Orioles get second straight walk-off win as Cedric Mullins’ double in 10th gives Baltimore a wild 10-9 victory over Rangers

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BALTIMORE — As the Orioles trickled toward their final out in a game in which they held three leads and lost each, a fan in the bowl of Camden Yards yelled out.

“This is all your fault, Roogie!”

It’s doubtful Baltimore second baseman Rougned Odor heard that proclamation as he prepped to hit in Tuesday’s bottom of the ninth, but he surely felt some responsibility for the Orioles’ circumstances against his former Texas Rangers club. He fielded a grounder without hurry in the top half of the inning, allowing the potential tying run to reach. It scored when Corey Seager homered off Félix Bautista, the third straight inning Baltimore’s bullpen allowed a game-tying or go-ahead blast.

With the Orioles down to their final out in the bottom of the ninth, Odor made up for his miscue, hammering a game-tying home run to right field. He took his time leaving the box and making his way to first, admiring his shot and perhaps giving those who had yelled out time to issue an apology before he began his trot.

An inning later, the Orioles finally ended their back-and-forth matchup with the Rangers in a 10-9 victory, as Cedric Mullins reached for a fifth time with a walk-off double in front of those who remained from an announced crowd of 7,371, Camden Yards’ second-lowest of the season.

The win positioned Baltimore for its first sweep of the season.

It also erased a frustrating game from its bullpen, one that had been a surprising bright spot. The Orioles (38-44) took a 4-0 lead in the second inning as starter Austin Voth cruised through four frames, but he loaded the bases while recording only out in the fifth. Keegan Akin entered and allowed all three to score on a sacrifice fly, a groundball single that bounced off third base and a single into center. He pitched a clean sixth before Mitch Garver hit a game-tying home run off him in the seventh.

With the two outs in the bottom half, Baltimore broke ahead again. A walk from Mullins preceded four more baserunners, with Ramón Urías dealing the key blow with a two-run single that pushed the Orioles’ lead to 7-4.

That lead was short-lived. With two outs in the eighth, Dillon Tate left two runners on for Nick Vespi, who surrendered a game-tying three-run home run to Nathaniel Lowe.

Ryan McKenna cleared Camden Yards’ new left field wall for his first home run of the year, but the advantage disappeared against Bautista in the ninth, the third time in five games the Orioles went into their opponents’ half of the ninth leading and exited it trailing. But thanks to Odor, the game stretched into an extra frame.

Joey Krehbiel left the bases loaded in the top of the 10th, and after two unproductive outs, Mullins laced a ball into left-center, giving the Orioles consecutive walk-off victories for the second time this season.

Mullins heating up

A year ago Monday, Mullins was named an All-Star. It’s doubtful he repeats when this season’s group is announced this weekend.

But a slow start following his breakout season has hidden improvements that have been bubbling for a month. After a loss on June 5, he was batting .236 with a .667 OPS. He finished Tuesday’s game hitting .333 with an .880 OPS in the month since.

After three singles from the bottom of the order gave the Orioles a 1-0 lead in the second inning, Mullins laced a two-run double to center, his 11th extra-base hit of his past 25 games, and then scored on a double from Trey Mancini. He sparked Baltimore’s seventh-inning rally with a two-out walk.

After Robinson Chirinos popped up a bunt and pinch-hitter Ryan Mountcastle popped up, Mullins came through in the 10th.

Around the horn

>> Orioles outfielder Austin Hays is dealing with a sore right wrist after a hit-by-pitch Monday aggravated an injury he first felt after a diving catch into foul territory in Chicago. Mountcastle was out of the lineup with a sinus issue.

— Right-hander Kyle Bradish, on the 15-day injured list with right shoulder inflammation, will throw to hitters in the coming days.

— MLB Pipeline updated its top 100 prospect rankings with the graduation of Orioles catcher Adley Rutschman, formally the No. 1 prospect. Triple-A infielder Gunnar Henderson skyrocketed from No. 41 to fifth, with Norfolk teammate Jordan Westburg entered the rankings at No. 96.

RANGERS@ORIOLES

Wednesday, 7:05 p.m.