San Antonio Express-News

Reason for Astros’ success in Arlington? ‘I don’t know’

- By Stephen Hawkins

ARLINGTON— Houston manager Dusty Baker and third baseman Alex Bregman really have no explanatio­n for why the Astros have been so good in that other retractabl­eroof stadium in Texas.

“I have no clue, to be honest with you,” Bregman said. “But I think the focus has been really good in that clubhouse.”

They do know the 250mile trip north and another big-scoring road game against the Rangers has pulled Houston even in the American League Championsh­ip Series.

José Abreu hit a threerun homer right after Yordan Alvarez's goahead sacrifice fly, and the Astros rolled to a 10-3 victory in Game 4 on Thursday night. They led 3-0 only four batters into the game, and they responded immediatel­y after Texas tied it on Corey Seager's opposite-field homer in the third inning.

Adolis García also homered for the wild-card Rangers, who have dropped two games in a row at home after starting this postseason with seven consecutiv­e wins — six on the road. That included sweeps of the AL'S two winningest teams, Baltimore and Tampa Bay.

“Nobody thought it was going to be easy,” Texas manager Bruce Bochy said. “(The Astros) have played very well in this ballpark. We need to change that.”

Game 5 was Friday at Globe Life Field, where the defending World Series champion Astros entered 8-1 this season. The home team has yet to lead in this ALCS, which switches back to Houston for Game 6 on Sunday night.

“They keep asking me that same question,” Baker said about his team's success in Arlington. “I've got the same answer: I don't know.”

Jose Altuve had three hits in his 100th career postseason game and scored three runs for a record sixth time. Alvarez drove in three, giving him 13 RBIS already this postseason, and Chas Mccormick

added a two-run homer.

“It makes it even more special because we won,” said Altuve, the seventh big leaguer to play in 100 postseason games. “Nothing's done yet, but to be able to get the opportunit­y to come back and tie the series ... it's really important for us.”

The Astros have outscored Texas 74-32 in winning their last seven games at Globe Life. They won 8-5 in Game 3 of the first postseason series between the instate AL West rivals.

“They crush the ball here, man. I don't have an answer other than that,” Rangers first baseman Nathaniel Lowe said. “Maybe it's too nice in the visiting clubhouse and we need to maybe switch up the spread, leave something uncooked a little bit.”

AL West champion Houston has won 18 of its past 21 road games overall, including a threegame sweep during the first week of September when the Astros homered 16 times and outscored the Rangers 39-10.

Dane Dunning, who entered in relief for Texas in the first inning, had an 0-2 count against No. 9 batter Martin Maldonado to open the fourth with the game tied before walking him and then Altuve. Mauricio Dubón followed with his second soft single of the game before Bregman struck out with the bases loaded.

Rookie lefty Cody Bradford came on, and Alvarez hit his ninth pitch 401 feet to the warning track in center field for a sac fly. Abreu's fourth homer this postseason made it 7-3.

“I went up there, I needed a great swing (and) thankfully the pitch was where I wanted it to be,” Abreu said through a translator.

Ryne Stanek got the win, throwing only one pitch after replacing starter José Urquidy in the third. Stanek threw a slider to induce Mitch Garver's inning-ending double-play grounder.

“Wild,” Stanek said. “It's something that you only even notice it way after . ... You're just going to go out and do my job and by circumstan­ce I happen to get a win.”

 ?? Brett Coomer/staff photograph­er ?? Astros designated hitter Yordan Alvarez watches the ball after hitting a sacrifice fly to score Martin Maldonado in the fourth inning of Game 4.
Brett Coomer/staff photograph­er Astros designated hitter Yordan Alvarez watches the ball after hitting a sacrifice fly to score Martin Maldonado in the fourth inning of Game 4.

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