The Rockies entered today struggling on offense. Losers of three straight, they had scored just four runs during that stretch. Last night they were humbled by one of the best pitchers in the league, and early tonight it looked like more losing was on the menu.
However, Mickey Moniak led a resurgent Rockies offense to a much needed victory despite a shaky and confusing start by José Quintana.
A unique start for José Quintana
Left-handed veteran José Quintana entered today’s game as a potential steady hand after doing well in his last three starts.
What followed was an… odd outing.
Quintana wasn’t at his sharpest, lasting just four innings. However, he did keep the game close enough for the Rockies to stage a comeback.
Quintana walked Oneil Cruz to leadoff the game in the first inning. With one out, Rockies fans were treated to something they had never seen before. Jake McCarthy recorded an unassisted double play in left field to end the inning. Per the Rockies, it was the first time such a play had happened in franchise history.
Then things went off the rails was the second inning.
With one out, Quintana issued a double and back-to-back walks to load the bases. He then struck out the next batter on three pitches, and it looked like the Rockies might escape the jam with no harm done.
Pirates catcher Henry Davis hit the ball sharply, but a diving stop by third baseman Kyle Karros looked to have the inning over. Karros threw to second instead of first without recording an out and a run scored. Edouard Julien then initiated a rundown that should have ended at home plate. Nick Gonzales veered into Quintana and pushed him, but Quintana was called for obstruction, and the run was granted.
This allowed the Pirates to take a 2-0 lead.
Quintana looked to be in trouble again in the third when he gave up a double and two singles to let the Pirates score another run, but a well-executed double play helped keep the damage to a minimum. Quintana then pitched a scoreless fourth inning, but his night was done.
Bats arrive fashionably late, but with gusto
You’d be forgiven for thinking you were watching a repeat of last night’s game over the first four innings.
Pirates starting pitcher Mitch Keller had been perfect through four innings. With a three-run deficit, the Rockies needed to get something going to avoid further déjà vu.
TJ Rumfield kicked off the fifth inning with a single for the first of five straight hits. Single-single-single-double-single. Suddenly the game was tied with no outs and runners still on base.
Then came along Mickey Moniak. The Birthday Boy.
Moniak slugged a three-run home run—the first of the season for the Rockies—to complete a six-run fifth inning and give the Rockies the lead. He would continue to hit well throughout the game with a double later on and a bases-clearing triple in the top of the ninth. Moniak finished a single shy of the cycle with five RBIs in a 3-for-5 evening.
His seven games with multiple extra-base hits is tied for the league lead and his 12 home runs is a team high for the Rockies.
TJ Rumfield also continued to play a substantial role. The rookie first baseman went 3-for-4 and scored twice. He also hit his sixth home run of the season in the top of the eighth. Rumfield leads all rookies in three-hit games this season.
The bullpen locked it down
Antonio Senzatela—who’s resurgence is still one of the best Rockies stories so far this season—pitched three almost-perfect innings in relief of José Quintana. He gave up just one earned run on one hit: a solo home run by Ryan O’Hearn off a fairly well-located pitch inside right on the hands. It was the first home run Senzatela has allowed this season. He also struck out two batters and allowed no walks.
Jaden Hill, who has quietly been one of the Rockies’ better relievers this season, lowered his ERA to 3.60 thanks to a 1-2-3 inning with a strikeout. Lefty Brennan Bernardino wrapped things up in the ninth on nine pitches to seal the Rockies’ victory.
Coming Up Next
The Rockies will wrap up their road trip tomorrow morning with an early 10:35 AM MDT start time.
Chase Dollander—once again sans opener—will take the mound for the Rockies with righty Carmen Mlodzinski going for the Pirates.
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