


It was almost too good to be true.
The Orioles were five outs away from squeaking out a one-run win against the Milwaukee Brewers. Baltimore had overcome a nearly disastrous first inning from Kyle Gibson and got all of its offensive production from two players — Aaron Hicks and Ryan O’Hearn — who weren’t on its major league roster a month ago.
But the Orioles needed more offense than the homers they got from Hicks and O’Hearn, as the host Brewers came back to win, 4-3, in 10 innings. Milwaukee tied the game in the eighth off Yennier Cano and won it with a walk-off single from Joey Wiemer in the 10th off Austin Voth.
Hicks’ two-run homer in the second inning tied the game after the Brewers took a 2-0 lead in the first, while O’Hearn’s solo shot in the seventh gave the Orioles a 3-2 lead.
Cano replaced left-hander Danny Coulombe with two outs in the seventh, striking out Brian Anderson to strand the runners on the corners. But the dominant right-hander allowed a leadoff walk to Blake Perkins, who stole second and scored on a single from Brice Turang to even the score.
Félix Bautista struck out the side in the ninth, but Jorge Mateo, Adam Frazier and Josh Lester failed to drive home the automatic runner in the top of the 10th. Mateo struck out after failing to lay down a sacrifice bunt, Frazier flied out to right field and Lester, who was pinch-hitting for defensive replacement Ryan McKenna in Anthony Santander’s spot in the order, struck out.
Manager Brandon Hyde handed the ball to Voth in the bottom half of the inning, giving the right-hander the difficult task of stranding the automatic runner at second. He got two outs without allowing the runner on second to advance, but Wiemer, the Brewers’ No. 9 hitter, roped a line drive that one-hopped the left field wall to score Andrew Monasterio and end the game.
Baltimore (37-23) is 3-4 in extra innings and has lost in walk-off fashion five times this season.
Gibson looked nothing like himself in the first inning. The 35-year-old had command issues, missing glove side with his sinker and four-seamer often as he racked up 35 pitches. The Brewers (33-28) brought eight batters to the plate in the initial frame, managing three hits, one walk and one hit by pitch. Brian Anderson and Abraham Toro hit back-to-back RBI singles to give Milwaukee an early 2-0 lead.
Hicks’ 100.2 mph homer down the right field line tied the game an inning later, as the switch-hitter stayed back on a 73 mph curveball from right-hander Freddy Peralta and smashed the pitch 372 feet. Baltimore signed Hicks, a longtime Yankee, to fill in for the injured Cedric Mullins, and the 33-year-old has posted a 1.208 OPS in his brief time as an Oriole.
After the poor first and a one-out double to Christian Yelich in the second, Gibson retired 11 of the next 12 batters he faced before he was pulled after a leadoff walk in the sixth. He retired the side in the third on eight pitches, stranded a runner at third with one out in a nine-pitch fourth and struck out the side in the fifth.
Gibson scattered five hits and two walks with seven strikeouts in five-plus innings. It was only his second time striking out more than five batters in a start this season, as the right-hander entered Tuesday with the fifth-lowest strikeout rate among qualified starters. The 14 swings and misses he got are also the second most this season, behind his 11-strikeout, 18-whiff performance against the Detroit Tigers in April.
The Orioles struggled offensively in the middle innings, but O’Hearn’s opposite-field solo shot in the seventh broke the tie and gave Baltimore a 3-2 advantage.
This story will be updated.
Orioles at Brewers
Wednesday, 7:40 p.m.
TV: MASN
Radio: 97.9 FM, 101.5 FM, 1090 AM
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