logo
Garcia hits tiebreaking sacrifice fly, Wood and Bell homer as Nationals edge Orioles 4-3

Garcia hits tiebreaking sacrifice fly, Wood and Bell homer as Nationals edge Orioles 4-3

Fox Sports24-04-2025
Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — Luis Garcia Jr.'s sacrifice fly to deep center plated Alex Call with the go-ahead run in the bottom of the eighth, James Wood led off the game with his eighth homer and the Washington Nationals beat the Baltimore Orioles 4-3 on Wednesday.
Wood drove the fifth pitch of the game by Orioles starter Tomoyaki Sugano 431 feet over the right-center field wall and Josh Bell added a two-run shot as the Nationals raced out to a 3-0 lead on three hits in the first inning.
Kyle Finnegan allowed two singles but struck out Tyler O'Neill and got Heston Kjerstad to pop out in the ninth for his ninth save of the season. Jorge Lopez (1-0) earned the win. Gregory Soto (0-1) took the loss.
Wood's blast left the park at 116.3 mph and was second career leadoff homer. The first came against Mitch Keller on April 15 at Pittsburgh.
Bell's homer was his fourth of the season and 27th of his career at Nationals Park.
Down 3-0, the Orioles scored single runs in the third, seventh and eighth innings. Jordan Westburg's triple led off the eighth. Ramon Urias's sacrifice fly to center field brought him home to tie the game at 3.
Trevor Williams skirted through trouble later in his outing, allowing one run on six hits over five innings, striking out five and walking one. He threw 99 pitches, 61 for strikes. Key moment
Sugano settled in after the first inning, allowing just two hits over the next six to toss seven innings for the second consecutive start. He struck out one and walked none. Key stat
After going 2-for-26, Rutschman singled in his first two at-bats, including an RBI single to get the Orioles on the board in the third. Up next
Nationals left-hander MacKenzie Gore (2-2, 3.41 ERA), who leads the majors with 45 strikeouts, takes on Orioles left-hander Cade Povich (0-2, 6.38) in the series finale.
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
recommended
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Marlins keep Alcantara and Cabrera, deal Sanchez. Insight into their thinking
Marlins keep Alcantara and Cabrera, deal Sanchez. Insight into their thinking

Miami Herald

time8 minutes ago

  • Miami Herald

Marlins keep Alcantara and Cabrera, deal Sanchez. Insight into their thinking

The Marlins, who have won 11 of their past 12 series and climbed within three games of .500, opted to hang onto their best players before Thursday's Major League Baseball trade deadline. Miami, which went 15-10 in July and stands third in the National League at 52-55, kept pitchers Sandy Alcantara and Edward Cabrera, who attracted considerable interest from other teams. The Marlins also kept together a bullpen that has been generally effective, including Anthony Bender, Calvin Faucher and Ronny Henriquez. According to a source, the Marlins kept Alcantara and Cabrera because they wanted to take a disciplined approach to this trade deadline and also because no team met an extremely high asking price for either player. The Marlins' strong play in recent weeks also contributed to the decision to keep those two players, pitcher Cal Quantrill and the entire bullpen. The Marlins made only one trade, sending Jesus Sanchez -- their longest tenured outfielder -- to Houston in exchange for right-handed pitcher Ryan Gusto and two prospects - shortstop Chase Jaworsky (Houston's No. 13 prospect, per and outfielder Esmil Valencia. According to a source, the Marlins dealt Sanchez because they want to give a chance to Jakob Marsee, who was acquired in last year's Luis Arraez trade with San Diego. He could be promoted at any time. The 24-year-old Marsee, a former sixth-round pick and left-handed hitter, is batting .246 (.379 on base average) with 14 homers, 37 RBI, 14 doubles and 47 steals in 60 attempts in 98 games at Triple A Jacksonville. Gusto is expected to join Triple A Jacksonville because there are no open spots on the Marlins pitching staff and the organization wants him to remain a starter. He has a similar wins over replacement as Sanchez and is under team control for six years. The Marlins see Jaworsky as a well-rounded prospect with good bat to ball skills. The Marlins' outfield now will feature All Star Kyle Stowers, Dane Myers, potentially Marsee and Heriberto Hernandez. Here are more details on the Sanchez trade. Alcantara - who has had a rocky season while returning from Tommy John surgery - hasn't allowed a run in his past 12 innings over two starts, and there was a robust trade market for both him and Cabrera, who has delivered the best season of his career season. Cabrera's 3.35 ERA in 18 starts ranks 14th among National League starters. Both pitchers are under team control for at least two more seasons. Alcantara, 29, is making $17.3 million this season and next season, with a $21 million team option for 2027. Cabrera, 27, is arbitration-eligible for the next two seasons. Alcantara, who won the 2022 National League Cy Young award, stands first all time among Marlins starters in walks and hits per innings pitched (1.19), second in strikeouts with 870 and third in both complete games (12) and ERA (3.65). He will now have a chance to build on those numbers. This season, he's 6-9 with a 6.36 ERA in 21 starts, with 155 base-runners allowed in 109 innings. By also keeping all of their relief pitchers as well as veteran starter Cal Quantrill (who has allowed one earned run in his past three starts, spanning 16 innings), the Marlins kept intact a pitching staff that finished July with a combined 2.60 ERA, the best mark in July in club history and the second-best ERA in any month, trailing only April 2005, when the pitching staff had a 2.28 ERA. Starters Alcantara, Cabrera, Eury Perez, Quantrill and Janson Junk have all pitched well recently. Junk, who is 5-2 with a 3.38 ERA, is expected to pitch the opener of a much-anticipated home series against the New York Yankees at 7:10 p.m. Friday. Perez (3-3, 3.07) is scheduled to pitch Game 2 at 4:10 p.m. Saturday at loanDepot Park and Cabrera is scheduled to take the mound Sunday's 1:40 p.m. series finale. Alcantara and Quantrill will then take their rotation turns in night games against visiting Houston on Monday and Tuesday. Beside the current rotation, Miami has strong pitching depth in the system, with prospects Thomas White, Adam Mazur and Robby Snelling. Ryan Weathers, who has been out since early June with a lat strain, is expected back later this season. White, rated by as the Marlins' No. 1 prospect, had 14 strikeouts in five scoreless innings in a recent start for Double A Pensacola. And next spring, the Marlins will get back Braxton Garrett (returning next season from last December's elbow surgery) and Max Meyer, who had a 4.73 ERA in 12 starts before season-ending hip surgery. The Marlins entered Thursday seven games back of San Diego for the National League's final wild card spot, but also behind the Reds, Cardinals and Giants, the three other teams chasing the Padres.

Coco Gauff overcomes 14 more double-faults to advance in Montreal
Coco Gauff overcomes 14 more double-faults to advance in Montreal

Fox Sports

time8 minutes ago

  • Fox Sports

Coco Gauff overcomes 14 more double-faults to advance in Montreal

Associated Press MONTREAL (AP) — Coco Gauff overcame 14 more double-faults to beat Veronika Kudermetova of Russia 4-6, 7-5, 6-2 on Thursday in the National Bank Open. Two days after surviving 23 double-faults and a third-set tiebreaker against fellow American Danielle Collins, the top-seeded Gauff rallied from a set and break down against Kudermetova to reach the round of 16. Gauff, No. 2 in the world behind Aryna Sabalenka, entered the week having lost two straight matches since winning the French Open, falling in her opening matches in Berlin and Wimbledon. McCartney Kessler of the United States upset fourth-seeded Mirra Andreeva of Russia 7-6 (5), 6-4. ___ AP tennis:

Joel Dahmen leads Wyndham Championship with a 61 in bid to make postseason
Joel Dahmen leads Wyndham Championship with a 61 in bid to make postseason

Fox Sports

time8 minutes ago

  • Fox Sports

Joel Dahmen leads Wyndham Championship with a 61 in bid to make postseason

Associated Press GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) — Joel Dahmen started his long-shot bid to make the PGA Tour postseason by closing with three straight birdies for a 9-under 61 on Thursday to match his career best and give him a one-shot lead over Alex Noren in the Wyndham Championship. The Wyndham Championship is the final tournament in the regular season, with the top 70 in the FedEx Cup advancing to the lucrative postseason filled with potential perks. Dahmen is 101st in the standings and would need a runner-up finish with no more than two other players to reach the FedEx Cup playoffs. He was happy with the start — 10 birdies on a dry course at Sedgefield — and also realistic about his chances of playing next week in the FedEx St. Jude Championship. He has one victory and three runner-up finishes in 231 tournaments. 'I mean, I've had like three top 2s in my career — I don't know, four of them, maybe?' he said. "I mean, it's not even a thing, right? Yeah, great to make the playoffs, hat would be unbelievable, give me a lot of time off this fall. We've got a baby coming so that would take some pressure off of that. 'The playoffs are a bonus for me,' he said. 'I'm just going to go out and try to play good golf, and I guess if I play really well, then I get to play another week.' Dahmen also shot 61 in the second round of the RSM Classic in 2020. Noren missed six months with a hamstring tear and can't reach the postseason even with a win. The four players at 63 included Mark Hubbard, who is at No. 98 and who also would need a runner-up finish to advance. Hubbard was joined by Cameron Young, defending champion Aaron Rai and Nico Echavarria, who at No. 65 needs to hold his position. 'I think t's all about how you look at it. For me I think it kind of takes the pressure off because it's really hard to do that and it's not something that you're really thinking about,' Hubbard said. "I've just got to go play super well and make a ton of birdies. If that happens to fall into place that way, then that's great. 'I think it's easier than if I had to top-15 or top-10 because that way you're always looking at the board ... where this week I've just got to go out and play as good as I can.' Jordan Spieth and Adam Scott have different objectives this week and wound up with the same score at 65. Spieth had four birdies over his last five holes. He is set for the postseason at No. 50, but wants to help take the pressure off when he gets to Memphis, Tennessee. The top 50 after the first playoff event not only advance to the next week, they are guaranteed to get in all the $20 million signature events. Spieth missed out last year, then had wrist surgery, and had to ask for exemptions into the signature events. Scott, however, is at No. 85 and would need at least third place to reach the postseason. 'I'm going to need to get like 20 under to think of anything, so I better not be 1 under through day one or I'm going to leave myself a lot of work,' Scott said. 'So nice to make a few birdies. And of course as much as I think about moving on, I'd like to win this tournament.' Also at stake this week is the first FedEx Cup bonus pool — $10 million to the points leader (Scottie Scheffler) and $4 million for second place (Rory McIlroy), which they both have wrapped up. Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley is at No. 10 and would pick up $500,000 if he can stay there. Bradley bogeyed his last two holes for a 68. He played with Ben Griffin (67) and Andrew Novak (68), who both have Ryder Cup hopes. ___ AP golf:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store