San Antonio Express-News

Astros having fun while working on repeat of ’17

Tampa Bay ends 12-game streak

- By Brian Smith

Ring night was supposed to be the big night.

More than 40,000 fans swarming Minute Maid Park, just to receive a slightly less expensive version of the Astros’ 2017 World Series reward.

Then the team that won the whole darn thing last year started winning everything again this June.

Homestand finale with the then-American League West leading Mariners in town? Victory.

Four games versus the Bad News Rangers in Arlington? Sweep.

Three in Oakland, Calif. Sweep.

Three against the rebuilding Royals, who knocked off the Astros way back in 2015 to win their own rings?

Another sweep, and a perfectly dreamy 10-0 road trip.

Then there was the magical ninth inning Monday night in downtown Houston. A 4-0 Tampa Bay lead had become 4-3 Rays entering the final frame. A.J. Hinch's Astros dug in and played real baseball. Marwin Gonzalez walked on four pitches, Max Stassi ripped

a single to left field, Tony Kemp dropped down a perfect bunt and George Springer loaded the bases via a rarely seen catcher’s interferen­ce. When Alex Bregman cracked a double to left field — memories of Game 5 of the World Series immediatel­y returning to life – the scorching Astros were leaping, dancing and shouting like the peak points of 2015 and ’17 were on repeat.

Fun. Fun. Fun.

“You win one, you want to win two. Then you get the second one, you want to get the third one,” said Jose Altuve, who once again walked into the box leading MLB in batting average (.342). “Especially on this team. This team has really good chemistry, really good relationsh­ips between players.”

Twelve consecutiv­e

Ws, with a franchiser­ecord 13 was in sight and Cy Young-contender/ Houston hero Justin Verlander on the mound. However, Tampa Bay ended it with a 2-1 victory on Tuesday night as

Blake Snell and the bullpen held Houston to four hits.

A team you absolutely had to come to the ballpark for Tuesday night, bumping the triumph of sparkling fan rings Wednesday evening down a notch.

OK. Let’s not get too carried away.

The Astros (49-26, a game game behind the Red Sox and Yankees for the best record in MLB) were playing the littleknow­n Rays (34-39), whose big-league strategy Monday featured seven pitchers, with none lasting longer than 22⁄3 innings.

The hottest team in baseball also took the field before a semipacked house.

Still, the ballpark buzzed, orange Carlos Correa and Altuve shirts were everywhere, the top sections eventually filled up, and mid-June felt a little like early October for the reigning ring wearers.

Again: Just don’t tell that to the calm, cool man who’s managed four consecutiv­e seasons of mounting victories.

“I don’t think it matters while you’re doing it. I think history is for looking back and we’re not ready to look back, even to (Monday),” said Hinch, before Tampa Bay lefthander Blake Snell attempted to prevent yet another Astros W.

“When you put things together or put things in perspectiv­e over time, we’ll recognize what a championsh­ip was like last year or what some of these streaks are like this year or what a rotation that we have.

“I don’t want to rush to judge history until I’m old and I can look back and realize what exactly it means. And it’s fun to do what we’re doing. I’d like to stay present, in the moment, and not obsess over what we’re doing, but just continue the good ways.”

Oh so zen from Professor Hinch.

Very rebuilt Astros, who win the modern game the right way —except when they’re running into early-inning outs on the bases —all while balancing the constant glow of the future with the direct focus of the day.

Only two teams in team history had previously reached 12 consecutiv­e wins. The year after your baseball club finally won it all, Gerrit Cole was added, Altuve received the largest contract in franchise history, and Jeff “Architect” Luhnow received a promotion, another job title and an extension through 2023. Winning is contagious. “It’s a lot of fun. It’s challengin­g,” said Cole, who’s 8-1 with a 2.59 ERA since he was surrounded by winning baseball again. “Oftentimes, this game puts you in situations where there’s a lot of failure, whether you can control that or not. So when you get favorable outcomes – when you put in the hard work, when you put in a lot of focus – it’s something to be excited about. This is probably the longest winning streak I’ve had in the major leagues and second-longest winning streak I’ve been a part of.”

Evan Gattis received a standing ovation for the second consecutiv­e game.

Altuve leads everyone else in MLB — Mike Trout, Mookie Betts, Aaron Judge — in AllStar votes.

A golden championsh­ip banner already hangs above the left-field wall for a team that entered Tuesday just a single game off its recordsett­ing 2017 pace.

The clubhouse doors open and you hear music pumping, witness an in-progress card game, watch a pitcher playing a video game inside an open locker, and listen to a veteran outfielder try to figure out if George Strait or Tim McGraw is crooning through the speakers.

”The grind that my career has been so far, it’s a blessing to be in a major league clubhouse,” Kemp said. “To come to a clubhouse like this is something special.” Something special. That said it all.

 ?? Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle ?? Astros third base coach Gary Pettis holds left fielder Marwin Gonzalez back after he was ejected in the fourth inning.
Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle Astros third base coach Gary Pettis holds left fielder Marwin Gonzalez back after he was ejected in the fourth inning.
 ?? Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle ?? Astros second baseman Alex Bregman is tagged out by Rays shortstop Adeiny Hechavarri­a after hitting an RBI single to right, and thrown out trying to stretch the hit into a double during the third inning.
Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle Astros second baseman Alex Bregman is tagged out by Rays shortstop Adeiny Hechavarri­a after hitting an RBI single to right, and thrown out trying to stretch the hit into a double during the third inning.

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