Los Angeles Times

Justin time:

He strikes out 13, and Astros win on a walk-off hit by Correa to take a 2-0 series advantage.

- By Pedro Moura pedro.moura@latimes.com Twitter: @pedromoura

Verlander strikes out 13 and Astros win on walk-off hit.

HOUSTON 2, NEW YORK 1

— In the middle of the Houston Astros’ second consecutiv­e victory over the New York Yankees, Minute Maid Park became a playground, and major leaguers morphed into pre-teen pickup basketball players.

The Yankees had a man on second base in Saturday’s fifth inning, trailing the Astros by one run. Justin Verlander whipped a slider across the zone, and Todd Frazier sent a liner soaring toward the visiting bullpen beyond left-center.

At that moment, the second game of the American League Championsh­ip Series felt like after school in a suburb somewhere.

Frazier’s drive lodged itself between chain-link fencing and a uselessly high piece of padding, and Aaron Hicks scored the tying run as Frazier sprinted around the bases. Dumbfounde­d, Astros center fielder George Springer first tried to shake the baseball loose, like a 12-year-old faced with a particular­ly sturdy stanchion.

Finally informed of the ball’s location by Yankees reliever David Robertson, Springer tore off his glove and chucked it at the ball. Nothing worked until Robertson bounded from a bullpen chair to take it down. By then, Frazier had been sent back to second with a ground-rule double.

The score stayed tied, 1-1, until the bottom of the ninth, when Jose Altuve scampered home from first on Carlos Correa’s double to rightcente­r. Correa slid into second base, popped up, and watched the play at the plate, as catcher Gary Sanchez dropped the ball to grant the Astros the winning run.

On a normal relay play, Altuve would’ve been out by yards. But the Yankees flubbed every part of it, rewarding Houston’s risk. As a sold-out crowd of 43,193 fans clamored into a din, Correa yanked off his helmet and flung it as far as he could. He brought both hands to his chest and nearly ripped off his jersey. The Astros’ 2-1 victory provided them a powerful 2-0 lead in this series that moves Monday to New York City.

Functional­ly, the Astros won because of Verlander, who turned in a sublime start to match the moment. In firing a complete-game five-hitter, striking out 13, he ventured far beyond where starters range in modern postseason­s. Before this effort, no starter had obtained even one out in the eighth this month.

“That’s a performanc­e for the ages,” Springer said. “He came out and struck out 15, 14 — whatever it was, who cares.”

It was the kind of performanc­e that rendered statistics and pitch counts irrelevant. Verlander possessed the stuff from the start. In the first inning, he set up both Brett Gardner and Aaron Judge with steady heat, then spun vicious sliders to secure strikeouts.

New York generated few chances. With one out in the third, Josh Reddick hopped at the rightfield wall to snag a Chase Headley drive. Gardner next whacked a ball down the right-field line, but a wellHOUSTO­N executed relay throw beat him to third. Though Gardner was called safe, the Astros walked off the field as soon as the review began, certain he was out.

In the fourth, Correa powered a Luis Severino fastball to right field, with Judge giving chase. As he neared the wall, a young fan in the first row reached out to make the catch. The ball bounced off his glove and into the stands for a home run. A review confirmed the call, officials determinin­g the baseball was bound for the seats anyway. The Astros weren’t so sure.

“I love that kid,” said their manager, A.J. Hinch. “I want to leave that kid tickets.”

The Yankees’ only run scored on the game’s only weirder play. Hours later, Springer’s teammates laughed endlessly at his expense, interrupti­ng his answer to a reporter to supply advice.

“Hands up next time,” said injured outfielder Jake Marisnick. “Don’t throw your glove at it. We’ll address it later.”

In the moment, Springer kept thinking the umpires had to see him attempt to field the ball, or they’d call it a home run.

“That was my attempt,” he pleaded to Marisnick.

Verlander, the Astros’ Aug. 31 acquisitio­n, has thrown at least 200 innings in 10 of the last 11 seasons. His right arm is as resilient as exists in the sport today, and his confidence is not far behind.

Verlander said Friday that he often wonders how he would’ve handled long-ago baseball, when the best pitchers handled far more innings per season. He indicated his enduring mechanics made him think he could do it.

Saturday’s effort strengthen­ed Verlander’s case. Hinch didn’t even question him after the eighth, knowing he’d fight to remain on the mound. As he surpassed 120 pitches, he showed no signs of decline. His last pitch was a sharp slider that yielded a weak grounder, and he shouted various excited phrases as he marched off the field.

“It’s definitely one of the most satisfying starts I’ve had in my career,” he said.

 ?? Elsa Garrison Getty Images ?? JOSE ALTUVE EXULTS as he scores the winning run on Carlos Correa’s double in the bottom of the ninth inning. The throw beat Altuve, but Yankees catcher Gary Sanchez couldn’t handle it.
Elsa Garrison Getty Images JOSE ALTUVE EXULTS as he scores the winning run on Carlos Correa’s double in the bottom of the ninth inning. The throw beat Altuve, but Yankees catcher Gary Sanchez couldn’t handle it.

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