The Orioles went back-to-back-to-back in a ridiculous four-homer first inning

This browser does not support the video element.

The Orioles entered play on Friday the undisputed long ball champs of the league. They headed into the second game of their four-game set with the Astros having clubbed 183 homers through 120 games, nine more than the second-place Blue Jays. They even tacked on six more in Thursday's 13-5 win over Houston.
The use of the past tense above is key, considering the O's wasted no time adding to their power show on Friday with a quick start against Collin McHugh at Camden Yards -- after George Springercracked a leadoff homer to give Houston a 1-0 lead. 
Adam Jones matched Springer with a leadoff bomb of his own, knotting things up at 1-1. After Hyun-Soo Kim singled, Manny Machado connected on a two-run shot, Chris Davis clubbed his 28th round-tripper to right-center, and, not to be outdone, Mark Trumbo launched a Trumbomb to dead center.

It was a wild scene: 

The kind of scene that warrants this type of reaction from the dugout: 

Per Statcast, Davis' 446-foot shot was the longest of his season to date ... eclipsing a very recent one:

As well as the realization that this was a record-setting display by Baltimore:

Because this game chose to be wildly unpredictable, the O's quick 5-1 lead was erased when Houston dropped a five-spot in the second to go back on top, 6-5, and by the fourth inning things were knotted up again at 7-7, both teams having already gone to the bullpen.
But wait, there were more #DINGERZ as the night went along. Houston smacked three more as the game rolled along (Jose Altuve, Evan Gattis and Teoscar Hernández), while the O's tacked on one more with a Pedro Álvarez solo shot. By the time the dust had settled, all nine moonshots had landed and the Astros had wrapped up a 15-8 win, another record had been set:

Baseball.

More from MLB.com