


Notes
Cashner’s stranding streak ends
Back-to-back doubles break up RISP run; Trumbo to Bowie

It took five starts for
Cashner didn’t allow a hit with a runner in scoring position in his first four games, and left Cleveland Indians on second and third base in a tense third inning.
But the streak ended this year at 0-for-20 when, after a bases-empty home run by
With the Orioles up 3-2 in the fifth inning,
“Once you get the lead, you can’t give it up,” Cashner said. “I had to bear down and made some pitches. They fell in. I gave up some hard-hit balls, but I thought I had a lot of soft contact, too.”
To this point in the season, Cashner’s ability to strand runners had been his greatest asset. He’s allowed six home runs, but five have been with the bases empty, and he’s backed up his reputation as being a pitcher who competes in every at-bat.
Sunday began looking like a day when he wouldn’t even need to use that skill. He struck out four batters — two swinging and two looking — through two perfect innings before needing to stiffen his back and work out of the third. He ended with a season-high seven strikeouts, his most since he struck out nine Sept. 7, 2016.
Even as he ceded two leads, he wouldn’t have been second-best to many pitchers with the effort he turned in.
Kluber is what made him so Sunday.
“He battled his way,” manager
Cashner has pitched at least five innings in each of his five starts with the Orioles, and gone six or more in his past four. He has a 3.60 ERA and a 1.33 WHIP with 28 strikeouts in 30 innings.
Trumbo, who suffered a quadriceps strain during spring training, started a rehab assignment with the Baysox on April 10 but played just one game before backing off because he didn’t feel ready to go full-out.
“He’ll probably play right field or first base,” Showalter said. “They’re at home the next three days. He’ll play defense for two of those games. The last one is a day game and he’ll probably DH in that one.
“And then he’ll take that off day we all have, including them — there’s no place to play — and come back and work out with us. The plan right now is for him to go to Charlotte from there.”
Though Showalter said that he is leaving it up to Trumbo to decide when he’s ready to rejoin the major league team, he seemed fairly confident that the rehab stint would extend through the weekend.
“Trey is better. … He’s trending in the right direction,” Showalter said. “Talking to
“He’s still sore, but he’s moving on it. He got lucky with his kneecap. Watching the replay, he got lucky.”