Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Astros ‘verlander’ Rays in first game

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AL DIVISION SERIES

ASTROS 6, RAYS 2

HOUSTON — Asked what went wrong for his Tampa Bay Rays, Manager Kevin Cash invented a word.

“We got verlandere­d,” Cash said.

Justin Verlander looked every bit the October ace, Jose Altuve polished his postseason resume and the Houston Astros kept rolling, beating the Rays 6-2 on Friday to open their American League division series.

The Astros, who won a franchise-record 107 games for the best record in the majors, began their quest for a second World Series title in three years against a Rays team that downed Oakland 5-1 in the wild-card game this week.

Verlander kept up his dominant run this year when he posted an MLB-most 21 victories and fanned 300, allowing just a soft single in 7 shutout innings. He struck out 8 and improved to 8-0 in 12 career ALDS appearance­s — he’s 14-7 overall in postseason play.

He cracked up when told Cash used his performanc­e to turn his name into a verb.

“It’s a pretty great compliment,” Verlander said. “I don’t know what else to say, other than that.”

Tampa Bay got its only hit off Verlander when Brandon Lowe singled to start the fifth. Verlander ended his day by striking out the side in the seventh, pounding his fist into his glove as he walked off the mound after fanning Lowe.

Manager AJ Hinch was asked about Verlander’s knack for getting stronger late in games.

“He’s got an incredible instinct for the moment,” he said. “He leaves some gas in his tank at the end of his outings … like a good sprinter, like at the finish line, he’s going to win. He’s going to win the race at the end of his outings.”

Rays starter Tyler Glasnow had given up just three singles when he walked Josh Reddick on four pitches to begin the fifth. He struck out George Springer, but Altuve then tagged him for a tworun home run, lining a fastball into the left field seats.

“I just left that pitch up and it was a two-run home run,” Glasnow said. “Hindsight, I would go back and change some things, but can’t do anything about it now.”

The sellout crowd of 43,360, which included Astros Hall of Famers Nolan Ryan and Craig Biggio, erupted into deafening cheers and fans twirled bright orange towels as Altuve trotted around the bases, a huge grin plastered on his face.

Altuve has homered in Game 1 of the ALDS for three consecutiv­e years — including three against Boston in the 2017 opener — and the small-but-powerful second baseman now has nine home runs in 33 career postseason games.

“Just breaking through with the big swing for Jose doesn’t surprise me,” Hinch said. “It’s like clockwork, every ALDS it seems like he busts out with a really good game.”

Game 2 is today when Gerrit Cole, who has won 16 consecutiv­e decisions and led the majors in strikeouts, starts against Tampa Bay’s Blake Snell.

Altuve’s home run touched off a four-run inning. Brendan McKay took over for Glasnow and allowed a single to Michael Brantley before Alex Bregman knocked one off the wall in left for a double.

Chaz Roe relieved with two outs and Yuli Gurriel hit a high popup to shallow right field that Lowe chased from second base as right fielder Austin Meadows also dashed in. Lowe looked to have it, so Meadows pulled up — but the ball glanced off Lowe’s glove for an error that allowed two runs to score to push the lead to 4-0.

“I have to catch it plain and simple,” Lowe said. “I called it and I dropped it. Next time I just have to keep going for it and make a play on it.”

The Astros added two more runs in the seventh after Bregman walked and stole second base. AL Rookie of the Year candidate Yordan Alvarez and Gurriel followed with RBI doubles to make it 6-0.

Tampa Bay hit four home runs in its wild-card victory Wednesday at Oakland, but did nothing until Verlander left. Pinch-hitter Eric Sogard had an RBI single of Ryan Pressly with two outs in the eighth and scored on a double by Meadows to cut the lead to 6-2.

Glasnow, who came to the Rays in last year’s trade for Chris Archer that also netted Meadows, looked strong early and Houston’s powerful offense had trouble stringing anything together off him until Altuve’s shot.

The Astros loaded the bases with two outs in the third, but the big righthande­r struck out Alvarez to end the threat.

Glasnow, 26, who was making his playoff debut, had missed almost four months with a strained right forearm before his return on Sept. 8 and seemed to run out of gas in the fifth. He allowed 4 hits and 2 runs with 5 strikeouts in 41/3 innings.

Yandy Diaz, who starred with two home runs and three hits in the wild-card game, was 0 for 4 with a strikeout.

Cole is a Cy Young award contender after setting a team record by winning his last 16 decisions and topping the AL with a career-best 2.50 ERA.

His career-high 326 strikeouts were the most in the majors and set a franchise record that had stood since 1979 when J.R. Richard fanned 313.

Snell, who won the Cy Young in 2018, is happy to be healthy for the postseason after sitting out from July 22-Sept. 17 after arthroscop­ic surgery to remove bone chips in his left elbow.

Snell didn’t get out of the third inning in any of his three September starts, but believes he’ll be able to go quite a bit longer today.

“I feel very good,” he said. “I feel like I’ll be able to go five strong innings, if I’m in the zone and attacking like I should be.”

 ?? AP/MICHAEL WYKE ?? Jose Altuve (right) of the Houston Astros is congratula­ted by Josh Reddick after hitting a two-run home run in the fifth inning of the Astros’ 6-2 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays in their American League division series game Friday.
AP/MICHAEL WYKE Jose Altuve (right) of the Houston Astros is congratula­ted by Josh Reddick after hitting a two-run home run in the fifth inning of the Astros’ 6-2 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays in their American League division series game Friday.

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