MLB roundup: Brewers, Astros in playoffs with losing records
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[September 28, 2020]
Harrison Bader powered the
playoff-bound St. Louis Cardinals to a 5-2 win Sunday over visiting
Milwaukee, but the Brewers were still the big winners as they
grabbed the last spot in the National League postseason.
Bader hit a triple, blasted a solo homer and scored twice as the
fifth-seeded Cardinals will head on the road to face the
fourth-seeded San Diego Padres in a National League wild-card
series.
With the Philadelphia Phillies and San Francisco Giants also losing
Sunday, the Brewers grabbed the No. 8 seed in the NL. Milwaukee and
the American League's Houston Astros are the first teams ever to
make the playoffs with a losing record. The Brewers will face the
top-seeded Los Angeles Dodgers.
Cardinals starting pitcher Austin Gomber allowed one run on one hit,
two walks and a hit batter in four innings. Reliever Giovanny
Gallegos (2-2) pitched two scoreless innings to earn the victory and
Alex Reyes closed out the game to earn his first save.
Rangers 8, Astros 4
Rougned Odor hit a pair of home runs and host Texas parlayed a
five-run fourth inning into a victory over Houston, giving the
Rangers the four-game series win in Arlington, Texas.
Texas trailed 3-1 before Odor smacked a three-run home run to right
field off Astros right-hander Chase De Jong (0-1) with one out in
the fourth. Odor clubbed his 10th homer an inning later off
right-hander Nivaldo Rodriguez, who entered in relief of De Jong
with the bases loaded and two outs in the fourth. Odor finished
2-for-3 with four RBIs, two runs and a walk.
The Astros, who finished 9-23 on the road, will open their American
League wild-card series at Minnesota on Tuesday as the sixth seed.
Houston posted its first losing season since 2014 and joined the
Milwaukee Brewers in becoming the first teams in baseball history to
make the postseason with records below .500.
Padres 5, Giants 4
San Diego ended host San Francisco's playoff hopes as Wil Myers
doubled, homered and drove in two runs, and the Padres held off the
Giants' comeback bid on the final day of the regular season.
While the Padres were already locked into the National League's No.
4 playoff position, the Giants needed a win and a Milwaukee Brewers
loss at St. Louis to claim a wild-card spot. The Cardinals did their
part for the Giants, beating the Brewers 5-2, but San Francisco
couldn't complete a rally from a 5-1 deficit.
The Padres will take a three-game winning streak into their
best-of-three home series against the fifth-seeded Cardinals,
beginning on Wednesday.
Dodgers 5, Angels 0
Six pitchers combined to throw a three-hit shutout to lead the
playoff-bound Dodgers to the victory over the Angels at Dodger
Stadium.
A.J. Pollock homered twice to propel the Dodgers, and also singled,
drove in three runs and scored twice as the Dodgers finished 43-17,
the best record in the majors.
The Dodgers have qualified for the playoffs in seven consecutive
seasons, while the Angels finished 26-34 and out of the postseason
for the sixth year in a row. Billy Eppler, the Angels' general
manager for five of those seasons, was fired by the club on Sunday.
Nationals 15, Mets 5
Trea Turner hit a grand slam and finished with seven RBIs, and
21-year-old Juan Soto became the youngest National League batting
champion as host Washington routed New York.
The Nationals won the final three games of the four-game series to
officially move past the Mets in the National League East and avoid
becoming just the third reigning World Series champion to finish
last. Washington finished fourth by virtue of winning the season
series 6-4.
Soto finished the regular season with a .351 batting average, ahead
of runner-up Freddie Freeman (.341) and No. 3 Marcell Ozuna (.338),
both of the Braves.
Marlins 5, Yankees 0
New York's DJ LeMahieu wrapped up the American League batting title,
but the Yankees were dealt a shutout loss by visiting Miami in the
regular-season finale for both teams.
LeMahieu finished with a .364 batting average to win the AL batting
title, and became the first player to win batting titles in both
leagues after winning the 2016 crown with Colorado in 2016.
Jazz Chisholm hit a two-run double and homered for the Marlins, who
secured their first winning record since 2009 but also lost
outfielder Starling Marte (ear contusion) and starting pitcher Jose
Urena (hand) in the opening three innings.
Red Sox 9, Braves 1
Boston concluded a disappointing season with a power surge, belting
four home runs to defeat host Atlanta, which had already won the NL
East and secured the No. 2 seed for the playoffs.
The Red Sox got solo home runs from Jackie Bradley Jr., Xander
Bogaerts and Jonathan Arauz, the first of his career. J.D. Martinez
hit a two-run opposite-field homer to start a five-run uprising in
the seventh that put the game out of reach. Nick Pivetta (2-0)
worked five innings and allowed one run on four hits, two walks and
five strikeouts.
Atlanta's Marcell Ozuna fell short in his bid to become the first
National League player to win the Triple Crown since Joe "Ducky"
Medwick in 1937. Ozuna hit a solo homer, his 18th, and finished with
56 RBIs -- both NL league-leading totals. His average of .338 fell
short of the .351 posted by Washington's Juan Soto.
Orioles 7, Blue Jays 5
Cedric Mullins had two triples and two RBIs to help Baltimore
salvage the finale of a regular season-ending three-game series with
a win over Toronto in Buffalo.
The Blue Jays, who will enter the playoffs as the No. 8 seed in the
American League, still won eight of their 10 meetings with the
Orioles this season. Lourdes Gurriel Jr. was 4-for-4 with a two-run
homer and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. added a solo shot for Toronto.
Orioles starter Keegan Akin allowed four runs on five hits in three
innings. Travis Lakins Sr. (3-2) relieved Akin and permitted a walk
and struck out two in two scoreless innings. Cesar Valdez pitched a
perfect ninth to earn his third save.
Reds 5, Twins 3
Eugenio Suarez had two hits and drove in two runs, including one
during a three-run 10th inning, as Cincinnati defeated Minnesota in
Minneapolis in the final regular-season game for a pair of playoff
teams.
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Cardinals center fielder Harrison Bader (48) celebrates
after hitting a solo home run off of Milwaukee Brewers
relief pitcher Freddy Peralta (not pictured) during the
fourth inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff
Curry-USA TODAY Sports
Joey Votto walked three times and drove in what proved to be the
winning run with a bases-loaded free pass for Cincinnati. The Reds,
who were locked into the No. 7 seed in the National League when the
St. Louis Cardinals defeated the Milwaukee Brewers 5-2 earlier on
Sunday, will face the second-seeded Atlanta Braves in the National
League wild-card round beginning Wednesday.
Raisel Iglesias (4-3) picked up the win despite allowing an unearned
run in his 1 1/3 innings. Caleb Thielbar (2-1) took the loss after
pitching 1 1/3 innings and giving up one unearned run. Sergio Romo
failed to retire any of the four batters he faced.
Cubs 10, White Sox 8
Kris Bryant and David Bote homered as part of a six-run second
inning and Billy Hamilton added a home run and a steal of home,
helping the visiting Cubs send their cross-town rivals to an eighth
loss in the last 10 games.
The Cubs led 10-1 entering the eighth inning, but the White Sox
scored five runs in the eighth and two in the ninth to bring the
tying run to the plate with one out remaining. Andrew Chafin entered
and struck out Nomar Mazara to end the game and earn his first save
in three chances.
The Cubs, who clinched the National League Central on Saturday,
finished as the No. 3 seed in the eight-team NL playoff field and
will host the Miami Marlins in a best-of-three wild-card round
series beginning Wednesday. The White Sox will be the No. 7 seed in
the AL playoffs, visiting the Oakland Athletics in the wild-card
round beginning Tuesday.
Diamondbacks 11, Rockies 3
Kole Calhoun homered and finished with two hits, Madison Bumgarner
tossed five scoreless innings, and Arizona beat Colorado in Phoenix.
Tim Locastro, Ketel Marte, Eduardo Escobar, Nick Ahmed, Wyatt
Mathisen and Carson Kelly all finished with two hits for the
Diamondbacks. Raimel Tapia and Tony Wolters had two hits each for
Colorado.
Bumgarner (1-4) didn't allow a run for the second straight game to
earn his first win of the season. The lefty allowed just two hits
and struck out four to end his first year with Arizona.
Indians 8, Pirates 6
Carlos Santana and Franmil Reyes each homered and drove in four runs
as Cleveland erased a four-run deficit against visiting Pittsburgh
and earned the fourth seed in the AL playoffs, hosting the New York
Yankees.
Reyes hit a three-run homer, and Santana, who entered the game in a
4-for-41 funk, hit a two-run homer and two-run double. The Indians
scored three runs in the sixth and three more in the seventh for
their largest comeback win of the season.
Jose Osuna hit a solo homer and an RBI single, Ke'Bryan Hayes hit a
solo homer and Adam Frazier added a two-run double for Pittsburgh.
Rays 5, Phillies 0
Rookie Josh Fleming spun six scoreless innings as Tampa Bay Rays put
an end to Philadelphia's playoff hopes, finishing their three-game
sweep in St. Petersburg, Fla.
In a career-long start, Fleming (5-0) recorded five strikeouts and
allowed four hits and a walk. Relievers Oliver Drake, Aaron Loup and
Ryan Sherriff each tossed a scoreless frame in the six-hit shutout
for Tampa Bay, which finished the regular season by winning nine of
its last 11 games. Kevan Smith, Mike Brosseau and Nate Lowe all
added two hits. The Rays open the postseason against Toronto on
Tuesday.
Phillies right-hander Aaron Nola (5-5) took the loss after giving up
six hits and three runs in 3 2/3 innings. Bryce Harper had two hits.
Philadelphia ended the regular season by losing seven of its final
eight games.
A's 6, Mariners 2
Jake Lamb homered leading off the bottom of the seventh inning,
sparking a three-run rally as Oakland defeated visiting Seattle.
Lamb's homer to left-center field came on a 2-1 count against
Seattle right-hander Yoshihisa Hirano (0-1) and broke a 2-2 tie.
Sean Murphy followed by drawing a walk, and an out later, Tony Kemp
doubled to right. Chad Pinder walked to load the bases before Mark
Canha doubled to center to bring home two runs.
Canha drew a bases-loaded walk with two outs in the eighth for his
fourth RBI of the day. A's right-hander Yusmeiro Petit (2-1) got the
victory with a scoreless inning of relief for the American League
West champs.
Royals 3, Tigers 1
Brady Singer allowed one run over seven innings to lead host Kansas
City past Detroit in the regular-season finale for both teams.
Singer scattered three hits and struck out five without walking a
batter to finish off a solid rookie season at 4-5. The Royals won
three of the four games in the series between the two worst teams in
the American League Central. Adalberto Mondesi had three hits and
drove in two runs.
The Tigers were limited to just three hits and scored in the first
on a two-out, RBI double by Brandon Dixon. Rookie left-hander Tarik
Skubal (1-4) took the loss despite allowing just two runs on two
hits with six strikeouts and one walk in five innings.
--Field Level Media
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