BALTIMORE |  There once was a time when a three-run cushion against the Baltimore  Orioles represented an almost insurmountable lead. Not anymore. Miguel  Tejada singled in the tiebreaking run in the eighth inning, and the  Orioles rallied to beat the Washington Nationals 4-3 Sunday for their  season-high fourth straight win. In each game during their winning  streak, the Orioles have fallen behind before coming back. It’s a  formula that is a stark contrast to the previous norm. After  rallying from a 3-0 deficit to beat Florida on Thursday, Baltimore  trailed by six runs on Friday against Washington and emerged from a  five-run hole Saturday. Sunday was more of the same. “If you  look around, you see guys around you that are excited to hit and ready  to hit,” Orioles starter Jeremy Guthrie said. “They are doing phenomenal  things. When you are down six and five and three, and win all those  games, that changes your mentality — knowing that you always have a  chance to win the game, instead of, if they score a couple it’s over.” It  was the Orioles’ first sweep since they took three from Boston on April  30-May 2. Baltimore lost 11 straight series before this weekend. “To  have these three comebacks, those are big wins for any ball club,”  Guthrie said. “Especially for us, the way we’ve struggled in certain  aspects of our game.” With the score 3-all in the eighth, Julio  Lugo hit a one-out double off Tyler Clippard (8-5) but strayed too far  from second base and was picked off by catcher Wil Nieves. Corey  Patterson followed with a double, and Tejada singled up the middle to  give the Orioles their first lead of the game. “Guys are starting  to swing the bat and guys are picking each other up,” interim manager  Juan Samuel said. “A perfect example: Lugo got picked off, Corey  doubled, Tejada singled.” Tejada has seven RBIs in his past four  games and is 13 for 27 over his past six starts. David Hernandez  (3-6) struck out both batters he faced and Alfredo Simon worked the  ninth for his ninth save. Roger Bernadina homered for the  Nationals, who have lost four in a row and 10 of 12. The Nationals  failed to score after the fourth inning in all three games and were  swept for the fifth time this season. Asked if Washington (33-43)  has hit rock bottom, manager Jim Riggleman replied, “That’s a tough  question. I certainly don’t want to go lower.” Clippard, who also  took the loss Friday, couldn’t believe the Nationals blew leads of 6, 5  and 3 runs in successive games. “It’s terrible. It’s devastating,”  he said. “We’re battling our butts off, we’re playing good, but we’re  coming up short. It’s not fun.” Guthrie, who left with the score  tied at 3, ended a run of five straight losing starts. The right-hander  allowed three runs, three hits and four walks in six innings. Washington  starter Luis Atilano gave up three runs, two earned, and five hits in  seven innings. The Nationals went up 3-0 in the fourth. After Ryan  Zimmerman drew a leadoff walk, Adam Jones broke the wrong way on Josh  Willingham’s liner to center and failed to make a diving grab. The ball  rolled to the wall for a triple, and two pitches later Bernadina  homered. Baltimore tied it in the fifth. Luke Scott and Jones hit  successive one-out doubles, Matt Wieters singled and Scott Moore singled  in a run. Lugo then hit a potential double-play grounder, but Adam  Kennedy’s relay from second bounced past first base, allowing Wieters to  score. Neither team threatened again until the eighth, when  Kennedy opened with a single off Will Ohman and took second on a single  by Zimmerman. Ohman struck out Adam Dunn, and Hernandez struck out  Willingham and Bernadina. NOTES: The Orioles activated RHP Koji  Uehara off the 15-day disabled list and designated 1B Garrett Atkins  (.214, 1 HR) for assignment. … Before Bernadina connected,  Washington’s previous eight homers were all solo shots. … Nationals  INF Cristian Guzman was held out of the lineup after waking up with a  sore neck.
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