Albany Times Union

Astros sweep Twins

Minnesota postseason losing streak stretched to 18 with latest defeat

- By Dave Campbell, Minneapoli­s

Shaken up by a scandal before the virus outbreak shrunk the season, the Houston Astros barely played well enough to reach the playoffs — with the rest of baseball actively rooting against them.

Well, they’re not ready to leave yet.

Carlos Correa hit a two-out, tiebreakin­g home run in the seventh inning for the Astros, who produced another stifling pitching performanc­e and swept Minnesota over two games with a 3-1 victory Wednesday that sent the Twins to a record 18th straight postseason loss.

“I know a lot of people are mad. I know a lot of people don’t want to see us here,” Correa said. “But what are they going to say now?”

Nine months after Houston’s rules-breaking, sign-stealing system was revealed, the Astros advanced to the Division Series in Los Angeles. As the sixth seed, they’ll face the Oakland Athletics or Chicago White Sox in a best-of-five matchup starting Monday at Dodger Stadium.

“I don’t think they necessaril­y thought that they had anything to prove. They just had to

play ball,” said manager Dusty Baker, who took his fifth different team to the playoffs and advanced for the first time in seven rounds since winning the 2003 NL Division Series with the Chicago Cubs.

The Twins are 0-18 in the playoffs since winning Game 1 of their Division Series at the New York Yankees on Oct. 5, 2004, a total of seven rounds lost. Since that date, the Astros are 43-35 in postseason play, winning 10 of 15 rounds with three trips to the World Series.

Kyle Tucker hit two RBI singles for the Astros and made a throw from left field for the inning-ending out in the fifth.

Rookie Cristian Javier worked three hitless innings in relief for the win in his postseason debut and Ryan Pressly pitched a perfect ninth against his former team, giving the Houston bullpen 92⁄ scoreless

3 innings in this wild card series with three hits allowed.

“From the very beginning, we envisioned ourselves back in the playoffs and playing real well,“Tucker said. “So we never counted ourselves out.”

For the second straight year one of baseball’s most potent lineups limped through a brief postseason cameo. Against the Astros, they mustered only two runs and seven hits.

 ?? Jim Mone / AP ?? Houston's Carlos Correa celebrates his go-ahead solo home run off Minnesota’s Cody Stashak in the seventh inning in Game 2.
Jim Mone / AP Houston's Carlos Correa celebrates his go-ahead solo home run off Minnesota’s Cody Stashak in the seventh inning in Game 2.

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