Orioles’ bullpen melts down in 11-2 loss to Blue Jays

TORONTO — Tony Mansolino went all out to win Saturday’s game, pulling his starter at 63 pitches and using four relievers to get through the final three innings.

“We’re going for the win right there,” the Orioles’ interim manager said Saturday. “It’s an important game for us to try to win a game and stay in this series.”



Mansolino’s makeshift bullpen couldn’t hold onto that lead, losing in walk-off fashion, and the gassed relief corps imploded Sunday in an 11-2 defeat that ended with a position player pitching for Baltimore.

The Orioles planned to operate a bullpen game Sunday after skipping Dean Kremer’s most recent start because of minor forearm soreness. Albert Suárez started the game and did what he almost always does, delivering three innings of one-run ball with five strikeouts.

The two relievers after him couldn’t follow suit.

Left-hander Grant Wolfram allowed three hits and two runs in the fourth inning, and newcomer Carson Ragsdale was tagged for nine hits and eight runs across three frames in his MLB debut. Ragsdale, an August waiver claim who was recalled Sunday, was serviceable in the fifth and sixth innings, allowing one run in each, but the right-hander allowed the first seven batters of the seventh frame to reach base, with six of them coming around to score.

“None of us like that, especially understand that it’s his debut,” Mansolino said. “That’s a really difficult situation for him. We feel for him, there’s a lot of empathy right there. We’re trying as hard as we can not to use another bullpen arm. We’re incredibly short going into the game from a bullpen standpoint. At that point in the game, you’re trying to hang on to what you have so you have a chance to win the game tomorrow.”

Added Suárez: “We all know he goes out there to give 100% of what he’s got, so we feel a lot of respect for that. The effort is there.”

Shortstop Luis Vázquez pitched the eighth for the Orioles and extended his humorous scoreless innings streak to 4 1/3 by retiring the side in order. Vázquez, who is lobbing pitches between 31-35 mph, has a 0.00 ERA and a 0.92 WHIP in four outings this season.

The Orioles’ only two runs came on solo homers from Coby Mayo and Colton Cowser in the second and seventh innings, respectively. Both young hitters have been struggling at the plate, but Mayo might be beginning a hot streak after he also homered Saturday.

Baltimore entered Toronto as winners of eight of its past nine games. Now, the Orioles are 69-80 and two losses away from guaranteeing a losing season.

“I think the best way to kind of think about it is with such a young group, an inexperienced group, there’s going to be volatility,” Mansolino said. “So you see a young, inexperienced group for a week play their butts off, man — play great, play great defense, throw the ball good, the bullpen does well, big hits. And then you see a young group that can be volatile for three days — not play good defense, not get the big hit, the one shot you got to win a game, the bullpen melts down a little bit.

“With young players, every team kind of goes through it. We’ll bounce back tomorrow.”

Postgame analysis

No one player could have single-handedly prevented what the Orioles went through in April and May. After two months, the Orioles were 18 games under .500 and one of the worst teams in Major League Baseball.

But one player whose presence was missed perhaps as much as any other is Suárez. The 35-year-old’s team-first mentality and do-it-all skill set were critical to helping the 2024 Orioles make the playoffs — and they were sorely missed this season.

Suárez, who finished second on the team in innings pitched last season, injured his shoulder in late March and didn’t return until Sept. 2. He has a 2.31 ERA in 11 2/3 innings this year and a 3.59 ERA since his return to MLB in 2024.

“It’s a Swiss Army knife in a lot of ways,” Orioles interim manager Tony Mansolino said. “I think another way you would have seen him, we probably would’ve seen a possible three-inning save [Saturday], given that we didn’t have to use them today. We have a lot of trust in Albert. Obviously, we’re willing to start him here in a big game, we’re willing to close him out in a big game. Not a lot of people have the skill set to kind of bounce back and forth and do both.”

Toronto Blue Jays' George Springer (4) watches teammate Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (27) steals home plate to score off a three run RBI double from Addison Barger as Baltimore Orioles catcher Alex Jackson (70) looks on during seventh inning MLB baseball action in Toronto on Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press via AP)
Blue Jays designated hitter George Springer, top, watches as first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. scores in front of Orioles catcher Alex Jackson, left, in the seventh inning. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press via AP)

What they’re saying

Mansolino on Cowser after his homer broke a slump that saw his average dip below .200 Sunday:

“It’s been a tough stretch for Moo for a little bit now. Puts a nice swing on a ball, hits an opposite-field line drive that goes over the fence. Just kind of shows you what his ability is and what he’s capable of. Sophomore slumps are real, it’s a real thing, he’s been going through it for a while now. But he is eventually going to have to bounce back and get it together, and hopefully that’s the start of it.”

By the numbers

The Ravens have one of the best collections of tight ends in the NFL with Mark Andrews, Isaiah Likely and Charlie Kolar. The Orioles might be assembling their own tight end room, and they all pitched Sunday. The average height and weight of Suárez (6-foot-3, 235 pounds), Grant Wolfram (6-7, 240 pounds) and Ragsdale (6-8, 235 pounds) is 6-6 and 237 pounds.

On deck

The last time Kyle Bradish pitched in Chicago, he threw seven no-hit innings with 11 strikeouts. That no-hit bid in May 2024 ended in the eighth when reliever Danny Coulombe gave up a solo homer. Bradish will take the ball Monday at the White Sox’s Rate Field for the fourth time since he underwent Tommy John elbow reconstruction surgery last June. The Orioles haven’t announced their starters for Tuesday and Wednesday.

Have a news tip? Contact Jacob Calvin Meyer at jameyer@baltsun.com, 410-332-6200 and x.com/JCalvinMeyer.

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