Jackson Holliday’s injury rehab assignment with Triple-A Norfolk runs through next Wednesday. He isn’t in tonight’s lineup but will play the next two days.

Holliday underwent surgery on Feb. 12 to remove a broken right hamate bone. He’s appeared in nine games with the Tides and gone 6-for-35 with two doubles and a .465 OPS.

The lingering discomfort that Holliday’s feeling isn’t unusual and can slow the ramp up process.

“That’s my experience with them,” said manager Craig Albernaz. “Each player’s different, either how the surgery went, how they’re recovering, how they’re dealing with whatever it is. But to me, that’s common.

“Last year, Chase DeLauter had a similar injury and he had some discomfort for an extended period of time, too. I’m not saying Jackson is in that same scope, but it is common to have some type of whatever feeling, soreness, whatever it is.”

The Orioles aren’t consumed by rehab statistics. There are other boxes to check before his season debut.

“Just making sure that Jackson is feeling as healthy as he can,” Albernaz said. “That’s it for me. As long as his wrist is feeling great, his body’s feeling great.”

Reliever Dietrich Enns says the medication is working on his infected left foot and the improvement leaves him encouraged about a relatively quick return.

Enns went on the 15-day injured list retroactive to April 4. He allowed a run the previous night after walking three batters, worked out and went back to the team hotel in Pittsburgh. He woke up Saturday morning and noticed some swelling near his big toe.

“I said something to the trainer, like, ‘Hey, something doesn’t feel right in there,’” Enns said. “So we did some treatment on it, and then I went out and played catch like normal, ran a little bit and was able to be all right. And Sunday morning, Easter morning, my foot kind of blew up even more and could barely put any weight on it. It was super red, swollen, so that’s when I went to the ER in Pittsburgh and got an antibiotic IV and just started taking antibiotics from there.

“They said it was just an infection. Yeah, kind of crazy. Don’t know really what caused it. They said it could have been from like a micro cut in my foot or somewhere or a bug bite, but we’ve had so many people check my feet out. They haven’t found anything out of the ordinary and there’s nothing that I can really pinpoint in the last week or two that has been anything different. So it’s just one of those unfortunate things that happened, and we’re just trying to get past it and recover the best we can.”

Enns had almost regained full range with the toe and foot.

“Hopefully, it’s just as brief as it can be and I’ll be back as soon as possible.”

According to STATS, reliever Rico Garcia is the first Oriole to not allow a hit while also collecting a win and save through his first six outings of a season.

Taylor Ward is the first player to have nine doubles through his first 12 games with the club, surpassing the record of seven shared by Jose Iglesias (2020), Renato Nuñez (2017) and Tim Beckham (2017).

The bullpen hasn’t allowed an inherited runner to score (0-for-13). The Guardians (0-for-17) are the only other club with a clean mark.

For the Giants

Willy Adames SS
Luis Arraez 2B
Matt Chapman 3B
Rafael Devers 1B
Casey Schmitt DH
Jung Hoo Lee RF
Heliot Ramos LF
Patrick Bailey C
Harrison Bader CF

Landen Roupp RHP

Tyler O’Neill has been scratched from the lineup due to illness.

Gunnar Henderson SS
Taylor Ward LF
Adley Rutschman C
Pete Alonso 1B
Samuel Basallo DH
Dylan Beavers RF
Leody Taveras CF
Jeremiah Jackson 2B
Blaze Alexander 3B