Close
calls lean toward Red Sox on way to 3-1 ALCS lead
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[October 18, 2018]
The cumulative effect of so many
close calls seemingly favoring their opponent seems to be wearing
thin on the Houston Astros. It's only a game of inches when there is
balance in that distribution; when that outlay appears skewed,
frustration can manifest.
The Astros witnessed those delicate inches work against them on
Wednesday at Minute Maid Park in Game 4 of the American League
Championship Series. The first instance where distance mattered came
in the bottom of the first inning; two more unfolded in the eighth
and the ninth before the Boston Red Sox sealed their 8-6 victory and
secured a commanding 3-1 series lead.
In the bottom of the first, with Boston having already scratched
across two runs off right-hander Charlie Morton, who recorded just
seven outs in his first start since Sept. 30, the Astros fashioned
what seemed a hasty response against Red Sox right-hander Rick
Porcello.
With a runner on first and one out, Jose Altuve drilled a deep fly
ball to right field, and Boston's Mookie Betts made a leaping stab
for it at the wall.
Betts' glove, the baseball and a collection of hands attached to
eager fans met simultaneously, and right field umpire Joe West ruled
fan interference, robbing Altuve of a game-tying, two-run home run.
Despite what looked to be clear evidence that Betts reached into the
stands on his attempt, a replay review upheld the initial call on
the field, and Porcello escaped the inning unscathed.
"When I hit the ball, I was expecting to tie the game. I thought I
did," Altuve said. "They called an out. It's tough. That was two
runs in the first inning that would have helped us a bit more."
Ultimately, the Astros clawed back from a 3-1 deficit via solo home
runs from George Springer in the third inning and Tony Kemp in the
fourth, both off Porcello. Carlos Correa produced two RBI singles,
the second of which came against the Red Sox's Joe Kelly (1-1),
drove in Yuli Gurriel and lifted the Astros to a 5-4 lead in the
fifth. That advantage was short-lived.
Boston center fielder Jackie Bradley Jr. struck the decisive blow
for a third consecutive game, smacking a first-pitch changeup from
Astros right-hander Josh James (0-1) into the right field seats with
two outs in the sixth inning to swing the pendulum back toward the
Red Sox.
James had limited Boston to one run after entering in relief of
Morton in the third inning. However, after recording two quick outs
in the sixth, he surrendered a double to Christian Vazquez before
Bradley pounced on James' off-speed offering. The flame-throwing
James averaged 99.4 mph over 23 fastballs.
[to top of second column] |
Astros shortstop Carlos Correa (1) attempts a double play during the
seventh inning against the Boston Red Sox in game four of the 2018
ALCS playoff baseball series at Minute Maid Park. Mandatory Credit:
Troy Taormina-USA TODAY Sports
Bradley supplied the Red Sox a 6-5 lead with his two-run shot, his
second home run in as many games and third game-altering extra-base
hit in the series. He slugged an eighth-inning grand slam in
Boston's 8-2 Game 3 win and hit a third-inning, three-run double in
the Red Sox's 7-5 Game 2 victory.
"I'm very proud of him," Red Sox manager Alex Cora said of Bradley.
"What he's done in the second part of the season and what he's done
tonight and in this series, it's amazing. He keeps working on his
craft, his swing. He understands now, he's staying through the ball,
hitting the ball in the air. There's no more hitting line drives
into the shift. Now he hits the ball in the air."
When the Astros refused to wilt, despite Boston extending to an 8-5
lead in the eighth, the Red Sox turned to their sparkling outfield
defense.
Kemp attempted to stretch a leadoff single into a double in the
eighth, and Betts barely threw him out, a key out considering the
Astros scored later that frame against Boston closer Craig Kimbrel.
When Houston loaded the bases with two outs in the ninth, Kimbrel
surrendered a first-pitch, sinking line drive to Alex Bregman.
Andrew Benintendi snagged it with a game-saving, diving catch in
left field.
"We take all the pride in the world," Betts said of the outfield
defense. "It wins games like it did today. It's just one of those
things where it just takes effort. We're all athletes that give
effort."
Favorable close calls aside, the Red Sox are on the cusp of their
first AL pennant since 2013 because of their offensive attack. The
Astros allowed the fewest runs (534) of any AL staff in a non-strike
season since the designated hitter was instituted in 1973. The Red
Sox have laid waste to that pitching, scoring 23 runs -- 16 via
two-out RBIs -- over Games 2-4.
"Their offense is relentless," Astros manager A.J. Hinch said. "It's
been relentless since March since we first saw them in spring
training. Getting through them, getting through the at-bats, you
watch them hang in there. They draw walks when you shy away from the
zone. They get two-out hits. They're a full offense to deal with on
a nightly basis. That's what's going on."
--Field Level Media
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