Montreal Gazette

Astros rocket past Red Sox in four games

Verlander wins in first relief outing

- JIMMY GOLEN

Justin Verlander came out of the bullpen for the first time in his career, beating Chris Sale in an aces-turned-relievers role reversal on Monday and the Houston Astros advanced to their first AL Championsh­ip Series by rallying past the Red Sox 5-4 and eliminatin­g Boston in four games.

“When we saw Verlander run to the ’pen we said, ‘Our horse is on the mound. We need to win this game,”’ said Houston third baseman Alex Bregman, who homered off Sale to tie it in the eighth before Josh Reddick’s single gave the Astros the lead.

“That’s kind of the whole energy that he’s brought since we brought him over here,” Bregman said of Verlander, the former AL MVP and Cy Young winner who was acquired from Detroit for the playoff run. “He’s brought an energy with him that, ‘Hey, when he’s out there, we’re going to win.’”

Houston will open the ALCS on Friday, either in Cleveland against the Indians or at home against the New York Yankees. The Indians held a 2-1 edge over the Yankees going into Game 4 of the AL Division Series on Monday night.

With both Game 1 starters coming out of the bullpen, Verlander gave up a go-ahead homer to Andrew Benintendi — the first batter he faced — before shutting down the Sox for 2 2/3 innings. He picked up the win in what was his first pro relief appearance after 424 starts in the majors and minors.

“The two big boys, Sale and Verlander, both get into the game. Everybody did well,” Houston manager A.J. Hinch said. “Nobody really wanted to concede the game.”

The Astros last reached the league championsh­ip series in 2005 as a National League team, and were swept in the World Series by the White Sox. This year’s team, wearing “Houston Strong ” patches to support the city after hurricane Harvey, is hoping to finish the job.

“The city of Houston is still rebuilding,” Hinch said. “It’s easy for us to look in the rear-view mirror and think that the hurricane is over, (but) the rebuild is not going to stop for a long time. … We want to win for them. We want to win for us. We want to win because we showed up in spring training to try to win a World Series.”

CUBS OVERCOME SCHERZER’S GREAT START

Anthony Rizzo hit a tiebreakin­g single with two outs in the eighth inning and the Chicago Cubs overcame Max Scherzer’s brilliant performanc­e to beat the Washington Nationals 2-1 in Chicago for a 2-1 lead in their NL Division Series.

Scherzer was dominant in his return from a right hamstring injury, carrying a no-hitter into the seventh. But just like in Game 1, when Chicago was held hitless into the sixth by Stephen Strasburg, the World Series champion Cubs persevered. Albert Almora Jr. had a pinch-hit RBI single in the seventh for Chicago, and Jose Quintana tossed 5 2/3 innings of one-run ball in his post-season debut.

SEVERINO, JUDGE HELP YANKS TOP INDIANS 7-3

Luis Severino bounced back from his playoff debacle, Aaron Judge delivered a big hit and the New York Yankees took advantage of shoddy defence by Cleveland to beat the Indians 7-3 on Monday night and push their AL Division Series to a decisive Game 5.

Gary Sanchez homered and Judge laced an early two-run double for his only hit of the series to go with 12 strikeouts in 15 at-bats.

Cleveland starter Trevor Bauer struggled on three days’ rest and was chased in the second inning. But it was on the wet Yankee Stadium field where the Indians really flopped, committing a season-high four errors that marked a franchise record for a post-season game.

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