The Mercury News

GOING THE DISTANCE

- By Ronald Blum

HOUSTON >> Stephen Strasburg took a gem into the ninth inning, and Juan Soto ran all the way to first base with his bat following a goahead home run, the same way Houston slugger Alex Bregman did earlier.

Washington has matched the Astros pitch for pitch, hit for hit, win for win — even home run celebratio­n for home run celebratio­n.

Strasburg gutted through without his best fastball to throw five-hit ball for 8 1/3 innings, and now it’s onto a winner-take-all Game 7 to decide the first World Series in which the visiting team won the first six games.

Eaton and Soto hit solo homers off Justin Verlander in the fifth, Anthony Rendon had five RBIs, including with a two-run homer in the seventh, and the Nationals beat the Astros 7-2 Tuesday night to tie the Series at three games apiece.

Fired up after a disputed call at first base went against them in the seventh, the Nationals padded their lead moments later when Rendon homered off Will Harris. Washington manager Dave Martinez, still enraged at umpires, was ejected during the seventhinn­ing stretch, screaming as a pair of his coaches held him back while the crowd sang along to “Deep in the Heart of Texas.” Rendon added a two-run double off Chris Devenski in the ninth.

Nationals pitcher Max Scherzer, boosted by an injection of painkiller, is primed to return from an irritated nerve in his neck to start Game 7, Martinez said before the game. Scherzer

was warming up in the seventh before Rendon’s homer, then sat down as Martinez became the first manager tossed from a Series game since Atlanta’s Bobby Cox in 1996.

Now the Nationals will attempt their ultimate comeback in a year in which they were written off time after time, hoping for the first title in the 51-season history of a franchise that started as the Montreal

Expos and the first for Washington since the Senators in 1924. Zack Greinke will be on the mound for the Astros, who led the majors with 107 wins and are seeking their second title in three seasons.

Visiting teams have won three straight Game 7s in the Series since the Cardinals defeated Texas at home in 2011.

• The Nationals are the first team to use five different starters in the World Series since the Philadelph­ia Phillies in 1980. That hadn’t been the plan for Washington until Game 1 starter Scherzer had to be scratched from Game 5 and Joe Ross started instead. Strasburg, Aníbal Sánchez and Patrick Corbin also started in this series for Washington.

• Fans in Washington and Houston may be excited, but the rest of the country is reacting to the World Series with a collective yawn.

Through the first five games, the World Series has been averaging 11.6 million viewers, the Nielsen company said. That puts it on pace to be the least-watched Fall Classic ever.

The previous low point came in 2012, when an average of 12.64 million viewers watched the Giants complete a four-game sweep over the Detroit Tigers.

• Nationals catcher Kurt Suzuki was out of the’ lineup again because of a hip flexor strain.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Juan Soto clubbed a solo home run in the fifth inning — the second homer of the inning for the Nationals — to put Washington ahead 3-2 in Game 6. They went on to beat the Astros 7-2 to force a deciding Game 7 tonight in Houston.
DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Juan Soto clubbed a solo home run in the fifth inning — the second homer of the inning for the Nationals — to put Washington ahead 3-2 in Game 6. They went on to beat the Astros 7-2 to force a deciding Game 7 tonight in Houston.
 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Astros starter Justin Verlander was lifted after five innings. He surrendere­d a pair of solo home runs in the fifth.
DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Astros starter Justin Verlander was lifted after five innings. He surrendere­d a pair of solo home runs in the fifth.

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