The Baltimore Orioles staged a remarkable six-run comeback to defeat the Arizona Diamondbacks 9-7, scoring eight unanswered runs. Jeremiah Jackson hit a grand slam in the sixth inning, followed by Pete Alonso's go-ahead two-run homer in the seventh.
Apr 13, 2026; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Baltimore Orioles second baseman Jeremiah Jackson (82) celebrates with teammates after hitting a sixth inning grand slam against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Tommy Gilligan-Imagn Images | Tommy Gilligan-Imagn Images
Apr 13, 2026; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Baltimore Orioles second baseman Jeremiah Jackson (82) celebrates with teammates after hitting a sixth inning grand slam against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Tommy Gilligan-Imagn Images | Tommy Gilligan-Imagn Images
OK, folks. That was fun.
The Orioles pulled off their most incredible victory of the young season, rallying back from a six-run deficit in the sixth to score eight unanswered runs and shock the Diamondbacks, 9-7. Jeremiah Jacksonās grand slam ā the first of his two homers ā whittled away the deficit in the sixth before Pete Alonso delivered his most momentous hit as an Oriole, a go-ahead two-run homer in the seventh that sent Camden Yards into hysterics. It was the Oriolesā sixth win in their last seven games, and the kind of exhilarating, improbable victory that makes you think that ā just maybe ā this 2026 Orioles team might turn out to be a lot of fun.
The emotional whirlwind of tonightās game was truly wild. I cannot stress enough how frustrating and lackluster the first 5.5 innings of this game were, before it brilliantly transformed into one of the most awesome Oās comebacks in recent memory.
People, this game was over in the sixth inning. Finished. Done. Finito. The Orioles were dead and buried. They were down by six runs, 7-1, and essentially doomed to a forgettable, uncompetitive defeat. It was all over but the shouting. And then, delightfully, it wasnāt.
Weāll start with the bottom of the sixth, where the game turned on its head. After five innings of getting dominated by Diamondbacks starter Ryne Nelson, the Oās offense roared to life. Pete Alonso led off the frame with a double, and Nelson was pulled after 5.1 strong innings. Had Arizona manager Torey Lovullo known what was about to happen to his bullpen, he mightāve stuck with his starter a bit longer.
The Orioles jumped all over reliever Taylor Rashi. Dylan Beavers and Leody Taveras both singled, plating Alonso, and Colton Cowser walked to load the bases. Rashi tried to fool Jeremiah Jackson with a slider, only to leave it flat in the middle of the zone, and Jackson didnāt miss. One mighty swing later, heād deposited a momentum-shifting grand slam into the left-field seats, the first salami of his career.
Just like that, the Oriolesā deficit was whittled to just one run, 7-6. Five innings of offensive frustration were cast aside, and the Birds could suddenly sense that the game was there for the taking. And so the next inning, they took it.
Former Yankee Jonathan Loaisiga began the seventh by plunking Taylor Ward on a 2-2 pitch, bringing up Alonso. Now, itās no secret that the Polar Bear hasnāt gotten off to the kind of start with the Orioles that heād hoped. But that doesnāt matter now because HE CRUSHED A TWO-RUN HOMER TO LEFT FIELD AND GAVE THE ORIOLES THE LEAD. He even directed it straight at Mr. Splash, who was wearing a polar bear head. That happened!
It was bedlam at Camden Yards as the small but vociferous crowd celebrated the biggest hit in the early Orioles career of the Birdsā prize free agent slugger. Alonso pumped his fist and practically danced around the bases as his teammates went crazy in the dugout. What a scene. The Orioles, two innings after trailing 7-1, had taken an 8-7 lead. Remarkable.
For good measure, Jackson added an insurance run in the eighth with his second dinger of the game, a solo shot off Andrew Hoffmann. I should mention that Jeremiah, earlier in the game, had smoked a foul ball into the dugout that hit Craig Albernaz in the face, leaving a rather rough-looking bruise on the managerās right cheek. Iād imagine Albie can find it in his heart to forgive the guy who drove in five runs tonight.
The Oriolesā late-inning relievers took it from there. Rico Garcia continued his dominant start to the season, working a perfect eighth, and has now pitched eight games this season without allowing a hit. Heās one shy of Yennier Canoās record of nine hitless appearances to start a season, set in 2023. And closer Ryan Helsley didnāt mess around in the ninth, mowing down the DāBacks with two strikeouts and a weak grounder, to seal the memorable Orioles win.
Briefly letās cover all the stuff that happened before the game turned awesome. Dean Kremer, after two weeks in Triple-A purgatory, made his long-awaited season debut for the Oriolesā¦and his very first pitch was clobbered onto the flag court by Arizonaās Ketel Marte. His first pitch of the season! You canāt make this stuff up, folks. āAnd thatās why he was in the minors,ā said every Orioles fan simultaneously, laughing at their own joke.
Kremer got through the rest of the lineup unscathed before Marte struck again with another moon shot to right in the third, almost to the same place as his first. Maybe just donāt give this guy anything to hit, Dean? Then the Oriolesā defense abandoned Kremer in the fourth when Gunnar Henderson (whoād hit an RBI triple earlier) made a throwing error on a routine grounder, extending the inning for Nolan Arenado to hit a two-run homer. Kremer ultimately allowed four runs (two earned) in five innings, though his nine strikeouts were his most since May of 2024.
Arizona extended the lead to 7-1 in the sixth when Arenado launched a three-run homer off Albert SuĆ”rez. The corpse of Arenado had entered the game with no homers and just one extra-base hit in his first 14 games as a Diamondback, but had no problem feasting on Oās pitchers tonight. Thatās something Iād be complaining more about if the game had turned out the way I thought it was going to.
But it didnāt. The Orioles pulled a most unlikely victory from the jaws of defeat, and it was glorious.
Who is your Most Valuable Oriole for tonight, Camden Chatters? Does Jeremiah Jackson get the nod for his grand slam that brought the Oās back into the game and insurance-run homer that iced the victory? Or is it Pete Alonso for delivering the big hit Orioles fans have been desperately waiting for? Let us know in the comments.
Q&A
How did the Orioles come back from a six-run deficit against the Diamondbacks?
The Orioles scored eight unanswered runs, highlighted by Jeremiah Jackson's grand slam and Pete Alonso's two-run homer.
Who hit the grand slam for the Orioles in the game against the Diamondbacks?
Jeremiah Jackson hit the grand slam in the sixth inning.
What was the final score of the Orioles vs. Diamondbacks game on April 13, 2026?
The final score was 9-7 in favor of the Baltimore Orioles.
What significance does Pete Alonso's homer have in the game against the Diamondbacks?
Pete Alonso's two-run homer in the seventh inning was the go-ahead hit that secured the Orioles' comeback victory.
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