Orioles Bats Nearly Non-Existent Once Again in Third-Straight Loss to Motivated, Reconstructed Marlins

At around 10 p.m. Wednesday night, the Orioles finally squeezed out a run, seemingly by divine intervention. 

It happened when a chopper from outfielder Austin Hays bounced off two Marlins infielders and into the outfield which allowed Anthony Santander to score and cut the lead in half. The problem was, it was the Orioles' first run of the game, third hit of the game and ninth hit of the series. 

The Orioles, up until Hays' single, had gone 21 ⅔ scoreless innings against a Marlins team that had 18 replacement players from its Opening Day roster due to an outbreak of COVID-19. The Marlins were a team that had to find pitchers that were simply available to throw major league innings, and they retired Orioles batters consistently through the first three games of the serires.

Baltimore, operating as the road team at Camden Yards for the second half of a doubleheader, lost their third-straight in a 2-1 loss to the Marlins. The fourth game of the series will be Thursday. 

"I don't want to take credit away from their guys, I thought they pieced it together fairly nicely out of the pen giving us some different looks," Orioles manager Brandon Hyde said. "I don't know if we're trying too hard, or...I'm not what it is, to be honest with you. It's one of those little funks that we've gone through in a couple days."

Ever since the second game of the season against the Red Sox, the Orioles have swung the bat particularly well, better than most thought they could. But all of those bats went silent after a series sweep of the Rays on Sunday, a series victory that left some with a brief, optimistic scenario that the Orioles could contend for a playoff spot. 

Since that win over the Rays, though, the offense hasn't just been quiet, it's been silent. 

The Orioles were shut out Tuesday and in game one of the doubleheader Wednesday in 4-0 and 1-0 losses, respectively. Were it not for Hays' single, it would've been three straight games with a zero on the scoreboard.

"I can't really put my finger on it," Hyde said. "We're not driving the baseball. I think guys are trying to do too much, carrying too big of a load, instead of trying to get the next guy up instead of trying to win every pitch. We're having a tough time just getting on base to start a rally and putting good ABs together after it."

After blazing starts to the year, some of the Orioles' best hitters have hit a cold streak at the same time against a Marlins team that was cramped in a hotel room for more than a week.

Anthony Santander is just 2-for-10 in the series, Jose Iglesias and Rio Ruiz have been hampered by injuries and Hanser Alberto, after a staggering start to the year, is 0-for-11 in the series. 

"It's not fun," Iglesias said. "We just lost two games, but I think we've got to move forward. Tomorrow is another day. We're going to get an opportunity to play the game and come back."

But while the bats have failed, the pitching has thrived. In that regard, it makes the previous few days that much more enfuriating for the Orioles.

In the last three games, the starters have been excellent. John Means, Alex Cobb and Asher Wojciechowski have combined to throw 14 ⅔ innings and have allowed just eight hits, four earned runs and four walks. They've struck out 15 batters, too, as both Means and Cobb each allowed just one run in their starts. 

All three pitchers, however, received losses. 

"I don't have an explanation for it except I really like the way we're pitching," Hyde said. "I think our offense will come around. I don't think we're going one run in three games continuously. We have proven we can score runs and we can swing the bats against really good pitchers. This series, for whatever reason, we're not driving the baseball. We're not grinding out at-bats the way that we did against the teams we played before."

The Marlins, who are now 5-1, have seemingly released all their pent up energy through the team's pitching staff. 

The Orioles, who dropped to 5-6 with the three losses, simply haven't had an answer for a Marlins team that came out of quarantine with a stout pitching staff.

"I've been impressed with their pitching, for those guys to be shut down in a hotel and throw the way they've been throwing, they've done a nice job," Hyde said. "I don't think we've helped them out, I think we've expanded the strike zone, but I think they've come out with energy and we haven't scored any runs."

Orioles bats nearly non-existent once again in third-straight loss to motivated, reconstructed Marlins originally appeared on NBC Sports Washington

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