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Nanner
07-15-2006, 10:13 PM
Dang! Another fine game from Eric B! :cheer: :jump:

I think Mazzone's working his magic, and Eric is paying attention!

Orioles 8, Rangers 1
Bedard rolls again as O's beat Texas
Orioles lefty goes seven innings for his sixth straight victory
By David Ginsburg
The Associated Press
Originally published July 15, 2006, 7:20 PM EDT

Fastball, changeup, curveball. It didn't matter which pitch Erik Bedard threw, because they all seemed to hit the corners with uncanny accuracy.

The result was another impressive performance by the young left-hander, who has put up some amazing numbers since perfecting his changeup and mastering the fine art of throwing strikes.

Bedard allowed one unearned run in seven innings to win his sixth straight start, and the Baltimore Orioles ended their scoring slump at the expense of rookie John Rheinecker in an 8-1 victory over the Texas Rangers on Saturday.

Bedard (11-6) gave up six hits, walked one and struck out six. He has a 1.07 ERA during his six-game run, and has allowed only two earned runs in 36 innings over his last five starts.

"He's been absolutely phenomenal. It's fun to watch," Orioles manager Sam Perlozzo said. "He's gradually growing into becoming a great pitcher."

Working with pitching coach Leo Mazzone, Bedard recently added a changeup to his list of pitches. That made his fastball more effective, but that's only one reason why Bedard has been so efficient lately.

"The changeup is a big factor," he said. "Throwing strikes with that helps me a lot with the rest of my pitches."

Said Perlozzo: "I'm sure it's a combination of things, but I think the changeup got him on the right track. He's been locating his fastball on the outer part of the plate and working ahead in the count. His curveball's been great, too. He makes it tough for the opposition to hit."

The Rangers will vouch for that.

"He kept us off balance all day. He throws strikes consistently," said Mark Teixeira, who went 0-for-3 and got Texas' lone walk. "He's definitely improved as a pitcher; we have a good-hitting lineup and he held us down all day."

Jeff Conine had three hits and two RBIs, and Melvin Mora drove in two runs and scored twice for the Orioles, who had totaled two runs and 10 hits in their two previous games. Every starter had a hit by the fifth inning as Baltimore built an 8-0 lead.

The Rangers' lone run came on a sixth-inning RBI single by Ian Kinsler following a throwing error by Mora from third base.

Before that, Texas didn't get a runner past first base.

"(Bedard) was tough. He was very impressive," Rangers manager Buck Showalter said. "He's been throwing well against a lot of people. We knew his velocity and arm strength were up, and he presents a lot of challenges to hitters."

Texas was 4-0 against the Orioles this season, outscoring them 27-5.

Making his 10th start, Rheinecker (4-4) yielded a career-high seven runs in 3 2-3 innings, his shortest stint of the season. His ERA rose from 3.96 to 4.82.

"He didn't particularly give up a lot of hard hit balls, but the way Bedard was pitching you've got to have a real good outing," Showalter said.

The Rangers had not allowed more than four runs in eight straight games, going 6-2 in that span. The streak crumbled under the weight of a five-run fourth inning that provided the Orioles with a 7-0 lead.

All the runs came with two outs. Mora hit a two-run double and Miguel Tejada drove in a run with an infield single to chase Rheinecker. Conine then singled in a run off Scott Feldman and Ramon Hernandez followed with an RBI single.

In the fifth, Luis Terrero followed singles by Javy Lopez and Kevin Millar with his first hit of the season, an RBI single to center. He was 0-for-19.

The Orioles got a run in the first when Mora was hit by a pitch and scored when Texas right fielder Mark DeRosa let a single by Tejada skip past him.

Doubles by Brian Roberts and Conine made it 2-0 in the third.

Notes: Former Oriole Jerry Hairston went 0-for-3, but made an outstanding leaping catch in the sixth to rob Conine of a homer. ... Baltimore's Nick Markakis went 2-for-4 and is batting .383 over his last 23 games with an at-bat. ... Before he received a warm ovation from the crowd of 35,804 for his first hit, Terrero was cheered after making a fine running catch in center and doubling up Kinsler at first base in the fourth.



Copyright © 2006, The Associated Press

Nanner
07-16-2006, 11:52 AM
I remember one of Eric Bedard's first games. It was against the Red Sox. And Jacqui posted here and said, "Who's the stud that's pitching?"

Well, he seems to have developed into one of the league's best young lefthanders. I love reading some of the comments by his teammates. They seem to have rallied around him and they're supporting him. And Kris Benson loves him!

He's got a 6-game winning streak!!! :clap:

So, I think Bedard can be the cornerstone of the future pitching staff for the Orioles. :thumbsup:

And I love the description at the end of the article, of the catch by Hairston - where he had to get it before a fan did. :D

Orioles 8, Rangers 1
Orioles' bats back Bedard
He earns sixth straight victory as all nine in O's lineup get hits
By Childs Walker
Sun reporter
Originally published July 16, 2006

In this season of disappointing plots for the Orioles, one happy story continues to build.

For more than two years, Erik Bedard symbolized his club's frustrations. He was a homegrown player of obvious talent who had his brilliant outings but could never deliver one gem after another.

That all has changed in a winning streak that grew to six games yesterday against the Texas Rangers. Bedard (11-6) allowed no earned runs in seven innings, struck out six and walked only one to beat the Rangers, 8-1, before 35,804 at Camden Yards.

"He's been absolutely phenomenal," manager Sam Perlozzo said. "It's fun to watch. He's gradually growing into being a great pitcher and you cross your fingers that he can continue the rest of the year."

Bedard was typically understated in describing his win. "Right now I'm on a roll and I'm trying to roll with it," he said.

After two days of tepid offense, all nine Orioles starters smacked hits to support their suddenly unbeatable ace. Jeff Conine had three hits and two RBIs, and Melvin Mora scored two runs and drove in two as the Orioles swamped Rangers rookie John Rheinecker (4-4).

"I know playing against Texas, they have a lot of good hitters, so it was good for Bedard that we scored early," Mora said. "We've been struggling to score early. We always come back in the seventh and eighth, but we're down seven, eight runs, so I'm glad we scored early."

The Orioles had taken a 15-1 bludgeoning Thursday and then wasted a complete game by Kris Benson in a 2-1 defeat Friday. But just as he had last weekend in Cleveland, Bedard proved the ideal man to snip a string of painful losses.

He has allowed two earned runs in his past 36 innings and has won a career-high 11 games. His ERA peaked at 5.97 on June 1 but dropped to 4.02 after yesterday's performance.

"He's not picking on us," Rangers manager Buck Showalter said. "He's been throwing well against a lot of people."

Bedard had tremendous stuff in the early innings. He hit 96 mph on the radar gun during a 1-2-3 first inning. He struck out Mark Teixeira with a fastball on the outside corner to start the second, struck out Hank Blalock swinging and broke Kevin Mench's bat for an inning-ending groundout.

He struck out former teammate Jerry Hairston on a dive-bombing curve in the third and then got Gary Matthews Jr. to swing through an inside fastball.

"He looked like he had a little better velocity," Perlozzo said. "I think the key for him is that he's locating it so well, but today, he had a little extra juice and it paid off."

Bedard received a little help in the fourth. Luis Terrero galloped in to snare a sinking liner and doubled Ian Kinsler off first base. Then, Nick Markakis made a running catch at the wall on Teixeira's drive.

Bedard led 7-0 by the time he came out for the fifth, and though he didn't appear as sharp in his last three innings, it didn't matter.

He continues to credit an improved changeup for his streak. Benson helped him perfect it, and he said Bedard's evolution has been a joy to watch.

"It's a lot of fun," the veteran right-hander said. "I'm sitting down looking at scouting reports and stuff and he tells me not to overanalyze. And I tell him I don't have a 95-mph cutter like he does. So, yeah, it's just a matter of he's got a lot of great tools, and I'm glad it's coming together for him."

Benson said he would rank Bedard with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays' Scott Kazmir among the best young left-handers in the game.

Orioles hitters love watching him as well. "I was talking to him in spring training and telling him he has no idea how nasty he is," Mora said. "I think he's one of the top left-handed pitchers in the American League now."

Mora raced home with the game's first run after Rangers right fielder Mark DeRosa let Miguel Tejada 's single skip over his glove and roll to the warning track.

The Orioles added a run in the third when Conine pulled a broken-bat double inside the third-base bag to score Brian Roberts .

Mora made it 4-0 in the fourth when he launched a bases-loaded double over Matthews' head in center. Tejada, Conine and Ramon Hernandez padded the lead with RBI singles.

Everyone got in on the fun. In the fifth, Terrero stroked his first hit as an Oriole to score Javy Lopez and make it 8-0.

"Finally our offense came around for us," Perlozzo said. "We just played a good all-around game."

Hairston produced one spectacular moment for the Rangers. He tracked Conine's drive to the wall in left field, leaped and went glove to glove with a fan. Hairston appeared to come down without the ball but as he stepped away, he popped open his glove as if to say "surprise," and revealed that he had made a superb catch.:D


Copyright © 2006, The Baltimore Sun

Nanner
07-16-2006, 12:59 PM
.....Eric's ERA during this 6-game winning streak is a stunning 1.07! :eek: :hail:

I just saw that Hairston catch on ESPN News. :clap: Great catch. I miss Jerry. I always thought he was a nice guy.

PopTop
07-24-2006, 05:49 PM
Yet another strong outing from E.B. And Mighty Mel with the key blow on offense :clap:

Orioles' Bedard wins seventh consecutive start

BOXSCORE (http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/boxscore?gameId=260723130)

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -- Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon thought he might see a pitcher's duel and it turned out he was right.

Erik Bedard pitched seven strong innings to win his seventh consecutive start and Melvin Mora hit a tiebreaking RBI single during a two-run eighth inning as the Baltimore Orioles beat the Devil Rays 4-2 on Sunday.

Bedard (12-6) gave up two runs and three hits in a tight matchup with All-Star Scott Kazmir.

"I thought both pitchers pitched really well," Maddon said. "We talked about that before the game. You knew it could happen. Kaz's slider was very sharp. Bedard's breaking ball, he could throw it for strikes whenever he wanted to."

Bedard had nine strikeouts and three walks. The 27-year-old left-hander has given up eight runs in 49 innings during his winning streak.

"He pitched great again," Orioles manager Sam Perlozzo said. "I don't know where we'd be without him. He's been outstanding."

Brian Roberts had a one-out double in the eighth off reliever Jon Switzer (1-1). Mora snapped a 2-all tie with his single off Edwin Jackson. Jeff Conine extended the lead to two later in the inning with a run-scoring single.

Chris Ray pitched the final two innings for his 24th save.

The 22-year-old Kazmir allowed two runs, seven hits, one walk and struck out 10 in seven innings. The left-hander is 0-2 in his last three starts, allowing nine runs in 19 1/3 innings.

"Bedard threw a good game," Kazmir said. "Had all of this stuff working. I just wanted to keep the team in the game. I knew we'd been battling throughout the whole thing. I felt like I made some good pitches in some tight situations, so I'll take all the good things out of this."

Kazmir has struck out 10 or more seven times in his career, including four this season. Tampa Bay pitchers overall have only 14 all-time 10 or more strikeout games.

Bedard was scratched from his scheduled start Friday because of food poisoning. He allowed two baserunners -- both on walks -- through four innings.

"Early going I felt a little weak," Bedard said. "But as the game went on, I felt stronger. I just tried not to overthrow, and throw strikes."

Travis Lee walked to open the fifth, advanced to second on Bedard's wild pitch and scored on the Devil Rays' first hit, a two-out double by Tomas Perez that got Tampa Bay within 2-1. Jorge Cantu's sixth-inning run-scoring triple tied it at 2.

"He kept us off balanced for the most part," Tampa Bay right fielder Damon Hollins said. "He's been pitching well and today was no exception."

Javy Lopez put the Orioles ahead 1-0 on a third-inning homer. Ramon Hernandez made it 2-0 on an RBI double in the fourth.

Tampa Bay had a combined 27 runs and 32 hits in winning the first two games of the series. The Orioles recorded 19 runs and 30 hits over the stretch.

"If Erik would have struggled early, I would have worried about how the team would have responded," Perlozzo said. "Thank goodness he came out and pitched well, and we were able to get on top. I thought that was the key to the morale of the club."

Game notes
Devil Rays SS Julio Lugo, who could be traded before the non-waiver deadline July 31, was out of the starting lineup. He was also taken out of Saturday night's game after hitting two homers in the fifth inning. "It's just a day off," Maddon said. "He's been getting after it real hard so I'm giving the day." ... The Orioles (45-55) improved to 10-24 in games when the opponent starts a left-hander.

Royce
07-25-2006, 02:30 PM
He's bolstered my fantasy staff. He's doing great! Just like last year again. :cool: