
After falling behind by 6 in the 2nd inning, the Orioles storm back and rout Tampa Bay 22-8
Gary Sanchez homered and drove in four runs, Ramón Laureano scored four times, and the Baltimore Orioles stormed back from an early six-run deficit to rout the Tampa Bay Rays 22–8 on Friday night.
The Orioles were on the wrong end of a similar comeback against Tampa Bay just nine days earlier when the Rays rallied from down 8–0 to beat Baltimore 12–8. Tampa Bay opened the scoring with six runs in the second. Jonathan Aranda, Josh Lowe, and Brandon Lowe homered in that inning, but Rays starter Ryan Pepiot couldn't make it through the bottom half. The Orioles scored four runs in the second and one in the third. With Tampa Bay up 7–6 in the sixth, Sanchez hit a two-run shot. Colton Cowser's third double of the game brought home another run in the sixth. Sanchez then followed with his third hit–a two-run single that made it 11–7. Laureano added a two-run single in the seventh. Jackson Holliday's solo homer in the eighth made it 16–8, at which point infielder José Caballero came in to pitch for the Rays and allowed six more runs. Gunnar Henderson hit a two-run shot–his fourth hit of the game–off him. Sanchez finished with four hits as well. The Orioles had 21 as a team. Baltimore's final runs came when Coby Mayo hit his first career home run, a two-run shot off Caballero.
Tomoyuki Sugano (6–4) allowed seven runs in five innings for the Orioles. The 35-year-old rookie had gone his first 15 starts without allowing more than four. Pepiot had gone 12 straight starts permitting three runs or fewer, and the Rays were coming off a three-game sweep of Kansas City in which they allowed only one run total.
Key moment: Laureano and Cowser led off the bottom of the fifth with consecutive doubles to bring the Orioles within one, setting up Sanchez's big homer that bounced off the top of the wall and over in left-center field.
Key stat: The Orioles fell one run short of their team record since moving to Baltimore–which was set when they beat Toronto 23–1 on Sept. 28, 2000.
Up next: Zach Eflin (6–4) takes the mound for the Orioles against his former team Saturday. Tampa Bay counters with Zack Littell (6–7).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Arabiya
26 minutes ago
- Al Arabiya
Otto Lopez has 3 hits and 3 RBIs as Marlins beat Diamondbacks 9-8 for 5th straight win
Kyle Stowers hit a go-ahead solo home run in the sixth inning. Otto Lopez doubled, homered, and drove in three runs, and the Miami Marlins beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 9–8 on Friday night. The Marlins, who beat San Francisco 12–5 on Thursday to complete a three-game sweep, have won a season-high five in a row and six of seven. Lopez finished with three hits. Stowers also had an RBI double, and Heriberto Hernandez hit a solo home run. Lopez, Agustín Ramírez, and Stowers hit consecutive two-out doubles off starter Merrill Kelly (7–4) in the fourth inning to take a 2–1 lead. Starter Eury Pérez gave up a leadoff home run to Jake McCarthy and a walk before Ronny Henriquez (4-1) came in with one out in the fifth. Henriquez gave up one run – a home run by Geraldo Perdomo – in 1 1/3 innings. Jake McCarthy led off the third with a walk, stole second, and advanced to third by Pérez and then scored on a sacrifice fly by Alek Thomas for Arizona to open the scoring. McCarthy added a leadoff home run in the fifth. Thomas hit a solo shot in the seventh, and Pavin Smith capped the scoring with an RBI single in the ninth. Key moment: Stowers hit a leadoff home run in the sixth to chase Kelly, who was replaced by Juan Morillo. Connor Norby hit a two-out single and scored on a triple by Javier Sanoja to make it 6–4. Key stat: The Marlins, who went into the game leading the NL in hits (215), batting average (.268), and doubles (44) this month, finished with 13 hits. Miami has had at least 10 hits in a season-high five consecutive games and an MLB-best 12 in June. Up next: Marlins RHP Sandy Alcantara (4–8, 6.69 ERA) takes the mound Saturday against Diamondbacks RHP Brandon Pfaadt (8–5, 5.49).


Al Arabiya
an hour ago
- Al Arabiya
Nationals Set Season Highs for Hits and Runs in 15-9 Win Over Angels
Brady House hit a go-ahead RBI double in the seventh inning. Josh Bell and Jacob Young drove in three runs apiece, and the Washington Nationals set a season high for scoring in a 15–9 win against the Los Angeles Angels on Friday night. CJ Abrams, Luis García Jr., and Nathaniel Lowe each had three hits for the Nationals. García and Lowe each had two RBIs, and reliever Brad Lord (2-5) gave up a hit over 1 2/3 scoreless innings. Washington, which is just 6-18 in June, scored at least a run in each of the last five innings, capped by a four-run ninth. Bell hit a two-run homer in the second inning before Young had a two-out, two-run double and scored on a single by Abrams, who was thrown out at second trying to stretch it into a double. Lowe hit an RBI double and then scored on a single by Daylen Lile to give the Nationals an 8–7 lead in the fifth. Taylor Ward, Nolan Schanuel, and Jo Adell each homered for the Angels. Reliever Sam Bachman (1-1) took the loss. The Angels announced earlier Friday that manager Ron Washington would miss the rest of the season due to an unspecified medical issue. Ray Montgomery was named interim manager. Key moment: Bachman came on in the seventh and after taking an 0-1 lead in the count threw four consecutive balls to walk Bell. House hit the next pitch down the left field line to drive in Bell, and the Nationals led the rest of the way. Key stats: Seven different Angels players had multiple hits, and the team finished with a season-high nineteen.


Al Arabiya
2 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Phillies Have 17 Hits, 5 Home Runs in 13-0 Rout of Braves
Trae Turner hit two of Philadelphia's five home runs as the Phillies broke out of an offensive slump with a 13–0 rout of the Atlanta Braves on Friday night. Kyle Schwarber, Nick Castellanos, and Otto Kemp also hit home runs for the Phillies, who scored just one run in three games while being swept by the Houston Astros prior to arriving in Atlanta. The game was delayed 2 hours 19 minutes as a storm hit shortly before the scheduled first pitch. Phillies starter Mick Abel and Braves starter Bryce Elder had both warmed up, but Philadelphia decided to start Tanner Banks after the delay and throw a bullpen game while the Braves still went with Elder. The Phillies scored 10 runs (nine earned) on eight hits and four walks off of Elder (2–5) in two-plus innings. Elder surrendered three home runs. Banks pitched two innings before giving way to Taijuan Walker (3–5), who went two innings. Alan Rangel went the final five, allowing six hits and one walk. Kemp and Schwarber homered in the third inning. Kemp's was the first of his career, and Schwarber's was his 25th of the season. Turner went 4 for 6 with four runs scored, Schwarber was 1 for 3 with two walks and three runs scored, and J.T. Realmuto was 3 for 4 with a walk. Braves first baseman Matt Olson singled in the fifth inning to extend MLB's longest active on-base streak to 28 games. The 13 runs was the most allowed by the Braves in a game this season. Key moment: Castellanos' 445-foot home run to center field with two outs in the second inning extended the Phillies' lead to 5–0. Key stat: Eleven of Philadelphia's first 20 batters scored. Up next: The Phillies will start LHP Jesús Luzardo (7–3, 4.08 ERA) against Atlanta's RHP Spencer Schwellenbach (6–4, 3.21) on Saturday.