The Prince George Citizen

Astros force Game 7 vs. Yankees

- Stephen HAWKINS

HOUSTON — The New York Yankees will have to win one more eliminatio­n game to get to their first World Series since 2009.

This time, the Baby Bombers are going to a Game 7 after missing a chance to close out the AL Championsh­ip Series against the Houston Astros.

Luis Severino had another abbreviate­d start in Houston and Aaron Judge struck out two more times to match a major league record for strikeouts in a post-season before a towering home run in the Yankees’ 7-1 loss in Game 6 on Friday night.

With a series lead for the first time this postseason after winning all three ALCS games in the Bronx, the Yankees were again stifled by Justin Verlander – just like in Game 2. The big right-hander didn’t go the distance this time, but he did get his ninth win in nine appearance­s since being acquired by Houston.

New York will have veteran left-hander CC Sabathia on the mound for Game 7 on Saturday night. Sabathia, reliever David Robertson and left fielder Brett Gardner are the only holdovers from the Yankees’ last World Series team eight years ago – in Joe Girardi’s second season as their manager.

It will be the first Game 7 for the Yankees since the 2004 ALCS, when the Boston Red Sox came back to claim the AL pennant after losing the first three games in that series.

The Yankees haven’t lost when facing eliminatio­n this post-season. After beating Minnesota in the win-or-go-home AL wild-card game, New York lost the first two games in the bestof-five AL Division Series against Cleveland before winning three straight to advance.

Judge’s third homer of this series – he hit two in New York – was a soaring shot off reliever Brad Peacock in the eighth projected to 425 feet by Statcast.

But in his other three at-bats, Judge grounded into a double play and struck out twice. That’s 26 strikeouts this post-season for the rookie slugger, matching the record set by Alfonso Soriano while with the Yankees in 2003.

Severino got into trouble against the bottom half of the Astros order in the fifth.

After No. 6 batter Alex Bregman walked to lead off, Evan Gattis drew a one-out walk and No. 9 batter Brian McCann got his first hit in the ALCS with a ground-rule double that drove in the first run.

George Springer, the Astros leadoff hitter still hitless in the ALCS, then drew a walk, and Jose Altuve ended an 0-for-12 slide with a two-run single that made it 3-0 and chased Severino.

Severino threw only 62 pitches - exactly half as many as Verlander - in Game 2. The 23-yearold right-hander didn’t even take the mound for the fifth in that game after he uncharacte­ristically wound his arm several times after giving up a solo homer to Carlos Correa, and was struck on the wrist of his non-throwing hand on the last out. Robertson gave up a solo homer to Altuve, and four runs without recording an out, in the eighth.

Verlander has thrown 16 scoreless innings and won twice against the Yankees in the ALCS. The closest the Yankees came to scoring against Verlander in Game 6 was after Greg Bird drew a walk to lead off the seventh and Starlin Castro was hit by a pitch – though Girardi had to issue a replay challenge after home plate umpire Jim Reynolds initially just called the pitch a ball.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Houston Astros players Carlos Correa and George Springer celebrate after Game 6 of the American League Championsh­ip against the New York Yankees on Friday, in Houston. The Astros won 7-1 to tie the series at 3-3.
AP PHOTO Houston Astros players Carlos Correa and George Springer celebrate after Game 6 of the American League Championsh­ip against the New York Yankees on Friday, in Houston. The Astros won 7-1 to tie the series at 3-3.

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