Los Angeles Times

CHAMPIONS GOT EVEN BETTER

- By Maria Torres

When they matched with the Boston Red Sox in last year’s American League Division Series, the Houston Astros seemed unstoppabl­e. They’d bolstered their starting rotation with the waiver-deadline acquisitio­n of Justin Verlander, scored the most runs in baseball and won 101 games on the way to their first American League West division crown.

Little has changed — except that the Astros have become stronger since winning last year’s World Series. They boast the stingiest pitching staff in baseball (3.11 ERA) and one of the majors’ most well-rounded offenses.

The Red Sox, who were 108-54 during a record-setting campaign, pose a credible threat to the Astros’ throne. They’re nearly as efficient offensivel­y and have three front-line starters in Chris Sale, Rick Porcello and David Price. They combined for a 3.39 ERA (198 earned runs in 5251⁄3 innings) in the regular season.

But the New York Yankees, who the Red Sox beat in four games in the ALDS, exposed Boston’s biggest weakness: A bullpen that has few dependable solutions as a bridge for closer Craig Kimbrel. Even Kimbrel looked shaky during the series. He gave up three earned runs in two outings. In the Red Sox’s Game 4 win, he hit a Yankees batter with the bases loaded and allowed a second run on a sacrifice fly.

Two 100-win teams. Complete offenses. Multiple team MVPs. If it weren’t for Boston’s struggling relief corps, the Red Sox and Astros would be evenly matched. Homefield advantage might make a difference. There was no one better at home than the Red Sox, who had a 57-24 record at Fenway Park. That said, no team played better on the road than the Astros, who were 5724 away from Minute Maid Park.

Why the Astros should win

The Astros didn’t win 108 games like the Red Sox, but they managed 103 victories (two more than last year) without full seasons from Jose Altuve or Carlos Correa. Alex Bregman emerged as a dark-horse candidate for the AL MVP award and had a 2.048 on-base-plus-slugging percentage and batted .556 with four walks and one strikeout in the ALDS against Cleveland.

Yes, one strikeout. That’s the thing about the defending champions: They didn’t hit as many home runs as the Yankees (267) or Dodgers (235), but they are discipline­d at the plate and they can put the ball in the play. Astros batters struck out just 1,197 times, the second-lowest total in baseball.

They batted .255, just 11 points behind the majors-leading Red Sox, and they ranked sixth out of 30 teams in runs scored (797). The only team left in the playoffs who can claim a similar profile is the Red Sox. More on that later.

Houston’s pitchers, of course, provided a strong backbone. They gave up 3.30 runs per game, which was lowest in the majors. The trend continued in the ALDS, as the Indians scored just six runs in three games.

The Red Sox must watch out for the continued excellence of starting pitchers Verlander, Gerrit Cole, and Dallas Keuchel; the trio anchored a rotation that led the majors in starter’s ERA (3.16).

The Astros have an advantage in the bullpen. They have so many quality arms, manager A.J. Hinch and left right-hander Hector Rondon, who posted a career-best 3.20 ERA in 63 appearance­s, off the ALDS roster. Fellow right-hander Joe Smith, who held left-handed hitters to a .191 batting average, received the same fate.

The Astros allowed the secondfewe­st homers (152) this year. That may pose a problem for a slugging Red Sox club that led the majors with a .792 OPS and 2,550 total bases.

How the Red Sox can win

Boston batters hit 208 home runs, 31 triples and 355 doubles. They led in the former category and ranked sixth in walks with 569.

The Red Sox bullpen yielded seven earned runs and issued 11 walks in 17 innings during the division series. However, the bulk of those runs and innings were logged in the second game of the series, as the Yankees knocked Price out of his start after 12⁄3 innings. Beyond Price, who was charged three earned runs, Red Sox starters only yielded four earned runs in a combined17­1⁄3 innings.

Sale, the Red Sox ace who pitched a quick eighth inning in Game 4 of the ALDS, will start the ALCS opener opposite Astros No.1 starter Verlander. Cole will oppose Price on Sunday.

Who’s coming in hot

A near-handful of MVP candidates will take the field at Fenway Park when the ALCS begins Saturday. One of them, J.D. Martinez, keyed Boston’s offense during the ALDS. Martinez hit .357 and drove in six runs. He also never struck out in his 17 plate appearance­s. Instead, he drew six walks.

The Astros’ George Springer extended his season-ending offensive tear into the playoffs. Among qualified hitters, Springer’s 1.500 OPS this postseason is second only to Bregman.

Who’s coming in cold

Likely American League MVP Mookie Betts scored what ended up being the game-winning run for the Red Sox in the opening game of the ALDS and scored two of Boston’s 16 runs in its historic defeat of the New York in Game 3 of the series. But Betts did little else. In four games, he batted .188 (three for 16) with three walks and four strikeouts.

Carlos Correa was one of two Astros regulars held to one hit in the first round of the playoffs. But Correa hit a three-run homer off the Indians’ Brad Hand to pad the Astros’ lead in Game 3 of the ALDS.

Season series

The Astros won four of seven games against the Red Sox, outscoring them 34-31.

Prediction

Astros in seven games.

 ?? David J. Phillip Associated Press ?? GEORGE SPRINGER, right, and Alex Bregman have been two of the Astros’ hottest hitters in the postseason.
David J. Phillip Associated Press GEORGE SPRINGER, right, and Alex Bregman have been two of the Astros’ hottest hitters in the postseason.

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