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The 2022 World Series matchup is set.
Starting Friday, the Houston Astros and Philadelphia Phillies will clash for the Commissioner’s Trophy in a meeting of one league’s favorite and the other league’s biggest underdog.
Under MLB’s new playoff format, the Phillies entered as the sixth and final seed in the National League but advanced all the way to the Fall Classic, while the American League’s No. 1 seed, the Astros, rolled over the rest of the Junior Circuit.
What has October taught us about each of these teams? What do they need to do to come out on top? And which players could be the difference-makers on both sides? ESPN MLB experts Jeff Passan, Joon Lee, Jesse Rogers and David Schoenfield break it down.
What’s the most impressive thing about the Astros this postseason?
Passan: Everything is a thing, right? Fine. If a single thing defines the Astros, it’s their pitching depth. They have Justin Verlander and Framber Valdez, both frontline starters, at the top of their rotation. They follow with Cristian Javier and Lance McCullers Jr., each of whom would be a frontline starter on most teams. As good as their starting pitching is, the sheer amount of relief talent in their bullpen — from closer Ryan Pressly to Rafael Montero to Ryne Stanek to Bryan Abreu to Hector Neris to Hunter Brown — makes any lead feel comfortable. The Astros are excellent at everything, but their pitching is why they remain undefeated this postseason.
Lee: The depth across Houston’s roster. If you had told the Yankees heading into the American League Championship Series that through three games, Yordan Alvarez and Jose Altuve would have just one hit apiece, New York would have been ecstatic. Instead, the rest of the Astros have led the way, from Yuli Gurriel to Alex Bregman to Chas McCormick to Jeremy Pena to Martin Maldonado. This Houston team can beat you in so many different ways, from its incredibly deep pitching staff to its lineup, which can knock you out with the long ball or beat you into the ground with singles and doubles. On top of that, it’s the consistency. Depth and consistency usually play well in October, and Houston has proved that against both the Mariners, in the AL Division Series, and the Yankees.
Why will it (or won’t it) work against the Phillies in the World Series?
Passan: Certainly the Phillies’ lineup, the way it’s hitting right now, poses a greater challenge than the Mariners or Yankees did for Houston. But as long as Dusty Baker manages with proper urgency and uses his bullpen as he can — mix and match and do not allow Kyle Schwarber, Rhys Hoskins, J.T. Realmuto and Bryce Harper third looks unless the starter is truly cruising — Houston has the goods to neutralize Philadelphia’s offense similarly to how it did Seattle’s and New York’s.
Lee: The Astros are the better team on paper, but being underdogs hasn’t stopped the Phillies so far in the postseason, after coming in as a third-place team from the NL East and beating the Cardinals, Braves and Padres on their path to the World Series. There’s also something to be said about that October magic, and getting hot at the right time. We’ve seen this run out for teams in the past, but Philadelphia has taken a cue from last year’s Braves and gotten scorching hot when it counts the most. Harper’s go-ahead homer in the National League Championship Series clincher was a sports moment too on-the-nose for the movies, but it felt written in the stars by the baseball gods.
Who is the one player who must deliver for the Astros to be champs from here?
Passan: Considering the Astros have gotten to the World Series with him practically nonexistent, perhaps Jose Altuve is a foolish answer. But to derail a hot and confident Phillies team, Houston needs production from the top of its order, and an Astros lineup with Altuve getting on base takes an engine that’s already spitting out plenty of horses and turbocharges it.
Lee: Pena has been Houston’s X factor so far in October. When Altuve and Alvarez have struggled, the previously unheralded rookie has come through and been a star for the Astros. If Altuve and Alvarez continue to struggle, guys like Pena, McCormick, Trey Mancini and Gurriel will need to help carry Houston to a World Series title.
What’s the most impressive thing about the Phillies this postseason?
Rogers: They instantly became the team everyone in the organization thought they could be, one with great starting pitching and massive power — enough in both areas to overcome any defensive flaws or bullpen unevenness. Harper, Schwarber and Hoskins aren’t missing mistakes and are playing with the most confidence they’ve had all year.
Schoenfield: The stars are hot — not just the sluggers, but also Zack Wheeler, who has a 1.78 ERA in his four starts. He could start Game 1 on full rest, but it might make sense for the Phillies to go with Aaron Nola and then Wheeler in Game 2 given that Wheeler started to tire around the 80-pitch mark in both of his starts against the Padres. An extra day of rest might help. But let’s mention something else: The Phillies’ bullpen has kind of figured things out a little bit, and manager Rob Thomson has done a great job adjusting on the fly and going with the hot hand. Seranthony Dominguez has allowed just one run in 7 2/3 postseason innings with 15 strikeouts and no walks — and that one run was in part a result of the wet conditions on Sunday. Jose Alvarado is throwing heat from the left side, and David Robertson has plenty of postseason experience. Thomson was even willing to use starter Ranger Suarez to close out Game 5 of the NLCS.
Why will it (or won’t it) work against the Astros in the World Series?
Rogers: The Phillies’ mojo will keep the Astros from winning in a short series, but eventually all that pitching will win out for them. The longer it goes, the better it is for Houston, as Philadelphia can’t match the Astros arm for arm. A best-of-seven usually isn’t won at the plate but on the mound. That’s where Houston prevails.
Schoenfield: The bullpen depth is still a little questionable — although Connor Brogdon had a clutch seven-out effort against the Padres in Game 4 and Andrew Bellatti has pitched well enough in his five appearances and could be a good matchup against Houston’s righty-heavy lineup (he allowed a .608 OPS against righties, but .866 to lefties). But what if Brad Hand has to face the Alvarez/Bregman/Kyle Tucker part of the order? And Thomson has been careful in his usage with Dominguez, who is in his first full season back from Tommy John surgery. He pitched just 11 times on back-to-back days in the regular season and has had days off between all six of his postseason appearances — at least two days in five of those. At some point, he’s going to have to go back-to-back days and maybe for a longer stretch of pitches.
Who is the one player who must deliver for the Phillies to be champs from here?
Rogers: It might be cliché to pick Harper, but he’s the guy. The Phillies’ heartbeat runs through him. They’ll be underdogs, deservingly, and they’ll need an extra special series to beat Houston. Who better to energize them once again than Bryce Harper? He’s already having a great postseason. As he goes, so goes the Phillies’ offense, which could shock the world by getting to a dominant Astros staff. It starts with Harper.
Schoenfield: I’m banking on another big series from Harper, but my key guy is Nola. Wheeler has the potential to dominate in his outings. The Astros are going to have the starting pitching edge in the games Suarez or Bailey Falter (or Noah Syndergaard) starts. Nola had two great postseason starts — 6 2/3 scoreless innings against the Cardinals and then one unearned run against the Braves. Against the Padres, however, he had a 4-0 lead but allowed back-to-back home runs in the second and then four runs in the fifth. Nola is also extra vital because if he can go deep, that means more fresh arms for the Suarez and No. 4 starter games. Oh, one reason to start Nola in Game 2 instead of Game 1: He had a 3.84 ERA in the regular season on four days of rest (14 starts), but 2.79 on five days (13 starts). If he starts Game 1, he would go again in Game 5 on four days of rest, but if he goes in Games 2 and 6, he gets five days of rest. The Phillies have an interesting decision on how to align their rotation.
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Seventy minutes after hitting the most important home run of his life Sunday, a two-run blast that won the Philadelphia Phillies the National League Championship Series, Bryce Harper was at the center of the clubhouse, surrounded by his teammates as beer and champagne soaked anyone within spraying range.
“Give me all of it, give me all of it,” the series MVP shouted to his teammates. His wish was instantly granted, as beer poured down on him from every direction.
Harper’s place in the middle of the celebration was only fitting, as was the fact that he manufactured the moment that sent his Phillies to the World Series. He has been the face of the franchise since the 2019 day he committed to the city for 13 years after owner John Middleton wrote a $330 million check to bring him to Philadelphia.
Despite plenty of moments when he might have doubted he made the right choice in leaving Washington for Philadelphia as a free agent, Harper has always embraced his new home. Even when his old team, the Washington Nationals, won the World Series in 2019. Even when Philadelphia changed GMs and managers more than once during a turbulent first four years with the franchise — including when Rob Thomson took over for Joe Girardi after a 22-29 start this season.
“I don’t like looking back,” Harper said after the game, with his MVP trophy sitting next to him. “I like looking forward and moving forward. This game is ‘what have you done for me lately?’”
He never lost faith, always believing what Middleton had promised him: The organization would always put winning above all else.
Not long after the Sunday home run, owner and star met on the field amid celebratory chaos. Their hug lasted longer than the flight of the ball — which left the playing field at 108.9 mph. Middleton was asked if the embrace meant something extra special.
“You bet it did,” he said. “$330 million later, and mutual promises of being committed to winning and doing whatever it took to win. He did that.”
The home run that sent Philadelphia back to the World Series for the first time since 2009 justified the Phillies’ spending on Harper, as well as the free agent deals this spring that brought in Kyle Schwarber and Nick Castellanos — both of whom had front-row views of Harper’s blast; Schwarber from the dugout, and Castellanos from the on-deck circle. “It looked like I was having an exorcism on the dugout rail,” Schwarber said in a beer-soaked locker room. “Man, he’s nasty.”
Castellanos marveled at how different the celebration felt from when Harper had hit a walk-off home run against Castellanos’ Cubs three years earlier.
“The way he ran around the bases [in 2019] was crazy and energetic,” Castellanos said. “Tonight, he was the calmest person in the stadium. I think that’s a lot of growth on his part.
“Watching him [tonight] was a big lesson for me. The way he was able to immerse himself in the moment and stay focused and calm was f—ing incredible. Please use those exact words.”
This clubhouse littered with empty bottles of Budweiser and champagne was always the goal when Castellanos and Schwarber signed with Philadelphia within days of each other after the lockout, giving Harper some much-needed thump around his own power bat in the lineup.
For Castellanos, this is the winning team he has been on a mission to find ever since being drafted by Detroit in 2010. After going 10 major league seasons without winning a postseason series, he has enjoyed three champagne celebrations just this month.
“We both want to win so bad,” Castellanos said when asked what he learned of Harper this season. “That’s one thing we have in common.”
For Schwarber, winning has never been an issue. He has done it everywhere he’s been his entire career. Praised as the ultimate glue guy in the Phillies clubhouse throughout this postseason, Schwarber has appeared in six league championship series for three different teams. But he was hurt for the only pennant-clinching win of his career, when the Chicago Cubs won it all in 2016. He never got the full playoff experience until now.
“It was cool for me,” he said Sunday between puffs of a cigar. “To be with them the whole year, from day one, has been awesome. Last time [in Chicago] I was down for the whole year.”
This was also a first for the longest-tenured Phillies position player, first baseman Rhys Hoskins. Hoskins had four home runs in five games this series and might have been named MVP if not for Harper’s heroics — but couldn’t bring himself to care about that while he celebrated his first pennant win.
“It’s a dream,” Hoskins said, wide-eyed on the field afterward. “This organization is the one that believed in me and gave me an opportunity to impact the city of Philadelphia in any way I could.”
Harper’s arrival signaled to Hoskins that the organization was serious about winning after years of frustration. Until this season, Hoskins had never played in a postseason game, instead having to hear stories of glory about teams from the past. Every time he looked up at the video scoreboard during this series, there was another Phillies great looking down from the stands: Ryan Howard, Jayson Werth and Shane Victorino — all members of the team’s 2008 World Series-winning squad.
The dream of joining those former players as champions became realistic once Harper arrived. Hoskins wasn’t surprised that it was Harper who delivered the big play that finally got him there.
“It’s probably something that he’s had in his head since the time he picked up a bat,” Hoskins said. “It’s been a while. He changed cities and had to get used to a new organization. For him to come through in that moment is storybook stuff.”
Later, in a hallway underneath the stands behind home plate, Harper shared a moment with actor Miles Teller, a huge Phillies fan, while still clutching his MVP trophy. He sat in the media room and said all the right things: The team isn’t satisfied with just winning the pennant and has four more games to win from here. But Harper looked most comfortable back in the clubhouse, allowing beer to be poured on him while sharing a victory that ended the series — instead of packing up to head across the country for Game 6.
“I didn’t want to get back on that flight back to San Diego,” he said. “I just didn’t want to get on a 5½-hour flight. I wanted to hang out at home and enjoy this at home with these fans and this organization and this fan base.”
The Phillies are headed to the World Series because of Harper. This is his team and now his city — and it was his heroics that allowed his home fans to celebrate the win in their ballpark.
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CNN
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The Philadelphia Phillies have advanced to the World Series after defeating the San Diego Padres four games to one in the National League Championship Series. The Phillies won Sunday’s decisive Game 5 by a score of 4-3.
The Phillies trailed in the eighth inning of the game before slugger Bryce Harper hit a two-run home run, his fifth of the postseason, to put Philadelphia in front. Harper was named NLCS most valuable player after racking up eight hits, five RBIs and two home runs in the series.
Philadelphia advances to its first World Series since 2009 and looks for its first championship since 2008.
The Phillies await the winner of the American League Championship Series between the Houston Astros and New York Yankees, which the Astros lead three games to none.
Philadelphia entered the postseason as the National League’s final wild card team after finishing third place in their division with a regular season record of 87-75.
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CNN
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Philadelphia Phillies shortstop Bryson Stott treated a superfan who lost his father to cancer to free National League Champion Series tickets.
Geoff Crawley, a long-time Phillies fan, couldn’t afford tickets to see the team play in Philadelphia, WCAU-TV reported. But he was determined to watch the team play – so he used airline miles to book a flight from Washington, DC, to San Diego.
Crawley’s passion for the Phillies started with his father, Skip, who died of cancer in July, according to WCAU. He brought a sweatshirt with a picture of his father to the San Diego game and placed it on the seat beside him.
And when WCAU reporter John Clark posted a picture of the fan with his touching tribute to his father to Twitter on Wednesday, the story quickly took off, eventually making it to at least one member of the team.
On Friday, Stott retweeted the image of Crawley, writing, “I would be happy to leave him 2 tickets for this weekend.”
Crawley’s story was particularly resonant for Stott, who lost a high school friend to leukemia.
“I mean I hate cancer,” Stott said, according to WCAU reporter John Clark. “Cancer is the worst thing on the planet. For (Geoff) to cheer us on all the way in California and honor his dad was pretty cool.”
On Twitter, Crawley expressed his gratitude for the shortstop’s kind gesture – and asked Phillies fans to use the hashtag #WinItForSkip to honor his late father.
“Thanks so much for all the love,” he wrote on Wednesday.
Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly attributed reporting by WCAU reporter John Clark.
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PHILADELPHIA — In a sport that often defies logic, Philadelphia Phillies right fielder Nick Castellanos had a simple explanation for the Phillies’ comeback from a disastrous top of the first inning Saturday in Game 4 of the National League Championship Series: “It’s tough to play in the jungle, man.”
After the San Diego Padres roared out of the gate with four runs in the first, the Phillies roared right back with three runs in the bottom of the first — on their way to a four-homer outburst in a 10-6 victory that put the Phillies one win away from reaching their first World Series since 2009.
“We knew the crowd was going to be a factor,” first baseman Rhys Hoskins said as the Phillies improved to 4-0 at Citizens Bank Park in the postseason while scoring 31 runs and hitting .313 — in a postseason where runs have otherwise been scarce. “We’re confident in that. We saw that in the NLDS. And we feel like it’s a big part of when you get those innings rolling, you get a couple guys on, it gets a little louder. You get the one big hit, it gets louder, and that’s where you can really snowball things.”
The top of the Phillies’ lineup was locked in all game long. Their top five hitters delivered big nights as they each got at least two hits or scored at least two runs, going a combined 9-for-18 with seven extra-base hits and all 10 runs scored. The biggest hero was Hoskins, who hit two crucial two-run home runs for a four-RBI game.
Hoskins’ first home run followed Kyle Schwarber‘s leadoff single in the bottom of the first, after the Padres had struck for a four-run outburst off Bailey Falter. Hoskins worked the count full against Padres starter Mike Clevinger, who threw a 94-mph fastball right down the middle that Hoskins drilled 384 feet to left-center.
“A lot of us said ’27 outs’ after the top of the first inning,” Hoskins said. “We’ve been down before. We knew with a bullpen game, the possibility of multiple guys having to be put in positions that they’re not used to being in, that we were going to have to slug. We did that tonight.”
His second home run was even more impressive. Padres left-hander Sean Manaea was on in relief, making his first appearance of the postseason. With the Padres leading 6-4, Schwarber worked a one-out walk and Padres manager Bob Melvin left in Manaea, who had a 6.44 ERA in the second half, to face the right-handed Hoskins.
With the count 1-1, Hoskins crushed a sinker at the knees, 417 feet with a 108.4-mph exit velocity to a similar area of the left-center stands. The home run tied the game and Citizens Bank Park exploded in a frenzy.
“There’s nobody on the team that deserves those moments more than Rhys,” Castellanos said. “He’s been here from the beginning, he’s been through a lot of losing here, he’s been through the hard times, so to be on this stage and to come through like this, I couldn’t be happier for him.”
It was the eighth two-homer game in Phillies postseason history and the first since Chase Utley in Game 5 of the 2009 World Series. While Hoskins said he appreciates baseball history — especially Phillies history and being mentioned alongside Utley and other greats from the team — in the past he has said he’s tired of hearing about the 2008 World Series champion club. He wants to make his own history.
Now he’s learning what 2008 was like.
“It feels like we’re living it, yeah. The red towels, it’s deafening loud, right? Like, yeah, just the whole scene. And as soon as you step on the field, really in batting practice, you can just kind of feel the electricity building,” he said. “I need some more. I need some more of it.”
For the Padres, Clevinger’s short outing — 15 pitches and no outs — left Melvin needing to get nine innings out of his bullpen.
“This was probably one of the worst days of my life,” Clevinger said. “That sums it up. It sucks.”
Nick Martinez pitched three perfect innings before Manaea entered in the fourth and allowed a run. He came back for a second inning of work in the fifth. After Hoskins’ home run tied the game, J.T. Realmuto walked and Bryce Harper lashed a ringing double to left-center to score Realmuto with the go-ahead run.
“I was going to try to get [Manaea] one time around the lineup,” Melvin explained. “I thought his stuff was better. He had 95. He had swings and misses when he got into the zone, but he couldn’t locate it. The second inning, four batters, five batters, it happened pretty quickly.”
The Phillies are careful not to get ahead of themselves, but they are oozing with confidence — especially with ace Zack Wheeler going in Game 5 and coming off a masterful outing in Game 1 when he allowed just one hit over seven scoreless innings.
“I’ve said this a couple times in the last couple of I days, and I’m sorry it’s getting redundant,” Hoskins said. “You can’t write it better for the guys in that room, for the staff, for everybody in this organization, but I think most importantly for the city. Yeah, you can’t write it better. I can’t imagine what tomorrow is going to be like.”
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Houston Astros Chas McCormick (20) reacts as he rounds the bases after hitting a two-run home run … [+]
During a replay challenge to see if Jose Altuve was safe on a routine groundout, those in charge of playing music at Yankee Stadium whipped out the theme song from “Unsolved Mysteries”
The haunting tune preceded the hit NBC show that ran for nine seasons while being hosted by Robert Stack, whose voice led into the show by saying “Perhaps You Can Help Solve a Mystery.”
Through three games of the ALCS, the Yankees are enduring their own version of “Unsolved Mysteries” against the Astros about why despite holding the AL’s second-best record, they are getting dominated by Houston’s standout pitching staff, the one who has shirts reading “No, No, No, No-Hitter and “Framber Valdez’s 2022 Quality Start Tour.”
Through the first three games, the Yankees are putrid 12-for-94 (.128) with 41 strikeouts. They are one game away from being swept out of the ALCS for the first time since hitting .157 and striking out 36 times against Detroit in 2012.
By comparison when the Yankees were competitive against the Astros in 2017 and 2019, their averages were better. In the six-game loss in 2019, the Yankees batted .214 and in the seven-game loss two years earlier, the Yankees batted .205.
In this series, New York has seen 449 pitches from seven pitchers. Perhaps the most astounding stat involves Cristian Javier’s success against the Yankees.
On June 25, Javier threw 115 pitches in seven hitless innings to combine with Hector Neris and Ryan Pressly on the first no-hitter for some people’s baseball attending life. On Saturday, he threw 52 pitches before Giancarlo Stanton doubled, making it 168 pitches in 10 1/3 innings against Javier at Yankee Stadium this year.
As you would expect, the mood inside the silent Yankee clubhouse was somber with the theme of trying to get everyone going or enough players rolling. It was most certainly a contrast to the environment of Tuesday when the Yankees celebrated modestly before boarding the plane to Houston.
“We’ve got a lot of talented individuals in this room and just haven’t been able to get everybody clicking,” Aaron Judge said.
New York Yankees designated hitter Matt Carpenter (24) reacts after striking out against the Houston … [+]
“Our backs are against the wall now,” Anthony Rizzo said. “As a competitor and as a baseball player, it sucks, but tomorrow we have another game. Obviously, this isn’t ideal, but we just have to win tomorrow. It sucks tonight, it’s going to suck, it’s going to sting, but tomorrow we have to figure out a way to win.”
“I think they’ve attacked the zone,” third baseman Josh Donaldson said before the YES Network postgame panel opined, he was guessing at pitches. “They have good stuff. They have good arms over there. Can’t take anything away from those guys, but we just need to be better.”
Rizzo was the fourth leadoff hitter of the postseason which seems like the sign of a team struggling to find it at the plate. Judge batted leadoff for the first two games of the ALDS and coincidentally after Alex Rodriguez said on FOX the slugger should not bat leadoff, Gleyber Torres moved there for four games before Harrison Bader did it in Game 2 of the ALCS and Rizzo led off for Game 3.
When a team is going as poorly as the Yankees are these days, it hardly takes much to quiet a loud environment.
The moment occurred about 30 minutes into Game 3.
First Judge ran in front of Bader in right-center resulting in an error for the center fielder when Gerrit Cole was one out away from getting through the second.
New York Yankees center fielder Harrison Bader drops a fly ball hit by Houston Astros Christian … [+]
Three pitches after the error, ninth-place hitter Chas McCormick got enough of a 1-1 fastball.
At first McCormick thought the ball went foul but then he saw Rizzo give a look of “here we go again” and realized the 335-foot poke bounced into the right field seats. And when McCormick experienced that realization, the Astros did their celebration known as the “Chas Chomp”, a new celebration featuring enthusiastic and exaggerated clapping that was started by Houston fan Scott Agruso who attends game wearing an alligator suit.
“It’s cool. I like how my teammates are into it now. Around the bases I see them always chomping,” McCormick said. “It fires me up, and I said before in case I hit a home run, I’m going to round third base, hit the chomp a couple of times to my teammates.”
The chomp was enough to create a feeling of doom for the Yankee fans. Nearly 90 minutes later, Game 3 seemed to be officially over when Cole loaded the bases, exited and Lou Trivino allowed a sacrifice fly by Trey Mancini and a two-run single by Christian Vazquez, whose fourth-inning homer off Zack Britton was the series-clinching run for Boston over the Yankees in Game 4 of the 2018 ALDS.
As virtually anyone who follows the postseason knows, only one team ever rallied from a three games to none deficit. The struggling offense gets its first attempt at solving the mystery of Houston pitching and joining the 2004 Red Sox as the second team to do so 18 years and three days after Boston made history at Yankee Stadium.
“You always want to be your best,” Judge said. “I wouldn’t say as I go, we go. We’ve got a lot of individuals on this team that can carry the club. I’ve got to step up and do my job. I haven’t come up with the big hit. Missed a couple the other night. But we’ve still got a lot of ballgame in us, and just got to take care of business.”
In less than 24 hours, the Yankees will either take care of business to live to see another day or lament everything that went wrong towards the end of a season where they held the best record in the AL until Aug. 11.
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Larry Fleisher, Contributor
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NEW YORK — The New York Yankees clubhouse went silent. During the regular season — win or loss — New York always played music over the speakers after games.
But that pattern died on Saturday after the Yankees lost 5-0 in Game 3 of the ALCS, putting them at a 3-0 deficit to the Houston Astros, facing a sweep and elimination on Sunday.
As looming disappointment faced them square in the face, the Yankees struggled to come up with words on how they could come back in a series down three games against an Astros team that has not lost a game in the 2022 playoffs so far.
“This isn’t ideal,” said Yankees first baseman Anthony Rizzo. “We just got to win tomorrow. It sucks tonight. It’s gonna suck. It’s gonna sting. And we just got figure out a way to win.”
New York previously faced elimination in the series against Cleveland, going down 2-1 before winning Game 4 and 5 to punch a ticket to the ALCS.
But New York faces significantly higher obstacles trying to defeat the Astros, who looked like the better baseball team in every aspect of Saturday’s game. Houston received strong starting pitching from Cristian Javier — who went 5 1/3 innings, allowing no runs on one hit, three walks and five strikeouts — and the Astros offense came through, with its RBIs coming from Trey Mancini, Christian Vazquez and Chas McCormick, the bottom-three hitters in Houston’s lineup.
“We faced elimination before earlier this postseason and guys have faced elimination in their careers,” Bader said. “At times, things might feel like a mountain but you know, classically speaking, giving a cliché, you can’t get to the top without starting at the bottom. There’s a game tomorrow that’s being played tomorrow, there’s nine innings being played tomorrow. It’s just a matter of taking things pitch by pitch.”
History is on Houston’s side, with just one team in MLB history — the 2004 Boston Red Sox — coming back from a 3-0 deficit in a best-of-seven series. Even still, the Astros aren’t booking their World Series tickets just yet.
“All the guys, especially guys who have been here, are just preaching to keep our foot on the gas,” said Astros pitcher Justin Verlander. “You never know what can happen. Playoffs is a funny things. Right now, we obviously have some momentum, we’ve been playing good baseball, but zero complacency. That’s kind of the theme. Just to come here tomorrow and try to win a game like we’re down 3-0.”
Astros second baseman José Altuve said he will ignore the series lead heading into Game 4.
“The mentality is to go out there and not think about anything else but win,” Altuve said. “It doesn’t matter if we’re [up] 3-0 right now, nothing is done yet. We gotta go out there and play our best game because we know we are playing a good team. A series is not done until one team wins it all. We are going to try to play tomorrow like the series is 0-0 and try to win.”
Yankees fans expressed their disappointment throughout the course of Saturday’s game, with players up and down the roster booed at various times. When Houston scored three runs in the sixth inning to make the score 5-0, groups of Yankees fans could be seen leaving the stadium.
“I definitely understand their frustration,” Judge said. “There’s a big Game 4 coming up. Even if we get down, stick with us and we’ll do our thing. I understand why there are boos and why they’re yelling at times, but we got to pick it up as a team and it’s going to take their support. That’s for sure.”
The Yankees will need more performance from their offense to have a chance at winning Game 4 and make this a series. New York has not scored an earned run in 19 innings, the last run coming in the 8th inning of Game 1 in Houston. They will try to break that streak against Astros pitcher Lance McCullers Jr., who went six innings and allowed no runs on two hits against the Seattle Mariners in the ALDS.
New York is hoping a positive mindset heading into Sunday can help extend their season one more day.
“You gotta go out there and have fun,” Judge said. “We can’t beat ourselves up about one play, one pitch. We got to stay inside that laser focus throughout the whole game. Even if they go up on us tomorrow or we go up, we got to stay laser focused, one through nine.”
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HOUSTON — The Astros quickly ran out of superlatives in describing Justin Verlander‘s performance in their 4-2 victory over the New York Yankees in Game 1 of the American League Championship Series on Wednesday night.
Echoes of “first-ballot Hall of Famer” and “ace” were heard throughout the Astros clubhouse after Verlander struck out 11 batters over six innings and allowed only one earned run.
But what truly differentiated his performance was the fact that the 39-year-old Verlander was not initially sharp, coming off one of the worst postseason outings of his illustrious career, having allowed six runs on 10 hits in the first game of the division series against the Seattle Mariners.
The Astros managed a comeback victory against Seattle with a three-run, walk-off home run by slugger Yordan Alvarez, with Verlander notably showing rust and lack of command. Even so, it was no surprise to catcher Martin Maldonado that his ace quickly returned to form when he was needed most.
“This is exactly what I expected from him,” Maldonado told ESPN. “That is why he is a Hall of Famer.”
“He’s not only physically strong, which you can see, but he’s mentally strong,” manager Dusty Baker added in praise of Verlander. “This guy, he has mental toughness. When he’s down and out and it looks like you got him in trouble, I mean, this guy, he can dial it up.”
While the Astros fell behind in the second inning Wednesday night after Harrison Bader tagged him with a solo shot, Verlander bounced back, retiring the last 11 Yankees he faced in a row, with nine punch-outs.
Verlander’s 11 total strikeouts gave him the eighth double-digit strikeout game of his postseason career, setting an MLB record. Verlander also became the new postseason strikeout king, setting a major league record with 219 career strikeouts in the playoffs, surpassing Clayton Kershaw‘s 213.
“I think you saw what a real Hall of Fame pitcher’s made of tonight,” fellow starter Lance McCullers Jr. said. “He had a tough start in the DS. You don’t have to beat around the bush; it wasn’t a great start. I know he wanted to do better. … You saw him work all week. He felt like he had some adjustments to make, and he made the adjustments. … In a series where there’s only one off-day, him being able to give us six amazing innings, speaks volumes for who he is as a pitcher and a competitor.”
The Yankees finished the game with 17 strikeouts, tied for the second most in a nine-inning game in postseason history. With the Astros striking out only twice, their differential of 15 strikeouts became the largest in a single game in postseason history.
“He gave us exactly the kind of performance we needed, and I feel that I say that all the time about Verlander,” said Jose Altuve, who is stuck in the longest postseason slump of his career at 0-for-19. “This was a huge win for us, alongside our bullpen, which has been exceptional all season. He set the tone and allowed us to win the first game, which is very important in a tough series like this one, and against a great team like the Yankees.”
Verlander improved to 5-1 with a 2.62 ERA in nine career postseason starts against the Yankees. This was Verlander’s 15th career postseason win, tying Hall of Famer John Smoltz for second all-time (Andy Pettitte leads with 19).
The Astros improved to 10-5 all-time in postseason play against New York, including a 7-1 record at Minute Maid Park.
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It is a great time to be a fan of Philadelphia sports. The city’s teams just keep winning.
Let’s start with the Philadelphia Phillies. They are three wins from reaching the World Series for the first time since 2009. Philadelphia took Game 1 of the NLCS Tuesday, beating the San Diego Padres 2-0, and saw a monstrous home run from Kyle Schwarber that’s still flying.
The Phillies have been one of the biggest surprise teams of the MLB postseason. They got into the playoffs then promptly swept the St. Louis Cardinals and then pummeled the reigning champion Atlanta Braves. Philadelphia has lost one game this postseason and is outscoring opponents by 3.5 runs in wins.
The winning continues in football. After beating the rival Dallas Cowboys on Sunday, the Philadelphia Eagles are the lone remaining undefeated team in the NFL. Quarterback Jalen Hurts is eighth in the league in passing and, according to ESPN Stats and Information research, he is the fourth-youngest quarterback to start 6-0. The Eagles are also the fifth team in the past 35 seasons to not trail in the second half of their first six games. Two of the prior five teams to do that won the Super Bowl.
And, in hockey, the Philadelphia Flyers have started the season 3-0. They most recently defeated the Eastern Conference champion Tampa Bay Lightning. Gritty, the Flyers’ mascot, has crowned the city as the best in sports.
Want to solve the puzzle but not taking any L’s right now. pic.twitter.com/eDkl9Y6OKe
— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) October 19, 2022
Absent from all the winning is the Philadelphia 76ers. They lost to the Boston Celtics on Tuesday in their first game of the season. On the bright side, James Harden looked super cozy in his pregame attire, and the city’s MLS team — the Philadelphia Union — is atop the league standings.
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New York Yankees Aaron Judge celebrates in the locker room after the Yankees defeated the Cleveland … [+]
The music was loud, the plastic covering was on the spacious carpeting, the champagne and Bud Light flowed from one player to another.
In the hour after the Yankees completed the ALDS with their 5-1 win that seemed more like a formality once they took a three-run lead about 15 minutes in, it was a somewhat modest one on the celebration scale, especially compared to some of the others to take place by them and other teams.
The celebration had all the usual components of winning a postseason series, but it was more a theme of taking care of business in a series that felt more like the extended nature of an NBA best-of-seven first round series.
After eight days where there nearly were more days off than actual games, the Yankees won a pair of elimination games and enjoyed their first playoff series clincher at home since CC Sabathia’s 121-pitch complete game in Game 5 of the 2012 ALDS against Baltimore.
Then they got ready to take their bus to the airport for their next order of business – a third ALCS against the Houston Astros.
“If you’re stuck in the past, you’re not going to go anywhere,” said Aaron Judge, who was entering his final season at Fresno State when the Yankees escaped a tough five-game series with Baltimore. “I’m going to treat it like any other series. We’ll go there with our A game and take care of business.”
The narrative of the Yankees against the Astros is finally here and whether it was the combination of not having a day off in between the ALDS and ALCS or the recent history, the celebration was more of a loud toast with an eye towards hopefully using the more expensive champagne such as winning a pennant or a World Series like they did exactly 44 years ago in Reggie Jackson’s three-homer game over the Dodgers.
The celebration was also not like the 2001 version when the Yankees somberly clinched the AL East in their first home game following the Sept. 11 attacks on Sept. 25, 2001. It paled in comparison to ones as recently as Oct. 9 when the Padres toasted often with Brut 1818 Champagne after eliminating the Mets in Game 3 of the wild-card round in a game that was highlighted by Joe Musgrove’s futile ear check as he dominated the Mets and could hardly compete with the party going on footsteps from their large clubhouse under the elevated tracks on River Avenue.
It had the touches of a raucous celebration, especially since you could hear someone yell “Who’s Your Daddy” in reference to the Josh Naylor celebration he displayed while connecting in Game 4 off ace Gerrit Cole, who was so locked in he hardly paid attention to it.
“Yeah, whatever. It’s cute,” Cole said Sunday with the look of someone still locked in while speaking at the podium in Cleveland. “It wouldn’t have bothered me in the moment and it just is kind of funny.”
Naylor’s celebration is officially called “Rock the Baby” and it annoyed Yankee fans when it was unveiled against Cole Sunday, the same way it irked White Sox fans in Chicago when he hit a grand slam earlier this season.
By the time Tuesday afternoon arrived, fans were well-versed in this and yelled “Who’s Your Daddy” every time Naylor batted. And when Wandy Peralta (in his fifth straight game) recorded the final out, Gleyber Torres perhaps showed how the Yankees truly felt.
Torres recorded the final putout when he completed the force play from Isiah Kiner-Falefa. Then after stepping on second base, Torres swung his arms back and forth four times while throwing a steely glare at Naylor in the Cleveland dugout although later on in a somber clubhouse the first baseman said he was honored at being recognized in the form of a chant.
“We got our revenge. We’re happy to beat those guys. Now they can watch on TV the next series for us,” Torres said “It’s nothing personal. Just a little thing about revenge.”
The Yankee celebration was modest with more talk about what lies next, Round 3 with the Houston Astros. The Astros won the first two rounds of the looming trilogy and as it became apparent what was on the horizon some fans could be heard chanting their favorite four-letter word before the name “Altuve.”
The New York Yankees celebrate on the field after defeating the Cleveland Guardians in Game 5 of an … [+]
Altuve ended the last meeting between the teams with his famous homer off Aroldis Chapman, who was following the ALDS win from his home base in Miami after being instructed to stay away by the Yankees. In the month after Altuve’s game-ending homer, the details of Houston’s cheating scandal emerged with details about what they did during the seven-game ALCS over the Yankees in 2017 when the home team won every game.
Those revelations further fueled the fire and even in limited capacity due to the COVD-19 pandemic in May 2021 it was clearly evident.
Full-capacity Astros-Yankees games returned in June when a combined 180,703 fans spent a portion of their weekend watching a compelling four-game series. Over the course of 13 hours, 28 minutes, the Yankees wound getting two wins on game-ending hits in games they did not lead, got no-hit (to the delight of some people there) and got dominated by Future Hall of Famer Justin Verlander.
“We’ve seen each other a lot in years past in the postseason,” Judge said nearly four months ago. “Anytime we play, it’s always gonna be a good ballgame. I think the fans anticipate that and they bring their energy from the first pitch on. That’s what you love, you look forward to playing good teams, and seeing where you stack up in the AL.”
Now after their somewhat subdued celebration, seeing where they stack up in the AL is here for the Yankees.
“We know what we’re going up against,” Nestor Cortes said. “We’ve just going to battle it out. It’s going to be a tough series for both of us. Let the best team win.”
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Larry Fleisher, Contributor
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Monday’s rainout shuffled the pitching strategy for both teams in Game 5 of their American League Division Series. While Jameson Taillon was supposed to start on Monday, the New York Yankees will send out Nestor Cortes on short rest to face Aaron Civale of the Cleveland Guardians.
Cleveland has reinforcements, with Shane Bieber on normal rest and available to pitch if necessary. Like much of the first few games of the series, the decisive Game 5 could be determined by who scores first, especially with the bullpens of both teams pitching well through the first four games.
One notable change for the Yankees is the absence of shortstop Isiah Kiner-Falefa from the lineup. The infielder was a polarizing player for the Yankees’ fan base because of the past Gold Glove winner’s struggles in the field, culminating in multiple missed opportunities in Game 4 that contributed to runs for Cleveland. New York will lean on rookie Oswaldo Cabrera, who has become a super utility man over the past few months of the season.
Fans in the right field stands got two treats, as Giancarlo Stanton hit a three-run bomb in the first and Aaron Judge followed it up in the second with a solo shot.
Stan by me. pic.twitter.com/rIm8yhgCZY
— New York Yankees (@Yankees) October 18, 2022
Been doing it all year. #ALLRISE pic.twitter.com/hxiEW3jjae
— New York Yankees (@Yankees) October 18, 2022
Calm, cool, collected.#ForTheLand pic.twitter.com/kyPp2vp6Jr
— Cleveland Guardians (@CleGuardians) October 18, 2022
Let’s go @CleGuardians ‼️ pic.twitter.com/qc0rt7jWb5
— Cleveland Cavaliers (@cavs) October 18, 2022
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WHEN HARRISON BADER found out that his childhood dream was coming true, his first reaction was unexpected: disappointment.
St. Louis, where he’d spent the past five and a half seasons as a member of the Cardinals, had become home. The team drafted Bader out of Florida in 2015, and when he was called up in 2017, he became a fan favorite. As the Cardinals ownership and front office told him that he was part of their roster’s core and the team’s future, Bader planted roots in the community. He was named the King of St. Louis Mardi Gras. He befriended local politicians like Missouri state senator Brian Williams and was working with him to bring a PGA golf event to St. Louis.
But on Aug. 2 of this season, when his phone rang four minutes before the trade deadline with a call from Cardinals president of baseball operations John Mozeliak, Bader knew his time in St. Louis was over.
“Say it ain’t so, Mo,” Bader said to Mozeliak.
The trade was to New York, 11 miles from where Bader grew up in Bronxville, New York. Bader had idolized Derek Jeter and the Core Four, attending the Yankees’ 2009 playoff run — and when the team hoisted the World Series trophy that year, he imagined one day doing the same. As the news of his new home leaked out on Twitter, Bader’s phone flooded with text messages from friends he graduated with at Horace Mann, a private school in the Bronx. To most of his high school friends, Bader expressed excitement about returning to play for the hometown team.
But to his best friend, Nick Wiener, whom he met in second grade, he expressed frustration.
“I understand why they did it,” Bader told Wiener. “But I’m gonna make them see this was a bad decision.”
There were other complicating factors. Before he ever played a game in pinstripes, Bader faced skepticism from the same fans he once rooted alongside, who wondered why the front office would trade left-handed starting pitcher Jordan Montgomery for Bader, then on the IL with plantar fasciitis and wearing a walking boot.
It didn’t help that the Yankees struggled after the deal, posting a 10-18 record in August, hitting .221/.297/.354 over that span and watching their lead in the division shrink from 15.5 games to four. Montgomery flourished early for St. Louis, allowing just one run in his first 25⅔ innings, good for a 0.35 ERA over four starts.
Meanwhile, all Bader could do was wait to heal — and show up to play when it counted most, down the stretch and into October.
He’s come through. Since making his debut Sept. 20, Bader has won over skeptical Yankees fans, flashing Gold Glove defense in center field. In a hard-fought ALDS that goes to a deciding Game 5 on Monday night in the Bronx, Bader has smacked solo blasts in Game 1 and Game 3 against the Cleveland Guardians before hitting a two-run homer in Game 4, joining Bernie Williams and Mickey Mantle as the only Yankee center fielders with three home runs in a single postseason. They were also his first three home runs as a Yankee.
“Coming to New York,” Bader said, “I felt like I pressed the reset button.”
HARRISON BADER REALLY loved his long hair. He initially grew out his mane in 2018, inspired by players he watched in the NHL, whose flow is visible from underneath their helmets. He loved that his hair made him recognizable. He loved that when he made diving plays in the outfield, it waved around out of his hat like a cape hanging off of Superman. The fans loved it too, with a Twitter account dedicated to his signature locks.
But playing for the Yankees means adhering to the franchise’s infamous grooming policy, which prohibits all players, coaches and male executives from displaying facial hair other than mustaches and growing their hair below the collar.
For Bader, it was symbolic. Hitting the reset button meant cutting off his hair.
“There was not even a thought about it,” Bader said. “It was great, happy to do it. I had a great time on and off the field in St. Louis, and I wouldn’t trade it for anything, but in many ways, this was emblematic of the page turning.”
But even after the haircut, it took weeks for Bader to really process how his life had changed. He sold his home in St. Louis; his mom came and helped pack his life up to move back north. He walked into the Yankee clubhouse for the first time, but still Bader did not fully feel the weight of it all until he finally healed from his injury and returned to the field Sept. 20, the day Aaron Judge hit his 60th homer of the season and the Yankees came back from four runs down in the ninth inning against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
“I don’t think he really processed it until he started going to batting practice and putting on the Yankee uniform,” Wiener said. “He didn’t fully process it until he was out there and making his debut.”
The postseason success has felt like validation for Bader, proof of why he deserves to wear pinstripes, why the Yankees thought it wise to trade for him despite his injury. While Yankees general manager Brian Cashman told Bader that he expected the outfielder to be an impact player for New York, Bader knew fans had questions, and they weren’t the only ones. Montgomery was popular in the Yankees clubhouse, and Bader knew it would take time for him to win over his new teammates, especially given his inability to join them on the field right away.
But Bader knew focusing on things outside of his control would only hamper his ability to succeed on the field.
“You focus on the next thing, the next opportunity,” Bader said. “Then, you kind of relieve yourself of all of the other anxiety.”
IT’S HARD TO miss Bader in the clubhouse. He often dresses like he’s another 20-something New Yorker walking around the streets of SoHo, wearing bright graphic T-shirts and hyped sneakers like the Nike Ben & Jerry’s collaboration Chunky Dunkys, which resell on the secondary market for as much as $5,000. Bader’s new teammates describe him as outgoing, someone who’s always saying hi to the folks around him.
Yankees ace Gerrit Cole noticed Bader’s presence immediately once he joined the team.
“He’s electric, really,” Cole said. “An electric player, impact player. Like, got moxie, got baseball awareness. Gets after the ball on defense. A lot of good things to say about that guy.”
When he joined the Yankees, he also made a mission to get to know fellow outfielder Aaron Judge. While the two needed to get to know each other in order to communicate while roaming for fly balls, Bader also admired the way Judge carried himself on and off the field.
“Bro, not in a weird way, but I want to get close to him and do what he does,” Bader told Wiener. “I’m spending every minute I can next to that man.”
While Bader carried a fiery approach to the game in St. Louis, he saw Judge’s mature and calm demeanor and wanted to adopt it for himself.
“I wanted to surround myself with him and his energy,” Bader said last week. “We move as a unit out there and he’s part of that. It was a conscious decision to just be like, we’re going to be working next to each other so let’s talk. Let’s see where we’re at and just be the best version of ourselves for this team.”
He’s also settled back into New York life, returning to his high school routine of getting a bacon, egg and cheese on a blueberry bagel in the morning, grabbing a slice from his favorite pizza joint (Best Pizza, on First) and attending the wedding of a high school friend, something he would not have been able to do if he was still in St. Louis. He returned to local favorites like Caridad Express, a Dominican restaurant in the Bronx that he goes to with his off-season training partner, Andy Camilo.
Usually on the field, though, Bader tries to show as little emotion as possible, hoping that bottling up his feelings will help propel him to play better. But as his first home run as a Yankee sailed over the left-field fence in Game 1 of the ALDS, Bader couldn’t help but relish the moment, something he spent time visualizing to prepare himself.
“You don’t want to detract from anything that might come later in the game, but it was really hard when everybody was cheering,” Bader said. “It was a great moment. I enjoyed it, and again, as soon as it was over, it’s right back to locking in.”
Bader said this strategy dates back to his time at the University of Florida, where coach Brad Weitzel preached the mindset of “be the baseball,” telling his players that the baseball doesn’t have any emotion, doesn’t take the situation into account, doesn’t care how many fans are in the stands.
“It is totally emotionless,” Bader said. “So I try to act that way.”
Bader knows it’s easy to get distracted wanting to be the hero, hit the big home run, come through in a big moment — especially while playing for your childhood team. Keeping his mind off all that helps Bader on the field — and also helped him off of it, particularly back in August, when he was the new guy who couldn’t help his team win.
“The reality of the situation was that I wasn’t ready to play,” Bader said. “If I was going to force playing, if I was chasing that exact emotion, it wouldn’t have been a version of myself that would have been effective for myself and my teammates. Coping with that reality allowed me to continue to work.”
Even as the Yankees face possible elimination in Game 5, Bader is controlling those emotions again. He doesn’t want to dwell on accomplishing his childhood fantasy for too long.
“It’s a conscious decision every day to not get too high and not get too low,” Bader said. “Everything is just the next opportunity. You have to be completely still and just relax and be emotionless for when that next opportunity arises.”
For Bader and the Yankees, that opportunity is now.
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Eight teams started Saturday still in the 2022 postseason. After today’s league division series games, that number shrank considerably.
The Philadelphia Phillies eliminated the Atlanta Braves with an 8-3 National League Division Series Game 4 victory that had Philly’s Citizens Bank Park rocking.
The Seattle Mariners played their first home playoff game in more than 20 years, but they couldn’t avert a sweep against the Houston Astros. And the San Diego Padres knocked out the 111-win Los Angeles Dodgers after holding on for a 2-1 victory in Game 3.
The American League Division Series matchup between the New York Yankees and Cleveland Guardians was split after the first two games in the Bronx. But the Guardians pushed the 99-win Yankees to the brink of elimination with a walk-off win in Game 3.
More: Everything you need to know about the 2022 MLB playoffs | Previewing LDS matchups | Could this be the greatest postseason … ever? | Bracket, results and more
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Padres win series 3-1
The Padres have slayed the “dragon up the freeway,” to borrow a phrase from their owner, Peter Seidler. They won three consecutive NLDS games to eliminate a star-studded Dodgers team that dominated them throughout the regular season, and they seem to be operating at a completely different level at this juncture. They’re getting solid-to-great starting pitching and playing stellar defense behind it. The back end of their bullpen is dominating. And they’re stringing together timely hits, never more so than in the five-run seventh inning that produced an epic comeback on Saturday night.
Perhaps just as important — they’re playing with an extreme level of confidence. Eliminating the Mets and Dodgers, two teams that combined to win 212 games during the regular season, will do that. Now they’ll have the home-field advantage in an NLCS showdown against the similarly hot Phillies. And given the energy at Petco Park these last two nights, that could be a major lift. — Alden Gonzalez
HE IS HIM. #CaptureTheMoment pic.twitter.com/VYUX81hImH
— San Diego Padres (@Padres) October 16, 2022
Count it as a Run Batted Aust-In! #CaptureTheMoment pic.twitter.com/MUc3CRn8k6
— San Diego Padres (@Padres) October 16, 2022
HA. SEONG. KING. #CaptureTheMoment pic.twitter.com/dzu8GX6hm1
— San Diego Padres (@Padres) October 16, 2022
JUAN. SOTO.
The @Padres have come back to tie it! #postseason pic.twitter.com/XPefj5gRtm
— MLB (@MLB) October 16, 2022
TRAYCE THOMPSON! pic.twitter.com/u4jNsnu5mL
— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) October 16, 2022
Freddie clutch! pic.twitter.com/Lk6PZKQ8wJ
— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) October 16, 2022
Congratulations to Cara and Will Smith on the birth of their beautiful baby girl who was born this morning. Both mom and baby are doing well.
— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) October 16, 2022
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Guardians lead series 2-1
It might seem impossible to win without going big on offense in the postseason, but don’t tell that to the plucky Cleveland Guardians. The New York Yankees hit three homers, including a 449-foot moon shot by formerly struggling slugger Aaron Judge. But the Guardians just keep blooping pitches into the outfield and looping little liners to the opposite field — and before you knew, it added up to some real offense. The Yankees tried to close it out with a combination of Wandy Peralta and Clarke Schmidt, but Cleveland kept blooping and looping until the bases were loaded for frequent postseason hero Oscar Gonzalez, who singled softly through the middle, scoring two runs for a walk-off win in the ninth inning as a sell-out crowd at Progressive Field set the grandstand shuddering. It turns out a slingshot offense actually can get it done in October, and when it does, it’s awfully fun to watch. — Bradford Doolittle
OSCAR THE CLUTCH! #POSTSEASON pic.twitter.com/6ZJUW8JSgI
— MLB (@MLB) October 16, 2022
Silly Willy.#ForTheLand pic.twitter.com/qrLo9w06dV
— Cleveland Guardians (@CleGuardians) October 16, 2022
He done did it again. pic.twitter.com/ySJbwH6Azk
— New York Yankees (@Yankees) October 16, 2022
Cabrera CRUSH 💥 pic.twitter.com/NlmUTFuqcW
— New York Yankees (@Yankees) October 16, 2022
You think Oswaldo knew this was gone?! #postseason pic.twitter.com/1Mlv9pIYYE
— MLB (@MLB) October 16, 2022
Brand new ballgame 👨⚖️ pic.twitter.com/Kd3NoEjVqp
— New York Yankees (@Yankees) October 16, 2022
Aaron Judge‘s first hit of the postseason is a game-tying two-run homer. Prior to that, Judge had been 0-9, with eight strikeouts this postseason. According to ESPN Stats & Information, that was Judge’s 12th career postseason home run, which broke a tie with Bernie Williams for the third most by a Yankee through the age-30 season. Judge trails only Mickey Mantle (14 home runs in 54 games) and Derek Jeter (14 HRs in 110 games).
Real ones have been here since day one.#ForTheLand pic.twitter.com/wLHsoYjfah
— Cleveland Guardians (@CleGuardians) October 16, 2022
Ay Nay Nay.#ForTheLand pic.twitter.com/g3On6Ith3m
— Cleveland Guardians (@CleGuardians) October 16, 2022
Get ’em on. Get ’em over. Get ’em in.#ForTheLand pic.twitter.com/61figmJTfD
— Cleveland Guardians (@CleGuardians) October 16, 2022
A house party on a Saturday night.
Say less.#ForTheLand pic.twitter.com/S6DE50zgYs
— Cleveland Guardians (@CleGuardians) October 15, 2022
Saturday Showdown. #RepBX pic.twitter.com/3oSgwQgsMj
— New York Yankees (@Yankees) October 15, 2022
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Astros win series 3-0
The game that felt like it might never end finally did, at 7:31 p.m. local time — 6 hours, 22 minutes after it started, 18 innings deep, on account of one bad pitch.
Jeremy Pena, the rookie shortstop for the Houston Astros, hammered a hanging slider from Seattle Mariners rookie Penn Murfee to center field, breaking the longest scoreless tie in playoff history and leading the Astros to a 1-0 victory.
In a game that had as many pitchers as hits (18), with a postseason-record 42 strikeouts, no errors and incredibly clean baseball, the Astros advanced to their sixth consecutive AL Championship Series, sweeping their division rivals and illustrating again that whether it’s a slugfest or a pitching duel, they’re as equipped as any team to triumph. — Jeff Passan
FINAL in 18: Astros 1, Mariners 0
Jeremy Peña’s solo home run to lead off the top of the 18th sends Houston to its sixth straight ALCS.
Seattle’s first home playoff game in 21 years goes as long as any in postseason history. Amazing atmosphere. Wonderful season. Tough ending.
— Jeff Passan (@JeffPassan) October 16, 2022
JEREMY PEÑA BREAKS THE ICE IN THE 18TH! #postseason pic.twitter.com/4EkefQ91U3
— MLB (@MLB) October 16, 2022
FIVE-TOOL PLAYER JULIO RODRIGUEZ pic.twitter.com/r09OGHJML1
— Joon Lee (@joonlee) October 16, 2022
Astros-Mariners is going to the 16th inning. Here are the numbers so far.
– Hitters are 14 for 101
– Of those 14 hits, 12 were singles and two doubles
– Pitchers have struck out 37 hitters and issued three walks
– There have been 425 pitches thrown
– Total runs scored: zero— Jeff Passan (@JeffPassan) October 16, 2022
Just your everyday double play. #EmbraceTheChaos pic.twitter.com/RPGhgRSOdy
— Seattle Mariners (@Mariners) October 15, 2022
Return of the King 👑
Felix Hernandez is back in Seattle for the Mariners first playoff game since 2001!
(via @MarlyRiveraESPN)pic.twitter.com/VYN85bX1nV
— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) October 15, 2022
Forever our King 👑 pic.twitter.com/PO1Jlz0Sen
— Seattle Mariners (@Mariners) October 15, 2022
✨ that light tho ✨ pic.twitter.com/5gNSFlwbzO
— Seattle Mariners (@Mariners) October 15, 2022
Win. pic.twitter.com/KGvAE3aExY
— Houston Astros (@astros) October 15, 2022
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Phillies win series 3-1
Once again, Major League Baseball will not have a repeat World Series champion after the Phillies bounced the Braves from the postseason with a resounding 8-3 victory in Game 4 of their NLDS.
Just as they did in all three of their wins in the series, the Phillies jumped to an early lead that had Atlanta playing chase pretty much from the beginning. And for the second day in a row, it was a party from start to finish at a raucous Citizens Bank Park.
Instead of a bat-spike home run celebration providing the signature moment like it did in Game 3, the highlight on Saturday was a spring around the bases. In the third inning, J.T. Realmuto became the first catcher in postseason history to hit an inside-the-park home run, one inning after Brandon Marsh ignited the crowd with a three-run blast.
Two things are clear no matter who Philly faces in the NLCS: This team that found new life earlier in the season when manager Rob Thomson took over won’t be an easy out for anyone; and when the Phillies take the field at home in an NLCS for the first time since 2010 on Friday, it’s going to be quite a scene in Philadelphia. — Jesse Rogers
.@bryceharper3 with the exclamation point! #Postseason pic.twitter.com/5Xs4ZyIcHC
— MLB (@MLB) October 15, 2022
Rhys Hoskins drives in another run!
📺: FS1 and the FOX Sports App pic.twitter.com/C6yF1UfXfL
— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) October 15, 2022
J.T. Realmuto is SPEED! @Phillies lead 6-2!
📺: FS1 and the FOX Sports App pic.twitter.com/jwCXSPwBhC
— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) October 15, 2022
The Phillies are pouring it on! Philadelphia fans can feel it!
📺: FS1 and the FOX Sports App pic.twitter.com/T2hReNtECD
— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) October 15, 2022
🚨 INSIDE-THE-PARK HOME RUN 🚨#POSTSEASON pic.twitter.com/pX1BrApZrU
— MLB (@MLB) October 15, 2022
According to ESPN Stats & Information, that is the first inside-the-park home run by a catcher in the postseason and the first time any Phillies player has done it in the playoffs.
Ar-SEE YA!
A solo shot gets the @Braves on the board!
📺: FS1 and the FOX Sports App pic.twitter.com/4OHCrok5O1
— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) October 15, 2022
Charlie Morton stayed in the game after being hit in the elbow by a comebacker
📺: FS1 and the FOX Sports App pic.twitter.com/VMvRR3KiIc
— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) October 15, 2022
THIS IS MARSH!!!!!!!!! #Postseason pic.twitter.com/xOitZ3UPts
— MLB (@MLB) October 15, 2022
I think I’m appropriately dressed for today’s big day…..you PHEEL-EASE?!! 🤣🤣🤣 Philly we ready?!! Then let’s goooooo @Phillies! Our time! pic.twitter.com/8ceNVTiaNU
— dawnstaley (@dawnstaley) October 15, 2022
The Philadelphia native knows a bit about winning when it counts.
positive vibes only
— Blooper (@BlooperBraves) October 15, 2022
day game in the city that spawned the Day Man, we’re gonna have to fire on all cylinders
— Blooper (@BlooperBraves) October 15, 2022
The fellas pic.twitter.com/RrNSBWkmD6
— Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) October 15, 2022
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Playoff baseball returns to the Pacific Northwest on Saturday.
The Seattle Mariners are hoping it’s more than a one-day cameo.
Julio Rodríguez and company host Yordan Alvarez and the Houston Astros for Game 3 of their AL Division Series. The Mariners are hoping to extend their October stay after dropping the first two games of the best-of-five series in Houston.
Matt Olson and Atlanta look to stay alive against Bryce Harper and Philadelphia, and the Los Angeles Dodgers take on Manny Machado and San Diego in Game 4 of their NLDS on Saturday night. The New York Yankees face the Cleveland Guardians in the other ALDS matchup.
It’s the first playoff game in Seattle since the Mariners were eliminated by the New York Yankees in the 2001 AL Championship Series.
“The factor that I don’t think is getting talked about enough and I think it’s going to show up tomorrow on the first inning is when there’s 45,000 Mariner fans in the stands pumped and ready to go, and all behind us. Because we certainly need it,” Seattle manager Scott Servais said. “I talked about it when we clinched, ended the drought, how valuable our fan base has been to this team. This team really, somehow, we get wired, we get going when it’s loud here.”
Seattle snapped the longest playoff drought in the four major North American sports when it clinched one of the AL wild cards on Sept. 30 thanks to Cal Raleigh’s home run.
Even the starting pitcher for Houston — trying to end Seattle’s season on Saturday — has appreciation for seeing the Mariners back in the postseason.
“Moments like these where the fans get to come back out and watch postseason baseball for an organization that hasn’t been there in a while I think is really cool,” Houston right-hander Lance McCullers Jr. said.
Here’s what else to know about the MLB playoffs Saturday:
SATURDAY’S SCHEDULE (All times ET)
NLDS Game 4: Atlanta at Philadelphia, 2:07 p.m., FS1
ALDS Game 3: Houston at Seattle, 4:07 p.m., TBS
ALDS Game 3: New York Yankees at Cleveland, 7:37 p.m., TBS
NLDS Game 4: Los Angeles Dodgers at San Diego, 9:37 p.m., FS1
ALL RISE?
Maybe a change of scenery will help Aaron Judge as he looks to find his timing at the plate. Judge and the Yankees visit the Guardians for Game 3 of their AL Division Series on Saturday.
Judge went 0 for 5 with four strikeouts in Friday’s 4-2 loss in Game 2. He is 0 for 8 with seven strikeouts in the deadlocked best-of-five series.
“Just a little late,” Judge said. “When you’re a little late, you’re missing pitches that you’re usually doing some damage on. You’re swinging at stuff that you usually don’t. So it’s truly all about timing.”
The 30-year-old Judge hit .311 with 62 homers and 131 RBIs this season, leading New York to the AL East title and setting himself up for a big payday. The 6-foot-7 outfielder is eligible for free agency after breaking Roger Maris’ AL home run record.
ON THE EDGE
Atlanta is on the brink of elimination heading into Game 4 at Philadelphia. The Braves won the World Series last year, and then rallied past the Mets for their fifth consecutive NL East title this season.
Charlie Morton starts for Atlanta, and Noah Syndergaard takes the mound for Philly. Morton, who turns 39 on Nov. 12, is 7-4 with a 3.35 ERA in 17 career postseason appearances. Syndergaard is 2-1 with a 2.33 ERA in six postseason games, including a scoreless eighth inning in Game 2 at Atlanta.
Morton was in the mix for Friday’s Game 3, but the Braves went with Spencer Strider instead. The rookie right-hander was tagged for five runs in 2 1/3 innings in a 9-1 loss.
“It’s the postseason. You’ve just got to be ready to throw when they call on you,” Morton said.
___
More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
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Minnesota Twins’ Carlos Correa reacts while batting during the first inning of a baseball game … [+]
When the game of musical chairs among an unprecedented class of free agent shortstops ended in late March, Carlos Correa was left without a seat.
Correa signed a somewhat complicated contract with the Minnesota Twins on March 22, more than a week after the lockout-delayed spring training began.
Going into the offseason, Correa was one of four premium shortstops to hit the open market.
Corey Seager signed a 10-year, $325-million deal with the Texas Rangers. The Detroit Tigers signed Javier Baez to a six-year, $140-million contract and Trevor Story agreed to the same deal with the Boston Red Sox.
Story agreed to play second base because Boston already had Xander Bogaerts.
That left Correa to agree to a three-year contract worth $105.3 million that would pay him yearly salaries of $35.1 million from 2022-24. However, agent Scott Boras also had opt-out clauses put into the deal that would enable Correa to void the remainder of the contract after both the 2022 and 2023 seasons.
While nothing is official, Correa told El Nuevo Dia earlier this week that he plans to void the recent of his contract and jump back into the free agent market this upcoming offseason. He would walk away from a guaranteed $70.2 million.
The move is a bit of a calculated risk as Correa could again find a soft market for his services. However, it is also understandable why Correa is willing to bet on himself.
The longtime Houston Astros stalwart had an outstanding offensive season for the Twins, hitting .291/.366/.467 in 136 games with 22 home runs. On the downside, he had three defensive runs saved after registering 20 for the Astros in 2021.
Despite playing eight seasons in the major leagues, Correa just turned 28 years old last month. He seemingly has many more good years ahead.
However, Correa will also be wading into another free agent pool again loaded with impact shortstops.
Bogaerts is expected to opt out of the final three years and $60 million of his six-year, $120-million contract with the Red Sox. He hit .307/.377/.456 with 15 home runs in 150 games this season and had four defensive runs saved.
The Los Angeles Dodgers’ Trea Turner should generate plenty of interest.
In 160 games, Turner had a .298/.343/.466 slash line, 21 homers, 100 RBIs and 27 steals. However, his fielding was questionable as he had -1 defensive runs saved.
The Atlanta Braves want to re-sign Dansby Swanson, but he can reach the open market five days after the World Series ends. Durability is certainly one of Swanson’s calling cards as he played in all 162 games during the regular season, hitting .277/.329/.447 with 25 homers, 18 stolen bases and nine defensive runs saved.
Bogaerts is 30 years old while Turner is 29 and Swanson is 28. All three are young enough to command long-term contracts.
Will the trio cause Correa to again be without a team when the offseason ends? Time will tell but it should be an interesting market to follow.
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John Perrotto, Senior Contributor
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The Cleveland Guardians weren’t supposed to be here — not yet. They entered the season with the youngest roster in MLB, at least a season or two behind a Chicago White Sox team that many pundits believed would run away with the American League Central race.
And yet, here they are, after taking the division with 92 wins and sweeping the Tampa Bay Rays in the AL Wild Card Series, now facing off against the New York Yankees in the division series.
Their unexpected success can be attributed to a number of things: smart promotions from the front office and successful debuts from many of the franchise’s 25-and-under crowd. But, most importantly, the presence of a bona fide superstar in veteran Jose Ramirez — the heart and soul of the team and a man who, in early April, was hours away from being traded.
On the final day of spring training, the Guardians’ front office had hit its deadline — if it couldn’t get a contract extension done with its All-Star third baseman that day, he was going to be traded before Opening Day. The San Diego Padres, among other contenders, were waiting for a call.
Team interpreter Agustin Rivero, who was coaching first base in a split-squad game that afternoon, was pulled away for one last conversation between the player and his front office, and to help Ramirez share his take: He wanted to stay in Cleveland.
“I’m so grateful Jose wanted to be here, and he made that a priority,” Guardians president of baseball operations Chris Antonetti said during wild-card weekend. “He got personally involved. … We wouldn’t be standing here without that.”
After a few hectic hours, Ramirez went from the trade block to a long-term commitment from the only franchise he has known. And six months after Ramirez signed a seven-year, $141 million deal, he and his squad celebrated their first playoff series win since the 2016 AL Championship Series.
“I’m really happy, especially for the commitment the organization made,” Ramirez said through Rivero recently. “It’s very really special. The most important part is family. The city has given me the opportunity to take care of my family. Cleveland is my family.”
As one of the only veterans in a clubhouse full of youngsters, Ramirez has led his squad to an unlikely extension of its season — first with an MVP-caliber season that got the Guardians to October, then with a go-ahead home run in Game 1 of the AL Wild Card Series against the Tampa Bay Rays.
But how far Ramirez could lead this team came down to how quickly a roster that debuted 17 rookies this season was ready to follow.
A lot of the Guardians’ success as a young team is a credit to the franchise’s culture, according to Antonetti. The current rookies watched as previous Cleveland teams made the playoffs while they were doing the same in the minors. Winning begets winning, in his estimation.
“Our Double-A team won a championship in the Eastern League in 2021,” Antonetti said. “And there’s like seven to nine of those guys up here now that are AL Central champions.”
The rookies got their first taste of a pennant race during that minor league season, but there is a level of pressure in the major leagues that is impossible to replicate anywhere else. And perhaps the number of intense showdowns they needed to put away two division competitors to clinch this season gave the kids a little extra edge when their October moment arrived.
And arrive it did, when Oscar Gonzalez — a rookie with fewer than 100 games under his belt — provided the only run in a 1-0 Game 2 win by depositing a 15th-inning pitch into the right-center-field bleachers — and sending Progressive Field into a frenzy.
“I could never imagine anything like this,” another rookie, Steve Kwan, said on the field after the wild-card series win. “And how it’s happened as well. Tito [manager Terry Francona] expressed at the beginning of the year that we’re going to play the game right because we can’t live and die by the home run.”
It wasn’t lost on anyone that the Guardians’ two wins against Tampa Bay came via the long ball, as did their only run in Tuesday’s 4-1 ALDS-opening loss at Yankee Stadium. But no one, including the Guardians, thinks that’s how Cleveland is going to win a championship — at least not this year.
Their 127 home runs in the regular season ranked second to last in the majors, and while three runs might have been enough to get past the Rays, the Guardians are going to need to score some runs to take down the Yankees in the division series. Part of what helped spur a 16-2 run in September that vaulted Cleveland into the playoffs was putting the ball in play and working the basepaths: That month, the Guardians posted the second-highest batting average in the majors (.264), fourth-best OBP (.331), fifth-fewest strikeouts (195) and most stolen bases (31).
Cleveland is known for that scrappy, high-energy style of baseball — not for mashing balls into the stands. But what might matter more to the Guardians, who were as many as five games below .500 twice this season, is their resolve.
“There’s a quiet confidence in our group of guys,” 26-year-old reliever Sam Hentges said. “We come to the ballpark every day and we don’t really back down from challenges. That’s preached from Tito … and that’s how we attack each day.”
Hentges, in his first full year in the big leagues, compiled a 2.32 ERA in 57 games then followed that up with three pressure-packed scoreless innings Saturday to earn the clinching win over the Rays.
But now after grinding out that wild-card series over a fellow small-market team, Cleveland is being put to the ultimate test against the big-market, big-money 99-win Yankees, who won five of the six regular-season meetings between the teams before grabbing a 1-0 ALDS lead Tuesday night in New York.
“I was kind of wide eyed the first time,” Kwan said of playing in New York back in late April. “Hopefully, we can play baseball like we always do.”
While the Guardians’ front office would never use the payroll discrepancy as an excuse for whatever happens on the field this week, it’s hard to overlook the David vs. Goliath nature of this matchup as Cleveland brings an $82 million payroll that ranks 28th in all of baseball against New York’s $265 million roster.
“We operate in very different markets, but we have the same goal,” Antonetti noted with a smile.
That goal — to win in October — might have seemed far-fetched in March, but it became a bit more obtainable once Ramirez signed. Then as each youngster began to contribute and the team kept racking up wins, the concept of the postseason emerged as a reality. Cleveland went from a complete unknown, with just a 7.5% chance to win the division at the start of the season, to an ALCS contender. Now, facing their first series deficit of the playoffs, it’s time to see if the Guardians can quiet their doubters once again.
“They didn’t let anyone else write their season story for them,” Antonetti said. “They took the reins and wrote their own story.”
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We’re down to eight teams in the 2022 postseason after four were eliminated this past weekend in MLB’s first-ever wild-card series weekend. Now it’s on to the league division series: four series, best-of-five, first team to win three advances.
The Philadelphia Phillies beat the defending champion Atlanta Braves in the first game of the division series round on Tuesday. In a battle between AL West rivals, the Houston Astros defeated the Seattle Mariners on a dramatic walk-off. The New York Yankees beat the Cleveland Guardians in Game 1 of the second ALDS, and, finally, an intradivision showdown resulted in the the Los Angeles Dodgers beating the San Diego Padres in the second NLDS opening matchup.
Here’s a look back at all the Day 1 action.
More: Everything you need to know about the 2022 MLB playoffs | Previewing LDS matchups | Could this be the greatest postseason … ever? | Bracket, results and more
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Dodgers lead 1-0
The Dodgers have continually talked up the depth and talent of their bullpen, regardless of the uncertainty at the back end — and that confidence was validated in their postseason opener. The Padres trimmed a five-run deficit to two with a big fifth inning against Julio Urias, but then four Dodgers relievers — Evan Phillips, Alex Vesia, Brusdar Graterol and Chris Martin — kept the Padres scoreless over the last four innings for a Game 1 victory.
The usage offered an early peek at the Dodgers’ bullpen strategy. Manager Dave Roberts used Phillips, their most effective reliever this season, in the sixth inning because the best part of the Padres’ lineup was due up. Vesia, a lefty, came back out to face the left-handed-hitting Juan Soto. And for the final four outs, it was Graterol and Martin. The order will undoubtedly change throughout the postseason, with Tommy Kahnle and, perhaps eventually, Blake Treinen pitching in high leverage situations. But the Dodgers clearly feel good enough about their depth. — Alden Gonzalez
With the Padres on a roll in the sixth inning, Phillips got Wil Myers to ground into a double play, ending the threat.
Turn it! pic.twitter.com/nzuCPqiWmV
— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) October 12, 2022
Myers’ 376-foot home run just made it over the wall to give the Padres their first run of the night. Runs by Jake Cronenworth and Ha-Seong Kim cut the Dodgers’ lead to two.
Wil took this one way back 💥 #CaptureTheMoment pic.twitter.com/E82so8Uxws
— San Diego Padres (@Padres) October 12, 2022
In the bottom of the third, Will Smith hit a ball deep into left field for a double that brought home Trea Turner home and extended the Dodgers’ lead to three. After a Max Muncy single, L.A. added another run courtesy of a Gavin Lux double that brought Smith home.
A walk with the bases loaded along and a Padres error helped bring in two more runs and increased the lead to 5-0 for Los Angeles.
Puttin’ up a three-spot. pic.twitter.com/7L9I5UI9Be
— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) October 12, 2022
Trea Turner gave the Dodgers an early lead in the first inning with a 419-foot blast to left field.
TREA! pic.twitter.com/HdJDELGdNc
— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) October 12, 2022
Go get ’em, Julio. pic.twitter.com/F62MYDELD2
— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) October 11, 2022
Ready for October baseball. #WinForVin pic.twitter.com/3kn8q7UKzW
— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) October 11, 2022
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Yankees lead series 1-0
The Yankees needed Gerrit Cole to be on top of his game and he delivered. Over the course of 6 1/3 innings, Cole allowed just one run on four hits — a home run to Steven Kwan — while walking one and striking out eight. The game nearly fell apart on Cole in the third inning after Cleveland loaded the bases with one out following Kwan’s home run, but Cole managed to get out of the inning unscathed.
Meanwhile, at the plate, the Yankees relied on a solo homer from Harrison Bader to tie the game, a Jose Trevino sacrifice fly to take the lead and an Anthony Rizzo two-run shot into the second deck of right field to extend the lead to 4-1. That provided a cushion for the bullpen, which was held together on the backs of Jonathan Loaisiga, Wandy Peralta and Clay Holmes. — Joon Lee
It wouldn’t be a game at Yankee Stadium without a lot of home runs. Speaking of that, Anthony Rizzo hit a two-run dinger to add to New York’s lead.
H-R to the izzo. pic.twitter.com/q5zkwN2Bpw
— New York Yankees (@Yankees) October 12, 2022
Josh Donaldson thought he had a go-ahead home run … and was caught out between first and second base when it turned out that the ball had instead bounced off the top of the wall. Replay confirmed it, and the Yankee faithful were less than enthused. Fortunately for the Bronx Bombers, an Oscar Gonzalez misplay off the right-field wall led to a sacrifice fly, and a tenuous lead.
Josh Donaldson was THIS close to hitting a go-ahead HR for the @Yankees 👀 pic.twitter.com/sAtsHkwGdZ
— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) October 12, 2022
Trevi brings in IKF 💪 pic.twitter.com/FBQblC7Wp0
— New York Yankees (@Yankees) October 12, 2022
Harrison Bader tied things up for New York with a home run to left field. It’s Bader’s first home run as a member of the Yankees.
Not a bad time for your 1st blast in pinstripes. @aybaybader 🔥 pic.twitter.com/cFFujDrIXN
— New York Yankees (@Yankees) October 12, 2022
The Guardians’ power-filled postseason continues with Steven Kwan opening up the scoring with a 360-foot home run to right field.
Steven Kwan isn’t afraid of the big stage! #Postseason pic.twitter.com/MgTE8WeynS
— MLB (@MLB) October 12, 2022
Locked in. pic.twitter.com/M3K3i4sDAN
— New York Yankees (@Yankees) October 11, 2022
Tunnel Vision. #RepBX pic.twitter.com/lWk1e2RJpb
— New York Yankees (@Yankees) October 11, 2022
The Kids are here.#ForTheLand pic.twitter.com/Sorosy2bUN
— Cleveland Guardians (@CleGuardians) October 11, 2022
Hey @NYCMayor let’s make a deal. I’m willing to bet a freshly tapped 6 pack of @GLBC_Cleveland Christmas Ale as we prepare to beat the @Yankees. What do you say? #GoGuardians #ForTheLand
— Justin M. Bibb (@JustinMBibb) October 11, 2022
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Astros lead 1-0
The Mariners were on their way to stealing home-field advantage in their ALDS, and then the Astros did what the Astros always seem to do in October. Bottom nine. Two on. Two out. Yordan Alvarez at the plate. And in came Robbie Ray, the reigning AL Cy Young winner, the $115 million free agent prize of Seattle’s offseason, to get the lefty-on-lefty matchup. Alvarez fouled off a fastball. He didn’t miss the next one. And 439 feet later, a 117-mph rocket landed in the right-field bleachers and propelled the Astros to an 8-7 victory in Game 1. Down 7-3 after Justin Verlander‘s worst-ever playoff start, Houston looked done until it wasn’t. And it continued a trend that has proven awfully fruitful in years past: Six straight postseasons, six straight victories in Game 1 of the ALDS. — Jeff Passan
The Astros used the most brutal weapon possible in trolling the Mariners: math.
HOU love to SEA it. pic.twitter.com/ndPKtAb2BH
— Houston Astros (@astros) October 11, 2022
Alvarez’s walk-off home run put Houston in the win column in the series opener.
Yordan rules. #Postseason pic.twitter.com/yaQAKx8bFw
— MLB (@MLB) October 11, 2022
Alex Bregman‘s 403-foot homer drove Alvarez home and narrowed Seattle’s lead to 7-5 in the bottom of the eighth inning.
The @Astros aren’t done yet. 👀 #Postseason pic.twitter.com/nPYk6ugcOh
— MLB (@MLB) October 11, 2022
Seattle added to its lead thanks to Eugenio Suarez‘s solo homer.
Eugenio Suárez drops one into the Crawford Boxes! #Postseason pic.twitter.com/QTiGb7MA59
— MLB (@MLB) October 11, 2022
The Astros’ first score came in the third inning, courtesy of a Yordan Alvarez double that drove Jose Altuve and Chas McCormick home. Yuli Gurriel mashed a 373-foot home run for their third run of the game, cutting Seattle’s lead tp three.
YORDAN. pic.twitter.com/HfNkr3GVJF
— Houston Astros (@astros) October 11, 2022
La Piña left no doubt. pic.twitter.com/vei6JQHReH
— Houston Astros (@astros) October 11, 2022
Seattle’s hot start continued in the second inning with runs from Rodriguez, Adam Frazier and Jarred Kelenic.
Julioooooooo!
The J-Rod Show makes a Game 1 appearance. #Postseason pic.twitter.com/gp4LhcTpwf
— MLB (@MLB) October 11, 2022
TY
FRANCE
RAKES
🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷 pic.twitter.com/l6rKFwHCR8— Seattle Mariners (@Mariners) October 11, 2022
Julio Rodriguez drew a leadoff walk from Justin Verlander to begin the game. Ty France’s hit sent him to third, and Cal Raleigh‘s RBI single allowed Rodriguez to score the game’s first run.
Big start from Big Dumper. #Postseason pic.twitter.com/vej03tjo8m
— MLB (@MLB) October 11, 2022
Washington’s department of natural resources couldn’t resist cracking a joke about Houston’s sign-stealing scandal.
Reminder to hikers and Houston baseball players that trash cans should only be used for their intended purpose. pic.twitter.com/2GkmgVkV7J
— Washington State Dept. of Natural Resources (@waDNR) October 11, 2022
Dialed in. #SeaUsRise pic.twitter.com/z6zAFWoJgP
— Seattle Mariners (@Mariners) October 11, 2022
The very helpful excuse note. Especially for a 2:37 p.m. local time start.
Admin is giving y’all today and Thursday off 🤝 pic.twitter.com/013Fn1dle7
— Houston Astros (@astros) October 11, 2022
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Phillies lead series 1-0
The Phillies’ offense has emerged during the playoffs with a different feel than the long ball-or-bust version we saw most of the season. In Tuesday’s NLDS Game 1 win, they peppered Braves pitching with 10 hits — Nick Castellanos had three of them — and seven runs in the first five innings without hitting a home run.
When they weren’t filling the bases via singles and doubles, Philadelphia played small ball, attempting three sacrifice bunts, including one each from sluggers Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber. Two of those bunt attempts were successful, leading to two more small-ball moments: sacrifice flies by Alec Bohm in the third inning and Matt Vierling in the fifth. And it all added up to just enough for the Phillies to hang on for a 7-6 victory after the Braves made it interesting with a three-run ninth inning.
It’s not something you can find in the box score, but the Phillies’ fast start — coupled with the Mariners getting to Astros ace Justin Verlander early in their own division series opener — makes it worth wondering if there’s a rest-vs.-rust advantage to coming in hot off a wild-card-round win against a team that hasn’t played for nearly a week. — Jesse Rogers
Nick Castellanos makes a diving catch for the second out of the ninth inning en route to a Philly victory.
Also NICK CASTELLANOS ARE YOU KIDDING WITH THIS CATCH pic.twitter.com/MLpgZnDLel
— Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) October 11, 2022
Matt Olson hits a three-run blast with one out in the ninth, cutting the Phillies’ deficit to just one run — and giving the Braves some late-game hope.
👀@mattolson21 | #Back2Battle pic.twitter.com/ZUTdKqOZ0E
— Atlanta Braves (@Braves) October 11, 2022
Travis D’Arnaud earned his second and third RBIs of the game with a double that drove home William Contreras and Olson — making him responsible for all of Atlanta’s first three runs.
d’ouble#Back2Battle pic.twitter.com/VpdXrMMnU0
— Atlanta Braves (@Braves) October 11, 2022
Philadelphia is living the baseball adage that “two-out hits will get you to heaven.” Atlanta’s first score came via the long ball.
Starting off hot!! pic.twitter.com/KFy77HFp8H
— Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) October 11, 2022
Alec Bohm makes it 2-0 in the first!
📺: FOX and the FOX Sports App pic.twitter.com/BEcJ54mJof
— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) October 11, 2022
Mean Jean Hitting Machine pic.twitter.com/xhiwrwEyuD
— Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) October 11, 2022
d’inger#Back2Battle pic.twitter.com/vFNWIHCHQC
— Atlanta Braves (@Braves) October 11, 2022
Clutch Nick pic.twitter.com/YiEMZKV8dW
— Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) October 11, 2022
Y’all know what time it is, let’s go @Braves 🔥🔥#RepTheA | #Back2Battle | #TrueToAtlanta pic.twitter.com/vP45W8gS5H
— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 11, 2022
The Champs are #Back2Battle! Good luck @Braves!#ForTheA || #DirtyBirds pic.twitter.com/49h3lFvpsW
— Atlanta Falcons (@AtlantaFalcons) October 11, 2022
Mornin’ pic.twitter.com/nY6blR3BM0
— Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) October 11, 2022
No better way to start the day than wearing matching shirts tbh pic.twitter.com/r7Cct5tCcV
— Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) October 11, 2022
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New York Yankees starting pitcher Gerrit Cole delivers against the Cleveland Guardians during the … [+]
Gerrit Cole produced plenty of good moments through the 99-win regular season but also did enough things wrong to provide skepticism among fans, especially on the social media portion of the internet.
Perhaps scarred by the AL-worst 33 homers allowed, including the nine to Boston and possibly fearful of a reprise of last night’s nightmarish appearance in the wild card game at Fenway Park, the apprehension was there along with this question:
Should Gerrit Cole start Game 1 of a postseason series?
It was not only a topic among fans but a private discussion by the Yankees in their postseason planning meetings, though it seemed like a brief conversation before Cole ultimately was tapped for the start.
On Tuesday, there were a few anxious moments such as the 2-0 fastball Steven Kwan hit into the right field seats, sending pitching coach Matt Blake for a quick consultation. The next few at-bats that followed were also a little apprehensive for some when Cole loaded the bases as part of throwing 60 pitches through three innings.
The early 60-pitch sequence ended with a nasty slider Andres Gimenez swung at for strike three, one pitch after not getting a call on a close offering. Then quick innings and Cole only allowed two more baserunners allowed while the Yankees took a lead.
New York Yankees starting pitcher Gerrit Cole delivers against the Cleveland Guardians during the … [+]
“It was just a really awesome experience overall,” Cole said. “Just sometimes when you feel the crowd or the energy, it sometimes can become a little easier just to quiet things down because it’s so loud. I don’t know if that makes sense, but it does to me. I mean, just what a great atmosphere.”
A few hours later, Cole was the talk of the first of the of 11 wins the Yankees hope to get in their first championship since 2009 and it was more special for everyone involved since it was the moment he waited since being introduced at the standard lavish press conference on Dec. 18, 2019, the day he was accompanied by his famous childhood sign: “Yankee fan forever, Yankee fan today”.
That sign made its appearance in the 2001 World Series 18 years before he signed the record $324 million contract but for various reasons, the postseason under the lights in a packed house in the Bronx eluded Cole until Tuesday.
Fans cheer New York Yankees starting pitcher Gerrit Cole (45) as he leaves the game during the … [+]
First there was the COVID-19 pandemic that led to the 60-game season. During the truncated season, a midseason slump kept the Yankees from hosting an home game in an empty stadium and they traveled to Cleveland where Cole dominated the opener. Then there were two games in the ALDS against Tampa Bay being played in San Diego and Cole did his part in Games 1 and 5 where the Yankees in a normal setup would be in Tropicana Field.
Last year as baseball trickled back towards normalcy, the Yankees sputtered through an inconsistent first half that likely cost them an AL East title. Eventually they found their footing but sputtered again in September and wound up not clinching the postseason until their final at-bat of the regular season and when they did it was merely for the trip to Boston where Cole could not get out of the third while pitching on a hamstring he tweaked during the Yankees’ seven-game losing streak a month earlier.
Cole was the runner-up in the Cy Young voting to Robbie Ray, who was last seen allowing a 438-foot homer to Yordan Alvarez in Houston as the Yankees lined up for their baseline introductions.
On Monday, Cole seemed locked in with his answers with short clipped answers at the podium, talking as if he would rather be in the high intensity setting of a bullpen session than in a big room with pictures of Yankee history on the side walls and offering his common detailed answers. It was there he relayed an exchange with catcher Brian McCann upon joining Houston:
“You know the postseason is a drug, right?” I said, “Yeah, it is. It is.” You just can’t get enough of it.”
If Cole pitches as well as Tuesday, he and the Yankees may get more than enough of the postseason. There’s still a long way to go but this was a good start and validation of Boone’s defense of Cole, who sometimes can appear flustered at circumstances.
“Really good season,” Boone said Monday. “Obviously because it’s Gerrit Cole and because he came here and signed a huge contract, the long term, and the ace of this staff, the New York Yankees staff, nothing will ever be necessarily good enough. But I think he’s had a very strong year.”
And for one night it was good enough just like his six scoreless starts, his two flirtations with no-hitters in June.
“Gerrit was really good,” Boone said. “He did a really good job of owning the moment and being unpredictable. And I thought his breaking ball was really on point.”
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Larry Fleisher, Contributor
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