Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

White Sox, Astros win wild-card series openers

Houston rallies to capture Game 1 of wild-card series

- By Dave Campbell AP Sports Writer

The Chicago White Sox and the Houston Astros open their respective American League wild-card playoff series with victories.

Tarnished by scandal at the start of the year and below average during this pandemic-abbreviate­d season, the Houston Astros showed up for the playoffs with their usual confidence and poise.

Just like that, they’ve got the edge on the Minnesota Twins in an eliminatio­n game.

Jose Altuve drew a walk to force in the go-ahead run in the ninth inning Tuesday after a twoout error by shortstop Jorge Polanco,

and the Astros beat the Twins 4-1 to open their AL playoff series and stretch Minnesota’s all-time postseason record to 17 straight losses.

“These guys know how to battle. They know what it’s like,” said manager Dusty Baker, after the Astros became the first team in major league history to win a game after reaching the postseason with a losing record. “They know how to win, and they take pride in what they do.”

Game 2 in the best-of-three wild-card matchup is Wednesday at Target Field.

Michael Brantley tacked on a two-run single against Caleb Thielbar in the ninth after Sergio Romo issued the full-count walk to the 5-foot-6 Altuve, who batted 127 points lower (.219) this year than his 2017 AL MVP season.

“He laid off a close pitch. It didn’t go my way,” said Romo, who has three World Series rings with San Francisco and pitched in his 30th career postseason game. “Tough pill to swallow.”

Twins manager Rocco Baldelli called for Romo, the fifth of six pitchers, to start the ninth. The Astros started with two singles, but Romo was about to escape with the tie preserved until

Polanco’s throw to second base after a straight-at-him grounder was low to blow the forceout.

“I’m the one to wear any of that. I do feel that I put my teammates in a position they shouldn’t have been in,” said Romo, lamenting the five shutout innings by starter Kenta Maeda that were spoiled.

Minnesota and Houston tied for the fewest errors in the majors with 20 during the 60-game season. The Astros were only 18th in walks, but this one counted the most.

“It’s the same thing as a base hit,” Altuve said.

Framber Valdez, who made 10 regular-season starts, pitched five scoreless innings in relief of Zack Greinke for the victory to keep the bullpen fresh for the rest of the series. Valdez allowed his only two hits with one out in the ninth, but Willians Astudillo grounded into a double play to end the game.

Valdez became the first reliever with five shutout innings in a playoff game since Romo’s teammate, Madison Bumgarner, did

so for the Giants in Game 7 of the 2014 World Series.

“Framber is oblivious to pressure,” said the 71-yearold Baker, who took his fifth different team to the postseason.

The Twins aren’t, even though nobody on this team has taken part in more than five losses during this streak that surpassed the record for consecutiv­e postseason losses in major North American sports. Minnesota was tied with the Chicago Blackhawks, who dropped 16 straight games in the NHL playoffs from 1975-79.

 ?? JIM MONES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Houston Astros’ Carlos Correa, left, and George Springer, center, jump in celebratio­n after the team’s 4-1 win over the Minnesota Twins 4-1 in Game 1 of an American League wild-card baseball series in Minneapoli­s on Tuesday. At right is Josh Reddick.
JIM MONES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Houston Astros’ Carlos Correa, left, and George Springer, center, jump in celebratio­n after the team’s 4-1 win over the Minnesota Twins 4-1 in Game 1 of an American League wild-card baseball series in Minneapoli­s on Tuesday. At right is Josh Reddick.

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