6/07/2008

Orioles Win Behind Guthrie

The Orioles offense finally provided enough support to carry Baltimore to victory behind another solid pitching performance from Guthrie.  He gave up only one earned run in seven innings, lowering his ERA to 3.40.  

This recap from the Orioles website does a great job to summarize today's game as well as the season thus far:

http://baltimore.orioles.mlb.com/news/gameday_recap.jsp?ymd=20080607&content_id=2861279&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=bal

TORONTO -- Finally, Baltimore ace Jeremy Guthrie can greet a storyline he can stomach.

 

The Orioles have struggled to score all season with their Opening Day starter on the hill, but reserve outfielder Jay Payton stepped into that void Saturday and rendered it unrecognizable. Payton boosted his starter with five RBIs en route to a 9-5 win over the Blue Jays, singlehandedly providing more offense than Guthrie has seen in most of his starts.

 

"He's usually going out against one of their best pitchers, so it's been tough for us to score a lot of runs for him," said Payton, who finished with his second five-RBI game of the season. "Today, it was nice to go out against a great pitcher and to be able to push some runs across. Hopefully we can get a few more for [Guthrie] down the road."

 

"For the most part, we're in every game," added Guthrie. "Even if we score one or two runs -- or four or five -- it seems like we're always competitive. So to our hitters and to myself, it's not as big of a deal as maybe other people make it to be."

 

Big deal or not, Baltimore (31-30) hadn't opened up a four-run lead for Guthrie (3-6) before Saturday and had only scored six runs for him on two occasions -- both of which turned out to be no-decisions. Meanwhile, the right-hander had seen his team score fewer than three runs in seven of his 14 starts and had lost four games by two runs or fewer.

 

"It's fun to compete," he said. "And when the games are close, it really does make the game feel enjoyable. You'd love to win, but at the same time, competing and really being in a dogfight each game is also enjoyable and rewarding."

 

The two teams were locked in a tie game when Payton came through for the first time, lacing a two-run single in the third inning. Payton stepped up again in the fifth, drilling a three-run double that spurred a five-run rally. Baltimore chased A.J. Burnett (5-6) in that inning, and Guthrie went into the late going with his first significant lead of the year.

 

The Orioles didn't stop there, though, punching another run off the Toronto bullpen in the sixth inning. Guthrie made it all stand up, holding the Blue Jays (32-32) to a run in the first inning and not much after that. Five of the home team's six hits off Guthrie went for singles, and Baltimore's starter retired 15 of the final 17 batters he faced.

 

"I'd never had one so for sure it seems like a long time," Guthrie said of the rare luxury of a big lead. "They're not easy all the time, but hopefully you can make them look easy when you have a big lead and you continue to put up zeros."

 

"It's good that he had won the game, because he means a lot to our club," said Orioles manager Dave Trembley. "I don't care what the score is or the situation, he'll give you what he's got. But it's good for him and it's good for the team that we can score some runs. ... Once Guthrie got the lead, you knew he was going to stay right where he was."

 

Toronto couldn't even get runners back into scoring position against Guthrie. The Blue Jays advanced to second base in the second inning and then didn't do it again until the eighth, after Guthrie had been removed. Toronto scratched out four late runs to make the game appear cosmetically closer, and Guthrie completed seven innings for the sixth time.

 

"Either way, my goal is to attack them. But today, with the runs, it's nice to continue to try to get the first guy out and limit the damage while we're ahead," Guthrie said. "As the game went along, they took a little different approach. They were swinging a little bit earlier, which helped the pace of the game go while the lead was stretched out. It was a nice game."

 

The action turned for good in the fifth. With one out, the Orioles loaded the bases on two hits and a walk. Payton unloaded them with a gap double to left-center field. Burnett stayed in to give up two more run-scoring hits, and Baltimore's rally ended on a sacrifice fly to left field by Brian Roberts.

 

"I knew his pitch count was up a little bit," Payton said of Burnett. "Sometimes when a pitcher gets his count up, he's going to want to try to throw some more strikes so he can stay out there and get through five or six innings. Fortunately, we were able to take advantage of that. I think a lot of guys in that inning hit first or second pitches."

 

"You don't really want to get two strikes on you, because [Burnett] has devastating stuff," said Trembley. "He throws 95, and he'll throw that curveball that will buckle you. You just have to show a lot of patience with him and you've got to fight off good pitches with two strikes. But more importantly with him, you can't chase pitches out of the strike zone."

 

The Orioles held on late -- surviving a Toronto rally -- and took their fourth win in their last five road games. They also won their second straight road series and will have a chance to earn their first road sweep of the season on Sunday.

 

"We've been getting really good pitching all year," said Payton. "And on this road trip we've been able to get some big hits and some good hitting. That's kind of what we've lacked a little bit in the past on the road."



6/02/2008

Another Strong Outing for Guthrie as Baltimore Wins

Guthrie held the Red Sox to just two runs in 6 1/3 innings as the Orioles overtook them 6-3 tonight.  Here's the recap:

http://baltimore.orioles.mlb.com/news/gameday_recap.jsp?ymd=20080602&content_id=2823918&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=bal

6/01/2008

"Mission Accomplished" Article

I found this article online that discusses Guthrie's decision to serve as a missionary for two years and take a hiatus from baseball:

http://mormontimes.com/MITN_sports.php?id=1100

5/29/2008

Another Tough Loss Despite a Solid Performance

Guthrie has been pitching very well this season and has the lowest ERA (3.64) of any Oriole pitcher with more than 40 innings pitched.

Unfortunately, the offense hasn't helped Guthrie with run support when he's pitching, which makes it very difficult to win.  Such was the case last night against New York:

http://baltimore.orioles.mlb.com/news/gameday_recap.jsp?ymd=20080528&content_id=2787846&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=bal

5/15/2008

Guthrie Promoting "Bike to Work" Week

You may have noticed a promotion at offices across America this week encouraging workers to bike to work.  Jeremy Guthrie is helping the city of Baltimore raise the profile of bicycling by riding to City Hall with Baltimore's mayor tomorrow morning:

http://baltimore.orioles.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20080515&content_id=2705929&vkey=news_bal&fext=.jsp&c_id=bal
Go Jeremy!

4/07/2008

Strong Outing Against Seattle

Guthrie posted a strong performance against Seattle yesterday going seven innings and giving up just two earned runs. Here's the recap:

3/01/2008

Guthrie's Rise to the Top of the Rotation

The Miami Herald published this great article about Guthrie and his bright prospects for this season. It also touches briefly on his missionary experience:



Orioles' Guthrie on the rise again
BY MIKE PHILLIPS


You could get a nosebleed trying to follow the career of Jeremy Guthrie, who somehow has gone from being released by the Indians just two years ago to becoming the favorite to be Baltimore's Opening Day starter.
That's just part of Guthrie's yo-yo journey through baseball -- a crash-and-burn, rise-from-the-ashes saga that might have left the average player a little schizophrenic.

Not Guthrie, an easygoing pitcher who is grounded in his faith.

Maybe it was that two years of doing missionary work in Spain that helped shape Guthrie into what he is and where he is today, standing on the mound with a rock-hard foundation.

''It was the best two years of my life,'' said Guthrie, a devout Mormon, who left BYU and baseball with a sore arm after his freshman year to serve his two-year missionary commitment to the Church of Latter Day Saints.

''Of course [my religion] comes first,'' he said. ``It's helped me in baseball and in everything I do, because it is the most important thing to me. It's a lot easier to endure the ups and the downs because you have a base and a foundation of what is important to you.''

He has had more than his share of ups and downs, and it all started on that trip to Spain. Guthrie, who had an ERA of 6.25 at BYU, was ready to leave baseball behind. He didn't pick up a baseball for two years in Spain, where he knocked on doors for 12 hours a day professing his faith to strangers.

When he came back to the United States, he transferred to Stanford.

''I went to Stanford with the idea of working for Nike. It was an opportunity to get a great education to prepare for that,'' he said. ``I ended up on the baseball team. They allowed me to walk on the team, and it worked out.''

Worked out is an understatement. Guthrie was a two-time All-American who led Stanford to the College World Series, and the Indians made him their first-round pick and signed him for $4.5 million. He was rising again.

The crash came in 2004 when Guthrie struggled in the minors at Akron, Ohio.

''I just didn't feel comfortable on the mound and couldn't get any rhythm that season,'' he said. ``That was probably the low point, but I never thought about giving up baseball. I started pitching better [in 2005], but the Indians had a lot of young pitchers, and they really didn't have a place for me.''

BARGAIN OF THE YEAR

After the 2006 season, the Indians released Guthrie, and the Orioles picked up the bargain of the year, snatching Guthrie for the $20,000 waiver price after Kansas City and Tampa Bay passed on him. Guthrie barely made the team last spring and played for the minimum $385,000. But after being dumped by Cleveland, he began to look like one of Baltimore's best pitchers and a favorite for Rookie of the Year. He finished the season ranked 13th in the American League in ERA (3.70) and 14th in batting average allowed (.2.49), and when the Orioles traded ace Eric Bedard just before spring training, Guthrie became the favorite to be the Opening Day starter.

Orioles manager Dave Trembley likes Guthrie's fastball and his focus on the mound, but he also admires his grit, because of the way Guthrie came back quickly from a rib injury to finish September.

''I admire Jeremy for his thought process and his eagerness and his mental outlook,'' Trembley said at the time. Trembley hasn't announced his Opening Day starter, but the young Orioles are now counting on Guthrie to be a top-of-the-rotation pitcher.

''He has to be,'' said Baltimore first baseman Kevin Millar, one of the few veterans on the Orioles. ``He has to do it, and he can do it. We need him to be that guy.

''When he spots his fastball, he [can be an ace],'' Millar said. ``He pitched some great games for us last season, and we need him this year.''

Aided by an even temperament and his faith, Guthrie doesn't get too high or low no matter when he starts.

''It's never really been a goal of mine to be the Opening Day starter,'' he said. ``Last year it seemed like I faced No. 1s from the other teams a lot anyway.''

A SHOE GUY

Guthrie might be a rising star, but he could be selling shoes.

''My goal is to work for Nike,'' he said. ``I'm a shoe guy. I grew up in Oregon so I've always been a shoe guy and I've always had a passion for shoes.

``I would do anything, advertising, design, being a representative, anything. I would do anything from selling shoes at a NikeTown to working in the corporate offices.''

For now, Guthrie is looking for that big season, the one Millar and others believe he can have.

''I've had a lot of ups and downs, but I wasn't down when the Indians released me,'' Guthrie said. ``When I came here I was excited about the opportunity, and making the most of it.''

So far he has, rising again.

1/17/2008

Guthrie Signs 1-year Contract with Baltimore Orioles

The Orioles signed Guthrie to a 1-year deal that will give him a great opportunity to repeat his success from last season and sign a longer-term contract at the end of the year.

Here are the details:

http://canadianpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5gzYbS3jOtU9VJZu-RyM5bOULLzmg