Late rally comes up short in Baltimore's 5-4 loss (updated)

Cedric Mullins

MILWAUKEE – The first two innings haven’t been kind to the Orioles in the Tony Mansolino era. Late deficits haven’t been kind to Baltimore all season. 

In the first game of their new series against the Brewers, the Orioles beat both trends. But they couldn’t beat the Brewers, falling 5-4 in Game 1. 

Yesterday, the ever-reliable Zach Eflin allowed seven earned runs in his first two frames against the Nationals. On Saturday, Kyle Gibson and Charlie Morton combined to do the same. 

The Orioles, on the other hand, found their earliest runs of those two games in the fifth inning. 

Tonight’s deficit of 3-1 after two innings wasn’t quite 7-0, but it still wasn’t the start the Orioles were looking for.

Orioles lose late lead again and fall 4-3 to Nationals (updated)

Cade Povich

There are moments that in an instant seem to encapsulate the Orioles’ 2025 season. You just have to look for them. They really aren’t hard to find.

The latest example came tonight when they stranded three runners in the first inning and immediately fell behind, a nasty predicament for a team that was 4-19 when the opponent scored first and too often putty in the hands of a lefty starter.  

Change is good and the Orioles desperately needed it. They toyed with it. But old issues keep resurfacing.

They collected 10 hits off the Nationals’ MacKenzie Gore in 3 2/3 innings, broke a tie on Ramón Urías sacrifice fly in his third attempt with the bases full, were tied again and lost 4-3 at Camden Yards on a two-out infield single in the ninth inning off Félix Bautista.

Anything that could go wrong did go wrong.

Offense breaks through in series-clinching win (updated)

Gunnar-Henderson-black-jersey

ANAHEIM – The Orioles needed a bounceback in the worst way. 

After being swept in three games in Minnesota, the Birds flew to Anaheim in search of answers. Perhaps they found some in a 7-3 victory that wrapped up a series win. 

The sun was shining brightly on a beautiful Mother’s Day in Anaheim. It was a bit too bright, perhaps, for Taylor Ward. 

Gunnar Henderson led off the game with a left-on-left double into the right-center field gap. A few batters later, it appeared as if the O’s had stranded another runner in scoring position when Adley Rutschman flew a ball with a 99 percent catch probability to left. Instead, Ward lost the ball in the Sunday sun and it dropped safely onto the outfield grass for a Rutschman triple. Henderson scored, and the Birds had given Zach Eflin an early 1-0 lead. 

That advantage quickly dissipated. 

Morton and Akin surrender home runs, Orioles' losing streak reaches four games (updated)

Morton and Akin surrender home runs, Orioles' losing streak reaches four games (updated)

MINNEAPOLIS – The first two Twins batters struck out tonight and six of seven were retired. Charlie Morton appeared to be launching his redemption tour at Target Field.

Byron Buxton had to ruin it in the third inning by launching a curveball into the second deck for a three-run homer.

Morton was removed after the fourth with his pitch count at 70, Harrison Bader provided some cushion with a two-run shot off Keegan Akin in the seventh, and the Orioles lost again, 5-2, to fall nine games below .500 for the first time since July 2, 2022.

The Orioles have dropped four in a row and 11 of 15. Their last four-game skid came within a stretch of five straight defeats from July 9-13, 2024.

Ramón Laureano led off the top of the third inning with a 425-foot shot to center field off Simeon Woods Richardson for his fourth home run of the season. The Orioles had an early lead, but it didn’t last long.

Lefties leave Orioles with another loss

sugano @ KC

The Orioles’ best starter warmed in the bullpen, retired the side in order in the first inning on only nine pitches and sat, waited and wondered if he’d get back on the mound.

Long rain delays are the enemy of every manager who detests an unplanned bullpen game.

Tomoyuki Sugano wasn’t done, warming again and returning after a 57-minute stoppage. Large puddles had formed in front of the home dugout area. Sugano looked for a while like he’d make the night’s biggest splash.

Sugano’s scoreless streak reached 14 innings before the Royals pushed across a run in the fourth. Cavan Biggio hit his first home run in the fifth, and the Orioles still couldn’t solve Royals left-hander Kris Bubic in a 4-0 loss before an announced crowd of 19,348 at soggy Camden Yards.

The Orioles were trying to win three in a row for the first time since the three-game series in Minnesota that ended the 2024 regular season. Instead, they were shut out for the fifth time.

Laureano taking advantage of more starts to slip out of slump

Ramon Laureano

Doing curls in the weight room isn’t part of outfielder Ramón Laureano’s pregame routine. They aren’t a superstition after he came off the bench unexpectedly and hit two home runs against the Reds. He’s pumped up, but mostly because he’s getting to play.

Colton Cowser fractured his left thumb in the opening series in Toronto. Tyler O’Neill went on the injured list over the weekend with neck inflammation. The Orioles needed Laureano in the lineup, and he responded with seven hits in a span of 24 at-bats.

Laureano doubled twice Monday night against the Yankees and drove in the Orioles’ first run.

“Love him,” said first baseman Ryan O’Hearn, who hit a three-run homer in a 4-3 win. “He’s a competitor. Man, he gets in there and competes. He’s had some big swings for us lately and I can’t say enough good things. We need to keep him going. He’s definitely a spark for us.”

Laureano’s bat couldn't reach a temperature to create one earlier in the season.

Orioles hit back-to-back homers twice in Young's debut, Laureano provides power off bench in 9-5 win (updated)

Ramón Laureano

The Orioles thought they knew what was coming today from Reds starter Hunter Greene - the 99-100 mph fastball, the plus-sliders, the scoreless streak, the stacked odds. Brandon Young was the riddle, an undrafted rookie making his major league debut.

Young’s hair is long, but the Orioles hoped that his outing would provide some length.

You can’t count on much these days, and that includes Greene’s dominance. He lasted only three innings and surrendered three homers among his five runs. Greene went four-plus and left with a lead. And Ramón Laureano provided an unexpected twist by homering twice off the bench.

Jordan Westburg snapped an 0-for-30 stretch with a homer, and seven relievers combined for two-run ball over five innings in the Orioles’ wild 9-5 victory over the Reds before an announced orange-clad crowd of 28,534 at Camden Yards.

Félix Bautista warmed and sat down after the Orioles (9-11) scored twice in the eighth. He got up again after Austin Hays led off the ninth by clearing the left field wall against Matt Bowman and Gavin Lux doubled. A walk brought Bautista into the game with two on and no outs, they were stranded to give him the save, and the Orioles will try to claim another series Sunday.

Leftovers for breakfast

Seranthony Dominguez

Tyler O’Neill knew that he’d move around the outfield after signing his three-year, $49.5 million deal with the Orioles. He won two Gold Gloves in left with the Cardinals but has made four of his five starts in right this season.

Last night’s original lineup had O’Neill in left and Ramón Laureano in right, the same setup as Monday for home Opening Day, but they switched positions in the updated lineup less than an hour later.

Left field is up for grabs after Colton Cowser fractured his left thumb Sunday in Toronto. He’s expected to be out six-to-eight weeks at a minimum. But the Orioles have the same flexibility in their outfield as they do in the infield.

Long gone are the days of Don Buford in left, Paul Blair in center and Frank Robinson in right. Or two-thirds of the outfield consisting of Al Bumbry in center and Ken Singleton in right, or Adam Jones in center and Nick Markakis in right.

O’Neill is most likely to play where Markakis used to roam.

Spring training leftovers for breakfast

Spring training leftovers for breakfast

SARASOTA, Fla. – Enrique Bradfield Jr. joined in the raucous celebration last night after Leandro Arias’ walk-off single in the Spring Breakout game. He embraced teammates as the crowd erupted in a way normally sparked by major league comebacks, and he was one of the last Orioles prospects to leave the field.

He was euphoric and destroyed. Overcome with joy and overwhelmed by sadness. Somehow, the young man held it together as these emotions collided.

Bradfield opened up to the media afterward about his childhood friend, 25-year-old Isaiah Hood, who died last week in a motorcycle accident. They grew up together, played travel ball, became more like brothers.

Asked to imagine how Isaiah would have reacted to last night’s dramatic win, Bradfield said, “I hope he’s happy. I hope he’s happy.”

“You know,” Bradfield continued, “I tried to be focused out there and my energy in that moment sliding across home plate specifically, it’s just, maybe some emotion comes out of me and that’s normal, you know? That’s life. Bad things happen. You have to pick yourself up and keep moving forward.

Orioles and Blue Jays lineups in Dunedin

Cade Povich

DUNEDIN, Fla. – The Orioles brought reserves and minor leaguers to TD Ballpark for today's game against the Blue Jays.

Ramón Laureano is leading off and playing center field. Dylan Carlson follows in right field and Coby Mayo is batting cleanup as the designated hitter.

Other players on the trip include Nick Gordon in left field, Emmanuel Rivera at first base, Vimael Machín at third base, Livan Soto at second and Luis Vazquez at shortstop.

Maverick Handley is catching left-hander Cade Povich, who threw four innings on a back field the last time that he faced hitters.

Povich has made two starts and tossed five scoreless innings with one hit and seven strikeouts.

Orioles and Blue Jays lineups (updated with Westburg and Bautista)

Grayson Rodriguez

SARASOTA, Fla. – Orioles reliever Nate Webb is one of today’s scheduled pitchers against the Blue Jays at Ed Smith Stadium.

This is a big deal for Webb and his family. It’s his first outing since March 9, 2023 in the Pirates camp prior to undergoing ligament-reconstructive surgery in his right elbow.

The Orioles signed Webb to a two-year minor league deal and were on the verge of assigning him to an affiliate before he tore his left Achilles tendon in May. He was invited to camp this spring.

Grayson Rodriguez makes his first exhibition start, with Toronto sending former Orioles minor leaguer Easton Lucas to the mound.

I’ll save you the trouble: Lucas was acquired from the Marlins for infielder Jonathan Villar on Dec. 2, 2019. The Orioles traded him to the Athletics for reliever Shintaro Fujinami on July 19, 2023.

What does Mateo's injury mean for the position player battle?

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Heston Kjerstad’s reputation is that of a powerful slugger from the left side of the plate.

So would you believe me if I told you that he and Jackson Holliday had the exact same career minor league batting average? Or that Kjerstad’s .387 on-base percentage was just three points below Adley Rutschman’s down on the farm? The Arkansas product has proved himself to be a well-rounded force at the plate, and an OPS close to .750 in limited action in the big leagues is a sign of better things to come. Manager Brandon Hyde and general manager Mike Elias seem to think so, too. 

“He’s put up huge Triple-A numbers, and there’s opportunity now,” Hyde told reporters down in Sarasota.

“I think he’s kind of earned the right to get a lot of at-bats in the corner outfield and in the DH spot, specifically against right-handed pitching,” added Elias. 

As Elias said, Kjerstad has earned at-bats in the big leagues. But there are only so many swings and roster spots to go around. 

First Orioles spring training workout brings endless interview possibilities and potential for breaking news

Brandon-Hyde-and-Mike-Elias-2

SARASOTA, Fla. – I took a long walk around the outside of the Ed Smith Stadium facility yesterday to get in some steps – my Fitbit kept checking whether I was dead – and to snap a few photos. The sun periodically would duck behind the clouds and the wind picked up in intensity, but escaping the latest snow storm back home made it more than tolerable.

I also went into the team store and bought a 4T shirt. I’ve gone down a few sizes since my heart surgery and orders to shelve workouts for a while, but it also should fit my granddaughter.

The sounds of batting practice could be heard in the distance, likely one hitter in the cage on a back field. Media access begins today, enabling us to put faces with the swings.

During a recent radio hit, I was asked about the most difficult part of covering spring training. I chose the inability to be in more than one place at a time. Watch a bullpen session and risk missing BP. Wander over to Field 3 and miss something important on the main stadium field. Return to the press box to write and risk missing everything.

You’ve just got to make your choices and live with them, which also is good relationship advice.

Because You Asked - The Voyage Home

Dylan Cease

The opportunities to empty the offseason mailbag are dwindling. Spring training is right around the corner. Who’s excited?

That’s my only question. The rest must come from the readers.

You ask, I try to answer, and we have the latest sequel to the beloved 2008 original.

I don’t tamper with length, style, clarity or brevity. I usually don’t bother to shower. This is a very casual mailbag.

Also, my mailbag reports early and yours has visa problems and a maxed-out AMEX card.

Latest on Orioles' 40-man roster and questions surrounding it

Jorge Mateo

The Orioles have constructed a full 40-man roster with a revolving door at the end of it.

They began January by signing veteran starter Charlie Morton and designating catcher René Pinto for assignment. The Diamondbacks claimed Pinto on waivers. The Orioles claimed pitcher Roansy Contreras and designated infielder Liván Soto, who was outrighted after clearing waivers. They signed reliever Andrew Kittredge and designated catcher Blake Hunt before trading him to the Mariners. They claimed infielder Jacob Amaya and designated Contreras, who was claimed by the Yankees. They signed outfielder Dylan Carlson and designated Amaya, and they acquired infielder Luis Vazquez in a trade with the Cubs and designated infielder Emmanuel Rivera.

This brings us to February.

The White Sox claimed Amaya, and Vazquez was designated when the Orioles signed outfielder Ramón Laureano. We aren’t even a week into the month.

Let’s take the latest look at the 40-man roster, which used to contain four catchers but now holds seven outfielders.

Orioles sign Ramón Laureano to one-year deal with option

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As speculation and rumors keep swirling about the Orioles’ quest to add another starting pitcher, contract agreements are finalized to deepen the outfield and raise more questions about possible future moves.

A crowded outfield is going to need extra space. The team announced today that it signed Ramón Laureano to a one-year deal with a club option for 2026. He can earn $4 million this season and the option is worth $6.5 million, per a source.

A corresponding 40-man roster move involved infielder Luis Vázquez, who was designated for assignment after the Orioles acquired him from the Cubs Friday for cash considerations.

Colton Cowser, Cedric Mullins and Tyler O’Neill are the projected starters, with Heston Kjerstad viewed as the favorite to make the club as a fourth outfielder. Dylan Carlson signed last month for $975,000, but he holds three minor league options. Daz Cameron also is on the 40-man.

Carrying a fifth outfielder would whittle the infield group to six. Jorge Mateo is questionable for Opening Day after undergoing elbow surgery in late August. He’s going to be slow-played in camp.