Let’s try this again.

The Orioles and Tigers will attempt to play a day-night doubleheader, with a split admission but also a chance to sweep. Brandon Young starts Game 1, followed by left-hander Trevor Rogers in the second game.

Kyle Bradish, Shane Baz and Chris Bassitt can stay in turn for the upcoming series against the Rays at Camden Yards, but the Orioles must find a starter for Thursday’s opener against the Blue Jays.

They could go with a bullpen arrangement, though the downside is burning through relievers and having to make at least one move to compensate. They could give the ball to Albert Suárez, who might be able to provide some length before manager Craig Albernaz arranges for the baton passing.

Trey Gibson made his major league debut with a May 3 start at Yankee Stadium and pitched in relief five days later against the Athletics. He’s eligible to return by Thursday.

Cade Povich received a cortisone injection in his left elbow and isn’t available, and updates are scarce on Dean Kremer, who’s on the injured list with a strained right quadriceps and hasn’t started a rehab assignment.

The 40-man roster is full.

Both teams can add a 27th man for today’s doubleheader. Among the extra relief options for the Orioles are Cameron Foster, Nick Raquet, Josh Walker and Eduarniel Núñez. The rule requiring a player to stay down 15 days is waived.

Foster and Raquet each tossed a perfect inning Friday night. Foster threw seven pitches and Raquet five.

Gibson started Wednesday for Triple-A Norfolk and would be on short rest if called up. He was removed after only three innings, but he threw 75 pitches – 39 for strikes.

Non-roster left-hander Andrew Magno, 28, tossed another scoreless inning Friday and lowered his ERA to 0.92 in 17 appearances. He had allowed two earned runs and struck out 23 in 19 2/3 innings, maybe inching him closer to his major league debut.

Magno was used last night in the 10th inning in Jacksonville, let the automatic runner score and surrendered a walk-off grand slam to Cody Morissette. None of the runs were earned and his ERA lowered to 0.89.

The Orioles’ bullpen has allowed only 21.9 percent of inherited runners to score, second lowest in the majors behind Seattle’s 16.4 percent. The major league average is 30.2 percent, according to STATS.

Rico Garcia (0.84 ERA) and Yennier Cano (1.42) have formed one of the best relief duos in baseball. On the STATS list of pitchers with 20 or more appearances and ERAs under 2.00, Garcia and Cano join Toronto’s Tyler Rogers and Louis Varland, Atlanta’s Dylan Lee and Robert Suarez, Cleveland’s Erik Sabrowski and Tim Herrin, the Mets’ Huascar Brazoban and Brooks Raley, and San Diego’s Bradgley Rodriguez and Mason Miller.

Cano has appeared in 230 games since the start of the 2023 season, tied yesterday for fourth most in the majors.

On the hitting side, the Orioles are counting on Gunnar Henderson and Pete Alonso to stay hot under any weather conditions.

Henderson is 13-for-31 with three doubles and a home run in his last seven games. He’s recorded consecutive three-plus hit games for the first time since Aug. 10-11, 2024 and has three-plus hits in three of his last five games. Six of 12 are multi-hit efforts.

Alonso has homered in back-to-back games, including his three-run shot Friday night. Eight of his 10 home runs have come against right-handers, and six have gone to right field.

Alonso is 8-for-23 with nine RBIs in his last six games and he has 21 hits this month to tie Henderson for most on the club.

“There’s no secret,” Bassitt said after Friday’s 7-3 win. “When Pete and Gunnar are just who they are, they have the ability to carry an entire offense, and it kind of showed up tonight. It’s great when they’re both on, but even just one of them can do that.

“I think it was just getting them back to who they are. Not asking for more than that. Just getting those two guys going.”

*According to the transactions page, the Orioles signed left-hander Stephen Still and right-hander Andrew Herbert to minor league contracts.

Still, 24, was assigned to Class A Delmarva. He’s pitched in independent leagues the past two years after attending Loyola University New Orleans.

Herbert, 25, pitched in the independent Frontier League last summer after attending Reinhardt University in Georgia. He’s also assigned to the Shorebirds.