Dan Connolly

Bundy may not be perfect, but he’s pretty impressive

It’s hard to put brakes on the Dylan Bundy Train right now.

The kid may get fatigued as the season progresses. His blessed arm may not remain as effective as innings pile up. So many things can happen between now and October, especially since this is unchartered territory for Bundy.

But goodness gracious does he look good right now.

In his first two starts, the 23-year-old Bundy demonstrated why the Orioles are so high on him and wanted him to start despite the need for him to build endurance.

But on Wednesday?

On Wednesday, Bundy demonstrated why the club has refused to part with him through a Tommy John surgery, a shoulder condition and an absence of minor league options.

He showed why he is untouchable at this point in his young career.

For five innings, Bundy was perfect. Literally.

He faced 15 batters, retired them all and struck out eight.

“Dylan was really good. Solid. Got to get into another inning that he hadn’t been into, got to throw a couple more pitches than he’d thrown,” Orioles manager Buck Showalter said. “Just elevated a couple changeups. He was the reason we were in that game. Impressive.”

What was most impressive was Bundy’s sequencing. He kept setting up legitimate major leaguers and then setting them down.

In the second, he threw a 96-mph fastball high-and-tight that dropped Mark Reynolds to the dirt. He followed with a knee-buckling curveball that Reynolds could only admire for strike three.

Bundy struck out all three batters in the second. In the fourth, he started Nolan Arenado with an 83-mph changeup that the slugging Arenado was seconds ahead of (I’m barely exaggerating). Then he threw a 92-mph sinker, a 97-mph chase pitch in the other batter’s box and came back with 94-mph at the knees for another strike three.

Just not fair.

“Yeah, I’m starting to learn the routine a little bit and get in a groove,” he said.

Bundy retired his first batter in the sixth – his 16th straight – on a swinging bunt before losing Reynolds on a 3-2 count for a walk. At that point, the Orioles kept their modern-franchise-long streak alive – they’ve never been on either side of a perfect game.

Within an eyeblink, Bundy then lost his no-hitter and shutout when former Oriole Nick Hundley slammed a changeup into the left field seats. Two batters later, rookie David Dahl crushed a changeup to deep center for his first big league homer and Bundy was taken out of the game with his club losing 3-0 and his pitch count at a career-high 89 (61 strikes)

“Just two mistakes, changeups that were up in the zone and they were able to tag them for homers,” Bundy said. “Maybe just a little more focus or location a little bit better in the sixth inning and you get out of that with six innings pitched and no harm done.”

Some may grouse that Showalter should have pulled Bundy after the first homer, but that’s hindsight. At that point, he hadn’t yet reached his pitch count from the previous game – 87 pitches – and he had made one mistake. And he got a comebacker from the next batter before serving up the homer to Dahl.

“The third time through the order those guys can make adjustments, that’s why they are at this level,” Bundy said. “So I’ve got to make adjustments along with them and locate even better as the game gets going deeper.”

It’s all a learning experience for Bundy. And even for Showalter, in knowing when Bundy has had enough and when he can push ahead a little more. They’ve only had three starts together.

We can’t forget that Bundy is only 23 and basically had a three-season layoff.

But when he pitches like he did Wednesday, it’s easy to forget just how young he is in baseball terms.

Dan Connolly

Dan Connolly has spent more than two decades as a print journalist in Pennsylvania and Maryland. The Baltimore native and Calvert Hall graduate first covered the Orioles as a beat writer for the York (Pennsylvania) Daily Record in 2001 before becoming The Baltimore Sun’s national baseball writer/Orioles reporter in 2005. He has won multiple state and national writing awards, including several from the Associated Press Sports Editors. In 2013 he was named Maryland Co-Sportswriter of the Year by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association. And in 2015, he authored his first book, "100 Things Orioles Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die." He lives in York, with his wife, Karen, and three children, Alex, Annie, and Grace.

View Comments

  • Boy did he look good tonight. Such a shame that the O's couldn't take advantage of bases loaded and 1 out in the 5th. Who knows how Bundy could have responded with the lead in hand and some breathing room. We may have lost the series but the future still looks pretty bright. Let's just hope the O's bats can wake up before they get to the border.

  • I have to take issue with you on this one Dan.

    “Some may grouse that Showalter should have pulled Bundy after the first homer, but that’s hindsight.” Really?

    I’m thinking Buck COULDN’T pull him at that point because nobody was warm at that point.

    Now I'll start by stating that I believe Buck is probably the finest handler of a pitching staff I've ever seen, but I think he missed the boat on this one. I know I can't see bullpen activity from my couch, and correct me if I’m wrong, but there didn't seem to be anyone moving out there until it was too late. And as far as hindsight goes, Cakes Palmer mentioned a change in Bundy after only 4 or 5 pitches in the 6th. His pitches were all up in the zone, and the crispness was missing. Knees just didn’t seem to be buckling anymore. Certainly the coaches must have noticed this as well. So at this point, nobody had warmed up, and in the blink or two of an eye, the damage had occurred. I'm just thinking perhaps Givens should have warmed up before the 6th even got underway and been ready to go at the 1st sign of trouble.

    In this instance, I'm giving Buck a pass. I'm of the opinion, that Dylan's “perfecto” may have been the reason Buck never got anybody up before it was too late. I believe his "awesomeness" may have worked against him in this instance. And I’m not buying the “pitch count not reaching the last games count” argument either. Dylan himself said just two weeks ago that he didn’t think he was ready to pitch enough innings to start.

    All that said, In-Buck-I-Still-Trust.

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