The Houston Astros evened the best-of-seven ALCS at two games apiece with a 10-3 win over the Texas Rangers in Game 4 on Thursday night.
Both starting pitchers struggled and allowed a combined six runs in three innings of work. Corey Seager broke his ALCS slump with a home run, and Astros first baseman José Abreu hit his fourth home run of this postseason. The Astros' lead was imperiled in the bottom of the fifth, but a replay review credited Abreu with a perhaps controversial double play that helped squelch the threat.
Pre-game, much was made of the decision to leave the roof open at Globe Life Field on Thursday night, but if anyone took advantage of those generally hitter-friendly changes it was the visiting Astros.
While Game 5 will be in Arlington, the 2-2 series tie ensures that there will be at least a Game 6 back in Houston.
Now for some takeaways from Game 4.
Andrew Heaney had a disaster start, and José Urquidy wasn't much better
One day after the Rangers got a mere four innings from Game 3 starter Max Scherzer, Andrew Heaney gave them just two outs in his Game 4 start. Over that 2/3 of a frame, the lefty Heaney allowed three runs on four hits with a walk and no strikeouts. He lasted 22 pitches.
Heaney was effective for Texas during the regular season, as he pitched to a 107 ERA+ in 28 starts and six relief appearances. However, any semblance of effectiveness eluded him on Thursday. By the time he left the game, the Astros had better than a 75% chance of winning Game 4 and thus evening the series.
In addition to putting them in an unenviable spot early, the Rangers also face bullpen fatigue concerns going into Friday's Game 5.
As for Urquidy, he was staked to that early 3-0 lead, but it was gone by the third inning. He allowed a home run to Adolis García in the second, and in the third the Rangers were able to tie up. Urquidy's line – 2 1/3 IP, 3 ER – would've been even worse had Ryne Stanek not relieved him and induced an inning-ending double play with his first pitch.
Yordan Alvarez just missed a grand slam; José Abreu cleaned up the mess
Yordan Alvarez, the most productive hitter of the 2023 postseason thus far, just missed a game-turning grand slam in the fourth inning. Here's a look:
That left Alvarez's mighty bat at 110.7 mph and had an expected batting average of .890. Per Statcast, it also would've been a home run in 17 of 30 MLB ballparks. Maybe, though, Alvarez caught an unfortunate headwind (recall that open roof), which turned into a mere sac fly that gave Houston a 4-3 lead.
Baseball, though, is a team sport and fellow Houston cloutsman José Abreu came up soon after and picked up those remaining ducks on the pond in no-doubt fashion. Ground control to Major Bomb:
That's a 438-foot shot that came at the expense of Cody Bradford and gave the Astros a 7-3 lead and high odds of evening this best-of-seven series and ensuring there will be a Game 6 back in Houston.
The 36-year-old Abreu quite infamously got off to a terrible start in his first season with the Astros, but he started flashing more customary power down the stretch. He's been even better in these playoffs:
As for Alvarez, he still went 2 for 4 with three RBI and now has an OPS of 1.522 for the 2023 postseason.
It's time for a series reset
The Astros' win means that the ALCS is now in essence a best-of-three series with Houston holding home-field advantage, as they'll host Game 6 and, if necessary, Game 7. On the other hand, the Astros have been better on the road than at home this season, and in this season the road team is undefeated thus far. Also of note is that for most playoff teams the rotation flips back to the front end after a Game 4, and that's the case in this one.
Game 5 is up next
Who will have the series edge when it shifts back to Houston for Game 6? That's the central question that will be answered in Friday's Game 5. Historically, the team that's up 3-2 in a best-of-seven MLB postseason series goes on to win that series more than 70% of the time. Needless to say, the next one is a big one.
The pitching match-up will be a replay of Game 1, as Justin Verlander goes for the visiting Astros against Jordan Montgomery. First pitch is scheduled for 5:07 p.m. ET.