reflections
LaCava on turning down O’s: ‘I just didn’t feel I…

Two days before baseball’s free-agency period begins in earnest, the Orioles are still looking for a general manager.

They thought they were close Tuesday, when they made an offer to Toronto Blue Jays assistant GM Tony LaCava, a 50-year-old baseball lifer who is known for having a keen eye for talent.

But LaCava, who had interviewed twice in October with the club — including a sit-down with managing partner Peter Angelos on Monday — turned down the job, citing a desire to stay with a Blue Jays franchise that is considered by some as an up-and-comer.

“This was about the Toronto Blue Jays more than it is anything about the Baltimore Orioles. The Orioles were classy in everything they did, and I think they are going to go down the right path,” LaCava told The Baltimore Sun. “For me, it was how much I love the Toronto Blue Jays and I really, really treasure my relationship with my general manager, Alex Anthopoulos, and I really want to see this through with him. He created a great atmosphere to work up there, along with president Paul Beeston, and it is very hard to leave them.”

LaCava, who was a finalist in the past for GM jobs in Seattle and Pittsburgh, said he wasn’t actively searching for a new opportunity this time around.

“When I decided to interview, it wasn’t that I was looking to leave. But there are only 30 GM positions, and I was interested in it,” he said. “When I weighed both at the end of the day, I just didn’t feel I could leave the Blue Jays.”

The Orioles job presumably would have been both a financial and status boost for LaCava, who has worked in scouting and development for several clubs since 1989. But he would have been joining an organization that has had 14 consecutive losing seasons and lags far behind its American League East counterparts.

At least one industry source said LaCava asked for — and received assurances — that he would have been able to hire more than a half-dozen new employees to fill various holes in scouting and development. But ultimately, the Pittsburgh native chose to stay in Toronto.

“I am working in a great place, a job that I love,” LaCava said. “It’s just as simple as that.”

The Orioles are not commenting publicly on the search to replace Andy MacPhail, who stepped down in October after four-plus years as president of baseball operations. The Orioles have interviewed four men for the vacancy, including LaCava and Jerry Dipoto, who last week was hired as the Los Angeles Angels’ GM. That leaves Los Angeles Dodgers assistant GM De Jon Watson and Orioles player-development director John Stockstill as the remaining candidates.

However, it is expected that the Orioles will go back to their original list and conduct a few more interviews. Potential candidates could include Chicago White Sox assistant general manager Rick Hahn, New York Yankees scouting director Damon Oppenheimer and Texas Rangers assistant general manager Thad Levine, among others.

The Orioles, the only club without a top baseball executive, had hoped to have someone in place before the free-agency period begins Thursday, though the majority of free agents aren’t typically signed until December.

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Blue Jays’ LaCava turns down O’s

Two days before baseball’s free-agency period begins in earnest, the Orioles are still looking for a general manager.

They thought they were close Tuesday, when they made an offer to Toronto Blue Jays assistant GM Tony LaCava, a 50-year-old baseball lifer who is known for having a keen eye for talent.

But LaCava, who had interviewed twice in October with the club — including a sit-down with managing partner Peter Angelos on Monday — turned down the job, citing a desire to stay with a Blue Jays franchise that is considered by some as an up-and-comer.

“This was about the Toronto Blue Jays more than it is anything about the Baltimore Orioles. The Orioles were classy in everything they did, and I think they are going to go down the right path,” LaCava told The Baltimore Sun. “For me, it was how much I love the Toronto Blue Jays and I really, really treasure my relationship with my general manager, Alex Anthopoulos, and I really want to see this through with him. He created a great atmosphere to work up there, along with president Paul Beeston, and it is very hard to leave them.”

LaCava, who was a finalist in the past for GM jobs in Seattle and Pittsburgh, said he wasn’t actively searching for a new opportunity this time around.

“When I decided to interview, it wasn’t that I was looking to leave. But there are only 30 GM positions, and I was interested in it,” he said. “When I weighed both at the end of the day, I just didn’t feel I could leave the Blue Jays.”

The Orioles job presumably would have been both a financial and status boost for LaCava, who has worked in scouting and development for several clubs since 1989. But he would have been joining an organization that has had 14 consecutive losing seasons and lags far behind its American League East counterparts.

At least one industry source said LaCava asked for — and received assurances — that he would have been able to hire more than a half-dozen new employees to fill various holes in scouting and development. But ultimately, the Pittsburgh native chose to stay in Toronto.

“I am working in a great place, a job that I love,” LaCava said. “It’s just as simple as that.”

The Orioles are not commenting publicly on the search to replace Andy MacPhail, who stepped down in October after four-plus years as president of baseball operations. The Orioles have interviewed four men for the vacancy, including LaCava and Jerry Dipoto, who last week was hired as the Los Angeles Angels’ GM. That leaves Los Angeles Dodgers assistant GM De Jon Watson and Orioles player-development director John Stockstill as the remaining candidates.

However, it is expected that the Orioles will go back to their original list and conduct a few more interviews. Potential candidates could include Chicago White Sox assistant general manager Rick Hahn, New York Yankees scouting director Damon Oppenheimer and Texas Rangers assistant general manager Thad Levine, among others.

The Orioles, the only club without a top baseball executive, had hoped to have someone in place before the free-agency period begins Thursday, though the majority of free agents aren’t typically signed until December.

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Orioles close on Toronto Blue Jays executive Tony…

Toronto Blue Jays executive Tony LaCava is back in town today to meet with Orioles owner Peter Angelos,according to a team source, which is a pretty solid indication that he’s the preferred candidate to replace Andy MacPhail as the Orioles head of baseball operations.

The Orioles are not expected to do a second round of interviews, so the fact that LaCava is back almost certainly means that he and the ownership component of the search committee are discussing the conditions of his employment. It doesn’t mean, however, that he has been offered the job officially or will accept it.

It’s a complicated dance, since any high-quality candidate for this type of management position is going to want to know the limits of his authority as well as the size and length of his contract. The outside candidates who were summoned to Baltimore to interview for the position all are highly prized by their current organizations, so it’s not fair to assume any of them would automatically accept the job if offered.

It probably is fair to assume that if the Orioles schedule a news conference for tomorrow to announce the new VP or president of baseball operations, it will be LaCava, but there has been no indication yet that the process is moving along quite that quickly.

LaCava’s presence in Baltimore today was first reported on FoxSports.com.

That’s all the news for today.

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Arencibia comes off bench to lift Jays

THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — J.P. Arencibia’s two-out single in the bottom of the ninth drove in the winning run as the Toronto Blue Jays rallied to edge the Baltimore Orioles 5-4 on Saturday.

Toronto tied the game earlier in the inning on a wild pitch.

Baltimore took a 4-3 lead on Vladimir Guerrero’s double in the eighth but closer Kevin Gregg, a former Blue Jay, couldn’t hold the lead in the ninth.

Gregg (0-3) gave up a two-out walk to Kelly Johnson and single to Jose Molina. Chris Woodward ran for Molina and former Orioles pitcher Adam Loewen of Surrey, B.C. batted for Dewayne Wise and was hit by a pitch.

Arencibia pinch-hit for Mike McCoy and a wild pitch brought Johnson in with the tying run before Arencibia won it for the Jays (73-73).

Toronto starter Henderson Alvarez didn’t figure in the decision after allowing nine hits and three runs over seven innings. The 21-year-old right-hander allowed one walk and fanned four before Jesse Litsch (6-3) took over in the eighth in a 3-3 tie.

Robert Andino led off the eighth against Litsch with a double and scored on a one-out double by Guerrero to give the Orioles (58-86) a 4-3 lead.

Orioles starter Rick VandenHurk allowed three runs and three hits in 2 1-3 innings, surrendering homers to Jose Bautista — his major league-leading 41st of the season — and Brett Lawrie of Langley, B.C. He was replaced by Zach Phillips.

Toronto shortstop Yunel Escobar left in the second after being hit on the left elbow with a pitch from VandenHurk. X-rays were negative and he’s listed as day to day.

McCoy ran for Escobar and took over at shortstop.

Consecutive first-inning singles by Nick Markakis, Guerrero and Chris Davis put Baltimore ahead 1-0.

A leadoff walk to Escobar and Bautista’s homer in the bottom of the inning gave Toronto a 2-1 lead.

Kyle Hudson bunted for a single and took on second on Alvarez’s throwing error to lead off the second. Shortstop Pedro Florimon, playing his first major-league game, also bunted but was called out on a close play that brought manager Buck Showalter out to argue.

Hudson took third on the sacrifice and scored on Matt Angle’s single.

Lawrie countered in the bottom of the second with his ninth homer since making his major-league debut in Baltimore on Aug. 5.

The Orioles tied it again in the third on Guerrero’s single and Davis’s double. Davis was thrown out at home by centre-fielder Wise on a single by Josh Bell.

NOTES: Attendance at Rogers Centre was 17,742.. ….Toronto DH Edwin Encarnacion didn’t play due to a left shoulder strain picked up when he struck out in the seventh inning of Friday’s 2-0 loss to Baltimore … Orioles centre-fielder Adam Jones did not start Saturday because his left ankle was swollen after taking a foul a ball Friday night … Dustin McGowan (0-0, 6.75 earned-run average) will make his first start for the Blue Jays since July 8, 2008 when he faces Tommy Hunter (3-3, 5.28 ERA) on Sunday.

 

 

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Blue Jays rally in the ninth to end O’s winning…

CBSSports.com wire reports

TORONTO — The Toronto Blue Jays couldn’t get anything going against Baltimore’s relievers for six full innings. But when Kevin Gregg came on to wrap up the save, the Orioles’ bullpen didn’t just bend, it broke.

Pinch-hitter J.P. Arencibia hit a game-winning single with two out in the ninth as the Blue Jays rallied to beat the Orioles 5-4 on Saturday, snapping Baltimore’s winning streak at three games.

“We had a chance to win the game, we were one out, one pitch away,” manager Buck Showalter said. “It’s a frustrated clubhouse right now.”

The blown save was Gregg’s seventh in 27 chances, and he’s failed in three of his past six opportunities.

“Every one of them is tough, no matter how it happens,” he Gregg said. “You don’t like walking off the field like that.”

Jose Bautista hit his major league-leading 41st home run, a two-run blast in the first, and Lawrie also went deep for the Blue Jays.

Jesse Litsch (6-3) pitched two innings for the win.

Trailing 4-3 to begin the inning, Toronto’s David Cooper struck out against Clay Rapada before Showalter called Gregg (0-3) in to finish. Gregg struck out Brett Lawrie but couldn’t wrap it up, walking Kelly Johnson, giving up a single to Jose Molina and hitting pinch-hitter Adam Loewen to load the bases. The closer then uncorked a wild pitch that allowed Johnson to score the tying run. Arencibia followed with a game-winning single to left.

“We got into a situation there where we didn’t have much margin for error,” Showalter said.

The collapse came after five Orioles relievers had combined to pitch six no-hit innings, allowing just one walk.

“The guys did an outstanding job,” Gregg said. “The whole team put together a great effort and unfortunately I spoiled it at the end.”

After Rick VandenHurk left in the third, rookie Zach Phillips pitched 1 2/3 innings, Chris Jakubauskas worked one inning, Troy Patton went 2 1/3, Willie Eyre got one out and Clay Rapada got two outs.

“We were definitely aware of what was going on,” Jakubauskas said. “We knew that the innings were stacking up, scoreless-wise. Each guy who goes in, you feed off the last guy.”

The Orioles opened the scoring with three straight two-out singles in the first, matching the number of hits they collected in eight innings against Toronto right-hander Henderson Alvarez when he beat them at Baltimore on Aug. 31 for his first major league win. Nick Markakis and Vladimir Guerrero grounded singles to center before Chris Davis lined an RBI base hit to right.

The run snapped Alvarez’s scoreless innings streak at 14.

Toronto answered in the bottom half when Bautista hammered a 3-2 pitch into the second deck in left, scoring shortstop Yunel Escobar ahead of him.

An error by Alvarez helped Baltimore tie it in the second. Kyle Hudson reached on a bunt single and moved to second when Alvarez’s throw sailed into foul territory down the right field line. Pedro Florimon sacrificed Hudson to third and he scored on a two-out single by Matt Angle.

Toronto promptly reclaimed the lead when Lawrie homered to left on VandenHurk’s first pitch of the bottom half, his ninth.

Baltimore tied it again with another two-out rally in the third. Guerrero singled to right and scored when Davis doubled up the alley in right-center. Josh Bell followed with a single to center but Davis ran through third base coach John Russell’s stop sign and was thrown out at the plate for the third out.

Robert Andino doubled to begin the eighth against Litsch, took third on a grounder and scored when Guerrero doubled to center.

Guerrero went 3 for 4 and has eight hits in has past 13 at bats.

“Very quietly, he’s finishing with a little flurry,” Showalter said.

Making his first start of the season after two relief appearances, VandenHurk allowed three runs and three hits in 2 1/3 innings. He walked two and struck out one.

“I just didn’t throw enough strikes,” he said. “That’s what it comes down to.”

Alvarez allowed three runs and a season-high nine hits in seven innings. He walked one and struck out four.

Escobar left in the second after being hit on the left elbow by a pitch from VandenHurk. He was replaced by Mike McCoy. X-rays were negative and Escobar is day to day.

Notes

Orioles OF Adam Jones was scratched from the lineup with a sore left ankle. Jones fouled a ball of his ankle Friday night and it swelled up overnight, but Showalter said Jones might play Sunday. … Blue Jays OF prospect Melvin Garcia has been suspended 50 games for using a performance-enhancing substance. Garcia is the third Blue Jays minor leaguer to be suspended this season. RHP Aderly De La Cruz and LHP Luillyn Guillen received 50 games bans July 14.

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Jays get 2 off Gregg in 9th, top Orioles (AP)

TORONTO (AP)—The Toronto Blue Jays couldn’t get anything going against
Baltimore’s relievers for six full innings. But when Kevin Gregg(notes) came on to wrap
up the save, the Orioles’ bullpen didn’t just bend, it broke.

Pinch-hitter J.P. Arencibia(notes) hit a game-winning single with two out in the
ninth as the Blue Jays rallied to beat the Orioles 5-4 on Saturday, snapping
Baltimore’s winning streak at three games.

“We had a chance to win the game, we were one out, one pitch away,”
manager Buck Showalter said. “It’s a frustrated clubhouse right now.”

The blown save was Gregg’s seventh in 27 chances, and he’s failed in three
of his past six opportunities.

“Every one of them is tough, no matter how it happens,” he Gregg said.
“You don’t like walking off the field like that.”

Jose Bautista(notes) hit his major league-leading 41st home run, a two-run blast in
the first, and Lawrie also went deep for the Blue Jays.

Jesse Litsch(notes) (6-3) pitched two innings for the win.

Trailing 4-3 to begin the inning, Toronto’s David Cooper(notes) struck out against
Clay Rapada(notes) before Showalter called Gregg (0-3) in to finish. Gregg struck out
Brett Lawrie(notes) but couldn’t wrap it up, walking Kelly Johnson(notes), giving up a single
to Jose Molina(notes) and hitting pinch-hitter Adam Loewen(notes) to load the bases. The
closer then uncorked a wild pitch that allowed Johnson to score the tying run.
Arencibia followed with a game-winning single to left.

“We got into a situation there where we didn’t have much margin for
error,” Showalter said.

The collapse came after five Orioles relievers had combined to pitch six
no-hit innings, allowing just one walk.

“The guys did an outstanding job,” Gregg said. “The whole team put
together a great effort and unfortunately I spoiled it at the end.”

After Rick VandenHurk(notes) left in the third, rookie Zach Phillips(notes) pitched 1 2-3
innings, Chris Jakubauskas(notes) worked one inning, Troy Patton(notes) went 2 1-3, Willie
Eyre(notes)
got one out and Clay Rapada got two outs.

“We were definitely aware of what was going on,” Jakubauskas said. “We
knew that the innings were stacking up, scoreless-wise. Each guy who goes in,
you feed off the last guy.”

The Orioles opened the scoring with three straight two-out singles in the
first, matching the number of hits they collected in eight innings against
Toronto right-hander Henderson Alvarez(notes) when he beat them at Baltimore on Aug. 31
for his first major league win. Nick Markakis(notes) and Vladimir Guerrero(notes) grounded
singles to center before Chris Davis(notes) lined an RBI base hit to right.

The run snapped Alvarez’s scoreless innings streak at 14.

Toronto answered in the bottom half when Bautista hammered a 3-2 pitch into
the second deck in left, scoring shortstop Yunel Escobar(notes) ahead of him.

An error by Alvarez helped Baltimore tie it in the second. Kyle Hudson(notes)
reached on a bunt single and moved to second when Alvarez’s throw sailed into
foul territory down the right field line. Pedro Florimon(notes) sacrificed Hudson to
third and he scored on a two-out single by Matt Angle(notes).

Toronto promptly reclaimed the lead when Lawrie homered to left on
VandenHurk’s first pitch of the bottom half, his ninth.

Baltimore tied it again with another two-out rally in the third. Guerrero
singled to right and scored when Davis doubled up the alley in right-center.
Josh Bell(notes) followed with a single to center but Davis ran through third base
coach John Russell’s stop sign and was thrown out at the plate for the third
out.

Robert Andino(notes) doubled to begin the eighth against Litsch, took third on a
grounder and scored when Guerrero doubled to center.

Guerrero went 3 for 4 and has eight hits in has past 13 at bats.

“Very quietly, he’s finishing with a little flurry,” Showalter said.

Making his first start of the season after two relief appearances,
VandenHurk allowed three runs and three hits in 2 1-3 innings. He walked two and
struck out one.

“I just didn’t throw enough strikes,” he said. “That’s what it comes down
to.”

Alvarez allowed three runs and a season-high nine hits in seven innings. He
walked one and struck out four.

Escobar left in the second after being hit on the left elbow by a pitch from
VandenHurk. He was replaced by Mike McCoy(notes). X-rays were negative and Escobar is
day-to-day.

NOTES: Orioles OF Adam Jones(notes) was scratched from the lineup with a sore left
ankle. Jones fouled a ball of his ankle Friday night and it swelled up
overnight, but Showalter said Jones might play Sunday. … Florimon made his
major league debut. … Blue Jays OF prospect Melvin Garcia has been suspended
50 games for using a performance-enhancing substance. Garcia is the third Blue
Jays minor leaguer to be suspended this season. RHP Aderly De La Cruz and LHP
Luillyn Guillen received 50 games bans July 14.

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Gregg blows save as Blue Jays beat Orioles 5-4

TORONTO (AP) — The Toronto Blue Jays couldn’t get anything going against Baltimore’s relievers for six full innings. But when Kevin Gregg came on to wrap up the save, the Orioles’ bullpen didn’t just bend, it broke.

Pinch-hitter J.P. Arencibia hit a game-winning single with two out in the ninth as the Blue Jays rallied to beat the Orioles 5-4 on Saturday, snapping Baltimore’s winning streak at three games.

“We had a chance to win the game, we were one out, one pitch away,” manager Buck Showalter said. “It’s a frustrated clubhouse right now.”

The blown save was Gregg’s seventh in 27 chances, and he’s failed in three of his past six opportunities.

“Every one of them is tough, no matter how it happens,” he Gregg said. “You don’t like walking off the field like that.”

Jose Bautista hit his major league-leading 41st home run, a two-run blast in the first, and Lawrie also went deep for the Blue Jays.

Jesse Litsch (6-3) pitched two innings for the win.

Trailing 4-3 to begin the inning, Toronto’s David Cooper struck out against Clay Rapada before Showalter called Gregg (0-3) in to finish. Gregg struck out Brett Lawrie but couldn’t wrap it up, walking Kelly Johnson, giving up a single to Jose Molina and hitting pinch-hitter Adam Loewen to load the bases. The closer then uncorked a wild pitch that allowed Johnson to score the tying run. Arencibia followed with a game-winning single to left.

“We got into a situation there where we didn’t have much margin for error,” Showalter said.

The collapse came after five Orioles relievers had combined to pitch six no-hit innings, allowing just one walk.

“The guys did an outstanding job,” Gregg said. “The whole team put together a great effort and unfortunately I spoiled it at the end.”

After Rick VandenHurk left in the third, rookie Zach Phillips pitched 1 2-3 innings, Chris Jakubauskas worked one inning, Troy Patton went 2 1-3, Willie Eyre got one out and Clay Rapada got two outs.

“We were definitely aware of what was going on,” Jakubauskas said. “We knew that the innings were stacking up, scoreless-wise. Each guy who goes in, you feed off the last guy.”

The Orioles opened the scoring with three straight two-out singles in the first, matching the number of hits they collected in eight innings against Toronto right-hander Henderson Alvarez when he beat them at Baltimore on Aug. 31 for his first major league win. Nick Markakis and Vladimir Guerrero grounded singles to center before Chris Davis lined an RBI base hit to right.

The run snapped Alvarez’s scoreless innings streak at 14.

Toronto answered in the bottom half when Bautista hammered a 3-2 pitch into the second deck in left, scoring shortstop Yunel Escobar ahead of him.

An error by Alvarez helped Baltimore tie it in the second. Kyle Hudson reached on a bunt single and moved to second when Alvarez’s throw sailed into foul territory down the right field line. Pedro Florimon sacrificed Hudson to third and he scored on a two-out single by Matt Angle.

Toronto promptly reclaimed the lead when Lawrie homered to left on VandenHurk’s first pitch of the bottom half, his ninth.

Baltimore tied it again with another two-out rally in the third. Guerrero singled to right and scored when Davis doubled up the alley in right-center. Josh Bell followed with a single to center but Davis ran through third base coach John Russell’s stop sign and was thrown out at the plate for the third out.

Robert Andino doubled to begin the eighth against Litsch, took third on a grounder and scored when Guerrero doubled to center.

Guerrero went 3 for 4 and has eight hits in has past 13 at bats.

“Very quietly, he’s finishing with a little flurry,” Showalter said.

Making his first start of the season after two relief appearances, VandenHurk allowed three runs and three hits in 2 1-3 innings. He walked two and struck out one.

“I just didn’t throw enough strikes,” he said. “That’s what it comes down to.”

Alvarez allowed three runs and a season-high nine hits in seven innings. He walked one and struck out four.

Escobar left in the second after being hit on the left elbow by a pitch from VandenHurk. He was replaced by Mike McCoy. X-rays were negative and Escobar is day-to-day.

NOTES: Orioles OF Adam Jones was scratched from the lineup with a sore left ankle. Jones fouled a ball of his ankle Friday night and it swelled up overnight, but Showalter said Jones might play Sunday. … Florimon made his major league debut. … Blue Jays OF prospect Melvin Garcia has been suspended 50 games for using a performance-enhancing substance. Garcia is the third Blue Jays minor leaguer to be suspended this season. RHP Aderly De La Cruz and LHP Luillyn Guillen received 50 games bans July 14.

Not a lot else going on in the MLB world today.

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Guthrie pitches Orioles past Blue Jays (AP)

TORONTO (AP)—Baseball has taught Jeremy Guthrie(notes) not to worry about things
beyond his control, so the Orioles pitcher insists he’s not concerned about an
ugly win-loss mark.

Record aside, Guthrie remains focused on his own performance. He had every
reason to be happy Friday night.

Guthrie pitched three-hit ball for seven innings, Vladimir Guerrero(notes) and Nick
Markakis(notes)
each drove in a run and Baltimore beat the Toronto Blue Jays 2-0, their
third straight victory.

“You can’t ever lose a game if you give up zero runs,” Guthrie said.
“That’s the ultimate job a pitcher can do.”

The major league leader in losses, Guthrie (7-17) came in having won just
once in his past six starts and was seeking to avoid setting a career high for
defeats. The right-hander made sure of that in a stellar outing. He walked three
and struck out five.

“It was all about Jeremy tonight,” Orioles manager Buck Showalter said.
“He was solid. He commanded the fastball. When it’s there for him, he presents
a lot of issues.”

Catcher Matt Wieters(notes) was pleased with Guthrie’s effort.

“He had all four pitches working,” Wieters said. “He was able to keep his
tempo and keep his pace all night. It seemed like he was in control throughout
the whole game.”

As much as he’d like to avoid losing 20, Guthrie said he learned years ago
not to get too wrapped up with his own record.

“Baseball teaches you that so many things are out of your control,” he
said. “My first season in Baltimore was a big lesson. I felt like I had a
chance to win a lot of games. To get a ‘W’ next to your name, a lot of things
have to happen. You’re dependent on four things: your execution, your defense,
your offense and the bullpen. I can only control one of four, which means I have
25 percent control over getting a ‘W’ or an ‘L’ next to my name at the end of
the day.”

Pedro Strop(notes) worked the eighth and Jim Johnson(notes) pitched around a leadoff walk
to close it out in the ninth for his fourth save in eight opportunities.

Baltimore opened the scoring with an unearned run in the sixth, taking
advantage of a throwing error by Blue Jays second baseman Kelly Johnson(notes). Robert
Andino(notes)
led off with a single but was erased at second on J.J. Hardy’s(notes) fielder’s
choice. Johnson overthrew first base as he tried to complete the double play,
allowing Hardy to move to second. One out later, Guerrero drove in Hardy with a
single to left.

“He hit a great pitch, curveball down,” Blue Jays left-hander Brett Cecil(notes)
said. “That’s just the type of hitter he is. Seems like you can never fool
him.”

The Orioles benefited from another missed double-play opportunity by Toronto
in the eighth. With one out and runners at the corners, Nick Markakis grounded
into a fielder’s choice, with Hardy forced out at second. Markakis beat the
relay throw from Blue Jays shortstop Yunel Escobar(notes) on a bang-bang play at first,
allowing Ryan Adams(notes) to score from third. Toronto manager John Farrell did not
dispute umpire Jim Wolf’s call.

The hard-luck loser was Cecil (4-9), who has not won since July 29 against
Texas, a span of eight starts. Cecil allowed two runs, one earned, and seven
hits in 7 2-3 innings. He walked one and struck out a season-high nine.

“(Cecil) was really good,” Showalter said. “The key to being in that
ballgame is the pitching job our guy did to try and match up with him because
you’re not going to beat him unless you get a similar outing from your guy.”

Cecil had to jump over the jagged end of Adam Jones’(notes) bat after the Orioles’
outfielder got sawn off in the fourth inning. The barrel of the bat bounced off
the mound, with Cecil kicking his legs up to avoid being struck. Jones
eventually struck out.

After missing two games with a sore right wrist, Adam Lind(notes) doubled to begin
the second and advanced to third on Brett Lawrie’s(notes) sacrifice. But Johnson struck
out and J.P. Arencibia(notes) grounded out.

A throwing error by first baseman Mark Reynolds(notes) and a walk to Yunel Escobar
gave the Blue Jays runners at first and second with one out in the eighth, but
Strop got Eric Thames(notes) to ground into a double play.

“That was probably the one legitimate and true opportunity we had to mount
something,” Farrell said.

Blue Jays right-hander Kyle Drabek(notes) made his first appearance since June 12,
coming out of the bullpen to work the ninth. Drabek was sent to Triple-A Las
Vegas after going 4-5 with a 5.70 ERA in 14 starts.

NOTES: Jose Bautista(notes) slammed his bat into the padded railing at the top of
the dugout steps after striking out swinging to begin the seventh. … Guthrie
also lost 17 games in 2009. … Guthrie passed 1,000 innings for his career.
He’s pitched 1,001 1-3 innings over eight seasons. … Toronto was shut out for
the eighth time this season. … Orioles INF Chris Davis(notes), who was activated of
the DL Tuesday after missing more than three weeks with an injured right
shoulder, took extra BP before the game but was held out of the starting lineup.
Davis had played the past three games. … Baltimore manager Buck Showalter said
RHP Jason Berken’s(notes) return is “imminent.” Berken has been out since Aug. 22
with a strained right forearm. … Toronto OF Colby Rasmus(notes) (right wrist) will
play two rehab games with Double-A New Hampshire Saturday and Sunday and is
expected to come off the DL and rejoin the Blue Jays Tuesday in Boston. Toronto
is off Monday. Rasmus has not played since Aug. 23.

Not a lot else going on in the MLB world today.

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Reyes finds motivation in facing Blue Jays

The Associated Press

Posted:

Aug 31, 2011 10:59 AM ET

Last Updated:

Aug 31, 2011 10:59 AM ET

 

Orioles starter Jo-Jo Reyes would like to make an impact against the Toronto Blue Jays, who placed the pitcher on waivers earlier this month.Orioles starter Jo-Jo Reyes would like to make an impact against the Toronto Blue Jays, who placed the pitcher on waivers earlier this month. (Patrick Semansky/Associated Press)

Ryan Adams is providing an unexpected impact for the last-place Baltimore Orioles.

Jo-Jo Reyes would like to make one of his own against the Toronto Blue Jays.

Adams will try to continue his production at the plate while Reyes looks to beat his former club Wednesday night in the first meeting since being waived.

The Orioles (54-79) are at the bottom of the AL East, but have won seven of nine while Adams is hitting .333 with four doubles and four RBIs since being recalled from Triple-A Norfolk on Aug. 22.

The rookie second baseman turned in a clutch performance Tuesday, capping a two-run 10th with an RBI single in a 6-5 win over Toronto (67-68) to open this three-game series at Camden Yards.

“In that situation, I was just trying to get the ball in the air,” Adams said. “They were playing [the outfield] in and I got a pitch up. Right away, I knew it was going to be deep enough to get him in.”

Reyes (7-10, 5.26 ERA) may find some extra motivation as he tries to help Baltimore win just its second series since late June.

He went 5-8 with a 5.40 ERA in 20 starts for Toronto before the club designated him for assignment on July 23. He gave up 15 runs in 9 2-3 innings over his final two starts with the Jays, and the Orioles claimed him off waivers earlier this month.

“Yeah, you know, of course,” Reyes told the team’s official website. “They let me go, so of course I’m going to have a little chip on my shoulder. But I can’t let that affect my outing.”

The left-hander is 2-2 with a 4.57 ERA in five games – four starts – since joining Baltimore, but is lacking consistency.

Reyes has alternated wins and losses over those four starts, allowing two runs in 12 innings in the victories. However, he’s surrendered nine runs and 13 hits in nine innings of those losses.

Reyes was solid in a 6-1 victory at Minnesota on Thursday, allowing one run and five hits in six innings to help complete a four-game sweep.

He’ll try to keep Toronto slugger Jose Bautista in check, something the Orioles have been very successful at this season. Bautista, tied for the major league lead with 38 homers, is batting .178 (8 for 45) with no home runs against Baltimore in 2011.

The Blue Jays have lost five of six and are hitting .206 during a 3-8 skid. Bench coach Don Wakamatsu continues to run the team in the absence of manager John Farrell, who is recovering from a bout of pneumonia.

Toronto is expected to turn to Henderson Alvarez (0-2, 4.76), who faces the Orioles for the first time.

The rookie right-hander has lost his last two trips to the mound despite a respectable 3.75 ERA. His offense has supported him with two runs in those two games.

Alvarez surrendered four runs and four hits — three homers — while walking two and hitting another batter in six innings of a 6-1 loss to Tampa Bay on Friday.

The Blue Jays have lost six of 10 at Camden Yards after a six-game win streak there.

That’s all the news for today.

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Jays can’t put bumbling Orioles away, lose 6-5

Date: Wednesday Aug. 31, 2011 7:13 AM ET

BALTIMORE — Brian Tallet didn’t mince words or make excuses. Called upon to record his first career save, the Toronto Blue Jays left-hander didn’t get the job done.

“Yeah, it was a pretty (bad) result, huh?” Tallet said after coughing up two 10th-inning runs in a 6-5 Baltimore Orioles victory over Toronto on Tuesday night. “It’s what happens when you don’t throw strikes early in the game, early when you get in there and let those guys get on base. Anything can happen and that’s what happened.”

The Blue Jays didn’t make the most of early offensive opportunities and, while they took advantage of numerous mistakes by the bumbling Orioles, they couldn’t put Baltimore away.

In the 10th, they ran into some old-fashioned bad luck, when right-hander Casey Janssen came up with a tight lat in his throwing shoulder and couldn’t return to the mound after dispatching the Orioles on 13 pitches in the ninth.

“We’re going to evaluate him, see where he’s at,” said acting Toronto manager Don Wakamatsu, adding that he didn’t believe Janssen’s injury was serious.

Wakamatsu was filling in for manager John Farrell, who remained in Toronto while being treated for pneumonia. Farrell is expected to miss the three-game series in Baltimore.

The Orioles botched their bunt defence, muffed an infield pop fly for an error, twice failed to get bunts down successfully and blew a one-run lead in the ninth inning. Yet one swing of rookie Ryan Adams’ bat erased their many miscues.

“It wasn’t looking good there for a minute, but we battled back,” said Adams, who capped a two-run rally in the bottom of the 10th with an RBI single.

Matt Wieters led off the Baltimore 10th by drawing a walk off Tallet (0-2). Mark Reynolds walked and, after Robert Andino bunted a foul third strike, pinch hitter Jake Fox hit a game-tying single to right with Reynolds taking third.

Adams followed with a deep fly ball off the warning track in right-centre beyond a drawn-in outfield.

“In that situation, I was just trying to get the ball in the air,” Adams said. “They were playing (the outfield) in and I got a pitch up. Right away, I knew it was going to be deep enough to get him in.”

The victory went to Willie Eyre (1-0), whose wild pitch in the top of the 10th had put the Blue Jays ahead 5-4. That was the last in a long line of mental and physical mistakes that failed to undo the resilient Orioles.

Andino’s 10th-inning bunt attempt was the second time he was unable to advance runners, and some shoddy defence in the ninth contributed to a delayed — and undefended double steal — as Toronto tied the game on Yunel Escobar’s sacrifice fly.

“I know exactly what should have happened and didn’t happen and it won’t happen again, especially considering the people,” said Baltimore manager Buck Showalter when asked about the wacky bunt play.

Wieters homered for Baltimore, which has won seven of nine.

The Blue Jays have lost five of six.

“You’ve got to take it as it comes and analyze it and you’ve just got to suck it up and move on to tomorrow,” said Toronto’s Brett Lawrie. “There’s no sense in dwelling on it. You’ve got to come back tomorrow and keep playing.”

Lawrie’s sixth homer staked Toronto to a 3-0 lead in the second. After one-out walks to Edwin Encarnacion and Kelly Johnson, the native of Langley, B.C., ripped a 1-2 curveball from Jeremy Guthrie into the left-field stands.

Wieters’ two-run shot cut the lead to a run in the bottom of the inning. Vladimir Guerrero led off with a single and Wieters homered to centre off Brett Cecil, his 15th.

Cecil’s throwing error in the fourth allowed Baltimore to tie the game at 3. Andino doubled with two down and came around on an infield single by Nolan Reimold after Cecil threw wildly past first base.

The Blue Jays loaded the bases with none down in the fifth, but squandered the opportunity. Encarnacion bounced into a 1-2-3 double play and Johnson flied out to centre.

“There were several different opportunities to score, to do some things and the bottom line is we put ourselves in a position,” Wakamatsu said. “We talked about not giving up and going to the end.”

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Blue Jays can’t put bumbling Orioles away, lose…

The Blue Jays didn’t make the most of early offensive opportunities and, while they took advantage of numerous mistakes by the bumbling Orioles, they couldn’t put Baltimore away.

In the 10th, they ran into some old-fashioned bad luck, when right-hander Casey Janssen came up with a tight lat in his throwing shoulder and couldn’t return to the mound after dispatching the Orioles on 13 pitches in the ninth.

“We’re going to evaluate him, see where he’s at,” said acting Toronto manager Don Wakamatsu, adding that he didn’t believe Janssen’s injury was serious.

Wakamatsu was filling in for manager John Farrell, who remained in Toronto while being treated for pneumonia. Farrell is expected to miss the three-game series in Baltimore.

The Orioles botched their bunt defense, muffed an infield pop fly for an error, twice failed to get bunts down successfully and blew a one-run lead in the ninth inning. Yet one swing of rookie Ryan Adams’ bat erased their many miscues.

“It wasn’t looking good there for a minute, but we battled back,” said Adams, who capped a two-run rally in the bottom of the 10th with an RBI single.

Matt Wieters led off the Baltimore 10th by drawing a walk off Tallet (0-2). Mark Reynolds walked and, after Robert Andino bunted a foul third strike, pinch hitter Jake Fox hit a game-tying single to right with Reynolds taking third.

Adams followed with a deep fly ball off the warning track in right-center beyond a drawn-in outfield.

“In that situation, I was just trying to get the ball in the air,” Adams said. “They were playing (the outfield) in and I got a pitch up. Right away, I knew it was going to be deep enough to get him in.”

The victory went to Willie Eyre (1-0), whose wild pitch in the top of the 10th had put the Blue Jays ahead 5-4. That was the last in a long line of mental and physical mistakes that failed to undo the resilient Orioles.

Andino’s 10th-inning bunt attempt was the second time he was unable to advance runners, and some shoddy defense in the ninth contributed to a delayed — and undefended double steal — as Toronto tied the game on Yunel Escobar’s sacrifice fly.

“I know exactly what should have happened and didn’t happen and it won’t happen again, especially considering the people,” said Baltimore manager Buck Showalter when asked about the wacky bunt play.

Wieters homered for Baltimore, which has won seven of nine.

The Blue Jays have lost five of six.

“You’ve got to take it as it comes and analyze it and you’ve just got to suck it up and move on to tomorrow,” said Toronto’s Brett Lawrie. “There’s no sense in dwelling on it. You’ve got to come back tomorrow and keep playing.”

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Tallet can’t come through, Orioles rally past Jays

BALTIMORE (AP) — Brian Tallet didn’t mince words or make excuses. Called upon to record his first career save, the Toronto Blue Jays left-hander didn’t get the job done.

“Yeah, it was a pretty (bad) result, huh?” Tallet said after coughing up two 10th-inning runs in a 6-5 Baltimore Orioles victory over Toronto on Tuesday night. “It’s what happens when you don’t throw strikes early in the game, early when you get in there and let those guys get on base. Anything can happen and that’s what happened.”

The Blue Jays didn’t make the most of early offensive opportunities and, while they took advantage of numerous mistakes by the bumbling Orioles, they couldn’t put Baltimore away.

In the 10th, they ran into some old-fashioned bad luck, when right-hander Casey Janssen came up with a tight lat in his throwing shoulder and couldn’t return to the mound after dispatching the Orioles on 13 pitches in the ninth.

“We’re going to evaluate him, see where he’s at,” said acting Toronto manager Don Wakamatsu, adding that he didn’t believe Janssen’s injury was serious.

Wakamatsu was filling in for manager John Farrell, who remained in Toronto while being treated for pneumonia. Farrell is expected to miss the three-game series in Baltimore.

The Orioles botched their bunt defense, muffed an infield pop fly for an error, twice failed to get bunts down successfully and blew a one-run lead in the ninth inning. Yet one swing of rookie Ryan Adams’ bat erased their many miscues.

“It wasn’t looking good there for a minute, but we battled back,” said Adams, who capped a two-run rally in the bottom of the 10th with an RBI single.

Matt Wieters led off the Baltimore 10th by drawing a walk off Tallet (0-2). Mark Reynolds walked and, after Robert Andino bunted a foul third strike, pinch hitter Jake Fox hit a game-tying single to right with Reynolds taking third.

Adams followed with a deep fly ball off the warning track in right-center beyond a drawn-in outfield.

“In that situation, I was just trying to get the ball in the air,” Adams said. “They were playing (the outfield) in and I got a pitch up. Right away, I knew it was going to be deep enough to get him in.”

The victory went to Willie Eyre (1-0), whose wild pitch in the top of the 10th had put the Blue Jays ahead 5-4. That was the last in a long line of mental and physical mistakes that failed to undo the resilient Orioles.

Andino’s 10th-inning bunt attempt was the second time he was unable to advance runners, and some shoddy defense in the ninth contributed to a delayed — and undefended double steal — as Toronto tied the game on Yunel Escobar’s sacrifice fly.

“I know exactly what should have happened and didn’t happen and it won’t happen again, especially considering the people,” said Baltimore manager Buck Showalter when asked about the wacky bunt play.

Wieters homered for Baltimore, which has won seven of nine.

The Blue Jays have lost five of six.

“You’ve got to take it as it comes and analyze it and you’ve just got to suck it up and move on to tomorrow,” said Toronto’s Brett Lawrie. “There’s no sense in dwelling on it. You’ve got to come back tomorrow and keep playing.”

Lawrie’s sixth homer staked Toronto to a 3-0 lead in the second. After one-out walks to Edwin Encarnacion and Kelly Johnson, Lawrie ripped a 1-2 curveball from Jeremy Guthrie into the left-field stands.

Wieters’ two-run shot cut the lead to a run in the bottom of the inning. Vladimir Guerrero led off with a single and Wieters homered to center off Brett Cecil, his 15th.

Cecil’s throwing error in the fourth allowed Baltimore to tie the game at 3. Andino doubled with two down and came around on an infield single by Nolan Reimold after Cecil threw wildly past first base.

The Blue Jays loaded the bases with none down in the fifth, but squandered the opportunity. Encarnacion bounced into a 1-2-3 double play and Johnson flied out to center.

“There were several different opportunities to score, to do some things and the bottom line is we put ourselves in a position,” Wakamatsu said. “We talked about not giving up and going to the end.”

Guerrero’s RBI double in the bottom of the fifth put the Orioles ahead, scoring Adam Jones, who had drawn a one-out walk.

Cecil yielded four runs on eight hits over six innings, walking two and striking out four. Guthrie allowed three runs on six hits, walked two and struck out five.

Trying to protect a 4-3 lead in the ninth, Baltimore’s Kevin Gregg instead blew his fifth save in 24 chances. J.P. Arencibia led off with a single and was replaced by pinch runner Dewayne Wise. Mike McCoy walked on four pitches and, when the Orioles flubbed their wheel-play defense on Escobar’s bunt attempt, both runners moved up on an unconventional double steal, each benefiting from an unprotected base.

Escobar followed with a game-tying sacrifice fly to right.

NOTES: Baltimore snapped an eight-game losing streak in one-run games. … Toronto reliever Jon Rauch completed a 25-pitch simulated game Tuesday afternoon and appears close to rejoining the active roster. Rauch, who underwent an appendectomy August 16, will be re-evaluated Wednesday but is likely to be activated off the disabled list Thursday, according to Wakamatsu. … 1B Chris Davis, who is on the 15-day disabled list with a torn labrum in his right shoulder, took 25 swings off a tee and participated in throwing drills at the Orioles complex in Sarasota, Fla., on Tuesday. … Orioles RHP Jason Berken’s wife Emily gave birth to a 5-lb., 12-oz. baby girl, Hadley Lane, on Tuesday afternoon. … In 27 starts this season, Guthrie has yet to win consecutive decisions. … Toronto right-hander Henderson Alvarez (0-2) faces Baltimore lefty Jo-Jo Reyes (7-10) on Wednesday.

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Orioles rally in 10th for 6-5 victory over Blue…

Date: Tuesday Aug. 30, 2011 10:58 PM ET

BALTIMORE — Ryan Adams capped a two-run, 10th-inning rally with an RBI single and the Baltimore Orioles beat the Toronto Blue Jays 6-5 on Tuesday night.

Matt Wieters led off the Baltimore 10th by drawing a walk off Brian Tallet (0-2), who was trying for his first career save. Mark Reynolds walked and, after Robert Andino bunted a foul third strike, pinch hitter Jake Fox hit a game-tying single to right with Reynolds taking third.

Adams followed with a deep fly ball off the warning track beyond a drawn-in outfield.

The victory went to Willie Eyre (1-0), whose wild pitch in the top of the 10th had put the Blue Jays ahead 5-4.

The Blue Jays were without manager John Farrell, who is being treated for pneumonia in Toronto and is expected to miss the three-game series. Bench coach Don Wakamatsu ran the team in Farrell’s absence.

Wieters homered for Baltimore, which has won seven of nine.

The Blue Jays have lost five of six.

Brett Lawrie’s sixth homer staked Toronto to a 3-0 lead in the second. After one-out walks to Edwin Encarnacion and Kelly Johnson, Lawrie ripped a 1-2 curveball from Jeremy Guthrie into the left-field stands.

Wieters’ two-run shot cut the lead to a run in the bottom of the inning. Vladimir Guerrero led off with a single and Wieters homered to centre off Brett Cecil, his 15th.

Cecil’s throwing error in the fourth allowed Baltimore to tie the game at 3. Andino doubled with two down and came around on an infield single by Nolan Reimould after Cecil threw wildly past first base.

The Blue Jays loaded the bases with none down in the fifth, but squandered the opportunity. Encarnacion bounced into a 1-2-3 double play and Johnson flied out to centre.

Guerrero’s RBI double in the bottom of the fifth put the Orioles ahead, scoring Adam Jones, who had drawn a one-out walk.

Cecil yielded four runs on eight hits over six innings, walking two and striking out four. Guthrie allowed three runs on six hits, walked two and struck out five.

Trying to protect a 4-3 lead in the ninth, Baltimore’s Kevin Gregg, a former Blue Jays closer, instead blew his fifth save in 24 chances. J.P. Arencibia led off with a single and was replaced by pinch runner Dewayne Wise. Mike McCoy walked on four pitches and, when the Orioles flubbed their wheel-play defence on Escobar’s bunt attempt, both runners moved up on an unconventional double steal, each benefiting from an unprotected base.

Escobar followed with a game-tying sacrifice fly to right.

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Jays blow late lead, fall to O’s in 10th

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BALTIMORE — The Baltimore Orioles botched their bunt defence, muffed an infield pop fly for an error, twice failed to get bunts down successfully and blew a one-run lead in the ninth inning.

Yet one swing of rookie Ryan Adams’ bat erased their many miscues.

Adams capped a two-run, 10th-inning rally with an RBI single and the Baltimore Orioles beat the Toronto Blue Jays 6-5 on Tuesday night.

“It wasn’t looking good there for a minute, but we battled back,” said Adams.

Matt Wieters led off the Baltimore 10th by drawing a walk off Brian Tallet (0-2), who was trying for his first career save. Mark Reynolds walked and, after Robert Andino bunted a foul third strike, pinch hitter Jake Fox hit a game-tying single to right with Reynolds taking third.

Adams followed with a deep fly ball off the warning track in right-centre beyond a drawn-in outfield.

“In that situation, I was just trying to get the ball in the air,” Adams said. “They were playing (the outfield) in and I got a pitch up. Right away, I knew it was going to be deep enough to get him in.”

The victory went to Willie Eyre (1-0), whose wild pitch in the top of the 10th had put the Blue Jays ahead 5-4. That was the last in a long like of mental and physical mistakes that failed to undo the resilient Orioles.

Andino’s 10th-inning bunt attempt was the second time he was unable to advance runners, and some shoddy defence in the ninth contributed to a delayed — and undefended double steal — as Toronto tied the game on Yunel Escobar’s sacrifice fly.

“I know exactly what should have happened and didn’t happen and it won’t happen again, especially considering the people,” said Baltimore manager Buck Showalter when asked about the wacky bunt play.

The Blue Jays were without manager John Farrell, who is being treated for pneumonia in Toronto and is expected to miss the three-game series. Bench coach Don Wakamatsu ran the team in Farrell’s absence.

Toronto wanted to send Casey Janssen out for the 10th, but the right-hander came up with a tightness in a shoulder muscle, shelving him after a 13-pitch scoreless ninth.

“We’re going to evaluate him, see where he’s at,” said Wakamatsu, adding that he didn’t believe Janssen’s injury was serious.

That put Tallet into an unfamiliar role.

“Yeah, it was a pretty (bad) result, huh?” Tallet said. “It’s what happens when you don’t throw strikes early in the game, early when you get in there and let those guys get on base. Anything can happen and that’s what happened.”

Wieters homered for Baltimore, which has won seven of nine.

The Blue Jays have lost five of six.

“You’ve got to take it as it comes and analyze it and you’ve just got to suck it up and move on to tomorrow,” said Toronto’s Brett Lawrie. “There’s no sense in dwelling on it. You’ve got to come back tomorrow and keep playing.”

Lawrie’s sixth homer staked Toronto to a 3-0 lead in the second. After one-out walks to Edwin Encarnacion and Kelly Johnson, the native of Langley, B.C, ripped a 1-2 curveball from Jeremy Guthrie into the left-field stands.

Wieters’ two-run shot cut the lead to a run in the bottom of the inning. Vladimir Guerrero led off with a single and Wieters homered to centre off Brett Cecil, his 15th.

Cecil’s throwing error in the fourth allowed Baltimore to tie the game at 3. Andino doubled with two down and came around on an infield single by Nolan Reimold after Cecil threw wildly past first base.

The Blue Jays loaded the bases with none down in the fifth, but squandered the opportunity. Encarnacion bounced into a 1-2-3 double play and Johnson flied out to centre.

“There were several different opportunities to score, to do some things and the bottom line is we put ourselves in a position,” Wakamatsu said. “We talked about not giving up and going to the end.”

Guerrero’s RBI double in the bottom of the fifth put the Orioles ahead, scoring Adam Jones, who had drawn a one-out walk.

Cecil yielded four runs on eight hits over six innings, walking two and striking out four. Guthrie allowed three runs on six hits, walked two and struck out five.

Trying to protect a 4-3 lead in the ninth, Baltimore’s Kevin Gregg instead blew his fifth save in 24 chances. J.P. Arencibia led off with a single and was replaced by pinch runner Dewayne Wise. Mike McCoy walked on four pitches and, when the Orioles flubbed their wheel-play defence on Escobar’s bunt attempt, both runners moved up on an unconventional double steal, each benefiting from an unprotected base.

Escobar followed with a game-tying sacrifice fly to right.

.NOTES: Baltimore snapped an eight-game losing streak in one-run games. … Toronto reliever Jon Rauch completed a 25-pitch simulated game Tuesday afternoon and appears close to rejoining the active roster. Rauch, who underwent an appendectomy August 16, will be re-evaluated Wednesday but is likely to be activated off the disabled list Thursday, according to Wakamatsu. … 1B Chris Davis, who is on the 15-day disabled list with a torn labrum in his right shoulder, took 25 swings off a tee and participated in throwing drills at the Orioles complex in Sarasota, Fla., on Tuesday. … Orioles RHP Jason Berken’s wife Emily gave birth to a 5-lb., 12-oz. baby girl, Hadley Lane, on Tuesday afternoon. … In 27 starts this season, Guthrie has yet to win consecutive decisions. … Toronto right-hander Henderson Alvarez (0-2) faces Baltimore lefty Jo-Jo Reyes (7-10) on Wednesday.

What do you guys think about this.

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Orioles overcome miscues, rally in 10th for 6-5…

BALTIMORE Ryan Adams capped a two-run, 10th-inning rally with an RBI single and the Baltimore Orioles beat the Toronto Blue Jays 6-5 on Tuesday night.

Matt Wieters led off the Baltimore 10th by drawing a walk off Brian Tallet (0-2), who was trying for his first career save. Mark Reynolds walked and, after Robert Andino bunted a foul third strike, pinch-hitter Jake Fox hit a game-tying single to right with Reynolds taking third.

Adams followed with a deep fly ball off the warning track beyond a drawn-in outfield.

The victory went to Willie Eyre (1-0), whose wild pitch in the top of the 10th had put the Blue Jays ahead 5-4.

The Blue Jays were without manager John Farrell, who is being treated for pneumonia in Toronto and is expected to miss the three-game series. Bench coach Don Wakamatsu ran the team in Farrell’s absence.

Wieters homered for Baltimore, which has won seven of nine.

The Blue Jays have lost five of six.

Brett Lawrie’s sixth homer staked Toronto to a 3-0 lead in the second. After one-out walks to Edwin Encarnacion and Kelly Johnson, Lawrie ripped a 1-2 curveball from Jeremy Guthrie into the left-field stands.

Wieters’ two-run shot cut the lead to a run in the bottom of the inning. Vladimir Guerrero led off with a single and Wieters homered to centre off Brett Cecil, his 15th.

Cecil’s throwing error in the fourth allowed Baltimore to tie the game at 3. Andino doubled with two down and came around on an infield single by Nolan Reimold after Cecil threw wildly past first base.

The Blue Jays loaded the bases with none down in the fifth, but squandered the opportunity. Encarnacion bounced into a 1-2-3 double-play and Johnson flied out to centre.

Guerrero’s RBI double in the bottom of the fifth put the Orioles ahead, scoring Adam Jones, who had drawn a one-out walk.

Cecil yielded four runs on eight hits over six innings, walking two and striking out four. Guthrie allowed three runs on six hits, walked two and struck out five.

Trying to protect a 4-3 lead in the ninth, Baltimore’s Kevin Gregg, a former Blue Jays closer, instead blew his fifth save in 24 chances. J.P. Arencibia led off with a single and was replaced by pinch runner Dewayne Wise. Mike McCoy walked on four pitches and, when the Orioles flubbed their wheel-play defence on Escobar’s bunt attempt, both runners moved up on an unconventional double steal, each benefiting from an unprotected base.

Escobar followed with a game-tying sacrifice fly to right.

NOTES: Toronto reliever Jon Rauch completed a 25-pitch simulated game Tuesday afternoon and appears close to rejoining the active roster. Rauch, who underwent an appendectomy August 16, will be re-evaluated Wednesday but is likely to be activated off the disabled list Thursday, according to Wakamatsu. … 1B Chris Davis, who is on the 15-day disabled list with a torn labrum in his right shoulder, took 25 swings off a tee and participated in throwing drills at the Orioles complex in Sarasota, Fla., on Tuesday. … Orioles RHP Jason Berken’s wife Emily gave birth to a 5-lb., 12-oz. baby girl, Hadley Lane, on Tuesday afternoon. … In 27 starts this season, Guthrie has yet to win consecutive decisions. … Toronto right-hander Henderson Alvarez (0-2) faces Baltimore lefty Jo-Jo Reyes (7-10) on Wednesday.

The Associated Press

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Orioles rally to beat Jays in extras

The Associated Press

Posted:

Aug 30, 2011 10:42 PM ET

Last Updated:

Aug 31, 2011 12:10 AM ET

 

Baltimore's Matt Wieters, right, celebrates his home run with Vladimir Guerrero in the second inning Tuesday against the Toronto Blue Jays.Baltimore’s Matt Wieters, right, celebrates his home run with Vladimir Guerrero in the second inning Tuesday against the Toronto Blue Jays. (Greg Fiume/Getty Images)

Brian Tallet didn’t mince words or make excuses. Called upon to record his first career save, the Toronto Blue Jays left-hander didn’t get the job done.

“Yeah, it was a pretty (bad) result, huh?” Tallet said after coughing up two 10th-inning runs in a 6-5 Baltimore Orioles victory over Toronto on Tuesday night. “It’s what happens when you don’t throw strikes early in the game, early when you get in there and let those guys get on base. Anything can happen and that’s what happened.”

The Blue Jays didn’t make the most of early offensive opportunities and, while they took advantage of numerous mistakes by the bumbling Orioles, they couldn’t put Baltimore away.

In the 10th, they ran into some old-fashioned bad luck, when right-hander Casey Janssen came up with a tight lat in his throwing shoulder and couldn’t return to the mound after dispatching the Orioles on 13 pitches in the ninth.

“We’re going to evaluate him, see where he’s at,” said acting Toronto manager Don Wakamatsu, adding that he didn’t believe Janssen’s injury was serious.

Wakamatsu was filling in for manager John Farrell, who remained in Toronto while being treated for pneumonia. Farrell is expected to miss the three-game series in Baltimore.

The Orioles botched their bunt defence, muffed an infield pop fly for an error, twice failed to get bunts down successfully and blew a one-run lead in the ninth inning. Yet one swing of rookie Ryan Adams’ bat erased their many miscues.

“It wasn’t looking good there for a minute, but we battled back,” said Adams, who capped a two-run rally in the bottom of the 10th with an RBI single.

Matt Wieters led off the Baltimore 10th by drawing a walk off Tallet (0-2). Mark Reynolds walked and, after Robert Andino bunted a foul third strike, pinch hitter Jake Fox hit a game-tying single to right with Reynolds taking third.

Adams followed with a deep fly ball off the warning track in right-centre beyond a drawn-in outfield.

“In that situation, I was just trying to get the ball in the air,” Adams said. “They were playing (the outfield) in and I got a pitch up. Right away, I knew it was going to be deep enough to get him in.”

The victory went to Willie Eyre (1-0), whose wild pitch in the top of the 10th had put the Blue Jays ahead 5-4. That was the last in a long line of mental and physical mistakes that failed to undo the resilient Orioles.

Andino’s 10th-inning bunt attempt was the second time he was unable to advance runners, and some shoddy defence in the ninth contributed to a delayed — and undefended double steal — as Toronto tied the game on Yunel Escobar’s sacrifice fly.

“I know exactly what should have happened and didn’t happen and it won’t happen again, especially considering the people,” said Baltimore manager Buck Showalter when asked about the wacky bunt play.

‘Take it as it comes’

Wieters homered for Baltimore, which has won seven of nine.

The Blue Jays have lost five of six.

“You’ve got to take it as it comes and analyze it and you’ve just got to suck it up and move on to tomorrow,” said Toronto’s Brett Lawrie. “There’s no sense in dwelling on it. You’ve got to come back tomorrow and keep playing.”

Lawrie’s sixth homer staked Toronto to a 3-0 lead in the second. After one-out walks to Edwin Encarnacion and Kelly Johnson, the native of Langley, B.C., ripped a 1-2 curveball from Jeremy Guthrie into the left-field stands.

Wieters’ two-run shot cut the lead to a run in the bottom of the inning. Vladimir Guerrero led off with a single and Wieters homered to centre off Brett Cecil, his 15th.

Cecil’s throwing error in the fourth allowed Baltimore to tie the game at 3. Andino doubled with two down and came around on an infield single by Nolan Reimold after Cecil threw wildly past first base.

The Blue Jays loaded the bases with none down in the fifth, but squandered the opportunity. Encarnacion bounced into a 1-2-3 double play and Johnson flied out to centre.

“There were several different opportunities to score, to do some things and the bottom line is we put ourselves in a position,” Wakamatsu said. “We talked about not giving up and going to the end.”

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Blue Jays manager Farrell to skip Baltimore series

Blue Jays manager John Farrell continues to be weakened by pneumonia and will not accompany his team for a three-game series in Baltimore that begins Tuesday.
Farrell left in the bottom of the ninth inning of Thursday’s 9-6 loss to the Kansas City Royals suffering from pain on his left side, below the rib cage. The first-year manager was taken to hospital and diagnosed with pneumonia.
Bench coach Don Wakamatsu will continue to manage the team in Farrell’s absence, while coaching assistant Luis Rivera fills Wakamatsu’s spot.
Farrell was checked by Blue Jays doctors at the stadium on Saturday and returned today. Wakamatsu said Farrell still felt “shaky,” so general manager Alex Anthopoulos told him to stay home through the Baltimore series.
The Blue Jays’ road trip continues with a three-game weekend series in New York against the Yankees. Toronto returns home to begin a four-game set against Boston on Sept. 5.

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Still weak with pneumonia, Blue Jays manager John…

TORONTO — Blue Jays manager John Farrell continues to be weakened by pneumonia and will not accompany his team for a three-game series in Baltimore that begins Tuesday.

Farrell left in the bottom of the ninth inning of Thursday’s 9-6 loss to the Kansas City Royals suffering from pain on his left side, below the rib cage. The first-year manager was taken to hospital and diagnosed with pneumonia.

Bench coach Don Wakamatsu will continue to manage the team in Farrell’s absence, while coaching assistant Luis Rivera fills Wakamatsu’s spot.

Farrell was checked by Blue Jays doctors at the stadium on Saturday and returned today. Wakamatsu said Farrell still felt “shaky,” so general manager Alex Anthopoulos told him to stay home through the Baltimore series.

The Blue Jays’ road trip continues with a three-game weekend series in New York against the Yankees. Toronto returns home to begin a four-game set against Boston on Sept. 5.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

That’s all for today guys, i’ll be back to blog you tomorrow.

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Morrow, Blue Jays lose 6-2 to Orioles

For five innings, Brandon Morrow was absolutely brilliant.

Throwing strikes with uncanny precision, the Toronto Blue Jays right-hander mowed down the Baltimore Orioles without allowing a single baserunner.

It all fell apart in the sixth, when Morrow lost his perfect game and gave away the lead in what turned out to be a 6-2 defeat Saturday night.

The Orioles trailed 2-0 when Nolan Reimold led off the sixth with a single on a 3-1 pitch. One out later Blake Davis singled to right, and Reimold came in when shortstop Yunel Escobar mishandled a potential double-play grounder off the bat of Robert Andino.

After Nick Markakis fouled out, Adam Jones hit an opposite-field homer over the 25-foot scoreboard in right field.

Prior to the sixth, Morrow struck out five and allowed only three balls out of the infield. Forty-four of his 56 pitches during that span were strikes.

“I was placing the ball pretty much wherever I wanted it, 95 up to almost 100 mph,” he said. “So I was feeling good. I kept getting ahead of guys, got some quick outs, had good pitch count, everything was in my favor. Everything was there.”

The single by Reimold changed everything.

“Usually what happens in a situation like that, if you can just get something positive, the first hit seems to relax everybody and puts him in the stretch for the first time all night,” Orioles manager Buck Showalter said.

The sixth inning proved to be Morrow’s undoing, although it wasn’t all his fault. Had Escobar handled the grounder on the soggy infield, things might have been different.

“I thought Brandon had outstanding stuff tonight. He was dominant. A lot of power, a lot of strikes,” Toronto manager John Farrell said. “Unfortunately in the one inning we give them the extra out when the ball skips off the wet surface and stays under Yunel’s glove and ends up bringing Jones to the plate in that inning.”

Baltimore pulled away with a two-run eighth. Josh Bell walked and scored on a throwing error by center fielder Colby Rasmus, and Jones chased Morrow with an RBI single.

Morrow (8-6) gave up six runs, three earned, and four hits in 7 2-3 innings. It was only the seventh time in his 20 starts this season that the right-hander allowed more than three runs.

Chris Tillman (3-4) allowed two runs and four hits over seven innings to earn his first win since May 11. Called up from Triple-A Norfolk before the game for his third stint with Baltimore, the right-hander struck out five and walked one to help the Orioles secure their third win in 11 games.

The start of the game was delayed by rain for 1 hour, 11 minutes. It was raining when the game started and for much of the night.

Rasmus homered for the Blue Jays, his first since coming over from St. Louis as part of an eight-player trade on July 27. But Toronto was unable to do much else against Tillman, who raised his career record to 7-14.

After Rasmus staked Toronto to a 1-0 lead in the second, Tillman retired the next 10 batters — a string that ended with a leadoff walk to Jose Molina in the sixth. A single and a hit batter loaded the bases with no outs before Molina scored on a sacrifice fly by Jose Bautista.

NOTES: Baltimore did not strand a runner and Toronto had only two left on. … To clear room for Tillman, Baltimore placed RHP Jake Arrieta on the 15-day disabled list. … Orioles SS J.J. Hardy (ankle) and 1B Chris Davis (shoulder) both missed a second straight game. … The Orioles send Alfredo Simon (3-4) to the mound in the series finale against Toronto lefty Ricky Romero (9-9), who leads the Blue Jays in innings (151), ERA (2.98) and wins. Romero is 5-1 in his last seven starts against Baltimore. … The Orioles improved to 1-4 against Toronto in games started by Tillman.

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Morrow’s 5 innings of perfection turns into his…

It all fell apart in the sixth, when Morrow lost his perfect game and gave away the lead in what turned out to be a 6-2 defeat Saturday night.

The Orioles trailed 2-0 when Nolan Reimold led off the sixth with a single on a 3-1 pitch. One out later Blake Davis singled to right, and Reimold came in when shortstop Yunel Escobar mishandled a potential double-play grounder off the bat of Robert Andino.

After Nick Markakis fouled out, Adam Jones hit an opposite-field homer over the 25-foot scoreboard in right field.

Prior to the sixth, Morrow struck out five and allowed only three balls out of the infield. Forty-four of his 56 pitches during that span were strikes.

“I was placing the ball pretty much wherever I wanted it, 95 up to almost 100 mph,” he said. “So I was feeling good. I kept getting ahead of guys, got some quick outs, had good pitch count, everything was in my favor. Everything was there.”

The single by Reimold changed everything.

“Usually what happens in a situation like that, if you can just get something positive, the first hit seems to relax everybody and puts him in the stretch for the first time all night,” Orioles manager Buck Showalter said.

The sixth inning proved to be Morrow’s undoing, although it wasn’t all his fault. Had Escobar handled the grounder on the soggy infield, things might have been different.

“I thought Brandon had outstanding stuff tonight. He was dominant. A lot of power, a lot of strikes,” Toronto manager John Farrell said. “Unfortunately in the one inning we give them the extra out when the ball skips off the wet surface and stays under Yunel’s glove and ends up bringing Jones to the plate in that inning.”

Baltimore pulled away with a two-run eighth. Josh Bell walked and scored on a throwing error by center fielder Colby Rasmus, and Jones chased Morrow with an RBI single.

Morrow (8-6) gave up six runs, three earned, and four hits in 7 2-3 innings. It was only the seventh time in his 20 starts this season that the right-hander allowed more than three runs.

Chris Tillman (3-4) allowed two runs and four hits over seven innings to earn his first win since May 11. Called up from Triple-A Norfolk before the game for his third stint with Baltimore, the right-hander struck out five and walked one to help the Orioles secure their third win in 11 games.

The start of the game was delayed by rain for 1 hour, 11 minutes. It was raining when the game started and for much of the night.

Rasmus homered for the Blue Jays, his first since coming over from St. Louis as part of an eight-player trade on July 27. But Toronto was unable to do much else against Tillman, who raised his career record to 7-14.

After Rasmus staked Toronto to a 1-0 lead in the second, Tillman retired the next 10 batters — a string that ended with a leadoff walk to Jose Molina in the sixth. A single and a hit batter loaded the bases with no outs before Molina scored on a sacrifice fly by Jose Bautista.

NOTES: Baltimore did not strand a runner and Toronto had only two left on. … To clear room for Tillman, Baltimore placed RHP Jake Arrieta on the 15-day disabled list. … Orioles SS J.J. Hardy (ankle) and 1B Chris Davis (shoulder) both missed a second straight game. … The Orioles send Alfredo Simon (3-4) to the mound in the series finale against Toronto lefty Ricky Romero (9-9), who leads the Blue Jays in innings (151), ERA (2.98) and wins. Romero is 5-1 in his last seven starts against Baltimore. … The Orioles improved to 1-4 against Toronto in games started by Tillman.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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