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Orioles drop Game 1 to Royals, 1-0, for 9th consecutive postseason loss

Matt Weyrich, Baltimore Sun on

Published in Baseball

BALTIMORE — Corbin Burnes gave the Orioles everything they could ask for out of an ace in Game 1 of a playoff series. Cole Ragans and the Royals’ bullpen were simply better.

The Orioles lost the opener of their American League wild-card series to Kansas City, 1-0, on Tuesday afternoon at Camden Yards, setting up a win-or-go-home Game 2 on Wednesday. Burnes held the Royals to five hits over eight-plus stellar innings, but a costly one-out walk to third baseman Maikel Garcia in the sixth led to a go-ahead RBI single by star shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. that proved to be the difference in the game.

Burnes was the first Orioles starter to complete eight innings in a playoff game and lose since Scott McGregor in Game 1 of the 1983 World Series. With the loss, the Orioles extended their playoff losing streak to nine games — tied for the sixth longest in MLB history and the longest active streak of any club — in a stretch that dates to the 2014 American League Championship Series when they were swept by the Royals.

Coming off a 91-win regular season, the Orioles entered October looking to build off the momentum they gained by closing out the campaign with a 7-3 record over their final 10. Baltimore fell short of winning back-to-back American League East titles, grinding through the final three months as injuries struck and struggles with runners in scoring position mounted. While several star position players did make it back in time for the postseason, the latter still managed to carry over.

Ragans scattered four hits over six scoreless innings and struck out eight while the Orioles went just 1 for 6 with runners in scoring position against the left-hander. He was in position to match Burnes inning-for-inning but exited the contest with left calf cramps after the sixth. The Orioles didn’t fare much better against Kansas City’s bullpen, never pushing a runner past second base over the final three frames.

The Orioles had their chances, though. Cedric Mullins hit a leadoff double off the scoreboard in right field to start the third inning, but he never made it past third base after James McCann struck out swinging, Gunnar Henderson grounded out and Jordan Westburg flew out to deep left field. They put runners on the corners with one out in the fifth and left them there as Ragans struck out both McCann and Henderson.

Perhaps their best opportunity came in the eighth when, with Ragans out of the game, Henderson drew a two-out walk off Royals setup man Kris Bubic and Westburg followed with a single up the middle. Kansas City manager Matt Quatraro turned to closer Lucas Erceg to finish out the frame and he did just that, retiring Anthony Santander on a groundout.

 

All the while, Burnes continued to give the Orioles a chance to win. He allowed a leadoff single to second baseman Michael Massey in the first and settled in to retire 12 straight before first baseman Yuli Gurriel singled in the fifth. Even that base runner was erased, however, as Ryan Mountcastle turned an unassisted double play.

The scoreless tie didn’t hold for long, however, as No. 9 hitter Garcia worked an eight-pitch at-bat to earn a walk — the only free pass Burnes issued in the game. The speedy infielder made him pay for it, stealing second base a few pitches later to move into scoring position. Witt, the likely runner-up for this year’s AL Most Valuable Player Award, then brought him home on a single to left.

Burnes didn’t let the run shake his confidence, getting through the frame on a replay-confirmed caught stealing of Witt at second before setting down six in a row to complete eight innings. He came out for the ninth seeking the first complete game of his MLB career, but Garcia singled to end his afternoon at 84 pitches. Kansas City threatened to add some insurance runs when Keegan Akin allowed a two-out walk but Seranthony Domínguez struck out Perez to keep it a 1-0 game.

And that’s where the score went final. Erceg returned to the mound for the ninth and worked around a leadoff walk to Ryan O’Hearn to secure the save.

Needing a win to extend the series to three games, the Orioles are expected to start Zach Eflin opposite Royals right-hander Seth Lugo in Game 2. They’ll look to become the first team in the wild-card round era (since 2022) to win the series after losing Game 1.


©2024 Baltimore Sun. Visit baltimoresun.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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