Thursday, September 7, 2017

Thursday, September 7, 2017

World Champions 1983, 1970, 1966 American League Champions 1983, 1979, 1971, 1970, 1969, 1966 American League East Division Champions 2014, 1997, 1983, 1979, 1974, 1973, 1971, 1970, 1969 American League Wild Card 2016, 2012, 1996 Thursday, September 7, 2017 Columns: Orioles-Yankees postponed by rain, will be made up Thursday afternoon The Sun 9/6 Orioles notes: Hays finds first big league call-up an 'unbelievable' experience The Sun 9/6 O's try to deny Yanks in makeup matinee MLB.com 9/7 Inbox: What do O's do about Machado, Schoop? MLB.com 9/6 No. 2 prospect Hays will make O's debut soon MLB.com 9/6 O's-Yanks washed out; makeup Thursday MLB.com 9/6 The rest of the schedule and more from Hays MASNsports.com 9/7 Hays on “unbelievable” rise to the majors, and other notes MASNsports.com 9/7 Orioles and Yankees postponed due to rain MASNsports.com 9/6 Kendall on Mullins, Hays stacks up, Gausman faces New York MASNsports.com 9/7 Eastern League playoff notes and quotes from Bowie MASNsports.com 9/6 Yankees seek rare road series victory vs. Orioles ESPN.com 9/6 Yanks, O's rescheduled for Thursday ESPN.com 9/6 Rain Postpones Austin Hays' Debut With Orioles PressBoxOnline.com 9/6 Tonight’s Orioles Vs Yankees Rescheduled Due To Rain CBS Baltimore 9/6 Orioles suffer first home rainout of the year — play Yankees on Thursday at 1:35 p.m. BaltimoreBaseball.com 9/6 http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/orioles/blog/bs-sp-orioles-rainout-20170907-story.html Orioles-Yankees postponed by rain, will be made up Thursday afternoon By Eduardo A. Encina / The Baltimore Sun September 6, 2017 After waiting deep into the night through several rain delays at home this season, the Orioles and New York Yankees didn’t waste time in postponing Wednesday night’s series finale, making the decision before the gates at Camden Yards opened. The game will be made up on Thursday’s mutual day off. First pitch will be at 1:35 p.m. The postponement came after the Orioles and Yankees waited through a 2-hour, 14-minute delay to start Tuesday’s game, which ended on Manny Machado’s two-run walk-off home run just before 1 a.m. Wednesday morning. The two teams attempted to get Wednesday’s game in — the Orioles have been resilient this season in waiting out delays and did not have a postponement this season before Wednesday. Orioles manager Buck Showalter laid out the obstacles of playing on a travel day for both teams. But a forecast that showed little relief from storms throughout the night prompted all parties to decide to postpone the contest. Thursday’s scheduled day off was the Orioles’ only one over a 31-day span and will take away a travel day from the Orioles before a 10-day, 10-game road trip to Cleveland, Toronto and New York that will be pivotal in the team’s chase for a playoff spot. The Orioles went into Wednesday within one game of the second American League wild-card spot. “Our priority is trying to play tonight,” Showalter said before the game was postponed. “We've talked about start times tomorrow. You've got to think about a plane. If we played a night game tomorrow, you couldn't get the plane, potentially. That plane also takes the Pirates on somewhere else if they take us on time. There's a lot of things that change if you don't have your own plane. “There's a lot of variables that play into it, like start times, television, fans. So, I think we've got Plan A, which is to play the game and what time we might, if at all. And then what time you'd play tomorrow. We try to be fair to both teams. They're going to Texas, gaining an hour. And we're going to Cleveland and staying the same.” Tickets for Wednesday’s game will be honored for Thursday’s makeup game — no exchange is necessary, as ticket stubs for Wednesday’s game will grant admission. Fans holding tickets for Wednesday’s game who are unable to attend the makeup can exchange the value of those tickets for any of the team’s six remaining regular-season home games, subject to availability. http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/orioles/blog/bs-sp-orioles-notes-20170907-story.html Orioles notes: Hays finds first big league call-up an 'unbelievable' experience By Eduardo A. Encina / The Baltimore Sun September 6, 2017 Austin Hays had just finished his workout at Double-A Bowie and was preparing to see a movie with his girlfriend Tuesday when he received a call from Baysox manager Gary Kendall, who told him that his theater date would have to wait because he was getting summoned to Camden Yards for his first major league call-up. Soon enough, Hays — who has enjoyed one of the top 2017 minor league seasons of any player in any organization — was in the Orioles dugout at Camden Yards, his contract selected by the big league club to complete a campaign that began for him at High-A Fredrick and will end in a major league uniform. “It’s been unbelievable,” said Hays, the Orioles’ third-round draft pick in June 2016, of his quick ascent to the majors. “This first full season has gone by unbelievably fast, and to see where I’m standing right now is just incredible. It’s a dream come true.” The Orioles seemed content with allowing Hays — who hit .329 with a .958 OPS with 32 homers and 95 RBIs between Frederick and Bowie — to compete in the Eastern Leagueplayoffs, which will begin Thursday after being rained out Wednesday, but after outfielder Craig Gentry went down with a broken finger, a more immediate need for outfield help opened for Hays. Orioles manager Buck Showalter said he would more likely insert outfielder Joey Rickard into the game as a pinch runner or defensive replacement over Hays because he has more experience, but added that Hays have his opportunity to play. “We'll see,” Showalter said. “If he'd have been here the last few days, he might have started with the three left-handers. But now, we've got a pretty long stretch. He can hit right-handers, too, at that level. But we'll see. Somewhere along the line, he'll crop up.” Hays conceded that when he does get that opportunity, there will be nerves. “For sure,” he said. “I’d definitely say there will be. I think they’ll be some adrenaline and that’s a part of the game. That’s what you want.” Hays’ first night in a big league uniform was spent on the bench Tuesday night watching one of the Orioles’ most inspiring wins of the year as Manny Machado gave the team a walk-off, 7-6 win with a two-out, two-run homer in the ninth inning. “Oh, it’s awesome. It’s a great atmosphere here in the clubhouse and the game yesterday was a great first game to watch from the dugout,” Hays said. “It’s a lot of fun.” Givens honors Puerto Rican heritage on Clemente Day: Orioles reliever Mychal Givens receives surprised looks when he tells others of his Puerto Rican heritage — his great grandparents on his mother’s side were born in Puerto Rico and both grandmothers on the same side are of 100 percent Puerto Rican heritage — but he holds his ancestry close to him every day. “Everybody thinks I’m kidding about it, but I really take pride in both. My first and last name really don’t show that I’m Puerto Rican, but my full name is Mychal Antonio Givens. That’s why during players weekend, I wore Tony because that was my nickname and pretty much all of my family called me that on my Puerto Rican side. I’ve gone from little Tony to big Tony, and it’s been a [way] to represent not just my African-American side but also my Puerto Rican side, too.” So on Wednesday, as Roberto Clemente Day was celebrated across baseball, Givens talked about how Clemente — the Puerto Rican legend who was the first Latin American player to be enshrined in the Hall of Fame and died at the age of 38 in a plane crash while attempting to deliver relief supplies to victims of an earthquake in Nicaragua — has been an inspiration to him despite his death coming 18 years before Givens was born. During players weekend, Givens wore Clemente’s No. 21 and Jackie Robinson’s No. 42 on his spikes as a tribute to both and to honor his Latin American and African-American roots. “When you go to Puerto Rico, he’s a big inspiration for everybody for what he did in his career and what happened to him [dying at a young age], he could have done a lot more,” Givens said. “The hard work and the energy he put out was really an inspiration to me, and you can see it in the highlights and videos.” Orioles hope Aquino is still in their future: Showalter said he hopes left-hander Jayson Aquino, who was designated for assignment to make 40-man roster space for Hays, clears waivers and remains in the organization. The club had high hopes for Aquino entering the season as a starter, and he recorded a quality start April 22 against Boston in his first big league outing, holding the Red Sox to two runs on six hits over six innings.

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