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Orioles beat Yankees, 7-2, to take series as Jorge Mateo and Ryan McKenna homer in Kyle Bradish's return

Jacob Calvin Meyer, The Baltimore Sun on

Published in Baseball

BALTIMORE — The Orioles lead the major leagues in home runs thanks to their best hitters.

Baltimore’s eight hitters with the most at-bats all have four or more homers. Gunnar Henderson blasted 10 before May 1. Cedric Mullins and Colton Cowser both have six. In 31 games, the Orioles have hit 48 homers — seven more than any other club.

However, Thursday afternoon against the New York Yankees, it was the Orioles’ two least likely power hitters who backed Kyle Bradish in his return and powered Baltimore to a 7-2 victory. Jorge Mateo and Ryan McKenna, two bench players who entered Thursday with homers in only 1.8% of their career plate appearances, both went deep to help build an early lead for Bradish.

Bradish, the Orioles’ ace last season, started his first game of 2024 after missing the first five weeks with an elbow injury. While he only went 4 2/3 innings, throwing 84 pitches, the right-hander looked like the pitcher he was in 2023 when he finished fourth in American League Cy Young Award voting. Bradish surrendered only one run and struck out five but was one out shy of earning the win.

Baltimore is 20-11 and reclaims sole possession of first place in the AL East with the win over New York (20-13) in front of an announced 27,299 at Camden Yards. The Orioles are a half-game behind the Cleveland Guardians, who play Thursday night, for the AL’s top spot.

Solo homers from Mateo, McKenna and Ryan Mountcastle, who unlike the first two is accustomed to clobbering long balls, put the Orioles up 3-1 in the fourth inning against Yankees left-hander Carlos Rodón. Thursday marked the first time McKenna and Mateo homered in the same game since they became teammates in 2021, although they went deep in both ends of a doubleheader last season.

 

McKenna, who rejoined the Orioles last week in top prospect Jackson Holliday’s place, entered Thursday with just six home runs in 509 plate appearances. Mateo, who almost exclusively plays against lefties, hadn’t homered over the fence since April 30, 2023, when he began last campaign scorching hot before slumping the rest of the way. The probability of McKenna and Mateo hitting home runs in the same inning — using solely their career home run rates — is .024%.

After the offense added four more runs in the fifth, Baltimore’s bullpen kept the Bronx Bombers at bay. Keegan Akin (1-0), Danny Coulombe, Jacob Webb and Cionel Pérez combined to pitch 4 1/3 innings of one-run ball.

Baltimore has not lost a series against an AL East opponent since late April 2023, going 12-0-4 in them during that streak. In that span, the Orioles are 37-17 against the AL East, including 6-1 this season.

Bradish is back

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©2024 The Baltimore Sun. Visit at baltimoresun.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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