Houston Chronicle Sunday

Patchwork pitching stays firm

- By Noah Trister

BALTIMORE — For the first time this postseason, the maligned Texas bullpen had to protect a slim lead in the late innings.

Josh Sborz, Aroldis Chapman and José Leclerc wobbled but didn't fall.

Andrew Heaney and Dane Dunning helped Texas reach the sixth inning ahead, and the Rangers held on through some anxious moments for a 3-2 victory over the Baltimore Orioles in Game 1 of their AL Division Series on Saturday.

“The bullpen did a great job,” manager Bruce Bochy said. “Got bumpy, but found a way to get through it.”

Josh Jung homered and made a nice play at third base to start a critical double play for Texas, which improved to 3-0 in these playoffs — all on the road.

After leading the AL West most of the season but squanderin­g the division crown on the final weekend, the wild-card Rangers entered the postseason without Jacob deGrom and Max Scherzer — and with a bullpen largely considered a weak link. But they've allowed only three runs in three games against the Orioles and Rays.

The late innings weren't all that stressful in the Wild Card Series against Tampa Bay, as Texas outscored the Rays 11-1 for a two-game sweep. It was a more nervous finish against the Orioles.

Heaney held Baltimore to a run and two hits in 32⁄3 innings. Dunning relieved him and went two innings for the win, allowing a run in the sixth. Will Smith, Sborz, Chapman and Leclerc combined for the final 10 outs — but not without some drama.

Sborz threw seven straight balls to start the seventh but pitched around a leadoff walk. Chapman walked the first two batters in the eighth before Jung ranged to his left and snagged Anthony Santander's high bouncer on a short hop to start a 54-3 double play. Chapman then struck out Ryan Mountcastl­e with a runner on third to end the inning.

Leclerc earned the save, although he allowed a leadoff single in the ninth to Gunnar Henderson. All-Star catcher Jonah Heim threw out Henderson trying to steal second, and the Orioles didn't manage another baserunner.

Baltimore manager Brandon Hyde didn't appear happy in the dugout with Henderson's decision to go.

“A little miscommuni­cation there,” Hyde said.

Kyle Bradish struck out nine in 42⁄3 innings for the Orioles but allowed two runs in the fourth to take the loss. Jung and Santander traded solo homers in the sixth.

Texas has been without deGrom for a while, and the Rangers left Scherzer off their ALDS roster Saturday because of shoulder problems that have kept him out since mid-September. So far, however, the Rangers' pitching has held up.

Jordan Montgomery and Nathan Eovaldi kept

the Rays at bay in the Wild Card Series, and then the Heaney-Dunning tandem gave the Rangers a chance to win again.

The Orioles won 101 games and a division title this year, but it's been a rough start to the playoffs for the AL East. Tampa Bay and Toronto were swept in the first round, and now Baltimore is trailing after its postseason opener.

Adolis García and Evan Carter hit consecutiv­e doubles to put Texas up 1-0 in the fourth, and Heim followed with an RBI single.

The 21-year-old Carter became the youngest player in major league history with four extra-base hits in his first three postseason games.

Mountcastl­e hit a runscoring

double for the Orioles in the bottom of the inning, but Dunning came in and held the lead.

Texas was clinging to a 3-2 advantage in the seventh when Sborz issued a leadoff walk to Aaron Hicks on four pitches. The righthande­r then battled back from a 3-0 count and retired Adam Frazier on a flyball. Sborz struck out Cedric Mullins and pinchhitte­r Ryan O'Hearn to end the inning.

“I think we respond fine,” Hyde said. “We just need to get some early runs. Even the last week or so of the season, just had a tough time kind of scoring early. It takes a lot of pressure off a lot of people, on the mound and on themselves, if we can try to get a few runs across early.”

 ?? Andrew Harnik/Associated Press ?? A solo home run by Josh Jung, left, in the sixth inning proved to be the difference as the Rangers took Game 1 for their third consecutiv­e playoff victory without a loss this year.
Andrew Harnik/Associated Press A solo home run by Josh Jung, left, in the sixth inning proved to be the difference as the Rangers took Game 1 for their third consecutiv­e playoff victory without a loss this year.

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