The Mercury News

Astros look to wrap up powerpacke­d Series

-

LOS ANGELES >> At this rate, Justin Verlander might very well hit his first home run for real.

A classicall­y poor-hitting pitcher, the Houston ace knocked one over the wall last week at Dodger Stadium in batting practice. Maybe that bolstered his belief that this batch of baseballs is slick and juiced.

Tonight, Verlander aims to lead the Astros to their first championsh­ip when he faces the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 6 of a powerpacke­d World Series that’s already set the mark for home runs.

“We’re just making memories right now,” Astros catcher Brian McCann said, a day after he homered.

A total of 22 homers so far, with each swing making the World Series more riveting.

George Springer, Jose Altuve, Carlos Correa, Yuli Gurriel and McCann launched longballs in the Astros’ back-and-forth thriller Sunday, with Cody Bellinger and Yasiel Puig of the Dodgers also going deep. In all, seven different players on each side have homered.

“This is not going to be finished Tuesday,” Puig said in a bold prediction after Sunday’s loss. “It’s going to be Game 7.”

Springer has hit three homers in the Series. His assessment of Game 5: “Bedlam.”

“This is the craziest atmosphere I’ve ever played in, the craziest results,” he said. “Just big hit after big hit, big play after big play.”

Major League Baseball set a record this year for most home runs in a season and, fittingly, Minnesota leadoff man Brian Dozier began the playoffs with a homer.

Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw, meanwhile, has been tagged for a record eight home runs in a single postseason. Gurriel got him in Game 4, and Houston has 13 overall against the Dodgers.

Did anyone expect this many at this time in October? Surprising, right?

“I guess a little bit, just because both teams are putting up incredible at-bats in the most important times,” Astros manager A.J. Hinch said Monday.

“I think we realize on the pitching side, both teams are at the very end of their rope,” he said. “Their mistakes are getting hit. But the volume is certainly record-setting, and certainly the intensity of the moments that are ending in home runs is hard to fathom.”

Dodgers lefty Rich Hill opposes Verlander tonight. When they started Game 2, the teams combined for a Series-record eight home runs, with Houston holding on to win 7-6 in 11 innings.

Dodgers reliever Ross Stripling was among 14 pitchers, seven on each side, who worked in the Game 5 slugfest.

“If we can just hold them to less than 12 runs, we can get some wins,” Stripling said.

There were 6,105 home runs during the regular season, an average of about 2.5 homers per game. There have been 4.4 per game in the Series.

“The ball has been flying out of the ballpark all year,” said Justin Turner, whose tiebreakin­g homer helped Los Angeles win the opener, when the gametime temperatur­e was 103 degrees.

“So, no, it’s not surprising . ... It’s going to be a lot cooler here (tonight) than it was for the first two games, and it might be a different ballgame than you’ve seen in the first five games.”

Game 5 ratings down

Fox said Sunday’s Game 5 averaged 19.6 million on its three outlets, drawing 18,940,000 on the main Fox Network, 496,000 on Fox Deportes and 172,000 on the digital stream Fox Sports Go.

That was down 21 percent from 24.2 million for last year’s Game 5 between the Chicago Cubs and Cleveland Indians, which drew the most viewers for a fifth game since the Florida Marlins beat Cleveland 8-7 in 1997.

Viewers on the main network Sunday peaked at 20,755,000 from 8:45 to 10 p.m. PDT, and the average from 10 until the last out at 10:39 was 18,942,000.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Houston’s George Springer hits a home run in the seventh inning Sunday, one of 22 homers hit in the first five games.
DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Houston’s George Springer hits a home run in the seventh inning Sunday, one of 22 homers hit in the first five games.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States