Seven different Baltimore Orioles recorded the team’s 14 hits and five crossed home plate on the way to a dominating 10-0 win over the host Boston Red Sox on Monday night.
Ryan Mountcastle went 4-for-5 with four runs, a first-inning home run and a double. Ramon Urias (three RBIs) and Anthony Santander (four RBIs) also left the yard.
Trey Mancini’s 3-for-4 night included one RBI, two runs and a triple. Austin Hays also scored two runs, while Adley Rutschman and Jorge Mateo had two hits apiece.
While the offense racked up hits, Tyler Wells (2-4) put together the best start of his season by tossing six shutout, two-hit innings and striking out three. He walked just one, and retired the side in order three times.
Baltimore won three of the five games in the series.
Two of Boston’s four hits — doubles by Xander Bogaerts and Christian Vazquez — went for extra bases.
The Orioles hit two balls hard off Boston starter Rich Hill (1-3) and took a quick 2-0 lead in the first inning. After Hays was hit by a pitch to begin the game, Mancini ripped a run-scoring triple high off the Green Monster in center field.
Hill then tagged out Mancini trying to score on a wild pitch, but Mountcastle doubled the Baltimore lead with a solo homer over the left field wall.
The visitors continued adding on with two more in the third as Urias clubbed a two-run shot into the final section of Monster Seats in center. Mountcastle scored after his one-out infield single.
A Mancini walk and Mountcastle’s ground-rule double started the Baltimore offense in the fifth. After Hirokazu Sawamura replaced Hill, Santander made it a 5-0 game on a sacrifice fly to right before Urias drove home another run on a grounder to third.
Starting for Boston, Hill allowed six runs on seven hits across four-plus innings. He struck out five and walked two.
Hays doubled and Mancini singled to start Baltimore off in the seventh before Mountcastle’s double play brought home another run.
In the ninth, Mancini and Mountcastle hit one-out singles to center to set up Santander for a three-run homer toward the right-center bullpens.
–Field Level Media