Future is bright for stars on both teams
Dodgers and Astros are stocked with young talent
Carlos Correa is such a fresh face, his first big league hit was assisted by technology.
When he made his debut for Houston on June 8, 2015, Correa hit a three-hopper off White Sox ace Chris Sale and was called out by first base umpire
Larry Vanover.
About a minute later, a replay umpire in New York overruled the call, and the 20-yearold had an infield single and his first
RBI.
A new generation of ballplayers is featured in the World Series starting tonight. Houston’s dynamic infield duo of Correa and the diminutive Jose Altuve sparks the top offense in the major leagues. The tantalizing trio of Cody Bellinger, Corey Seager and Chris Taylor has the Los Angeles Dodgers in the Series for the first time since 1988.
“Media day in Oklahoma City was about two people there, and now I’m here and getting ready for the World Series,” Bellinger said, surrounding by dozens of reporters in the Dodger Stadium’s
Dugout Club. “I could never imagine this.”
Altuve skipped TripleA and made it to the major leagues on July 20, 2011, after Houston traded Jeff Keppinger to the Giants. He singled off Washington’s Tyler Clippard that night in his big league debut.
Houston finished last in each of his first three seasons. Now Altuve is among four Astros remaining from the team that lost a clubrecord 111 games in 2013, joined by pitchers Dallas Keuchel and Brad Peacock along with utilityman Marwin Gonzalez.
At 27, he’s already a fivetime All-Star and threetime batting champion.
“I’m coming from a team that lost a hundred games in a row three years, three straight years,” Altuve said. “We made the playoffs in 2015. We didn’t make it last year, and after last year we were a little uncomfortable because we were watching the playoff games from home.”
Correa, the top pick in the 2012 amateur draft, was a first-time All-Star this season, hitting 24 homers and driving in 84 runs despite a torn ligament in his left thumb that needed surgery, causing him to miss 42 games.
Bellinger, son of former Yankees infielder Clay Bellinger, started the season at Triple-A Oklahoma City and made his debut April 25 at San Francisco.
At 21, Bellinger became the youngest position player in Dodgers history selected for the AllStar Game, set a National League rookie record with 39 homers and had 97 RBIs in 132 games. Now he’s talking to his dad about his three World Series appearances.
Seager, at 23 the youngest of three brothers who played professional baseball, was a unanimous pick as NL Rookie of the Year in 2016 and repeated as an All-Star this season. He became the first Dodgers player since Jackie Robinson in 1947-48 with 30 doubles or more in each of his first two seasons, and his 52 career home runs is already second-most among Dodgers shortstop behind Pee Wee Reese’s 122. He missed the NL Championship Series after hurting his back on a slide into second base in Game 3 of the Division Series but is expected to be in the starting lineup for the opener against the Astros.
Taylor blossomed at 27 after 21/2 unremarkable seasons with Seattle. Traded to the Dodgers in June 2016, he started the season at Triple-A, was called up April 19 and earned the leadoff spot in the batting order. He had three grand slams and finished with a .288 average, 21 homers, 72 RBIs and 17 steals.
“It’s crazy how fast things can change in this game,” Taylor said. “It’s been an unbelievable journey.”
• Game 1 has a chance to be the warmest World Series game on record. Back in 2001, the temperature was around 94 degrees in Phoenix for the Oct. 27 World Series opener between the Arizona Diamondbacks and the New York Yankees. The Chase Field roof was left open, and the temperature had dropped to 76 degrees by game time.
Some forecasts expect Los Angeles to be hotter than 94 degrees for the first pitch at 5 p.m. — and there’s no roof on Dodger Stadium.