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Live from Camden Yards: Orange Crush chat at 7 as Britton seeks run support against Kansas City

**Join us in the Orange Crush live chat at 7:00 as the Orioles welcome the Kansas City Royals to town in the opener of a three-game set with rookie Zach Britton taking the hill in search of his elusive sixth win.** BALTIMORE — What’s a guy have to do to get a little bit of run support? Despite a string of 19 1/3 innings in which he hasn’t allowed an earned run, rookie Zach Britton has been stuck on five wins since May 1, the last time the Orioles managed to score a run while the lefty was still in the game. His 2.14 earned run average ranks sixth in the American League, and Britton will look for a little run support as he faces the Kansas City Royals in the first of a three-game set at Camden Yards. Britton will be opposed by fellow rookie southpaw Danny Duffy, who will be making his second big league start after allowing two runs and walking six in four innings against the Texas Rangers in his debut last Wednesday. Duffy is a former third-round pick of the 2007 amateur draft and one of the more heralded prospects in the Kansas City system.

Live from Camden Yards: Orange Crush chat at 7; Reimold, Adams summoned from Norfolk

**Join us in the Orange Crush live chat at 7:00 as the Orioles welcome the Washington Nationals to town in the first interleague series of the year.** BALTIMORE — With the New York Yankees thankfully back in the Bronx after sweeping Baltimore in a two-game series, the Orioles welcome the Washington Nationals to town to open interleague play for 2011. The Orioles (19-23) took the season series last year, 4-2, after going 3-0 in Baltimore and losing two of three at Nationals Park in D.C. Baltimore holds a 16-14 all-time edge over Washington in the annual interleague matchups. Jake Arrieta will try to halt the Orioles’ three-game slide when he takes the hill against Washington’s Jason Marquis. The 25-year-old will be making his second career start against the Nationals after surrendering five earned runs over 4 1/3 innings in a game the Orioles eventually won with seven unanswered runs scored from the fifth inning on in a 7-6 victory. The 32-year-old Marquis made his only start against Baltimore as a member of the Chicago Cubs. He allowed seven runs and seven hits in four innings of work at Wrigley Field in an Orioles win in 2008. Marquis has pitched two

Yankees put Orioles in familiar place in 13-2 beatdown

It took an extra 48 minutes for Thursday’s game to begin but less than 10 minutes after first pitch to see what kind of night it was going to be for the Orioles. After rain pushed back the start of the series finale against the Yankees, Buck Showalter and the Orioles must have been wishing the tarp had remained on the field as New York plated five runs in the first inning off Brad Bergesen. Five days after pitching a four-hit shutout in Tampa Bay, Bergesen surrendered three extra-base hits, hit a batter, walked two, and uncorked a wild pitch before even escaping the first inning. The game was over before CC Sabathia even took the Camden Yards mound. In the Yankees’ 13-2 beating, the burly left-hander improved to 10-1 with a 2.73 earned run average in Baltimore. After Orioles starting pitchers had allowed only eight earned runs over the last 56 innings pitched, Bergesen gave up eight in just 3 1/3 innings to drop to 1-5 on the season. The outing erased all the good karma from his dominating start against the Rays and firmly placed him back on the rotation bubble as Brian Matusz moves closer to his

Live from Camden Yards: Lee, Roberts to DL; pitchers Jakubauskas, Patton recalled

**Join us in the Orange Crush live chat at 7:00 as the Orioles take on CC Sabathia to close a two-game set with the New York Yankees** BALTIMORE — Fifteen innings later, the state of the roster grew only cloudier. As if the sting of a 4-1 loss wasn’t bad enough, the Orioles today placed first baseman Derrek Lee (left oblique) and second baseman Brian Roberts (headaches) on the disabled list. The Orioles have placed Roberts on Major League Baseball’s new seven-day disabled list, retroactive to May 17, with a concussion. Lee has been placed on the traditional 15-day disabled list. However, Wednesday’s 15-inning marathon left the Orioles’ bullpen in shambles — forcing tonight’s originally-scheduled starter Jeremy Guthrie to pitch in relief — and the club had no choice but to recall relief pitchers Troy Patton and Chris Jakubauskas for extra arms against the Yankees. The roster moves currently leave the Orioles with 14 pitchers and 11 positional players. The decision to send Guthrie to the mound after Michael Gonzalez was ejected for striking Chris Dickerson in the head with a pitch forces the Orioles to send Brad Bergesen to the hill against the Yankees. Keep in mind, however, that

Orioles place Izturis on DL, recall Snyder from Norfolk

BALTIMORE — A little more than an hour before the start of a brief two-game series with the New York Yankees, the Orioles placed utility infielder Cesar Izturis on the 15-day disabled list due to a right elbow ulnar nerve injury. The move is retroactive to May 13. In Izturis’ place, first baseman Brandon Snyder has been summoned from Triple-A Norfolk. Snyder was hitting .276 with five home runs, 16 runs batted in, and a .798 OPS in 35 games for the Tides. He will wear No. 29 with the Orioles. With the offseason acquisition of shortstop J.J. Hardy, Izturis was re-signed in the winter but relegated to a utility role after being the starting shortstop for two seasons in Baltimore. The 31-year-old is batting .192 with four runs scored in only 26 at-bats in 16 games this season. First baseman Derrek Lee was out of Wednesday’s starting lineup with a strained left oblique, but the Orioles have chosen to wait to see how he responds to rest and treatment before placing him on the disabled list. Second baseman Brian Roberts was also absent from the start of Wednesday’s game as he continues to deal with headaches dating back to

Live from Camden Yards: Injuries shuffle lineup as Orioles host Yankees, Orange Crush chat at 7

**Join us in the Orange Crush live chat at 7:00 as rookie star Zach Britton and the Orioles begin a brief two-game set with the New York Yankees** BALTIMORE — As if an 0-4 start in the season series against the New York Yankees wasn’t enough, the Orioles return home with a plethora of injury issues as they try to secure their first win against the Bronx Bombers at 7:05 p.m. Leadoff hitter Brian Roberts and first baseman Derrek Lee are missing from tonight’s lineup as neither veteran escaped Boston without ailment. Roberts is suffering from headaches after diving into first base during Monday’s 8-7 collapse at Fenway Park in which the Orioles blew a 6-0 lead. Of course, Roberts dealt with headaches and concussion-related symptoms to close 2010 that failed to subside until the middle of the offseason. Robert Andino will take his place at second base and hit ninth against Bartolo Colon and the Yankees. Lee (oblique) may be placed on the 15-day disabled list, but manager Buck Showalter said before the game that the club may choose to wait a few days before making a decision. Luke Scott will slide from left field to first base, with

Horse race or horse’s arse: Is Kegasus smart for Baltimore and Preakness Day?

So, it’s been almost two months since the Mighty Kegasus advertising campaign began and it’s now almost time to fully assess the success of the marketing of the 2011 Preakness. So far, so good in the only measurement that really matters — sales are up 21% for Saturday infield tickets. I said it on Day One and no matter the result of selling a few thousand extra tickets and mugs of Budweiser this week, my strong opinion has only intensified since I began seeing the billboards all over town – this is the dumbest, most short-sighted and irresponsible advertising campaign since Winston told America it “tastes good, like a suicide should.” Tsk, tsk, tsk. Shame on Tom Chuckas. Shame on the marketing idiots in Washington, D.C. who spit this out and shame on anyone who thinks this somehow will add prestige to an event and a weekend in Baltimore that’s in desperate need of not just short-term-revenue gain and a little “shot in the arm” for attendance but a real transplant for its reputation and its future as a viable “major sporting event” and not just a weekend drunkfest with frat boys and the girls who love them. As much

Turgeon nabs assistant Hill, keeps top recruit Faust in big day for Terps

WNST.net’s Glenn Clark and Ryan Chell contributed to this article. Just over a week into the Mark Turgeon era, Tuesday will go down as a signature day for the future of Maryland basketball. Hoping to create strong ties to an area rich in talent, Turgeon has hired high-profile assistant Dalonte Hill from Kansas State to join a coaching staff already boasting Bino Ranson, a holdover from the previous staff with deep Baltimore roots, and Scott Spinelli, an assistant with Turgeon at Texas A&M and Wichita State. Hill has strong connections to the Washington, D.C. area, dating back to his days coaching the D.C. Assault AAU program before being hired as an assistant coach at Charlotte and then Kansas State. His bond with the AAU team allowed Hill to entice several Washington products all the way to Manhattan, Kan., including current Minnesota Timberwolves forward Michael Beasley. For a program criticized in recent years for its inability to attract top local talent and hesitancy to get involved with the AAU basketball landscape, Hill’s hiring and Ranson’s retainment give the Terps strong recruiting faces in both the Washington and Baltimore areas. The biggest prize in Ranson’s first season at Maryland under the now-retired

Britton’s best keeps getting better for Orioles

I’d written several times after impressive outings in Zach Britton’s brief major league career that I got the sense from the rookie that he felt his best was yet to come, whether talking about a need for sharper command, reducing his pitch count to go deeper into games, or simply making better pitches in key spots. After nine shutout innings against the Mariners on Thursday in which he allowed three hits and didn’t allow a runner to reach second base, it won’t get much better than that. Rookie or not, it was one of the most dominating performances by a Baltimore pitcher in recent memory. “I was able to incorporate all three pitches today, whereas I haven’t been able to do that in the past,” Britton said. “I was able to get ahead of guys. Not walking guys is huge, too. That helps you go deep in the game.” The only problem was Seattle’s Jason Vargas was nearly as good, pitching nine shutout innings of his own as neither pitcher factored in the decision of a thrilling 2-1 comeback victory for the Orioles thanks to J.J. Hardy’s two-run single in the bottom of the 12th inning. “It would have been

Live from Camden Yards: Orange Crush chat at 7 as Orioles, Britton go for sweep

**Join us in the Orange Crush live chat at 7:00 as the Orioles go for the three-game sweep against the Seattle Mariners** BALTIMORE — After toppling King Felix in a 4-2 victory on Wednesday night, the Orioles (16-19) send Zach Britton to the hill with the chance to complete a three-game sweep over the Seattle Mariners tonight at 7:05. Britton will go for his sixth win of the season after the Orioles did not have a pitcher record his sixth victory of 2010 until Jeremy Guthrie on August 8. The last Baltimore pitcher to record his sixth win while still in the month of May was Kris Benson in 2006. According to Elias, the last two Orioles pitchers to record their sixth win as early as May 12 were Scott Erickson (May 11, 1997) and Jimmy Key (May 7, 1997). Unsurprisingly, that also marked the last time the Orioles had a winning season. Seattle will counter tonight with left-hander Justin Vargas who will be making his fifth career start against the Orioles. He is 1-1 with a 2.35 earned run average in his four starts (23 innings) against Baltimore. After missing Wednesday’s game while stricken with a stomach bug, Nick

Tillman topples King Felix, Mariners in 4-2 win

No one needed to tell Chris Tillman how important Wednesday’s start was for him and the Orioles. Coming off arguably the worst outing of his career, a 3 2/3-inning disaster in Kansas City in which he allowed eight runs and 10 hits in a 9-1 loss, the 23-year-old realizes his days in the starting rotation might be numbered with the return of Brian Matusz — and possibly Alfredo Simon — right around the corner. A 7.16 earned run average entering his start against the Mariners screamed anything but security. The bullpen was shorthanded after seven innings of work in Tuesday’s 13-inning victory, and Tillman’s propensity for short outings forced the Orioles to skip Brad Bergesen’s side session Wednesday and keep the starter on call to pitch in emergency relief. Win or lose, the right-hander needed to get deep into the game. To add another interesting wrinkle, Tillman was facing the team that drafted him in the second round of the 2006 amateur draft and later traded him to the Orioles in the Erik Bedard trade in February 2008. And, oh yeah, he happened to be facing the reigning American League Cy Young Award winner Felix Hernandez, who would be facing

Live from Camden Yards: Orange Crush chat at 7; Markakis, Reynolds out of lineup against King Felix

**Join us in the Orange Crush live chat at 7:00 as the Orioles battle King Felix in the second of a three-game set against the Seattle Mariners** BALTIMORE — Following one of the craziest games in recent memory, the Orioles face the daunting task of battling against 2010 Cy Young Award winner Felix Hernandez in the second of a three-game set at 7:05. The challenge grew even greater this afternoon with the news that right fielder Nick Markakis is out of the lineup due to a stomach virus. It hurts even more when looking at Markakis’ past success against the dominating Seattle right-hander, a .464 average in 28 career at-bats. The high-energy Felix Pie will take his place and bat second in the Baltimore order. Another lineup change comes via Buck Showalter, who has replaced the struggling Mark Reynolds with Robert Andino at third base this evening. Reynolds is mired in a 9-for-71 slump (.127) and has just five runs batted in in his last 23 games. To say the season’s first 34 games have been a struggle for Reynolds would be an understatement, so a mental break — perhaps for everyone involved — is definitely in order. Chris Tillman

Orioles prevail over Mariners in wild 13-inning affair

Maybe it was as simple as J.J. Hardy’s return to a struggling lineup. After all, the Orioles were 6-1 when the shortstop left the second game of a doubleheader against the Texas Rangers on April 9 and had gone 8-18 before he made his return from the disabled list Tuesday night. Hardy collected four hits, including a home run in his first at-bat, as the Orioles prevailed in a wild 7-6 final in 13 innings over Seattle. Hardy’s back and all is right in the Orioles’ world, right? Of course, you’ll excuse my delirium after what will surely be remembered as one of the craziest games of the season. What started as a solid pitching matchup through six innings between Jake Arrieta and Seattle’s rookie sensation Michael Pineda transformed into a contest filled with comebacks, mishaps, close calls, and a near brawl. Baltimore’s two favorite relievers, Mike Gonzalez and Kevin Gregg, surrendered leads after the Orioles had fought from behind on two separate occasions to take the lead. Adam Jones’ two-run double in the bottom of the sixth gave the Orioles their first lead in 40 innings before Gonzalez promptly gave the lead right back to Seattle in the seventh.

Live from Camden Yards: Orange Crush chat at 7, ‘Hardy’ a lineup change as Orioles take on Seattle

**Join us in the Orange Crush live chat at 7:00 as the Orioles play the opener of a three-game set against the Seattle Mariners** BALTIMORE — After plenty of speculation that changes were coming to the Orioles’ struggling lineup, the only noticeable different is the return of shortstop J.J. Hardy, who was activated from the 15-day disabled list earlier this afternoon. He replaces long reliever Josh Rupe who was designated for assignment. Fresh off a sweep to the Tampa Bay Rays and having lost six of their last seven, the Orioles (14-19) return to action this evening against the Seattle Mariners (16-19) this evening with Jake Arrieta taking the hill against rookie sensation Michael Pineda. The right-hander was named American League Rookie of the Month in April after going 4-1 with a 2.01 ERA in his first five big league starts before the calendar turned. Pineda has an impressive 39 strikeouts in 38 1/3 innings this season. Arrieta will seek his fifth win of the season and will try to reverse a nightmarish turn through the rotation for Baltimore starters. In the Orioles’ last four games, starting pitchers have allowed 23 earned runs in 18 2/3 innings. The Orioles hope

Orioles’ struggles becoming not so ‘early’ after weekend sweep to Rays

BALTIMORE — The old baseball adage is heard countless times in the early weeks of every season, whether a team or player is off to a smoking start or struggling to clear the spring training cobwebs when the games begin to actually count. It’s early. Or, it’s still early. The Orioles dropped their sixth game in seven tries on Sunday, falling 5-3 as the Tampa Bay Rays completed a three-game sweep at Camden Yards. The club now finds itself with a 14-19 record and in last place in the American League East. After a 6-1 start to spark early-season excitement, Baltimore has now dropped 18 of its last 26 games as the lineup continues to sputter and the back of the starting rotation and bullpen struggle to get the opposition out. After losing 11 of 13 in mid-April, the Orioles and optimists insisted it was simply a bad stretch, claiming it was too early to panic. A brief run of five wins in six games to close April looked like the start of better baseball, but that idea vanished after the Orioles flamed out in Kansas City and the Rays extracted revenge for the Orioles’ sweep in Tampa Bay to

Garyland no more: Terps coach Williams retires after 22 seasons

What felt like turbulent waves running through the Maryland basketball program with the official departure of Jordan Williams on Wednesday registered as little more than a drop of a pebble in a pond 24 hours later. After 22 years at the University of Maryland that included the 2002 national championship and 14 NCAA tournament appearances, legendary head coach Gary Williams announced his retirement Thursday afternoon, sending seismic waves through College Park and the landscape of the college basketball world. “It’s the right time,” Williams said in a statement on Thursday. “My entire career has been an unbelievable blessing. I am fiercely proud of the program we have built here. I couldn’t have asked any more from my players, my assistant coaches, the great Maryland fans, and this great university. Together, we did something very special here.” Special, indeed, as Williams returned to his alma mater as head coach in 1989 with the ashes still smoldering from the tragic death of Len Bias in 1986 and Maryland on the verge of being leveled with NCAA sanctions from violations committed under former coach Bob Wade’s tenure. Facing a mountainous climb back to respectability, Williams did that and much more. Largely thanks to

Part 2: What does WNST stand for & what journalistic value do we have in Baltimore in 2011 and beyond?

It’s impossible to address anything that has happened at WNST in our 13 years of existence without talking about the deterioration of the Orioles, the orange fan base and the interest and passion surrounding baseball in our community. And conversely, what would we be – as a company or as a sports town – without the emergence and consistent excellence of the Baltimore Ravens? We launched WNST-AM 1570 in the summer of 1998, when the Ravens were “the other team” in Baltimore. In our entire existence as an entity, the Orioles have yet to play a meaningful summer baseball game. Not one game! To think that hasn’t done incredible damage to our community and my business would be to just not understand the premise of what we’ve always tried to do – create enthusiasm and support and interest and passion for Baltimore sports. Our perceived “war” with the Orioles is legendary and we’re proud of everything we’ve ever said or done in regard to protesting 14 years of losing, insolence and lack of civic courtesy shown by Peter G. Angelos and his ownership group. And every time they continue to do stupid things as an organization – and they do

For Ravens' new Smiths, support is key, but in different ways

Draft picks have been linked together throughout the history of the NFL, the 16-year existence of the Baltimore Ravens being no exception. Jonathan Ogden and Ray Lewis in 1996, two future Hall of Famers selected with the first two picks in franchise history. A year later, Peter Boulware and Jamie Sharper were chosen in the first two rounds, completing a linebacker trio that led one of the greatest defenses in league history to the Ravens’ only Super Bowl a few years later. More recently, Joe Flacco and Ray Rice came off the board as the 18th and 55th overall picks in 2008, signifying a transition from a decade of defensive domination to a heightened attempt to create more balance on the offensive side of the football. But no other pair of draft picks in franchise history has perhaps produced as unique a dichotomy in some ways but common threads in others as cornerback Jimmy Smith and wide receiver Torrey Smith in the first two rounds this weekend. As the two top draft picks were introduced to the local media in Owings Mills on Saturday, the two sat between general manager Ozzie Newsome and coach John Harbaugh, the juxtaposition of their

For Ravens’ new Smiths, support is key, but in different ways

Draft picks have been linked together throughout the history of the NFL, the 16-year existence of the Baltimore Ravens being no exception. Jonathan Ogden and Ray Lewis in 1996, two future Hall of Famers selected with the first two picks in franchise history. A year later, Peter Boulware and Jamie Sharper were chosen in the first two rounds, completing a linebacker trio that led one of the greatest defenses in league history to the Ravens’ only Super Bowl a few years later. More recently, Joe Flacco and Ray Rice came off the board as the 18th and 55th overall picks in 2008, signifying a transition from a decade of defensive domination to a heightened attempt to create more balance on the offensive side of the football. But no other pair of draft picks in franchise history has perhaps produced as unique a dichotomy in some ways but common threads in others as cornerback Jimmy Smith and wide receiver Torrey Smith in the first two rounds this weekend. As the two top draft picks were introduced to the local media in Owings Mills on Saturday, the two sat between general manager Ozzie Newsome and coach John Harbaugh, the juxtaposition of their

Live from Camden Yards: Orange Crush chat at 7 as Orioles go for two straight over Red Sox

**Join us in the Orange Crush live chat at 7:00 as the Orioles play the second of a three-game set against the Boston Red Sox** BALTIMORE — Looking for their second straight win against the consensus favorite in the American League East, most would love their chances sending their veteran ace to the hill. However, taking a look at Jeremy Guthrie’s career numbers against the Red Sox and the Orioles’ attrition in his starts might cause you to rethink that philosophy. In 14 career starts against Boston, Guthrie is just 1-7 with a 4.95 earned run average. The 32-year-old has lost his last seven decisions and the Orioles have lost the last nine games Guthrie has started against the Red Sox. Of course, consider the lineups the Orioles have trotted out there against Boston during Guthrie’s tenure in Baltimore before you write him off tonight. Boston will give the ball to Josh Beckett, who will try to continue his success against the Orioles at Camden Yards. Beckett is 6-3 with a 3.53 ERA in 14 career starts against Baltimore, but his 5-2 mark with a 2.94 ERA in 10 starts in Baltimore is even more impressive. It will be a

In night of firsts, Orioles hope 4-1 win over Boston leads to brighter days

In their first game against the Red Sox in the 2011 season, the Orioles collected their first win over Boston, a 4-1 victory in which rookie left-hander Zach Britton was impressive yet again. It was the Orioles’ first series-opening win since beginning the season with three consecutive victories in series openers on their way to a 6-1 start. Britton became the first rookie starter in franchise history to win four games in the month of April, becoming just the fifth American League rookie since 1980 to win four by the end of the season’s opening month. Kevin Gregg recorded his first save that didn’t require an Orioles outfielder crashing into the fence to record the final out with runners on base. The closer retired the Red Sox in order to earn his third save of the season and keep fans’ blood pressure at a tranquil level. And the Baltimore offense, a group that’s struggled mightily through the season’s first three weeks, became the first lineup to score more than two runs against a Red Sox starting pitcher in Boston’s last 10 games, a period in which starters had posted a 0.88 earned run average in 61 1/3 innings over nine

Live from Camden Yards: Orange Crush chat at 7 as red-hot Red Sox come to town

**Join us in the Orange Crush live chat at 7:00 as the Orioles welcome Boston to town for the first time this season in the opener of a three-game set against the Red Sox** BALTIMORE — Having lost 11 of their last 13 games to find themselves in last place in the AL East, the Orioles badly needed a day off Monday after being swept by the Yankees in an abbreviated two-game series over the weekend. However, Tuesday brings no relief as the Boston Red Sox (10-11) come to town on fire as they continue to leave their nightmarish 2-10 start in their rear-view mirror. Winners of eight of their last nine and five straight, Boston visits Camden Yards for the first time this season after splitting the season series last season (9-9). Those nine losses were the most to the Orioles since 2004 when Boston went 9-10, the last time Baltimore won the season series against the Red Sox. Needing a good start against an impressive lineup, the Orioles (8-12) send rookie left-hander Zach Britton to the mound in his first career start against one of the two big boys in the AL East. After picking up his third

After labeling Yankees ‘just another team’ all winter, Orioles still can’t beat them

BALTIMORE — The Orioles talked the talk throughout the winter months, in addition to upgrading their lineup with four new hitters. They said all the right things about not putting the Yankees and the Red Sox on a pedestal, forgetting about the bloated payrolls and the World Series rings and the absolute domination those teams have held over the Orioles season after season. The game was decided on the field, they said, not with checkbooks, past results, or preseason predictions. Buck Showalter invigorated a fan base with a confident way about him, building optimism after a 34-23 finish in the final two months of 2010. Make no mistake, his mindset still is the correct one for an organization trying to reverse the losing culture that’s poisoned the once-proud Orioles over the course of 13 years. But he doesn’t throw pitches or swing the bats. His players bought into it, echoing the skipper’s sentiments about the two biggest foes in the most difficult division in baseball. It all sounded so great at FanFest, during spring training, and after a 6-1 start. But, as Showalter always reminds us, games are played between the lines, and the Yankees absolutely throttled the Orioles in

Live from Camden Yards: Orioles hope to end Sabathia’s Baltimore dominance

BALTIMORE — After rain washed out the opener of a three-game set between the Orioles and Yankees for the second time this season (the other coming in the Bronx on April 12), the teams return to Camden Yards for the start of an abbreviated two-game series Saturday night. After going 5-13 against the Yankees in 2010, the struggling Orioles (8-10) — losers of nine of their last 11 — were swept in an abbreviated two-game set last week in the Bronx and will try to muster some runs against the dominating CC Sabathia. The Yankees ace remains winless on the season despite a 2.52 earned run average in four starts. Sabathia owns a 14-2 career record against Baltimore, which is the highest winning percentage all-time against the franchise since 1954. “I think what a lot of people miss about Sabathia is what a pitcher he is,” Orioles manager Buck Showalter said on Friday before the postponement. “This guy’s evolved into quite a pitcher, not a thrower. You look at the percentage of fastballs that he throws earlier in the season compared to later in the season, he understands when he’s carrying that stuff and he’s not.” Sabathia has flourished throughout

Orioles-Yankees game postponed; no makeup date announced

(Updated: 6:30 p.m.) Tonight’s game between the Orioles and Yankees has been postponed due to rain. No makeup date has been announced, but there’s no real urgency considering New York comes to town two more times this season. Brad Bergesen will pitch on Saturday and Jake Arrieta will take the hill on Sunday for the Orioles. Right-handed pitcher Chris Tillman, Saturday’s scheduled starter, will be skipped in the rotation and is dealing with a right groin issue. Tillman could be used out of the bullpen until a fifth starter is needed again next Saturday. He is 0-2 with a 6.16 earned run average in four starts this season. The Yankees return to Baltimore for a brief two-game series in the middle of the week on May 18-19 and for a four-game weekend series on Aug. 26-29. Neither series provides scheduled days off before or after the series, making a doubleheader the likely scenario for the makeup game. _______________________________________ BALTIMORE — It figures to be a rainy, miserable night at Camden Yards, but the Orioles (8-10) expect to get this one in as the New York Yankees (10-6) come to town in an early-season litmus test for third-place Baltimore. After going

Live from Camden Yards: Orange Crush chat at 7 as Orioles go for series win

**Join us in the Orange Crush live chat at 7:00 as the Orioles go for the series win in the finale of a four-game set with the Minnesota Twins*** BALTIMORE — Needing a victory to secure their third series win of the season, the third-place Orioles (8-9) will send Jeremy Guthrie to the hill in the finale of a four-game set against the Minnesota Twins (6-12). The Orioles didn’t win their third series last year until June 25-27 when they swept a three-game series against the Washington Nationals. Right-handed pitcher Scott Baker will try to continue his overwhelming success against the Orioles as he tries to lead the Twins to a series split. Baker is 5-0 with a 2.53 earned run average in seven career starts against Baltimore. Orioles hitters hold a .214 lifetime average off Baker, who continues to give them fits at the plate. The Minnesota lineup will need a big start to as Twins hitters continue their season-long struggle and have yet to score more than five runs in any game this season. Not to be outdone, Guthrie has enjoyed his own success against the opposition with a 3-0 record and a 2.96 earned run average in

Resilient Britton overcomes bug to beat Twins

The final stat line tells you how Zach Britton pitched in a 5-4 win over the Minnesota Twins on Wednesday night. Good enough to win, but not overly impressive. Britton earned his third win in four starts but struggled with his command at several points, including two walks in the sixth inning that led to two runs and turned a comfortable 5-1 lead into a two-run nail-biter that was handed over to the bullpen. He departed after six innings and 88 pitches, giving up three earned runs, five hits, and issuing three free passes while striking out three. However, listening to his post-game comments provided a new appreciation for the outing after learning he was under the weather and even wheezing on the mound at several points, according to manager Buck Showalter. And it reaffirmed what many have suspected despite the 3-1 start to the 23-year-old’s infant career. His best work is still on the way. With a scratchy, hoarse voice, Britton expressed disappointment in his control issues and credited five early runs — thanks to home runs from Matt Wieters and Vladimir Guerrero and a two-run double by Adam Jones — for putting him in position to pick up

Live from Camden Yards: Orange Crush chat at 7 as Britton takes the ball

**Join us in the Orange Crush live chat at 7:00 as the Orioles go for two straight in the third of a four-game set with the Minnesota Twins*** BALTIMORE — It’s amazing what an 11-run outburst and a shutout can do for your confidence when you’ve been struggling to do just about anything right. Fresh off their first victory in nine games on Tuesday night, the Orioles (7-9) will send rookie Zach Britton to the hill for his second start at Camden Yards. The left-hander struggled in Cleveland last Friday, picking up his first career loss in an 8-2 beating at the hands of the Indians, but the Orioles hope for a similar result to what Britton did against Texas two starts ago when he pitched 7 2/3 shutout innings in a dominating performance. He’ll be opposed by right-hander Nick Blackburn. Even with an eight-game losing streak thrown into the mix in the season’s first three weeks, the Orioles will look for their eighth win of 2011 tonight after failing to reach the eight-win mark in 2010 until May 6, which came in the form of a 2-0 victory over the Twins at Target Field. The Orioles’ next home win

Orioles make it look easy in snapping 8-game slide

Following a 10-day stretch in which they couldn’t do anything right, the Orioles made it look simple in an 11-0 victory over the Minnesota Twins on Tuesday. Scoring just 20 runs over the eight-game losing streak, Baltimore plated 11 runs in two-out situations, thanks in large part to four runs batted in from catcher Matt Wieters and three from leadoff hitter Brian Roberts. The pair drove in three in the bottom of the second to give the Orioles a 3-0 lead, their first advantage at any point since the end of the eighth inning in New York last Thursday. Cleanup hitter Vladimir Guerrero put a cherry on top of the offensive explosion with a three-run homer to right field in the bottom of the eighth, giving the Orioles a season-high 11 runs and their third extra-base hit with two outs and runners in scoring position for the game. They had only one total in the first 15 games of the season. Jake Arrieta mowed down the feeble Twins lineup in six shutout innings, allowing four hits and striking out four. As he often has in his brief big league career, the 25-year-old struggled with his command, pitching into deep counts

Baltimore loses its No. 1 fan with passing of William Donald Schaefer

There will be a lot written and said about the honorable William Donald Schaefer today in Baltimore and throughout the state of Maryland. I can honestly say that I knew the man a little and as a kid who grew up watching him shape the landscape of my beloved hometown and later knew him in the “real” world, what you saw was what you got: he loved Baltimore and he loved Maryland and he literally put the “public” in a phrase that has now become trite: public servant. Schaefer served us all, especially those of us who love sports. I’m not sure Schaefer could recite the statistics of the 1958 Colts or the 1966 Orioles, but he could recite the statistics for what the economic impact and loss of the Colts did in 1984 and the value of the Orioles playing baseball in downtown Baltimore in 1992 and beyond. Every time I see a crowd like the pathetic one last night at Camden Yards, I think of what Schaefer would really think of the travesty the Orioles have become in terms of economic impact to stimulate the downtown business district. There’s no way he would’ve been Mayor and watched this

New Orioles coming up empty as losses continue to mount

BALTIMORE — There’s plenty of blame to go around. Over the current losing streak, which grew to eight games with a 5-3 loss to the Minnesota Twins on Monday, the Orioles haven’t hit or pitched well. Whether talking about young players or veterans, mainstays or newcomers, the Orioles simply haven’t performed, transforming a harmonious 6-1 start into a 6-9 crisis in a matter of only nine days. No one is absolved from the last eight games, but it’s hard to overlook the newest Orioles and their struggles to begin the season. President of baseball operations Andy MacPhail set out to improve a club that finished 34-23 under manager Buck Showalter by adding offensive pieces to provide protection for developing positional players and alleviate the pressure on a young starting rotation. He also looked to add a veteran to the back-end of the bullpen after the disastrous early-season results from Michael Gonzalez a season ago. The architect was applauded for signing two former All-Stars, Derrek Lee and Vladimir Guerrero, to fill the third and fourth spots in the lineup. MacPhail traded for third baseman Mark Reynolds and shortstop J.J. Hardy in separate deals to complete the infield transformation. Kevin Gregg —

Live from Camden Yards: Orange Crush chat at 7 as Orioles look to snap 7-game skid

**Join us in the Orange Crush live chat at 7:00 as the Orioles begin a four-game set with the Minnesota Twins*** BALTIMORE — Something has to give. Mired in a seven-game losing streak that’s dropped them to third place and two games below .500, the Baltimore Orioles (6-8) return to Oriole Park at Camden Yards to open a 10-game home stand against the last-place Minnesota Twins (5-10) tonight at 7:05. With both teams struggling to score runs and ranking among the worst teams in baseball offensively, Orioles starting pitcher Chris Tillman (0-1, 7.30 ERA) and Minnesota starter Francisco Liriano (0-3, 9.42 ERA) have to be treating tonight as an opportunity to right themselves after severe struggles to begin the 2011 campaign. Liriano’s struggles have raised more eyebrows as the lefty went 14-10 with a 3.62 ERA in 2010. Both lineups for tonight’s opener possess two players hitting above .250: Denard Span (.339) and Jason Kubel (.321) for Minneosta and Brian Roberts (.267) and Vladimir Guerrero (.259) for Baltimore. As anemic as the Orioles lineup has looked in the first two weeks of the season, the Twins have scored six fewer runs and have yet to win a series this season.

Here’s why Adam Jones and anyone who thinks like him is a nitwit…

Two weeks ago Adam Jones, the starting centerfielder for the Baltimore Orioles who also fancies himself a free spirit, world social media maven and loose-lipped athlete, repeatedly told our local fans to come back to the ballpark in 2011 and “knock the s**t outta Yankees fans” when they bring their money to Camden Yards. Being the only real journalist left in Baltimore with a free voice (and, conversely, no Orioles press pass), I wrote a scathing blog here about this very public pronouncement made by Jones on video at www.baltimoresun.com that cost me a local sponsorship and got me roundly slammed by the morons, apes and trolls on various “hangout” message boards and web blogs for “being too negative” about the Orioles. Well, it turns out, a couple of Los Angeles Dodgers fans took the “advice” of Adam Jones and now a 42-year old paramedic named Bryan Stow – same age as me, by the way – is in a coma in a Los Angeles hospital and his two children might never have a father again. Think I was a little too hard on Jones now? Or were the other local “media” members, afraid for their jobs and press passes

Orioles officially place Hardy on DL, recall Bergesen

In a move anticipated for a few days, the Orioles officially placed shortstop J.J. Hardy on the 15-day disabled list and recalled right-handed pitcher Brad Bergesen from Triple-A Norfolk prior to the start of the series opener with the New York Yankees on Wednesday night. Hardy has gone to Sarasota to rehab a strained left oblique and the move is retroactive to April 10. The new shortstop was batting .200 with two runs batted in in six games this season. Bergesen was optioned to Triple-A Norfolk last Saturday to clear room for the arrival of relief pitcher Chris Jakubauskas to aid a taxed bullpen last weekend. Originally slated to make the start against the Yankees on Wednesday before the rainout pushed Chris Tillman back a day, Bergesen is now slotted to make his second start of the season in Cleveland on Sunday. The Orioles would benefit from an opportunity to use Bergesen out of the bullpen briefly on Wednesday or Thursday to prevent a 10-day stretch between outings before making the start against the Indians. Despite being optioned to the Tides, Bergesen never reported to Norfolk and remained with the team after making his only start of the season on

Orioles-Yankees game postponed, no makeup date announced

Tuesday’s opener of a three-game set between the Orioles (6-3) and New York Yankees (5-4) was postponed due to heavy rains in the Bronx. No makeup date has been announced, and rain is again in the forecast for Wednesday. After much discussion over who would start Wednesday’s game — the recently-demoted Brad Bergesen or the man who replaced him, Chris Jakabauskas — Tuesday’s scheduled starter Chris Tillman will pitch Wednesday night, leaving the Orioles without the need for a fifth starter until Sunday in Cleveland. The club wants to get Bergesen back on track after infrequent work at the end of spring training and the opening of the season, but the right-hander needs to pitch somewhere to do it, whether it’s with the Orioles or down at Norfolk. If Bergesen is recalled in place of the injured J.J. Hardy, who will be placed on the 15-day disabled list, he can work out of the bullpen before making Sunday’s starts against the Indians. Should he not work at all in long relief, it will have been 10 days since Bergesen last pitched. The Orioles and Yankees are scheduled to return to the diamond at 7:05 p.m. Wednesday night with Tillman facing

Rocking The Red in Baltimore: Caps bring Trotz, Poile & Predators to town Sept. 20

This is the part where the geeky fan in me really comes out, when something as momentous as an NHL game happening in Baltimore comes around I find myself compelled to have to share my puck love. Yes, as we reported many weeks ago, it’s now official that the Washington Capitals will play a game in Baltimore against the Nashville Predators on Tuesday, Sept. 20 at the First Mariner Arena. If you don’t like hockey, this isn’t for you. If you like hockey, this is a nice treat. But if you LOVE hockey, this is an event that has been two decades in the waiting — the return of whistles and glass and zambonis and the Clippers Fight Song for an evening in Baltimore. I’m an old-school hockey guy. I saw Clippers games in 1970’s with my Pop. I went to see the green and gold North Stars’ of Clippers yore with Warren Young, Barry Alter and Henry Taylor. And I saw the Penguins of Gene Ubriaco and the days of Troy Loney, Bruce Boudreau and Roberto Romano. And I saw the Capitals of the Skipjacks with John Druce, Robin Bawa and Terry Murray. I even lived through the Bandits,

Orioles bats fall silent in series loss to Rangers

BALTIMORE — The Orioles lineup started off with a bang against the Texas Rangers over the weekend, plating five runs in the first three innings of rookie Zach Britton’s masterful performance in the first game of a doubleheader Saturday, but quickly dissolved after that. Adam Jones’ solo home run in the second inning of Saturday’s nightcap was the only run scored in the final 23 innings in the series loss to Texas as the Orioles fell 3-0 on Sunday afternoon. The Orioles entered Sunday afternoon’s game tied for 10th in the American League in batting average (.220), 11th in on-base percentage (.281), and 10th in extra-base hits. “I can speak for myself and Brian [Roberts] at the top of the order, I think we need to do a little better job getting on base,” right fielder Nick Markakis said. “We’ve been facing some tough pitching. Other than that, I think we’re pretty pleased with our record right now considering the way we’ve been swinging the bats, which says a lot about our pitching. We’ll get the bats going.” Considering the offense was considered the team’s strength entering the season, it makes the Orioles’ 6-3 start that much more remarkable. However,

Orioles’ Britton conquers powerful Texas, Arrieta falters in doubleheader split

BALTIMORE — If you happened to watch the Texas Rangers’ pummeling of talented Orioles pitcher Jake Arrieta in the nightcap of Saturday’s doubleheader that was over after the Rangers’ six-run third inning, you can appreciate even more what rookie Zach Britton was able to do in his second big league start earlier in the afternoon. Facing a lineup that had a staggering 32 extra-base hits and a .958 OPS in its first six games entering Saturday, Britton dominated the American League champions over 7 2/3 innings, allowing no runs and four hits to earn his second victory in a 5-0 win for the Orioles. Britton struck out two and walked three in his first start in Baltimore that was delayed a day due to Friday’s rain and became the first pitcher to beat the Rangers this season. “He was very good,” manager Buck Showalter said. “It goes without saying. I think he had five hitters on to lead off innings, something like that. That’s the beauty of the ground ball. We actually had a chance to turn another [double play] behind him. He had good stuff, trusted it. Thought his secondary stuff was good too.” Knowing he needed to eat

Live from Camden Yards: Roberts returns to lineup, Bergesen optioned to Norfolk

**Join us in a special makeup edition of the Orange Crush live chat at 4:30 this afternoon as the Orioles send Zach Britton to the hill in his home debut against the Texas Rangers for the first game of a twin bill*** BALTIMORE — The rains have subsided, but the news keeps pouring in regarding the Orioles’ tenuous roster situation prior to today’s doubleheader with the Texas Rangers. Second baseman Brian Roberts is in the starting lineup for Game 1 after being taken to the hospital with stomach pain Friday night. Doctors did not give a formal diagnosis, but ruled out any chance of appendicitis. “Everything’s fine,” Roberts said. “I hadn’t been feeling great for a couple days, and the doctors, a little while before [Friday’s scheduled game], wanted me to get checked out.” Shortstop J.J. Hardy will not start in the first game of the doubleheader, but he is expected to play in the nightcap, according to manager Buck Showalter. The Orioles’ pitching concerns sparked a noteworthy change Saturday afternoon after a few days of speculation. Starting pitcher Brad Bergesen has been optioned to Triple-A Norfolk, and the Orioles have selected the contract of right-handed pitcher Chris Jakubauskas from

Roberts’ stomach ailment the latest addition to Orioles’ MASH unit

When it rains, it pours. Only it has nothing to do with the day-long rain that postponed the Orioles’ series opener against the Texas Rangers on Friday night. There’s another name to add to the Orioles’ ever-growing infirmary report with the startling news of Brian Roberts being taken to a local hospital because of stomach pains. Roberts would have been the second starting infielder in as many days — the other being J.J. Hardy due to a ribcage injury on Thursday — to become a late scratch had the weather not forced a cancellation in what was supposed to be rookie Zach Britton’s home debut. Roberts’ status for Saturday’s straight doubleheader is unknown, and Hardy was not going to be in the lineup for the second straight night Friday. Both Hardy and manager Buck Showalter said the shortstop’s status is day-to-day, and a trip to the 15-day disabled list does not appear to be necessary, but it’s hard to feel encouraged about anything given the recent chain of events in Baltimore. If Roberts and Hardy are unavailable, the Orioles would be forced to go with the double-play combination of Robert Andino and Cesar Izturis. This comes immediately after the return

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