Mountcastl­e laughs after swinging at a pitch and falling down in the eighth inning against the Reds in Cincinnati on Sunday. Baltimore tied it at 2 in the frame but allowed the go-ahead homer in the bottom half of the inning in a 3-2 loss.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States