USA TODAY US Edition

Astros vs. Dodgers matchup is historic

- USA TODAY Sports

With 10 teams qualifying for Major League Baseball’s playoffs, which were already very much a crapshoot, an argument can be made that sometimes the best team doesn’t win the World Series. That argument will be much harder to make this year.

The Los Angeles Dodgers — winners of an MLB-best 104 regular-season games and seven of eight playoff contests — will take on the 101-win Houston Astros, who finished just a game behind the Cleveland Indians for the American League’s best record.

While Dodgers-Astros might lack the mass appeal and network ratings fireworks Dodgers-Yankees would have fetched, both clubs’ impressive résumés are just one element that makes this matchup historic in its own right.

100-WIN HEAVYWEIGH­TS

This is the first World Series matching two 100-win teams since 1970, when the Baltimore Orioles (108-54) beat the 102-win Cincinnati Reds.

This year, we’ll see two teams who ran away with their divisions early. The Astros seized a 14game lead by June 5, when they completed an 11-game winning streak and improved to 42-16. That huge advantage rendered injuries to ace Dallas Keuchel and Carlos Correa almost irrelevant.

The Dodgers were a machine all the way through the summer, posting a 91-36 record (and a 21game lead) by Aug. 25 before a 1-16 stretch raised concerns. Most of those were allayed when the club swept the Arizona Diamondbac­ks in the National League Division Series and dethroned the Chicago Cubs in a five-game NL Championsh­ip Series.

ASTROS: AL-NL DOUBLE

In beating the New York Yankees in Saturday night’s Game 7 of the ALCS, the Astros made history: They’re the first team to advance to the World Series as members of the National and American leagues.

You can thank Bud Selig, Drayton McLane and Jim Crane for that fun fact.

McLane was the Astros owner when they claimed the 2005 NL wild card and made it to the Fall Classic, surviving an Albert Pujols moon shot in Game 5 of the NLCS to win the pennant. They were swept in four games by the Chicago White Sox, however.

By 2011, McLane was ready to sell the team, and Houston businessma­n Jim Crane purchased it for $680 million. But MLB’s approval of the sale was contingent on the Astros moving from the NL to the AL, creating two 15team leagues.

Crane agreed but managed to strong-arm a discount out of the deal, as the sale price was cut to $615 million with the Astros suddenly in an AL West filled with undesirabl­e start times for intra- division road games.

Six years later, the Astros are kings of the West — and the AL.

AWARD TOUR

We won’t know until November who wins the major awards voted on by the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America. But suffice to say, many of them will be in this World Series.

Astros hit machine Jose Altuve is a solid favorite to win the AL MVP Award. Dodgers slugger Cody Bellinger is a shoo-in for NL Rookie of the Year after his 39 home runs set a league rookie record.

And Dodgers lefty ace Clayton Kershaw has a decent chance to wrest the NL Cy Young Award from Washington Nationals right-hander Max Scherzer.

The World Series hasn’t featured an eventual MVP or Cy Young winner since 2012, when MVPs Buster Posey (San Francisco Giants) and Miguel Cabrera (Detroit Tigers) collided. And Posey was the last Rookie of the Year to play in a Fall Classic, in the Giants’ first World Series triumph in 2010.

PLAYOFF HISTORY

Hard to remember now, but yes, these teams have met in the playoffs before (remember, the Astros used to be in the NL).

In 1981, a 50-day players strike wiped out nearly 40% of the season and baseball made a weird situation somehow worse by splitting the season in half and declaring the champs of each half meet in a division series.

How bad did that work out? Well, the Reds and Cardinals finished with the best overall records in the NL and missed the playoffs.

The Dodgers and Astros were the happy beneficiar­ies as the half-season champs of the NL West and met in a five-game series. It did not lack for big names or drama: Future Hall of Famer Nolan Ryan started Games 1 and

5 for the Astros, while 1981 was the season of Fernandoma­nia for the Dodgers.

Neither disappoint­ed: Fernando Valenzuela, just 20, pitched a four-hitter on short rest in Game

4 to force the decisive Game 5. Ryan outdueled Valenzuela in Game 1 only to be bested by Jerry Reuss in Game 5.

How much have times changed? Both teams each used just eight pitchers in the fivegame series. This year, they combined to use 23 pitchers in their league championsh­ip series.

HEAT WAVE

With Tuesday’s high in Los Angeles forecast to hit 100 degrees, Game 1 of the World Series will likely be the hottest on record. With sunset at 6:08 PT, fans and players alike will bake through the game’s first few innings.

That said, with games in L.A. and Houston — with a roof above Minute Maid Park — hoodies and layers for once won’t be necessary at the Fall Classic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States