Los Angeles Times

These teams have loaded starter kits

Superior rotations vaulted the Washington Nationals and the Houston Astros to the World Series.

- By Jorge Castillo

HOUSTON — If you have yearned for playoff baseball from the not-so-distant past, when the best teams in the major leagues rode premier starting pitchers through the end of October before relievers were relentless­ly swapped in and out to slow games to a crawl, this year’s World Series promises to be, for the most part, a welcomed throwback.

Notwithsta­nding the use of seven pitchers by each team in the Houston Astros’ 6-4 win over the New York Yankees in Game 6 of the American League Championsh­ip Series, the Astros and Washington Nationals are within four victories of a championsh­ip primarily because of starting pitching.

The Nationals have depended on Max Scherzer, Stephen Strasburg, Patrick Corbin and Anibal Sanchez to reach the first World Series in franchise history after falling 12 games under .500 on May 24.

On the other side, the Astros, a season-long juggernaut with a major league-leading 107 victories, are vying for their second title in three years with Gerrit Cole, Justin Verlander and Zack Greinke fronting the charge.

How the pitchers will be deployed beginning with Tuesday’s Game 1 at Minute Maid Park in Houston remains unclear.

The Nationals, after ousting the Dodgers in a National League Division Series, completed a four-game thrashing of the St. Louis Cardinals in the NL Championsh­ip Series on Oct. 15, giving them six days off to line up their pitching before Game 1.

Scherzer would pitch on nine days’ rest after throwing seven scoreless innings in Game 2 of the NLCS. Washington could follow Scherzer with Strasburg on eight days’ rest in Game 2 and Corbin on 10 days’ rest in Game 3. Sanchez will almost certainly start Game 4.

Houston will give the ball to Cole, a strong candidate for the AL Cy Young Award, in Game 1 on six days’ rest and to Verlander in Game 2 on regular rest. Greinke, acquired from Arizona at the trade deadline, will be the likely choice for Game 3.

The Astros rotation depth drops off from there. They could opt for a bullpen game in Game 4 — as they did in their Game 6 win over the Yankees on Saturday — or have Jose Urquidy or Brad Peacock make a convention­al start. Wade Miley, who was 14-6 in 33 starts during the regular season, was left off the ALCS roster after fading in September.

Offensivel­y, the Astros boast the deeper lineup with AL mostvaluab­le-player candidate Alex Bregman, ALCS MVP Jose Altuve, Carlos Correa, George Springer and Michael Brantley among the dangerous cogs.

The Nationals counter with Houston native Anthony Rendon and 20-year-old wunderkind Juan Soto supplying a strong one-two, middle-of-the-order punch with a capable cast around them. Trea Turner and Adam Eaton are the table setters atop the lineup, and 14year veteran Howie Kendrick, the NLCS MVP, is on a torrid stretch and 15-year veteran Ryan Zimmerman, the first draft pick in Nationals history, is another player producing in his mid-30s.

The series could come down to the teams’ common weakness: the bullpen.

Although the Astros relief corps has been trusted to carry its weight, the Nationals utilized starting pitchers out of the bullpen when necessary in the first two rounds to mask their deficienci­es. To win the World Series, they’ll likely need to rely on relievers beyond Sean Doolittle and Daniel Hudson. The Astros are too good to topple with six pitchers in a seven-game series.

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? WASHINGTON IS EXPECTED to go with right-handers Max Scherzer, left, and Stephen Strasburg to start the first two games of the World Series, but the order has not been announced.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press WASHINGTON IS EXPECTED to go with right-handers Max Scherzer, left, and Stephen Strasburg to start the first two games of the World Series, but the order has not been announced.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States