Orioles end five-game skid with first win in L.A.
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[July 06, 2016]
LOS ANGELES -- The Baltimore
Orioles earned their first-ever regular-season win at Dodger Stadium
thanks to something they lacked in the first seven games of their
nine-game West Coast road trip: a strong performance by a starting
pitcher.
Chris Tillman gave up one run over seven innings, Manny Machado
hit a decisive three-run homer, and the Orioles beat the Los Angeles
Dodgers 4-1 Tuesday at Dodger Stadium.
First-place Baltimore, which leads the second-place Toronto Blue
Jays by 2 1/2 games in the American League East, snapped a five-game
losing streak.
Tillman won his fifth consecutive interleague game dating back to
July 7, 2014, and the Orioles are 8-0 in his past eight interleague
starts. The right-hander surrendered five hits and two walks, and he
struck out two while throwing 100 pitches.
Tillman bounced back from losing Thursday at Seattle, his first
defeat since April.
Baltimore reliever Brad Brach struck out the side in the eighth
inning, and fellow All-Star Zach Britton got the last three outs for
his league-leading 24th save.
Although Tillman extended his record to 11-2, he expressed no
disappointment in not being named to the All-Star Game on Tuesday.
Five Orioles will be in San Diego next week, but Tillman will not be
one of them.
"We have a lot of talented players in our room," Tillman said. "It's
no big deal, I'm happy for the guys who made it."
The loss snapped Los Angeles' five-game winning streak, but the
Dodgers maintain a 1 1/2-game lead over the New York Mets for the
first National League wild-card spot and remain five games behind
the NL West-leading San Francisco Giants.
Kenta Maeda (7-6) lasted only four-plus innings for Los Angeles,
surrendering seven hits and four runs.
"Maeda made one mistake to a really good hitter," Dodgers manager
Dave Roberts said of the Machado homer. "We'll go back out there
tomorrow afternoon and try to win the series."
Despite the loss, the Dodgers' locker room was upbeat as their
recent success at home has placed them into postseason contention.
"Ken left a curveball up, and that was that," catcher Yasmani
Grandal said. "He battled through four innings, and other that that
pitch, he made tough pitches when he had to."
The loss snapped a 10-game home winning streak for Los Angeles. The
streak was the Dodgers' longest since a 13-game, season-opening run
from April 13-May 6, 2009.
The Orioles took a 4-1 lead in the fifth inning on Machado's 19th
homer of the season. He crushed a 2-2 curveball from Maeda deep into
the left field pavilion after a leadoff single by Adam Jones and a
walk to Hyun Soo Kim. The homer traveled an estimated 453 feet.
Pedro Baez replaced Maeda immediately after the homer.
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Orioles shortstop Manny Machado (13) throws to first after fielding
a hit in the sixth inning against Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger
Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports
Baltimore evened the score at 1 in the second when Jonathan Scoop
hit into an unusual fielder's choice to score Mark Trumbo, who led
off with a walk and advanced to third on a single by Matt Wieters.
Schoop looped a fastball into right field, and with Wieters holding
to see if the ball would drop, right fielder Yasiel Puig grabbed the
ball on one hop and fired to nail Wieters at second base.
The Dodgers took a 1-0 in the first inning on Adrian Gonzalez's RBI
single on the first pitch he saw from Tillman. Gonzalez served a
fastball to left field that scored Corey Seager, who had reached on
a double.
Tillman got out of further trouble by getting Grandal to fly out to
the end the inning.
Seager extended his hitting streak to 18 games with the double,
tying Bill Sudakis (July-August 1969) for the second-longest rookie
hitting streak in franchise history. Tommy Davis' 20-game streak in
1960 is the franchise mark.
NOTES: The Orioles had five players named to the AL All-Star team.
3B Manny Machado was voted as a first-time starter by the fans,
while C Matt Wieters and OF Mark Trumbo were named reserves. RHP
Zach Britton and LHP Brad Brach were named to the pitching staff by
AL All-Star manager Ned Yost. Baltimore manager Buck Showalter
kidded with his charges when he broke the news to them: "The good
news is that you made the team, the bad news is you made the team,"
he quipped in reference to the team's demanding travel schedule this
month. ... Los Angeles will be represented by three players in next
week's All-Star Game in San Diego. SS Corey Seager, RHP Kenley
Jansen and LHP Clayton Kershaw (currently on the disabled list)
received the call. Seager and Jansen will appear in their first
midseason classic, while Kershaw has been named to the team for the
sixth consecutive year. ... The Dodgers optioned LHP Julio Arias to
Triple-A Oklahoma City, with LHP Luis Avilan taking his roster spot.
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