The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Pollock, Peralta lead way

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PHOENIX — Two starting pitchers are hurt. So is the slugging third baseman. The team’s best player is in one of his worst slumps. And yet the Arizona Diamondbac­ks keep winning, taking two of three from the World Series champion Houston Astros over the weekend.

After going 4-3 last week against Houston and the Los Angeles Dodgers — the two teams that played in last year’s World Series — Arizona still has the best record in the National League at 23-11, 31⁄2 games ahead of the Colorado Rockies in the NL West.

“I don’t think we were intimidate­d, I don’t think we were worried about it,” Diamondbac­ks manager Torey Lovullo said of last week’s games. “We just knew if we played our game and did our thing that way that we know we can, that we would be OK. And we embrace that. We love these challenges.”

The Diamondbac­ks, idle Monday before a two-game set with the Dodgers in Los Angeles, still haven’t lost a series this season (They split with the Dodgers 2-2).

They have lost two of their five starting pitchers, Taijuan Walker for the season with Tommy John surgery and Robbie Ray for at least a month with a strained right oblique.

And Paul Goldschmid­t has not been himself, batting .225 with four home runs and 11 RBIs. Looking uncomforta­ble at the plate, he has struck out 45 times in 110 atbats. Goldschmid­t is hitless in his last 23 at-bats. He went 1-for-25 in the home stand.

Lovullo has steadfastl­y stood by the big first baseman, saying he’s confident he will eventually be his old self, although he did give him the day off Saturday, when Arizona beat Houston 4-3.

The most consistent offense has come from A.J. Pollock and David Peralta, especially Pollock.

The centerfiel­der Pollock, who also has had some defensive gems, was named National League player of the month for April and player of the week for the first week of May.

In the week ending May 6, Pollock hit .423 (11-for-26) with four home runs, eight RBIs, five runs scored, a double and a triple.

He drove in the winning run with a twoout bases-loaded single in the ninth inning of Saturday’s 4-3 victory and, on Sunday, he tripled in the tying run and scored the goahead run on a controvers­ial play.

After getting tangled up with Houston third baseman Alex Bregman, Pollock raced home and was thrown out. But Bregman was called for interferen­ce.

Houston manager A.J. Hinch used a colloquial version of “horse manure” to describe the rule and said it was “a bad interpreta­tion” of it. Bregman credited Pollock with “a good acting job.”

Neverthele­ss, the run counted.

 ?? Jennifer Stewart / Getty Images ?? Diamondbac­ks catcher Alex Avila and closer Brad Boxberger celebrate a 3-1 win over the Houston Astros at Chase Field on Sunday.
Jennifer Stewart / Getty Images Diamondbac­ks catcher Alex Avila and closer Brad Boxberger celebrate a 3-1 win over the Houston Astros at Chase Field on Sunday.

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