McCullers, Astros aim to even series with Rays
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[October 12, 2020]
The Houston Astros slugged their
way to the American League Championship Series, flexing their
offensive might by scoring 33 runs and bashing 12 homers against the
Oakland Athletics.
By most every measure, the Tampa Bay Rays would present a more
formidable challenge for the Houston offense, and in Game 1 on
Sunday at Petco Park in San Diego, the Rays lived up to their
advanced billing by limiting Houston to a first-inning Jose Altuve
solo home run in a 2-1 win that enabled Tampa Bay to grab a 1-0
series lead with Game 2 set for Monday at Petco Park.
The Rays went 14-5 in one-run games during the regular season and
eliminated the New York Yankees by the same 2-1 score last Friday to
close that AL Division Series. The Rays finished second in the AL in
ERA (3.56), and Houston is aware that runs might be a scarce
commodity.
In the series opener, the Astros finished 2-for-8 with runners in
scoring position and stranded 10 base runners total. When they
manufactured prime scoring opportunities in the fourth and eighth
innings, the Astros squandered them by hitting into double plays
that squelched those rallies.
"It's disappointing but those guys have a good pitching staff,"
Astros manager Dusty Baker said. "We hit some balls good.
Opportunity is the name of the game. If you keep getting
opportunities, sooner or later you're going to come through. But if
you don't get any opportunities, you don't have a chance.
"It hurts to lose these one-run games. They're good in these one-run
games, but I just knew that we were going to pull it out."
The Astros will look to even the series behind right-hander Lance
McCullers Jr. (3-3, 3.93 ERA during the regular season), who is 1-0
with a 3.25 ERA over 12 career postseason appearances (five starts).
He labored but did not factor into the decision in his lone start
this postseason, allowing five runs (four earned) on eight hits and
one walk with five strikeouts over four innings in the Astros' 10-5
win over the Athletics in Game 1 of the ALDS. This will mark
McCullers' first appearance against the Rays after he missed last
season following elbow surgery.
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The Rays will counter with right-hander Charlie Morton (2-2, 4.74
ERA), the winning pitcher in the Astros' Game 7 win over the Los
Angeles Dodgers in the 2017 World Series, a game started by
McCullers. Morton earned the win against the Astros in Game 3 of the
2019 ALDS, allowing one run on three hits and two walks with nine
strikeouts over five innings. He is 5-2 with a 3.50 ERA in 10 career
postseason appearances (nine starts) with Pittsburgh, Houston and
the Rays.
For his career, Morton is 4-6 with a 6.28 ERA in 11 starts against
the Astros.
Given the schedule awaiting both teams, with the best-of-seven
series contested without any breaks, pitching depth will be
paramount. The Rays have a distinct advantage in that regard and
showcased that edge in Game 1 with four relievers hurling four
scoreless innings in support of starter Blake Snell, who wobbled a
bit yet limited the Astros to one run over five solid frames.
"Pitching-wise we have a lot of guys that are very ready for this
moment," Snell said. "It's exciting."
In Game 1, relievers Aaron Loup and John Curtiss emerged from
secondary roles and delivered.
"Certainly our team recognizes that guys maybe not called upon in
the five-game series are now going to be called upon," Rays manager
Kevin Cash said. "We definitely have the confidence to send them out
there and there was an example of that with (Loup) and John
Curtiss."
--Field Level Media
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