By Roch Kubatko on Wednesday, September 17 2025
Category: Orioles

Wells registers quality start, Beavers homers and Orioles complete sweep with 3-1 win

CHICAGO – With a Wild Card berth no longer a mathematical possibility, official elimination arriving late last night, the Orioles must set other goals over the last few weeks.

Perhaps they can finish in fourth place in the division. Maybe post a non-losing record along the way.

Sights are lowered for a team in the basement.

The Orioles completed their sweep of the White Sox this afternoon with a 3-1 victory before an announced crowd of 10,919 at Rate Field. They return home to play the Yankees and Rays and make their final trip with a weekend series in the Bronx.

That’s a wrap on 2025.

Ten games remain and the Orioles are 72-80. One loss leaves them no better than .500. They’re 1 ½ games behind Tampa Bay, which plays tonight.

The Orioles rebounded from the sweep in Toronto by continuing their dominance of the White Sox, going 6-0 this season and 11-1 since the start of 2024.

Tyler Wells allowed one run in six innings in his penultimate start. Dylan Beavers followed last night’s triple and home run with a two-run shot in the fourth inning. Gunnar Henderson had two more hits and stole a career-high three bases.

The Orioles tied the club record with seven steals.

Wells threw 10 pitches while retiring the side in order in the first. White Sox left-hander Martín Pérez threw 32, with 16 strikes, but allowed only one run.

Henderson reached with two outs on a bloop single to left and advanced to second base on Will Robertson’s fielding error. Tyler O’Neill walked, they executed a double steal, and Henderson scored on Jeremiah Jackson’s infield hit.

Jackson has 21 RBIs in 40 games.

Pérez threw only eight pitches in the second and he retired eight in a row. Mayo singled with one out in the fourth and Beavers reached the right field seats at 107 mph for his third major league home run.

Jorge Mateo, making a rare start, doubled and stole third base, and Pérez exited with left shoulder soreness.

Mike Tauchman homered to lead off the fourth inning, pulling a slider over the right field fence. Wells had escaped trouble in the second after back-to-back singles by Colson Montgomery and Edgar Quero, getting Lenyn Sosa to ground into a double play.

Wells retired the last seven batters and left with his pitch count at 89. He allowed four hits, walked none and struck out four, and his ERA is 2.04 in three starts. Three homers have accounted for the four runs against him.

Interim manager Tony Mansolino said it was “all hands on deck” in the bullpen, and Yaramil Hiraldo followed his 1 1/3 scoreless innings last night by retiring the side in order in the seventh. Rico Garcia and Keegan Akin also worked in consecutive games. Garcia retired his three batters and Akin recorded his seventh save.

Mansolino has reached the four-month mark in his new role with his record improving to 57-52. He’s unsure whether he fits in the team’s plans for 2026, but a strong finish is important under any circumstances.

Asked twice today what he’s learned from the experience, his response didn’t change.

“The most visible thing is what happens in the game, right?” he said. “The bullpen moves and the pinch-hitting and win-losses, as it should be in a lot of ways. But I think probably the most important thing for a major league manager is actually what’s going on in the building, what’s going on in the clubhouse, what’s going on with his staff, the connection and collaboration, front office, down through coaches and players. The culture you create on the team. The freedom and looseness that you try to get your team to play with.

“To the fans and the people in the stadium, what’s on the field, what’s on the grass and the dirt they probably think is the most important, but I promise you the leadership and culture part far outweigh the actual in-game stuff for me personally. But you need to win, so you better do the stuff on the field the right way, too.”

More games against the White Sox would lessen the challenge.

Catcher Gary Sánchez is on his rehab assignment with Triple-A Norfolk and Mansolino said there are “a lot of moving parts with that right now” regarding the veteran’s return.

“I think over the next few days we’ll see how his rehab goes and how he’s feeling and everything that’s kind of associated with that, and then we’ll probably go from there.”

Adley Rutschman started his rehab assignment today with Norfolk. He’s catching Game 1 of a doubleheader.

The Braves claimed reliever Carson Ragsdale on waivers from the Orioles.

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