Orioles blast four homers to beat Cardinals
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[June 19, 2017]
BALTIMORE -- Ubaldo Jimenez was
happy to be back in a starting role, and he was even happier the
Baltimore Orioles used their big bats to support him.
Jimenez threw seven solid innings in his return to the rotation and
the Orioles clubbed four home runs in an 8-5 victory over the St.
Louis Cardinals on Sunday afternoon.
Making his first start since May 22 after being demoted to the
bullpen, Jimenez (2-2) kept the Cardinals' lineup in check. Over the
course of a 106-pitch performance in sweltering heat and humidity,
he allowed a pair of earned runs on four hits to earn his first
victory since April 19. He struck out three and walked four.
"He was good," Orioles manager Buck Showalter said. "I can't tell
you how few pitchers in baseball would have pitched seven innings in
that type of weather. That was pretty remarkable."
Jimenez, who was knocked out of the starting rotation after going
more than a month without winning a game, had made his last four
appearances out of the bullpen.
"It felt pretty good," Jimenez said of being back in the starting
rotation. "Like I said, it doesn't matter how things are going for
me. I am just going to fight."
The right-hander benefited from another power surge by the Orioles'
offense, as Seth Smith, Trey Mancini, Mark Trumbo and Welington
Castillo all blasted home runs off of Cardinals starter Lance Lynn.
The Orioles finished the three-game series with 10 home runs, which
is the most they have hit in a series this season.
Smith, the leadoff man, put the Orioles (34-34) in front right away
by knocking a 3-2 pitch from Lynn over the wall in center. It was
the fourth leadoff home run the Orioles have hit this season with
Smith responsible for three of them. He now has five leadoff home
runs in his career.
Mancini followed with his 12th homer of the season to start the
second, and then Trumbo and Castillo belted their as part of a
four-run fifth inning that chased Lynn from the game.
Lynn (5-4) allowed seven earned runs on nine hits in 4 2/3 innings.
He has not gone beyond 5 1/3 innings in each of his last three
starts.
"Some bad pitches," he said. "Good teams make you pay. Going to come
back and try again."
Mancini extended his hitting streak to a career-long nine games. He
notched his first career triple as part of the Orioles' power surge
in the bottom of the fifth.
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Orioles first base Trey Mancini (16) hits a solo home run off St.
Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Lance Lynn (31) (not pictured)
during the second inning at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory
Credit: Tommy Gilligan-USA TODAY Sports
The Cardinals (31-37) scored all of their runs via
the long ball. Stephen Piscotty homered twice with two outs and
notched the second multi-homer game of his career, while Dexter
Fowler homered in his fourth consecutive game for St. Louis.
Yadier Molina added a solo home run as part of a three-run eighth
inning for the Cardinals. It was his eighth of the season, and it
came against Orioles reliever Miguel Castro with two outs.
"You feel good with some guys having positive results. Always
something the guys can build off of and keep going," Cardinals
manager Mike Matheny said. "I think we had a good foundation to
start offensively. Hopefully take that into the next series."
Brad Brach worked a scoreless ninth inning to earn his 12th save of
the season for the Orioles.
NOTES: The Orioles won their 23rd home game of the season, which is
the most in the American League. At 23-11 at Camden Yards, they
trail only the New York Yankees (22-9) for the best home winning
percentage in the AL. ... Orioles SS J.J. Hardy was knocked out of
the game in the sixth inning after suffering a right-wrist
contusion. He was struck by a pitch on the wrist in the bottom of
the fourth. After the game, Orioles manager Buck Showalter described
the condition of Hardy's wrist as being "not good." following an
X-ray. The team will have a more definitive idea on Hardy's status
following a scan Monday morning. ... Cardinals RHP Lance Lynn has
now allowed a home run in seven consecutive starts. That's the most
by a Cardinals starter since Matt Morris surrendered homers in 10
straight games in 2004. [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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