Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Altuve: ‘We never give up’

He hits go-ahead homer in 9th to give Astros 3-2 series lead

- By Stephen Hawkins The Associated Press

ARLINGTON, Texas — Jose Altuve hit a three-run homer in the ninth inning and the Houston Astros, after getting into another bench-clearing scuffle with the Texas Rangers, rallied for a 5-4 victory Friday in a wild and testy Game 5 of the AL Championsh­ip Series.

After winning all three matchups at rival Texas, the defending World Series champions head back home to Houston needing one win to capture a third consecutiv­e pennant. They lead 3-2 in the best-of-seven playoff going into Game 6 on Sunday night.

“We’ve done it so many times. We never give up until the last out,” Altuve said.

Adolis García punctuated his towering three-run homer in the sixth with a slow trot and an empathic spike of his bat after watching the ball clear the wall to give Texas a 4-2 lead.

When the slugger came to bat again with a runner on first in the eighth, Bryan Abreu hit García on the left arm with a pitch. An angry García immediatel­y turned to get in the face of catcher Martín Maldonado — the two also jawed nose-to-nose when García touched home plate after his grand slam in Houston on July 26.

Both benches and bullpens cleared, although it didn’t appear any punches were thrown as the teams grabbed hold of each other near home plate. Once things settled down, García, Abreu and Astros manager Dusty Baker had been ejected during a delay that lasted almost 12 minutes.

After the game, umpire crew chief James Hoye told a pool reporter Abreu was ejected for throwing with intent, and García was tossed for being the aggressor in the situation.

“The guy hits a three-run homer; the next time up he gets smoked there,” Texas manager Bruce Bochy said. “I’d be upset, too, if I was Doli. But like I said, it just took too long to get things back in order, that’s what was frustratin­g me.”

Rangers closer José Leclerc gave up a leadoff single to pinch-hitter Yainer Diaz to begin the Houston ninth and walked pinch-hitter Jon Singleton at the bottom of the lineup. Altuve then pulled an 0-1 changeup over the left-field fence, just beyond the glove of a leaping Evan Carter.

It was the 26th career postseason homer for Altuve, second in major league history behind Manny Ramirez (29). The 5-foot-6 star second baseman was playing in his 101st postseason game — all with the Astros.

 ?? Julio Cortez/Associated Press ?? The Astros’ Jose Altuve (27) celebrates with teammates after Game 5 of the ALCS against the Rangers on Friday in Arlington, Texas. The Astros won, 5-4.
Julio Cortez/Associated Press The Astros’ Jose Altuve (27) celebrates with teammates after Game 5 of the ALCS against the Rangers on Friday in Arlington, Texas. The Astros won, 5-4.

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