The Orioles’ 2026 campaign got off to a winning start on Thursday afternoon at Camden Yards. Trevor Rogers twirled yet another gem, shutting out the Twins for seven innings, before Ryan Helsley closed out the 2-1 victory in Game 1 of the year.
Rogers picked up right where he left off last season. His velocity was up to 95 mph early in the game, though it eventually settled closer to 92-93. No matter how hard the southpaw was throwing, the Twins struggled to do much with it. He delivered seven shutout frames in which he allowed three hits, walked four, and struck out five.
It was not the sort of “dominant” performance you typically associate with seven scoreless innings. Double plays in the third, fourth, and seventh innings were key to preserving Rogers’ impressive season debut. He also loaded the bases in the second inning, but wriggled out of it unscathed. And the four walks are not something that Rogers will want to make a habit.
But all of that is secondary to the fact that Rogers did, in fact, put together seven shutout frames on Opening Day. He looked a lot like the guy that came out of absolutely nowhere to become one of the league’s best pitchers a season ago. Maybe that negative regression that felt like a certainty coming into the season is gonna take a little while longer to show up.
The Orioles offense was slow out of the gate, and it was looking like Rogers might have to settle for a hard luck no decision. They were stifled by Twins’ ace Joe Ryan for the first 5.1 innings, managing just one hit, walking twice, and striking out seven times.
Finally, in the seventh inning, the bats broke through with a pair of runs off of the Minnesota bullpen. Samuel Basallo led off with a single against Kody Funderburk. Tyler O’Neill followed with a base knock of his own off of Justin Topa. Basallo, not exactly known for his speed, was able to go from first to third on the hit. That set up Colton Cowser for a sac fly to left field, driving in Basallo for the Orioles’ first run of the season. O’Neill advanced to second as well, which positioned him to trot home on a Blaze Alexander single a few batters later and make it 2-0 to the home team.
The Twins only run came against Tyler Wells in the eighth inning. Byron Buxton smacked a rare triple to left field with one out. It was a line drive that Taylor Ward probably could have been a bit more aggressive on corralling in the corner. Instead, Buxton took advantage and scampered around to third. Luke Keaschall made it a 2-1 game with a sac fly of his own to Ward out in left before Wells wrapped up the inning with a strikeout.
The ninth inning brought the Orioles debut for Ryan Helsley, and boy was he good. The new closer did give up a single and uncorked a wild pitch, but he also struck out the side, threw six pitches at 100 mph or faster, and secured the Orioles’ first win of the season.
This game was a classic pitchers duel. Ryan probably had the better stuff between the starters, but Rogers was better prepared to go deep into the game. The Orioles bullpen was just a touch sharper, which proved to be the margin of victory.
The Orioles were fortunate that questionable outfield defense didn’t come back to bite them too badly. There was the aforementioned Ward play in left. It wasn’t an error, but it also didn’t feel like he did everything possible to hold Buxton at second base. In the sixth inning, O’Neill dropped a pop up in shallow right field as he was charging in. At the time, it felt like a potential game changer. But even though it was the lead-off hitter of the inning, Rogers was thankfully able to strand him.
It was a bad day for the top of the Orioles lineup. Ward, Gunnar Henderson, and Pete Alonso combined to go 0-for-11 with four strikeouts and a walk. Meanwhile, hitters 4-6 (Adley Rutschman, Basallo, and O’Neill) went 4-for-10 with a double, a walk, and two runs scored. Coby Mayo, batting eighth, walked and stole a base.
There will be better offensive showings for this Orioles lineup, but that may have been the peak for certain members of the pitching staff. Rogers was stellar, and Helsley looked like everything they could have hoped for. I will sign up for 162 games of that, please.
These two teams will be off on Friday before continuing the series on Saturday. Game 2 of the season gets underway at 4:05 p.m. Kyle Bradish will face off with Taj Bradley. See ya at the Yard!
Most Birdland Player
Due to some changes behind the scenes, polls don’t work on the site like they used to. So instead we will be asking for you to comment (or rec a comment you agree with) on who should be the Most Birdland Player for every victory this season.
Your nominees for Opening Day, 2026 are:
- Trevor Rogers (win, seven shutout innings, four walks, five strikeouts)
- Ryan Helsley (first save as an Oriole, three strikeouts, threw really, really hard)
- Samuel Basallo (1-for-4, going first to third, scoring first run of season)
- Blaze Alexander (1-for-3, drove in the winning run)
Let us know who you think should win it down in the comments!