Dan Connolly

Trumbo on walkoff win: ‘A real gut punch if it goes the other way’

Here’s the thing about baseball.

So many little moments can determine the outcome of a game.

Or those little things can mean absolutely nothing, can be totally forgotten with one play, one swing, one pitch.

The Orioles squandered chance after chance Friday night at Camden Yards. They left 14 men on base. They were 1-for-9 with runners in scoring position. They had one of their slowest runners thrown out at the plate in the ninth inning.

They only scored via three solo home runs.

Yet, when the dust settled and the coolers of water were splashed onto Mark Trumbo at home plate in the bottom of the 12th, another terrible, awful, no-good loss became a win that — who knows? — could help push this Orioles team back to the playoffs.

“That’s the million-dollar question. I hope so. I hope so,” said Trumbo, who hit a game-winning, solo homer to left field to give the Orioles their 6th walkoff victory of the year. “We’re giving it everything we have and obviously we’re gonna have to keep it going. We know what we have to do, and we’ve got the guys to do it.”

There was little about most of Friday night’s game that wasn’t frustrating.

Starter Yovani Gallardo, who ultimately delivered a quality start, gave up two runs in the first two innings to put the Orioles in an early hole. The offense again could not get a clutch hit with runners in scoring position in multiple innings. They couldn’t solve Shelby Miller, who entered the game 2-12 with a 6.90 ERA and may be considered the most disappointing pitcher in baseball, given his perceived upside.

And they nearly walked off in the ninth but J.J. Hardy was thrown out at the plate with two outs on a play that was reviewed for two minutes before the call, somehow, stood.

“I thought he was safe. I don’t know. The only thing they could have possibly said that they weren’t sure J.J. got there,” Orioles manager Buck Showalter said. “The guy tagged him with the glove and had the ball in his throwing hand. … Another head-shaker. We’ve had quite a few of them this year.”

There were plenty of head-shakers. Showalter decided not to pinch-run Drew Stubbs for Hardy in the ninth. Showalter pinch-hit Michael Bourn for Hyun Soo Kim because he wanted to set up a sacrifice bunt, and Bourn popped-up.

So many things went wrong. And then …it didn’t.

All the negatives evaporated. A five-game, nail-in-coffin losing streak is instead perhaps the start of a winning streak against the undermanned Diamondbacks.

“I’m glad our guys feel good about themselves for one night, they’ve been frustrated. They’ve earned the right to play these meaningful games and I’m happy for them,” Showalter said. “You like being in this arena. That’s why you do this. The players, that’s what separates them. They don’t want to watch the highlights on SportsCenter. They want to be a part of them. And that’s the difference.”

The Orioles didn’t gain any ground in the wild card race, but didn’t lose any. They are still a half game behind the Detroit Tigers for the second spot. They, one would presume, are still alive and kicking – or bashing, anyway.

“We’ll take it, especially after having a few chances,” Trumbo said. “This is the type of game you definitely want to win, because it can be a real gut punch if it goes the other way.

“It would be a tough one to stomach. Fighting really hard in the thick of things, and then to have a couple chances. The effort’s there, but someone’s got to get that big hit eventually.”

Dan Connolly

Dan Connolly has spent more than two decades as a print journalist in Pennsylvania and Maryland. The Baltimore native and Calvert Hall graduate first covered the Orioles as a beat writer for the York (Pennsylvania) Daily Record in 2001 before becoming The Baltimore Sun’s national baseball writer/Orioles reporter in 2005. He has won multiple state and national writing awards, including several from the Associated Press Sports Editors. In 2013 he was named Maryland Co-Sportswriter of the Year by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association. And in 2015, he authored his first book, "100 Things Orioles Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die." He lives in York, with his wife, Karen, and three children, Alex, Annie, and Grace.

View Comments

  • I don't know what to say except that i really feel let down by this team, which I'm sure is common to all of us. I want to ask what happened and I think of both Showalter and the team. I think one of our problems is Chris Davis and Buck's refusal to do anything about it. I guess he was getting pressure from on high, but I think he should have been batting 7th most of the year, he just didn't have it for cleanup or 5th or 2nd. Trumbo, who won't be with us next year, is obviously a first-half player. But, I'm sorry, Davis really gets to me.

    • I've been saying all year long that the Davis contract will be an albatross around the team's neck for years to come.

  • I love Jim Palmer's commentary. His understated way of expressing his frustration with the offense is entertaining. Last night, with Davis up and runners at 2nd and 3rd, the new lefty reliever threw the first two balls that were not close to being strikes. Palmer says "please, please take a strike". Next pitch, Davis flies out to center.
    He also wondered why Buck did not run for Hardy in the 9th. There were no outs. Result? Hardy thrown out at the plate. Easy to second guess, but Palmer isn't afraid to appropriately call people out.

    • I agree 100% pedro. Palmer is the most insightful analyst in the business today. I could listen to him talk about the nuances and 'art' of pitching all day long. He's a local treasure, and yet nobody seems to notice.

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