Hyde clarifies: G1 caught stealing was busted hit-and-run
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BALTIMORE -- What exactly went wrong when Orioles rookie Gunnar Henderson was thrown out trying to steal second base in the ninth inning of Saturday¡¯s American League Division Series Game 1 vs. the Rangers? That remained a burning question heading into Sunday.
After Baltimore¡¯s 3-2 loss, manager Brandon Hyde called it a ¡°miscommunication,¡± while Henderson -- who opened the ninth with a single -- said it was Hyde¡¯s call to go for a steal at that moment. Both statements are true.
Hyde clarified prior to Sunday¡¯s ALDS Game 2 that he had called for a hit-and-run, and veteran Aaron Hicks, who was at the plate at the time, missed the sign on the 2-1 count. Henderson was nabbed at second by Jonah Heim, and Hicks went on to strike out. Adam Frazier grounded out to end it.
¡°That's just something that we've done a lot this year,¡± Hyde said of the decision. ¡°Hicksy has been wonderful for us this entire season, in so many ways. We do put runners in motion, we don't hit a ton of homers, trying to generate offense a little bit at times. We bunt, we do the little things. And yesterday, we just missed a sign in the ninth inning there.¡±
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Hyde emphasized that the missed sign wasn¡¯t the primary reason the Orioles lost. He identified the earlier scoring chances Baltimore did not capitalize on.
Hicks drew a leadoff walk in the seventh before the next three O¡¯s batters went down in order. Baltimore had runners on first and second with no outs in the eighth, but Anthony Santander grounded into a double play and Ryan Mountcastle struck out to leave a man on third.
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¡°That didn't cost us the game,¡± Hyde said of the missed hit-and-run. ¡°We need to start taking a little bit of pressure off our pitchers and scoring early in the game. Yesterday, we just didn't execute at the times that we have this season.¡±
Hall impresses in first postseason appearance
Fifteen Orioles players made their playoff debuts in Game 1. Among them was rookie left-hander DL Hall, who had one of the most impressive showings of the afternoon.
Hall tossed 1 2/3 scoreless innings of relief without allowing a hit. The 25-year-old struck out three and walked one. Hall entered with two outs in the sixth and got Baltimore out of a jam before working a 1-2-3 seventh and striking out Nathaniel Lowe to open the eighth.
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After making 11 appearances for the Orioles in 2022, Hall had an unorthodox road back to the Majors. The 2017 first-round Draft pick -- one of Baltimore¡¯s top prospects as recently as 2022 -- didn¡¯t make the team out of Spring Training, having been slowed by a lower-back injury early in camp.
During the Minor League season, Hall stopped pitching in games for nearly two months, spending much of the summer participating in a strengthening program at the O¡¯s spring complex in Sarasota, Fla. He returned to Triple-A Norfolk in early August, then got called up to the big leagues on Aug. 26 to provide a boost to Baltimore¡¯s bullpen.
¡°I think that it was the best decision for me to go down there and get ready,¡± said Hall, who had a 3.26 ERA in 18 regular-season big league appearances. ¡°Because I felt like I could either continue to kind of spin my wheels and try and rehab and play at the same time, or I could come and go to Florida and get ready and where I needed to be, and come be a part of the playoffs for this team. ...
¡°I want to be a part of it. I want to help this team win in the playoffs. I think that was in the back of my head every day, for sure.¡±
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O¡¯s waiting to announce Game 3 starter
Per Hyde, Baltimore will not reveal the starting pitcher for Tuesday¡¯s Game 3 at Globe Life Field until Monday¡¯s off-day. The decision could depend on whether the Orioles tie the ALDS at 1 or are facing a 2-0 hole on the road.
The assignment will go to either Dean Kremer or Kyle Gibson, and there are reasons to consider both right-handers.
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Kremer had the better regular season, posting a 4.12 ERA over 32 starts. The 27-year-old allowed three earned runs or fewer in 23 outings.
Gibson is an 11-year big league veteran with postseason experience (3 1/3 innings over three outings). The 35-year-old also had a strong finish to the regular season, recording a 2.45 ERA over five September starts.
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Baltimore likely would have started John Means, but the 30-year-old southpaw was excluded from the ALDS roster due to left elbow soreness.