The Orioles’ farm system got a mixed bag on July 6, but two affiliates made the most of it by leaning on the kind of pitching that can carry a night. Chesapeake and Delmarva both posted 2-0 wins, while Norfolk had a lead slip away in the final inning and Frederick had its game stopped by weather.
Norfolk’s night ended in the most brutal fashion. The Tides were holding a 2-1 edge heading into the bottom of the seventh, but Hans Crouse gave up a walkoff grand slam to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre’s Jonathan Ornelas, turning what had been a solid opener into a 5-2 loss. The game was only seven innings because the clubs were supposed to play a doubleheader, but rain wiped out the second game before it could get underway.
There was plenty to like early for Norfolk, starting with Nestor German. He spun five scoreless innings, allowed no walks, and struck out four in what was just his second scoreless outing in 17 appearances this season.
Yaramil Hiraldo, on a rehab assignment, later surrendered a solo homer in the sixth to former Orioles minor leaguer J.C. Escarra.
The Tides’ offense never found much traction. They managed only three hits, with Heston Kjerstad doubling and Enrique Bradfield Jr. singling. Both Norfolk runs came across on fielder’s choices.
Chesapeake took the opposite path: not much offense, but more than enough pitching. The Baysox blanked Binghamton 2-0 behind a four-man effort that produced their fourth shutout of the season.
Luis De León was the headliner, dealing 5.2 scoreless innings of one-hit ball with nine strikeouts and three walks. Alex Pham, Richard Guasch, and Gerald Ogando each followed with a hitless, scoreless inning to finish it off.
The Baysox only had three hits themselves, but that was enough. Frederick Bencosme and Ethan Anderson, the top two hitters in the order, each reached with a single and a walk, and Griff O’Ferrall added the other hit. Chesapeake scored once on a Thomas Sosa sac fly and once more on a wild pitch.
Frederick’s game never got a full finish. The Keys and Brooklyn Cyclones were tied 2-2 when weather forced a suspension in the eighth inning, with Frederick’s potential go-ahead run standing at third and Wehiwa Aloy at the plate.
The game will be picked back up during the clubs’ series in Brooklyn from Sep. 1-6.
Before the interruption, left-hander Caden Hunter had given Frederick a quality start, allowing one run over six innings while striking out five. The Keys did all of their scoring in the second inning, when Randal Diaz, acquired from the Nationals last week, lined an RBI single and later came home on a Braylin Tavera double.
That damage came against Robert Stock, a veteran major leaguer on a rehab assignment for the Mets. Aloy finished 1-for-3, and Ike Irish went 0-for-3 with a walk.
Delmarva rounded out the night with another shutout, beating Charleston 2-0 for its third such win of the season. Christian Rodriguez set the tone with 5.2 innings of one-hit ball, striking out six. Trent Turzenski covered 1.1 scoreless innings, and Jack Crowder closed it out over the final two frames for his second save.
The Shorebirds collected six hits, with Jordan Sanchez and Cobb Hightower accounting for two apiece. Sanchez drove in one run with a single in the third, and the other scored on a RiverDogs error.
In Other News...
Orioles Just Sent Gunnar Henderson A Message They Couldnt Avoid
Gunnar Hendersons 2026 season has been a far cry from the star turn Baltimore has come to expect, and the Orioles have been trying to find a way to nudge him back into rhythm. His overall line has settled around league average, the power that once made him such a force has been quieter since May, and even with a better strikeout rate, the rest of his game has not quite kept pace. Baltimore has already started shifting his place in the order as part of that effort, a sign the club knows it needs more from one of its most important players.
The concern is not limited to the bat. Hendersons stolen-base production has slipped after he swiped 30 bags last year, and his defensive consistency has also dipped, leaving the Orioles with fewer easy answers as they try to climb back into the race. He still has the kind of talent that can change the tone of a lineup in a hurry, but the gap between that ceiling and what he has delivered lately is getting hard to ignore. [Read more 🡒]
Orioles May Have Finally Found The Bullpen Fix They Need
The Orioles have spent the past stretch cycling through left-handed relief options since losing Keegan Akin, a reminder of how quickly a bullpen can go from deep to unsettled. Nick Raquet has been among the arms shuffled through the roster, but the larger issue remains the same for Baltimore: finding a lefty who can stick, not just pass through on the way to another move.
With the trade deadline approaching, that search could push Mike Elias toward the market if the Mets decide to listen on veterans and reshape their roster. Baltimore has the kind of prospect capital that can make those conversations interesting, and David Stearns' willingness to deal would only add another layer to the equation, but the Orioles still have to decide how much they are willing to pay for a bullpen answer that feels more necessary by the day. [Read more 🡒]
Orioles Outfield Is Putting Even More Pressure On This Deadline
The Orioles outfield has become one of the clearest reasons this month matters so much, because the group is offering both help and headaches as the front office weighs its next move. Taylor Ward, Leody Taveras, Tyler ONeill, Colton Cowser and Dylan Beavers have each left a different imprint on the roster, giving Baltimore a mix of production, uncertainty and contract questions that makes the position worth a close look.
Wards presence adds another layer to the discussion, since his value could shape how aggressively the Orioles approach the market if they decide to move pieces. ONeills contract complicates the picture from the other direction, while Cowsers rebound and Beavers return from a strained oblique give Baltimore some reasons to think the group can still stabilize. For a team trying to sort out whether this is a roster to add to or rework, the outfield is suddenly doing a lot of the deadlines heavy lifting. [Read more 🡒]
