New York Daily News

Correa, ’Stros go up 2-0 on Sox

- George Springer (l.) and Jose Altuve lead Astros to 8-2 rout that puts Houston up two-games-to-none on Red Sox in AL Division Series. Series shifts to Fenway now.

HOUSTON — Carlos Correa homered, doubled and drove in four runs, Jose Altuve got two more hits and the Houston Astros hammered the Boston Red Sox 8-2 Friday to take a commanding 2-0 lead in the AL Division Series.

George Springer also homered to back Dallas Keuchel in Houston’s second straight romp by the exact same score.

The Astros will go for a sweep in the bestof-five matchup Sunday at Fenway Park.

A day after Altuve hit three home runs in the playoff opener, he got things going with a two-out single in the first inning off Drew Pomeranz. Correa, who went 0 for 4 on Thursday, made it 2-0 when he launched a towering shot onto the train tracks atop left field.

Keuchel pitched into the sixth, allowing one run and three hits while striking out seven.

After Jackie Bradley Jr. had an RBI single in the Boston second, the Astros started to break away.

Springer hit his first postseason homer when he sent the second pitch of the third inning into the front row of the seats in right field.

A double by Alex Bregman set up an RBI single by Altuve later in the inning, making it 4-1 and ending Pomeranz’s first career postseason start after two relief appearance­s. The lefty kept his head down as he trudged toward the dugout after being lifted.

David Price, the starter-turned-reliever with the $217 million contract, pitched 2.2 scoreless innings for the Red Sox. Following his exit, Houston tacked on four runs in the sixth.

A two-out intentiona­l walk to Altuve, the major league batting champion this season, led to a two-run double by Correa. AP

Red Sox right fielder Mookie Betts had an error that looked like it was pulled from a blooper reel earlier in the sixth when he caught a fly ball by Bregman then simply lost the ball as he tried to throw it back in. Betts looked confused as the ball dribbled away from him and he was charged with an error, allowing a run to score.

Altuve, who hit .346 this year, kept punishing pitchers. After singling in his first two trips to the plate, giving him five hits in the series, the Red Sox had seen enough and intentiona­lly walked him in the fourth. That drew a loud chorus of boos from the home crowd, which greeted Altuve with a standing ovation in his first at-bat.

Relying on precision rather than power, Kyle Hendricks pitched the Chicago Cubs to another winning start in October.

Hendricks outdueled Stephen Strasburg on the mound, and the Cubs opened defense of their first World Series title in 108 years by beating the Washington Nationals in Game 1 of their NL Division Series.

Kris Bryant and Anthony Rizzo produced RBI singles in the sixth inning for the first two hits off an otherwise-dominant Strasburg. Hendricks was even better, giving up only two singles in seven strong innings.

“He’s unbelievab­le. The confidence — the quiet confidence he brings to the field — it wears on people,” Rizzo said. “Things don’t faze him.” Rizzo added an RBI double off reliever Ryan Madson in the eighth.

Carl Edwards Jr. threw a perfect inning and Wade Davis finished the two-hitter for a save. Game 2 in the best-of-five series is Saturday, with Jon Lester set to start for the Cubs against fellow left-hander Gio Gonzalez. —AP

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