It defies reason, because nothing about a sizably sub-.500 record indicates a team should be in the postseason picture, and yet here the Orioles are. Deservedly or not, Baltimore enters the All-Star break within reach.
As of the final out at Camden Yards on Sunday, when the Orioles beat the Kansas City Royals 8-2 to win four straight games for the first time this season, they were two games out of the final American League wild-card place.
Baltimore is five games below .500 (46-51). There are four teams between it and the third wild card. The second half of the year will remain an uphill climb requiring much-improved play from every facet of the team.
Whether this flatters them or not, though, doesnβt change the uplifting nature of this sweep β although that uplifting win had an immediate shroud cast upon it with news that Blaze Alexander, one of Baltimoreβs top performers, broke his hand.
βJust because we had a good week and a half doesnβt mean that continued success is guaranteed,β first baseman Pete Alonso said. βWe got a tough schedule ahead of us, and we gotta rise to the occasion. And, especially now, doubly rise to the occasion because getting down, being down with Blaze, I mean, thatβs really frustrating. So we got to pick him up. We got to pick him up, and we have to play our best baseball, and then some, in the second half.β
Baltimoreβs players and staff members will disperse for the All-Star break β and catcher Adley Rutschman will head to Philadelphia to appear in the Midsummer Classic β and for these four days away from baseball, the Orioles can feel a bit more bullish about their chances.
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βI think itβs a great sign,β right-hander Shane Baz said. βI think thatβs some of the best baseball weβve played this year, just over the last four games. So, yeah, itβs good to see. I think everybodyβs ready for a couple days off, but everybodyβs excited to get going again.β
The Orioles arenβt the only team that feels this way, of course. The nature of this wide-open (read: subpar) American League is that there are many teams that can feel good about their general mediocrity.
The Boston Red Sox, for instance, fired their manager and have since surged into the hunt on the back of a nine-game winning streak. The Detroit Tigers, who remain behind the Orioles, had won eight of their last 10 games entering Sunday.
As infielder Coby Mayo said Saturday night, βit takes one good run to be right back where you want to be.β Thatβs the case for the Orioles. Thatβs the case for much of the American League.
During these few days off, though, the Orioles will emphasize their side of the equation β a feeling as though theyβre in control despite an uninspiring season to this point. They got here with a sweep of the Royals (38-59), who are one of the only AL teams with little hope remaining as the trade deadline approaches.

βThatβs always been in our mind, that we are able to get there,β outfielder Leody Taveras said of the postseason hunt. βWeβve got enough to go there with. Weβve just got to play the game, game by game, and weβll be all right.β
The Oriolesβ strategy at the deadline remains to be confirmed, but these four games may have helped push president of baseball operations Mike Elias toward buying β or at least a mix of buying and selling.
The offensive display this series looked more in line with what Elias expected from this group. On Friday, Samuel Basallo ripped a two-run, go-ahead home run in the eighth inning. On Saturday, Baltimore hit four more homers. And on Sunday a five-run sixth inning widened the gap and sent the Orioles on their way to a sweep.
Taveras delivered the first blow. In the second inning against right-hander Seth Lugo, Taveras slaughtered a pitch 448 feet for a two-run shot β the longest homer of his career.
He returned in the sixth to deliver an RBI single against left-hander Matt Strahm, and things unraveled for Strahm from there.
The southpaw conceded an RBI double to Jeremiah Jackson, a balk to bring home another run and an RBI infield single to Gunnar Henderson before he was pulled. With right-hander John Schreiber on the bump, Alonso drove an RBI single to right field to cap the onslaught.
Just for good measure, Basallo hit his 16th homer of the season in the seventh inning. And to add a bit of fire to a game that crawled to an ending, the benches cleared when Alexander jawed at right-hander Lucas Erceg one plate appearance later.
In a 1-2 count, the seventh pitch of the battle plunked Alexander on the left hand. Erceg, who looked to quick pitch Alexander before the batter was ready, lost control of a fastball. After dropping his helmet, Alexander yelled at Erceg.
The benches cleared, and manager Craig Albernaz initially held Alexander back before bench coach Donnie Ecker pulled him away from the scene. There were no ejections, and Alexander, who reached base four times with two singles and a walk, was lifted for Mayo to pinch run.
As it turns out, Alexander broke his hand. It was a down note at the end of an otherwise promising series.
βEspecially how Blaze has been playing on both sides of the ball, especially the way heβs swinging the bat,β Albernaz said. βBut our guys show weβre resilient. Blaze will be around and see where heβs at rehab-wise and go from there. But, yeah, definitely a gut punch.β
Earlier, Baz allowed one earned run in 4 2/3 innings, and another run crossed after an error. Both came on high choppers that sneaked through the infield in the second and third innings.
With his pitch count at 104 in the fifth inning, Bazβs start was cut short. The line of relievers behind him held Kansas City down.
Some of the success this weekend can surely be placed on the opponent. The Royals are one of the worst teams in a bad American League. But, for the Orioles even to think about a late postseason run, they must beat up on the bad teams.
βLast nine games, we challenged ourselves to kind of just shrink it,β Alonso said. βLike, shrink the remaining games. It was like a nine-game season. I think we went 6-3 in those nine games. So I think we did a good job of rising to the occasion in that short little window. But it takes a long time to have a good season. It takes a long time β 162 games to unfold. And I think the biggest thing is just staying the course. Itβs not about how you start; itβs about how you finish."
This article has been updated.






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