SEATTLE — The Seattle Mariners have seemingly avoided another potential injury to their starting rotation.
In a 5-1 loss to the Baltimore Orioles on Tuesday, Mariners starting pitcher George Kirby took a 102.7 mph comebacker hit by Orioles infielder Ramon Urias to the face in the top of the fifth inning. The ball ricocheted off Kirby's throwing hand into his face. The ball landed favorably for Seattle and Urias was out at first to end the inning. Kirby walked back to the dugout under his own power, but was bleeding from the mouth where the ball made contact.
Big yikes here in Seattle, as George Kirby was just hit by a 102.7 mph comebacker and is bleeding from his mouth.
— Daniel Kramer (@DKramer_) June 4, 2025
The play yielded the third out here in the top of the 5th inning, and he immediately receded into dugout tunnel with the Mariners' athletic training staff. pic.twitter.com/fbZMpoBkOr
Mariners manager Dan Wilson said after the game Kirby appeared fine and could be taken for x-rays Wednesday. Kirby said his hand and face were fine and that the liner didn't hurt in a postgame interview.
Kirby participated in pitcher-fielding-pitches drills and played catch before another game against Baltimore on Wednesday, and seemed unbothered by the scary moment the previous day.
"Good to see George up and around today," Wilson said in a pregame interview Wednesday. "Seemingly feeling pretty good. Seems to be in good spirits. ... That's a huge sign."
Wilson didn't say what the results of the x-rays were, or if Kirby ended up having them done. But Kirby's participation in pregame drills seem to indicate the former All-Star avoided another injury.
Kirby was out for two-and-a-half months with right shoulder inflammation. He made his season debut against the Houston Astros on May 22.
Kirby threw a season-high 95 pitches, struck out three, walked one and allowed two earned runs on eight hits Tuesday. He has an 8.56 ERA with 11 strikeouts in 13.2 innings pitched across his trio of starts since being activated off the injured list.
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