The Korea Times

Nationals seal 1st victory in World Series

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HOUSTON (AFP) — Dominican slugger Juan Soto smacked a solo home run and a two-run double to power the Washington Nationals over Houston 5-4 in Tuesday’s opening game of the 115th World Series.

The 20-year-old left-fielder homered in the fourth inning and drove in the deciding runs in the fifth while left-handed closing reliever Sean Doolittle forced the final four Houston outs, inflicting the first loss on Astros starting pitcher Gerrit Cole since May 22.

Washington jumped ahead 1-0 in Major League Baseball’s best-of-seven championsh­ip final, which continues Wednesday in Houston.

Soto became the third-youngest “cleanup” batter — fourth in the lineup — in World Series history after Ty Cobb in 1907 and Miguel Cabrera in 2003.

Soto, who turns 21 on Friday, admitted he was nervous in his World Series debut.

“In the first at bat, I’m not going to lie, I felt a little bit shaky in my legs, but I just tried to control my emotions and hit the ball,” Soto said.

“After the first at bat I just said it’s just another baseball game. Just go out and enjoy.”

The Nationals have won 17 of their past 19 games, including seven in a row.

Game one winners have eventually taken 18 of the prior 22 World Series titles.

Cole, this year’s major league strikeout leader, had won 19 straight decisions in his past 25 starts over five months, the longest one-season win streak in MLB history, but he also surrendere­d the most runs he has since last losing on May 22.

“He has been so good for so long, there builds this thought of invincibil­ity and that it’s impossible to beat him, which is why I want to give credit to the Nats,” Astros manager A.J. Hinch said.

“It’s just not easy to do what these guys do and their streaks of dominance.”

The Astros seek their second title in three seasons while the Nationals, who moved from Montreal to Washington for the 2005 season, chase their first crown and the US capital’s first since the Senators captured the 1924 championsh­ip.

The Nationals could join the 1914 Boston Braves as the only World Series champions who were 12 games below .500 during the regular season.

Washington right-hander Max

Scherzer took the victory despite lasting only five innings, striking out seven while allowing five hits and three walks.

Houston first baseman Yuli Gurriel smacked a two-run double off the left-field wall to put the Astros ahead 2-0.

Washington’s Ryan Zimmerman answered with a solo homer to centerfiel­d in the second inning and Soto blasted a solo shot to left field to start the fourth inning to equalize at 2-2.

The Nationals seized the lead for good in the fifth when catcher Kurt Suzuki walked, took second on a Victor Robles single, reached third on Trea Turner’s fly out and scored on Adam Eaton’s single to right field.

After Anthony Rendon grounded into a fielder’s choice, Soto blasted a two-run double off the left-field wall to lift the Nationals ahead 5-2 — the major league’s best lineup at scoring with two outs in an inning producing that way once again.

Astros batters wore down Scherzer, making him throw 112 pitches in five innings, so in the sixth Washington used Patrick Corbin, a possible future starter, for a scoreless relief inning.

But the Nationals bullpen of relief pitchers, with the worst earned-run average of any playoff team in major league history, couldn’t make the margin last.

Tanner Rainey entered in the seventh and surrendere­d a towering solo homer to Houston’s George Springer and two walks. Daniel Hudson replaced Rainey but Carlos Correa singled to load the bases before Hudson struck out Yordan Alvarez to end the threat.

In the eighth, Houston’s Kyle Tucker singled, took second on an

Aledmys Diaz fly out and scored on Springer’s double off the centerfiel­d fence to make it 5-4.

Doolittle entered to get the last four outs, starting with Michael Brantley’s fly out to Soto to end the eighth, and retired the Astros in order in the ninth for the save.

Cy Young winners at World Series rotations

HOUSTON (AP) — The starting rotations for the World Series between the Houston Astros and Washington Nationals are filled with former Cy Young winners and first-round draft picks.

Game 1 featured a pair of starting pitchers who were first-round draft picks — and so will Game 2. Two of the hurlers were No. 1 overall selections.

Gerrit Cole, a first-round pick both out of high school and then first overall out of college, lost for the first time in five months Tuesday night when the Astros dropped a 5-4 decision to Washington in Game 1. Three-time Cy Young winner and 2006 first-round pick Max Scherzer started and got the win for the Nationals.

Cole was picked 28th overall by the New York Yankees in 2008 but opted to go to UCLA and was selected first overall by Pittsburgh three years later. Scherzer was picked 11th overall by Arizona in 2006. He won the 2013 AL Cy Young before twice winning the NL award (2016-17).

Game 2 on Wednesday features 2011 AL Cy Young winner Justin Verlander, the second overall pick by Detroit in 2004 who is in his second World Series with Houston. Stephen Strasburg pitches for the Nationals, who took him first overall in the 2009 draft.

Another former Cy Young winner and first-round draft pick is scheduled to start for Houston in Game 3 in Washington on Friday night. Zack Greinke was the 2009 AL Cy Young winner for the Kansas City Royals, who drafted him in the first round in 2002.

This is the first World Series since 1945 to include six of the top 20 qualified pitchers in ERA for that season, according to Elias.

Astros executive apologizes

HOUSTON (AP) — The assistant general manager of the Houston Astros apologized Tuesday for using “inappropri­ate language” after a Sports Illustrate­d report said he repeatedly yelled toward a group of female reporters about closer Roberto Osuna during a clubhouse celebratio­n.

Brandon Taubman released a statement through the Astros hours before they played Game 1 of the World Series against Washington. Major League Baseball said it will interview those involved before further commenting.

Taubman’s remarks after the Astros clinched the AL pennant reportedly referenced Osuna, who was suspended for 75 games last year for violating MLB’s domestic violence policy before being traded from Toronto to the Astros.

According to SI, Taubman shouted “Thank God we got Osuna!” and made similar remarks several times, punctuatin­g them with an expletive.

SI said one of the reporters was wearing a domestic violence awareness bracelet. The incident occurred after the Astros beat the New York Yankees at Minute Maid Park on Saturday night in Game 6 of the AL Championsh­ip Series.

 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? Juan Soto of the Washington Nationals hits a solo home run against the Houston Astros during the fourth inning in Game One of the 2019 World Series at Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas, Tuesday.
AFP-Yonhap Juan Soto of the Washington Nationals hits a solo home run against the Houston Astros during the fourth inning in Game One of the 2019 World Series at Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas, Tuesday.
 ?? EPA-Yonhap ?? Washington Nationals pitcher Max Scherzer gets the ball back after Houston Astros batter Jose Altuve hit a flyout in the bottom of the third inning of their MLB 2019 World Series game one at Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas, Tuesday.
EPA-Yonhap Washington Nationals pitcher Max Scherzer gets the ball back after Houston Astros batter Jose Altuve hit a flyout in the bottom of the third inning of their MLB 2019 World Series game one at Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas, Tuesday.
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