The Padres get their act together in time

Midway through the second inning, the Padres looked destined to hit the Pennsylvania road with little wiggle room. They did, however, erase a four-point deficit to defeat the Philadelphia Phillies 8-5 on Wednesday in San Diego to tie the National League Championship Series at 1-1.

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The Padres really got going in the fifth inning with five runs. It was Austin Nola, with a single productive at the expense of his brother Aaron Nola, who got the ball rolling. A double from Juan Soto, followed by more singles from Brandon Drury and Josh Bell, then gave the Padres the cushion they needed to win.

Late game specialist Josh Hader made sure to put the finishing touches on a fourth save in the playoff tournament. He took out Alec Bohm, Jean Segura and Matt Vierling on strike after strike.

Aaron Nola (2-1) started the game well, but things quickly got complicated for him. He notably conceded two solo homers in as many consecutive pitches in the second inning, allowing Brandon Drury and Josh Bell to go around the trails. He eventually gave up six runs and seven hits in four and two-thirds innings.

Unlucky

Blake Snell (2-0) allowed four runs, five hits and one walk in five innings. Bohm, Vierling, Edmundo Sosa and Kyle Schwarber all produced a point on his back in the second period, but Snell has little to be ashamed of.

Indeed, Soto dropped a ball, bothered by the sun, Jurickson Profar also missed a play in the field and Drury juggled a double play ball. Anyway, the gunner did not let down.

“It was just bad luck, so you have to keep attacking the strike zone,” he said on the field after the game. You have to believe in yourself, believe in the team and keep attacking.”

Manny Machado, for the Padres, and Rhys Hoskins, in the other clan, both hit a homer in this meeting.

The series will now move to Philadelphia, where the next three games will take place on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. If necessary, the series will return to California on Monday and Tuesday.

The Astros take control

The Houston Astros took the lead in the American League Championship Series by winning Game 1, a true slugger duel, 4-2 at Minute Maid Park.


The Padres get their act together in time

All but one of the runs in this encounter were scored using solo homers. For the home team, Yuli Gurriel, Chas McCormick and Jeremy Pena took balls out of bounds.

The Yankees also lived up to their reputation as the Bronx Bombers thanks to long balls from Harrison Bader and Anthony Rizzo. The latter closed the gap in the eighth inning, but it was too little, too late for his team.

Perhaps inspired by the ceremonial pitch of the controversial and prolific Roger Clemens, Justin Verlander (1-0) has been smoking hot on the mound for the Astros. The veteran continued to forge his own legend as the gunner with the most strikeouts in the playoffs. His 11 kills brought his total to 219, putting him ahead of Los Angeles Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw (213).

Author of the victory, Verlander allowed only one run on three hits and one walk, in six innings of work. Reliever Ryan Pressly made the save by fanning three batters late in the game.

The championship series will continue Thursday night, still in Houston.


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