The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Urquidy, Bregman help Astros tie up Series 2-2

- By Ronald Blum

WASHINGTON — Not bad for a TBA.

Unheralded rookie Jose Urquidy outpitched all those big-name aces who preceded him, quieting Washington’s bats and the Nationals Park crowd, too.

Alex Bregman busted out of his slump with a go-ahead single in the first inning and a grand slam in the seventh, and the resurgent Houston Astros routed the Nationals 8-1 Saturday night to pull even at two games apiece in an unpredicta­ble World Series that’s been one big road show.

Urquidy had never pitched above Class A before this year. This stage seemed surreal.

“A couple of moments,” he said, “I was thinking about, oh my God, I’m in a World Series pitching.”

Game 1 winner Max Scherzer took the mound Sunday night hoping to get Washington a home Series victory for the first time since the Senators won at Griffith Stadium in 1933. In a rematch of the opener, Gerrit Cole went for Houston after losing for the first time since May.

Visiting teams have won the first four games for the first time since 1996, when the Yankees broke the pattern in Game 6 against Atlanta to take the title.

Game 6 will be Tuesday night in Houston, when the Astros lose their road-field advantage.

“This is what it’s all about,” Bregman said. “This is a beautiful thing. It’s two teams battling it out. They’ve got great pitching, great offenses. It’s been fun so far, and just want to keep it rolling.”

Yuli Gurriel also drove in a run in the first as Houston strung together four singles in a seven-pitch span for a 2-0 lead against Patrick Corbin. Robinson Chirinos homered for the second straight day, a two-run drive that boosted the lead to 4-0 in the fourth.

Fans started leaving in the seventh, when the Astros sent 10 batters to the plate and battered the bullpen. Bregman, who began the night in a 1-for-13 Series slide, had the big blow, driving a low, inside fastball from Fernando Rodney into the left field stands of the ballpark where he was the All-Star

Game MVP in 2018.

Bregman held his bat high as he slowly walked out of the batter’s box, then took 28 seconds to savor circling the bases.

Orange-clad Houston fans in the right field upper deck chanted “Let’s go Astros!” as Nationals fans were silenced. Wild-card Washington lost consecutiv­e games for the first time since Sept. 13-14 against Atlanta.

“I think tonight was really the first time we really did what the Houston Astros offense can do,” outfielder Josh Reddick said.

Starting pitchers were the talk of the Series coming in, with Washington’s Stephen Strasburg, Scherzer and Corbin combining for 12 All-Star picks and three Cy Young Awards. The baseball cards of Houston’s Cole, Justin Verlander and Zack Greinke sparkle with 17 All-Star selections, two Cy Youngs and one MVP.

But there were just five 1-2-3 innings by starters in the first three games, and the most consecutiv­e outs were turned in by Nationals

veteran Anibal Sanchez, who retired seven straight in Game 3.

Urquidy, who rebounded from Tommy John surgery in 2016, exceeded them all.

“Maybe he doesn’t have the Max Scherzer, Gerrit Cole name, but he’s got good stuff,” Washington leadoff man Trea Turner said.

Urquidy wasn’t even announced as Houston’s starter until after Game 3, with manager AJ Hinch hoping to piece together innings any way he could.

The 24-year-old righthande­r began the season at Double-A Corpus Christi, then was bumped up to Triple-A Round Rock in mid-May and made his major league debut in July.

He faced the Nationals in just his 12th big league appearance, joining Fernando Valenzuela (1981) and Jaime Garcia (2011) as the only Mexican starting pitchers in Series history — and Valenzuela as the only ones to win. Urquidy’s mother, Alma, was on hand.

“My mom is someone that I talk to a lot and obviously she helped me out this morning,” Urquidy said. “We had coffee, just gave me some words of encouragem­ent.”

Urquidy allowed two hits in five scoreless innings, striking out four and walking none.

“From the very beginning I thought he was calm, I thought he was in control of his stuff,” Hinch said. “His fastball had a little extra life to it. It’s had good life this postseason. And then he just came up with big pitch after big pitch.”

 ?? WILL NEWTON / GETTY IMAGES ?? Carlos Correa (left) and George Springer of the Astros celebrate their team’s 8-1 win against the Nationals in the World Series on Saturday.
WILL NEWTON / GETTY IMAGES Carlos Correa (left) and George Springer of the Astros celebrate their team’s 8-1 win against the Nationals in the World Series on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States