Keuchel
digs deep as Astros put Royals on brink
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[October 12, 2015]
(The Sports Xchange) - Dallas
Keuchel, the ace Astros left-hander, treated his first career postseason
home start as he did others throughout the regular season, throwing
seven strong innings in Houston's 4-2 win over the Kansas City Royals on
Sunday at Minute Maid Park in Game Three of their American League
Division Series.
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The Astros took a 2-1 lead in the best-of-five series, and can
clinch a spot in the AL Division Series with a home win Monday.
Keuchel (2-0) tossed a season-high 124 pitches and dug deep into his
reservoir to strand runners at third base in each of his final two
frames.
The close of the seventh was particularly dramatic, with Keuchel
staying in to face Royals center fielder Lorenzo Cain, who homered
leading off the fourth inning. With Cain representing the tying run,
Keuchel struck him out to cap his outing and preserve his lead.
"I figured he was going to let me pitch to their best hitter,"
Keuchel said of Astros manager A.J. Hinch, who paid a mound visit
prior to the decisive at-bat.
"And I thought I deserved it. Made a mistake pitch early in the
game, but I felt like I really still had the energy and the pitch
quality to get another out."
Keuchel improved to 16-0 at home with a 1.45 ERA by allowing one run
on five hits and three walks with seven strikeouts.
Houston first baseman Chris Carter played some wobbly early defense
but offset that by going 3-for-3. Carter finished a triple shy of
the cycle, smacking a one-out double in the fifth inning and
subsequently scoring the go-ahead run, and then hitting a
first-pitch leadoff homer in the seventh off lefty Danny Duffy.
Royals right-hander Edinson Volquez (0-1) was electric through four
innings, relying on a fastball/breaking-ball mix that befuddled the
Astros. However, he carried a tenuous 1-0 lead into the fifth and
surprisingly started to unravel against the bottom of the Houston
order.
Carter doubled after third baseman Luis Valbuena worked a walk,
setting the table for catcher Jason Castro, who was hitless in nine
postseason at-bats. Castro delivered a seeing-eye single to center
field, scoring both Valbuena and Carter and delivering Houston a 2-1
lead.
"Good time to get my first hit in the postseason, that's for sure,"
Castro said.
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The Astros tacked on insurance runs in the sixth and seventh. Right
fielder George Springer doubled and scored off Volquez in the sixth,
coming home when center fielder Carlos Gomez laced a first-pitch
single to center with two outs. Carter added his first career
postseason home run an inning later, a 393-foot blast to left field.
"He's hung in all year," Hinch said of Carter, who lost his starting
job when his batting average dipped to .181 on Sept. 7.
"It hasn't been an easy year for him. It's still been a relatively
productive year for him. This guy's continued to hit homers and
maintained his composure."
Volquez allowed three runs on five hits and four walks with eight
strikeouts, departing with two outs in the sixth inning.
"It's tough. It's a tough loss for the team," Volquez said. "We
still have confidence that we can come back tomorrow and win the
game.
"I thought I pitched pretty good tonight. I was pitching against
Keuchel, who is a bulldog. He is a competitor. He can compete
against anybody."
In Game Four at Minute Maid Park, the Astros will send rookie
right-hander Lance McCullers to the mound against Royals
right-hander Yordano Ventura, who took the loss in the series
opener.
(Editing by Andrew Both)
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