Sunday's Orioles loss was an ordinary one in the context of the five months of baseball the team has played. It was replete with missed offensive opportunities after a starting pitcher put the team on the wrong path from roughly the moment the National Anthem ended.
But few have of those performances have come with a chance for a series sweep on a beautiful afternoon at Camden Yards. More often, the Orioles' woes have come on the road, where they've been among the league's most puzzling teams and where they'll play their next nine games with their season on the line.
Therein lies the problem. As the pennant chase ratchets up, a team with a 29-37 road record will once again pray for consistency after they boarded a plane in anticipation for 10 days away from home. The Orioles have just one winning road trip on this year —a two-game series in Minnesota.
In order to position themselves properly for their final homestand, the Orioles will have to break a road spell in the most basic fashion.
"Win games," manager Buck Showalter said. "It's real simple. We have to win games, regardless of how we get there. I don't care how it looks or how it happens, we need to have more runs than them after nine innings, or 10 or 11 or 12 or so on. It's a pretty simple equation right now, whether we're playing here or Tampa or Detroit or Boston,"
For 66 road games to date, it has not been that simple. Their road trips seem to be accentuate their worst qualities. They're down almost a half-run per game away from Camden Yards (4.89 per game in Baltimore, 4.45 on the road), and have an OPS 61 points higher at home (.801 to .740). On the pitching side, it's starker. Their home ERA is a flat 4.00. On the road, it's 4.93.
Complicating this upcoming road trip is the competition, a pair of playoff contenders in Detroit and Boston who share the Orioles' status as Wild Card teams if the regular season ended today. The immediate obstacle, though, is Tampa Bay.
The Rays have long been out of the hunt, but they're coming off a series win against the division-leading Toronto Blue Jays.
"There's never a time when they're not engaged in some form," Showalter said. "Tampa is in a spot, you can see how they're playing right now. Detroit's right there, and of course, Boston's there. That's why you do all the things that we do to be a part of this. To enjoy the competition, enjoy the fruits of their labor, our players' labor to get this chance."
There hasn't been much for the Orioles to enjoy on many recent road trips. Since the All-Star break, the highlight was taking two of three from the Giants to salvage a .500 trip in 10 early-August games in Chicago, Oakland, and San Francisco. That trip also included a disappointing three-game losing streak against the Athletics.
The only time the Orioles can claim a winning road trip this entire season was in May, when they swept a rain-shortened, two-game trip to Minnesota against a Twins team that has proven to be the league's worst.
Coming home with a winning road trip would mean the Orioles' 10-game homestand in mid-September will be a meaningful one. Then, if they're lucky enough to be in contention in the final week of the season, it's back on the road to Toronto and New York to try to clinch a playoff berth.
With upcoming series against Detroit and Boston, where each game is essentially worth two in the playoff standings, the pressure will be heightened.
"We need to win," left-hander Wade Miley said. "Every game on the road, we need to go out and play the game to win, and see where it takes us."
"One at a time," first baseman Chris Davis said. "That's got to be the mentality this of the year. You can't win them all at once, you got to go one at a time."
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