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He lasted 2/3 of an inning, allowing four runs (three earned) on one hit and four walks. In 10 starts, the 27-year-old has a 4.31 ERA with 43 strikeouts, 23 walks and 31 hits allowed in 39 2/3 ...
The pitch was thrown by Blue Jays rookie Yariel Rodríguez, who was struggling with his control before unleashing a first-inning pitch with the bases loaded that hit McCann square in the face.
Stendel was in the first base camera well at Yankee Stadium when an errant throw from Orioles shortstop Gunnar Henderson sailed over the head of first baseman Ryan O’Hearn, the former Royals player.
His first was a scoreless eighth inning in a 10–3 loss to the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on August 15, 2023 when he got three ground-ball outs around a pair of one-out hits. [52] The second was another eighth-inning outing the following year in a 19–8 away defeat to the Oakland Athletics on July 6, 2024 when he surrendered a two-out ...
On September 24, Mullins became the first Orioles player to hit 30 home runs and steal 30 bases in a season since the franchise moved from St. Louis. [27] For the 2021 season, Mullins slashed .291/.360/.518 with thirty home runs, 59 RBIs, 37 doubles, and thirty stolen bases, and led all major league outfielders with 389 putouts.
Lowenstein was taken off the field on a stretcher in the seventh inning of a 4–3 Orioles win over the Oakland Athletics at Memorial Stadium on June 19, 1980. While sliding into second base in an attempt to extend a game-tying single , he was accidentally hit on the back of his head by a ball thrown by first baseman Jeff Newman who was the cut ...
The ball hit Stendel directly in the head and sent him falling backward into the well. The game was delayed for nearly 20 minutes while medical staff attended to Stendel, who was later stretchered ...
Clinton Dawson Courtney (March 16, 1927 – June 16, 1975), nicknamed "Scrap Iron", was an American professional baseball catcher who played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the New York Yankees (1951), St. Louis Browns / Baltimore Orioles (1952–1954, 1960, 1961), Chicago White Sox (1955), Washington Senators (1955–1959) and Kansas City Athletics (1961).