MLB roundup: Yankees complete
winning trip
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[August 29, 2019]
James Paxton and three relievers
combined on a three-hitter, Aaron Judge continued his tear by
hitting a two-run homer in the fifth inning, and the New York
Yankees ended their nine-game West Coast road trip with a 7-3
victory over the Seattle Mariners on Wednesday afternoon.
The Yankees, who hit four homers in the game, ended their trip at
5-4. They won the final four games and five of the last six after
starting the trip with three straight losses in Oakland last week.
New York swept three games in Seattle.
Paxton (11-6) struck out four, walked five and threw 86 pitches in
winning his sixth consecutive start.
Judge's homer was fifth in six games and sixth on the trip. Gary
Sanchez reached 30 homers for the second time in his career while
Mike Ford and DJ LeMahieu also homered as the Yankees ended the trip
with 18 homers in the last six games.
Astros 8, Rays 6
Jake Marisnick capped a three-run seventh inning by scoring on a
throwing error as host Houston rallied past Tampa Bay.
The Astros scored three times in the seventh off Diego Castillo
(2-8), erasing a 4-3 deficit and taking Gerrit Cole off the hook for
what would have been his first loss since late May.
Cole matched his season high with 14 strikeouts and set a franchise
record with his 15th double-digit strikeout game of 2019, eclipsing
the mark set by J.R. Richard in 1978 and matched by Richard the
following campaign. But Cole surrendered four runs on six hits over
6 2/3 innings after allowing just six earned runs over his previous
six starts combined.
Dodgers 6, Padres 4 (10 innings)
Enrique Hernandez scored on a two-out throwing error by San Diego
shortstop Luis Urias, leading visiting Los Angeles to a win in the
rubber match of a three-game series.
Hernandez drew a two-out walk from Kirby Yates (0-5) and stole
second. Russell Martin then hit a one-hop rocket to Urias, who made
a nice stop on the ball. However, the throw to first sailed over the
head of Eric Hosmer, allowing Hernandez to race home. The error was
the rookie infielder's fifth in the past eight games.
The Padres tied the game in the bottom of the ninth on a wild pitch
by Kenley Jansen (4-3). Casey Sadler, the Dodgers' seventh pitcher,
pitched around a single in the bottom of the 10th to record his
first career save.
Brewers 4, Cardinals 1
Rookie Keston Hiura drove in three runs to lead host Milwaukee past
St. Louis to avoid a sweep.
Hiura delivered an RBI groundout, a solo home run and a run-scoring
double as the Brewers snapped the Cardinals' six-game winning streak
and moved back to within 5 1/2 games of National League
Central-leading St. Louis, which fell for just the fourth time in
the past 19 games.
Brewers starter Jordan Lyles (9-8) allowed just one run while
striking out nine batters in 5 1/3 innings. He gave up six hits and
walked one to improve to 4-1 in with a 2.51 ERA six starts since
arriving in a trade with the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Twins 8, White Sox 2
Jonathan Schoop homered twice, and Jake Odorizzi pitched six strong
innings to lift the visiting Minnesota to its fourth straight
victory.
Odorizzi (14-6) scattered two runs on five hits with two walks and
eight strikeouts.
Schoop drilled his second home run of the series in the second
inning, connecting for a three-run shot that gave him 20 homers this
season. The blast allowed the Twins to tie a major league record,
giving them seven players with at least 20 home runs.
Indians 4, Tigers 2
Jason Kipnis hit a pair of solo homers, Francisco Lindor hit a
go-ahead shot, and Cleveland continued its dominance over Detroit
with a road victory.
Lindor broke a 2-2 tie in the eighth inning off Buck Farmer (5-5)
with his 24th homer. Lindor had three hits and scored two runs.
Carlos Santana added two hits and an RBI for Cleveland, which has
defeated the Tigers in 14 of 15 games this season.
Rookie Aaron Civale (2-3) limited the Tigers to two runs on six hits
in seven innings, with no walks and five strikeouts. Both of his
career victories have come against Detroit. Brad Hand notched his
32nd save by pitching a 1-2-3 ninth inning.
Cubs 10, Mets 7
Ian Happ's two-run homer capped a six-run first inning as Chicago
took a big lead early, then withstood rallies by host New York to
clip the Mets.
The Cubs have won the first two games of the three-game set to open
a four-game lead over the Mets in the race for the NL's second
wild-card spot. New York has lost five straight.
Kyle Schwarber and Nicholas Castellanos also homered for the Cubs.
Mets starter Noah Syndergaard allowed 10 runs (nine earned) on nine
hits in three innings. He is the first Mets pitcher since Johan
Santana on May 2, 2010, to give up 10 runs in a start.
Royals 6, Athletics 4
Hunter Dozier capped a three-RBI performance with a tiebreaking
single in the seventh inning to send Kansas City past visiting
Oakland.
A's third baseman Matt Chapman was hit in the head by a Jakob Junis
pitch in the first inning but played in the field in the bottom of
the first and batted in the second. But he was pulled from the game
before the bottom of the second.
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Yankees starting pitcher James Paxton (65) throws against the
Seattle Mariners during the first inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory
Credit: Joe Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports
Thanks to homers by Marcus Semien and Mark Canha, the A's held leads
of 2-0 and 4-2 but the Royals were the only team to score over the
final 4 1/2 innings to get the win.
Braves 9, Blue Jays 4
Matt Joyce and Freddie Freeman each homered and were among four
Atlanta players with two RBIs as the Braves pulled away from host
Toronto.
Braves starter Mike Foltynewicz allowed three runs (two earned),
eight hits and two walks in 4 2/3 innings and did not qualify for
the win as the teams split a two-game set. Reliever Luke Jackson
(8-2) allowed two hits and a run in 1 1/3 innings to pick up the
win.
Blue Jays starter Jacob Waguespack (4-2) allowed five runs (three
earned), six hits and two walks in three innings. His undoing was a
five-run second inning in which Joyce homered and Rafael Ortega,
Ronald Acuna Jr. and Freeman each hit run-scoring doubles, Acuna's
driving in two.
Nationals 8, Orioles 4
Kurt Suzuki homered and finished with four RBIs, and host Washington
rode a five-run first inning to defeat Baltimore and split the
four-game season series between Beltway interleague rivals.
Washington's Max Scherzer, in just his second start since coming off
the injured list after recovering from problems with his upper back
and shoulder, was pulled after 4 1/3 innings. He gave up two runs on
six hits and struck out eight with one walk.
Wander Suero (5-7), who followed Scherzer to the mound, faced one
batter and got the win. Baltimore starter Asher Wojciechowski (2-7)
went four innings, giving up six hits and five runs. He struck out
three and didn't walk a batter.
Phillies 12, Pirates 3
After failing to hold a 7-0 lead in his last start, Philadelphia
pitcher Vince Velasquez (6-7) gave up two runs in five innings while
the Phillies offense scored five times in the fifth inning and
cruised past visiting Pittsburgh.
J.T. Realmuto went 3-for-5 with a home run and a triple, and Corey
Dickerson added a homer for the Phillies. Cesar Hernandez notched
three hits and three RBIs, and Bryce Harper contributed two hits and
scored three times in Philadelphia's 17-hit attack.
Rhys Hoskins broke out of a 7-for-71 (.099) slump with a triple in
the second, then stroked an RBI double in the third for his first
two-hit game since July 24. All eight starting position players for
the Phillies recorded an RBI.
Red Sox 7, Rockies 4
Xander Bogaerts hit two of Boston's four home runs, Eduardo
Rodriguez won his third straight start, and the Red Sox beat
Colorado in Denver.
J.D. Martinez and Rafael Devers also homered, and Rodriguez (16-5)
extended his scoreless streak to 20 innings before giving up his
first run in three starts. Boston moved within five games of the
second AL wild-card position.
Brandon Workman struck out all three batters he faced in the ninth
for his ninth save of the season. Colorado's Charlie Blackmon and
manager Bud Black were ejected by plate umpire Jerry Meals for
arguing a called third strike that produced the first out of the
inning.
Reds 5, Marlins 0
Anthony DeSclafani pitched seven scoreless innings against his
former team, leading visiting Cincinnati to a shutout win in Miami
and putting the Reds one win from a four-game sweep.
DeSclafani (9-7) allowed just two hits -- both singles -- and one
walk while striking out eight batters. He is one win away from the
first double-figure-victory season of his career, although this is
the third time in five years that he has reached nine victories.
DeSclafani was backed by Aristides Aquino, who went 2-for-4 with
three RBIs, a homer and a double. Eugenio Suarez was another Reds
hitting star, going 2-for-4 with a homer. He leads Cincinnati with
38 homers and has gone deep in four consecutive games.
Rangers 3, Angels 0
Ariel Jurado threw six scoreless innings, and Isiah Kiner-Falefa had
a key two-run double to lead Texas past Los Angeles Angels in
Anaheim, Calif.
Jurado (7-10) entered to begin the second inning after opener
Emmanuel Clase narrowly avoided damage in the first inning. Jurado
gave up just two hits -- a fourth-inning double by Kole Calhoun and
a seventh-inning single by Calhoun -- on 66 pitches, striking one
and walking one.
The Angels were without Mike Trout, who was out with a sore right
foot. Trout is expected back in the lineup on Friday following the
team's day off.
--Field Level Media
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