Baltimore Orioles Suffer Historic 24-2 Defeat Amid Pitching Struggles
BALTIMORE — The Baltimore Orioles endured one of their worst losses in franchise history on Easter Sunday, falling 24-2 to the Cincinnati Reds in a game that exposed the team’s deepening pitching crisis.
Veteran starter Charlie Morton, signed to a one-year, $15 million deal this offseason, lasted just 2⅓ innings, surrendering seven runs in his shortest outing since September 2023. The 41-year-old’s ERA ballooned to 10.89, raising questions about his ability to compete at the major league level.
“It’s embarrassing,” Orioles manager Brandon Hyde admitted. “You just want it to be over as fast as possible.”
A Nightmare on the Mound
By the eighth inning, the game had spiraled beyond salvage. Position players Jorge Mateo and Gary Sánchez were forced to pitch, giving up nine additional runs in the final two frames. The Reds piled on 25 hits, marking just the fourth time in Orioles history that the team allowed at least 24 runs and 25 hits in a single game.
Morton, a two-time All-Star, acknowledged his struggles. “It’s letting your teammates down, your coaches down, your fans down,” he said. “That’s something you never really get over.”
Rotation in Shambles
Baltimore’s pitching woes extend beyond Morton. The Orioles’ starters hold the worst ERA (6.11) in the American League, with injuries further thinning their options.
- Grayson Rodriguez, a key rotation piece, remains sidelined with shoulder soreness, and his return timeline is uncertain.
- Albert Suárez (shoulder) and Zach Eflin (lat strain) are on the injured list after making the Opening Day roster.
The lone bright spot in the series came from rookie Brandon Young, who delivered a respectable four-inning, three-run outing in his MLB debut during a 9-5 win. But even that performance couldn’t mask the team’s larger issues.
Can the Orioles Turn It Around?
Despite the disastrous loss, Baltimore (9-12) remains just three games below .500. The club is determined to rebound after back-to-back playoff appearances in 2023 and 2024, but their pitching must improve quickly.
“You’re not going to win games like this,” Hyde stressed. “You might outscore teams occasionally, but this isn’t sustainable.”
For now, the Orioles must regroup—and fast—before their season slips further away.
— Reported by Nexio News
