The Maui News

Montgomery outduels Verlander, Rangers blank Astros 2-0 to take Game 1 of ALCS

- By KRISTIE RIEKEN

HOUSTON — Jordan Montgomery outdueled Justin Verlander and the Texas Rangers received a big boost from their youngest player to open the AL Championsh­ip Series with a 2-0 win over the Houston Astros on Sunday night.

Montgomery pitched five-hit ball over 6 1/3 innings, Leody Taveras provided a two-run lead with his solo homer in the fifth and the Rangers remained perfect in the postseason at 6-0.

Evan Carter, a rookie who just turned 21 on Aug. 29, doubled and scored in the second and made two nifty defensive plays in left field. He’s shined this postseason after not making his major league debut until Sept. 8.

“He just has so much confidence,” Texas manager Bruce Bochy said. “He’s got the youthful enthusiasm and he’s just excited to be here. He’s not in awe of anything, just no fear in this kid since he’s come up.”

In the ALCS for the first time since back-to-back appearance­s in 2010-11, the Rangers swept the Rays in the Wild Card Series and the Orioles in the Division Series. The winning streak followed loses in their previous six playoff games against Toronto in

the ALDS in 2015 and 2016.

“We just found a way to get a couple of runs across the board,”

Bochy said. “That was the difference in the game, obviously. But our guy was really good, Monty, terrific job he did. And he got in a couple of jams there and found a way to get out of it.”

Game 2 of the best-of-seven series is today in Houston.

The defending champion Astros, in the ALCS for a seventh straight year, had a tough time getting anything going against Montgomery. The top four batters in Houston’s lineup were 2 for 12 with five strikeouts against

the left-hander. Slugger Yordan Alvarez struck out against him three times.

“Overall, just didn’t do enough tonight, offensivel­y,” Houston third baseman Alex Bregman said. “I thought J.V. threw the ball tremendous­ly, but we need to string together some better at-bats.”

Houston’s offensive woes came after it hit 16 homers and outscored the Rangers 39-10 in a three-game sweep in September. Things were much different in the first postseason meeting between these in-state rivals as they managed just five singles.

“Sometime you’ve got to say: ‘Hey, the guy threw a great game tonight against us, excellent game,’ ” manager Dusty Baker said. “And they say good pitching beats good hitting, but when you don’t hit, everybody wants to know what’s wrong. There’s not a whole bunch to say. He threw a real good game against us.”

Montgomery has been great in the last month, allowing just two earned runs over 27 innings in his last four starts of regular season, and posting a 2.08 ERA in three postseason starts.

Verlander allowed two runs and six hits in 6 2/3 innings to mark the first time this postseason where both starters pitched into the seventh. It was the 36th postseason start for Verlander and the MLB-record 14th time he’s started a playoff series opener.

The three-time Cy Young Award winner said the defending champs aren’t concerned after falling into an early hole in the series.

“We lost Game 1 in the World Series last year,” said Verlander, who rejoined the Astros in a trade from the Mets at the deadline. “We’ve lost Game 1 of some playoff series before. And that’s the great thing about this team. Obviously nobody is sitting in the locker room right now happy. But it’s very matter of fact, okay. We just got punched, how do you answer?”

Jose Leclerc struck out one in a perfect ninth for the save and the Rangers’ second shutout of the playoffs. Texas’ bullpen has a 1.86 ERA in the playoffs after ranking 24th at 4.77 during the regular season.

 ?? AP photo ?? Rangers starting pitcher Jordan Montgomery throws during the seventh inning of Game 1 of the AL Championsh­ip Series against the Astros on Sunday.
AP photo Rangers starting pitcher Jordan Montgomery throws during the seventh inning of Game 1 of the AL Championsh­ip Series against the Astros on Sunday.
 ?? AP photo ?? The Rangers’ Leody Taveras is congratula­ted by Marcus Semien after hitting a home run during the fifth inning Sunday.
AP photo The Rangers’ Leody Taveras is congratula­ted by Marcus Semien after hitting a home run during the fifth inning Sunday.

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