

Saturday evening the Astros outlasted the Seattle Mariners to complete the sweep in the best-of-three ALDS (HOU 1, SEA 0 in 18 innings).The game. Current conditions suggest the Astros and Phillies could begin Game 3 as scheduled, but once the rain intensifies later in the night, they would have to hit pause and the game would likely be suspended. The Houston Astros are heading back to the ALCS. ET, and continue until early Tuesday morning. This game really turned in the seventh, as Jesse Chavez took over for Elder. He left with a 7/2 K/BB ratio in 4 2 3 innings, but the Braves got no more runs off him or the Astros relief corps the rest of the way. ET and will increase in intensity around 9 p.m. Brown mostly settled down after that, though he did allow another, more hard-hit Acua double, as well as another walk and a HBP. Light rain started to fall at Citizens Bank Park around 6 p.m. Monday's postponement is the first in the Fall Classic since Game 6 of the 2011 World Series.
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Here is the updated 2022 World Series schedule: There will still be an off-day for travel between Thursday's Game 5 and, if necessary, Friday's Game 6. It will instead be played Tuesday ( live updates here), and the rest of the series will be pushed back one day. Game 3 of the Fall Classic has been postponed due to rain, MLB announced Monday evening just about an hour before first pitch. It was a good team win.The Houston Astros and Philadelphia Phillies will have to wait one more day to resume the 2022 World Series. The (Astros) score and they weren’t afraid to come back and score for us. Astros scoring play: Carlos Correa grounds out softly to third, but all the baserunners advance 90 feet and a run comes in to score. Renfroe making a hell of a play on Alvarez double attempt and the boys got run after run. I love the way they played out there, flying around on defense. “The last two or three years I don’t think we pull that one out, to be honest. What mattered was that image, of Robles boiling with frustration, of the Nationals appearing desperate and fraught. Rendon, the third baseman, made a spectacular diving stop in the fourth inning, and then he booted a routine grounder in the seventh.Īlthough it wasn’t perfect, the sum of the Angels’ efforts was still good enough for a victory they needed. He also threw out Alvarez trying to stretch a single into a double, and he made two nice running catches. Right fielder Hunter Renfroe made an error when he couldn’t stop a ball rolling along the fence in the third inning. The Angels mixed some exceptional defense with a couple of mistakes, by the same players.

Ward, who was moved back into the leadoff spot after he had been dropped when he was slumping, is now 11 for 27 (.407) in his last seven games. Ward was in the middle of both rallies with two of his three hits. In the fifth, Ohtani doubled off the right field fence to tie the score at 4-4. In the third, Shohei Ohtani doubled home a run and then Anthony Rendon singled to drive in the tying run. The Angels’ hitters picked up Sandoval each time he allowed runs, getting those runs back immediately. I wasn’t able to finish guys when I got 0-and-2, 1-and-2, but I gave us a chance to win and that’s all I can really ask for.” “I left a lot of pitches out over the plate.

“I’m not satisfied with how my stuff was today,” Sandoval said. Sandoval also gave up a homer to No. 9 hitter David Hensley in the fifth inning. He then gave up a single to Mauricio Dubon, a triple to Alex Bregman, a double to Yordan Alvarez and a double to José Abreu. Sandoval had allowed just one hit the first time through the order, including two quick outs to start the third. It wasn’t a quality start, but it was the first time in nine games that an Angels starter finished the sixth inning. Left-hander Patrick Sandoval gave up four runs in 6-1/3 innings on Monday. The Angels’ bullpen has actually been better than the starters lately. He took over after Matt Moore retired all five batters he faced. You never know when you’re going to make a bad pitch and regret it.”Īfter the Angels built their two-run lead, Estévez pitched a perfect ninth to convert his eighth save in eight tries. “There’s really no stop (in the Angels’ lineup). “I feel bad for the pitchers out there,” Ward said. Matt Thaiss then hit the first pitch he saw to center field for a sacrifice fly, knocking in an insurance run.ĭrury and Thaiss, the sixth and seventh hitters, finished off the offense on a night when eight of the nine Angels starters reached base with a hit or walk. “He said ‘That’s what works for you, what makes you good.’ So I was being aggressive there and I got a good pitch to hit.” “Marcus told me to be aggressive,” Drury said, referring to hitting coach Marcus Thames.
