Los Angeles Times

Houston spoils a capital return

Astros bounce back to win first Series game in D.C. since 1933.

- By Jorge Castillo

WASHINGTON — In the two days between Games 2 and 3 of the World Series, between receiving a staggering blow and delivering a counterpun­ch, the Houston Astros kept reminding themselves they were so good for so long.

They reminded themselves on the flight from Houston to Washington, during their off-day workout, and in the clubhouse before they took field for Game 3 on Friday with their season hanging off a cliff.

They convinced themselves this Series against the Washington Nationals was far from over even after dropping into an 0-2 hole. They compiled 107 wins during the regular season, toppled two worthy foes for the American League pennant, and were the biggest World Series favorites in 12 years. They were too good to just

crumble without a fight.

“We’re not just going to give up,” Astros second baseman Jose Altuve said. “That’s not who we are.”

On Friday, the Astros got off the mat and responded with a 4-1 victory at Nationals Park. Game 4 is Saturday with the Nationals leading the series 2-1.

“We stopped the bleeding,” Astros third baseman Alex Bregman said.

This city waited 86 years for this baseball game. It had been that long since the Washington Senators hosted the New York Giants in the World Series in 1933. Baseball in late October had become a fantasy.

The breakthrou­gh was a jampacked event. Prices for standingro­om-only tickets soared beyond $1,000.

Astronaut Buzz Aldrin threw out one of the ceremonial first pitches. Chad Cordero, the first closer in Nationals history, threw out one of the first pitches to Brian Schneider, a catcher on that first team in 2005. A local treasure of a singer named DC Washington rocked the building with his rendition of the national anthem.

Much of the rest of the night was filled with frustratio­n for the home club and 43,867 spectators in attendance. The Nationals had gone to Houston and defeated the Astros’ two best pitchers — Gerrit Cole and Justin Verlander — to swing the pendulum their way.

On Friday, Houston turned to Zack Greinke, a former Dodger whose struggles in his three playoff starts did not warrant optimism. He had allowed 10 runs in 14 innings before Saturday and wasn’t very effective again. He threw 95 pitches in just 4 innings. He allowed seven hits and walked three. But it was a game of missed scoring opportunit­ies on both sides, and the Astros missed fewer.

The Nationals left 12 runners on base. A runner reached second base in each of the six innings, chasing Greinke along the way, but the Nationals went 0 for 10 with runners in scoring position. Houston left 10 runners on base but, after recently struggling with runners in scoring position, went four for 10 in those situations.

The result snapped the Nationals’ eight-game winning streak; their previous loss had been in Game 3 of the National League Division Series against the Dodgers.

“We’ve been doing really well, driving in runs with men in scoring position,” Nationals manager Dave

Martinez said. “It just didn’t happen today.”

The Astros took a lead in the second inning against righthande­r Anibal Sanchez, the Nationals’ fourth starter after their vaunted trio of Max Scherzer, Stephen Strasburg and Patrick Corbin. Carlos Correa smacked a leadoff double and Josh Reddick singled to score him. Houston manufactur­ed another run in the third inning with help from Juan Soto in left field.

Altuve led off with a line drive into the left-field corner, where Soto failed to cleanly retrieve the ball. His troubles allowed Altuve to advance to third base. He scored moments later on a single from Michael Brantley that deflected off Sanchez. The same sequence was repeated in the fifth inning: Altuve doubled and Brantley singled him home.

Robinson Chirinos clubbed a home run in the sixth inning before Fernando Rodney, a 42-year-old reliever, rode a bullpen cart out to replace Sanchez. There were runners on second and third base when Martinez took a gamble and intentiona­lly walked Brantley to face Bregman with the bases loaded.

Bregman has struggled recently — his two-run home run in Game 2 notwithsta­nding — but remains one of the sport’s most dangerous hitters. Martinez’s gamble worked as Bregman grounded into a fielder’s choice, and Rodney escaped.

But the Nationals didn’t capitalize on the tactical triumph. They left six runners on base through three innings before scoring their only run in the fourth inning.

Ryan Zimmerman drew a leadoff walk against Greinke. Two batters later, Victor Robles lined a triple down the left-field line, scoring Zimmerman.

 ?? Rob Carr Getty Images ?? RELIEVER Roberto Osuna hugs catcher Robinson Chirinos after getting the final out of Game 3.
Rob Carr Getty Images RELIEVER Roberto Osuna hugs catcher Robinson Chirinos after getting the final out of Game 3.
 ?? Will Newton Getty Images ?? ROBINSON CHIRINOS blasts a solo home run for the Astros in the sixth inning, giving Houston its final margin.
Will Newton Getty Images ROBINSON CHIRINOS blasts a solo home run for the Astros in the sixth inning, giving Houston its final margin.

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