Pena homers, drives in 3 to lead Astros over Rays 3-1
By BEN DuBOSE
Associated Press
HOUSTON (AP) — Jeremy Pena hit an early two-run homer and drove in an insurance run late, lifting the Houston Astros to a 3-1 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays on Sunday.
One pitch after Jose Altuve’s leadoff bunt single, Pena belted a cutter by Rays starter Corey Kluber (10-10) over the right-field fence and into the home bullpen. That put the Astros ahead early, and Houston maintained that lead with strong pitching and key defensive plays, including Pena’s diving stop and throw to deny Ji-Man Choi in the fourth inning.
After homering only once in August, Houston’s shortstop has five homers since September and is up to 21 for the season, tied for second among AL rookies. The Astros are 41-6 this season when Pena bats second, as he did Sunday, and 20-2 in their last 22 games with that lineup order.
“We’ve definitely made some (swing) adjustments in the cage,” said Pena, now on a six-game hitting streak. “It’s about swinging at better pitches, and not missing them.”
Pena had three hits, punctuated by a two-out, opposite-field RBI single in the seventh inning to plate Chas McCormick. That run off Rays reliever Easton McGee was unearned, because McCormick reached on Jonathan Aranda’s error at second base.
Altuve and Yuli Gurriel each went 2-for-4 for the Astros, though Pena was the clear offensive standout after driving in all three runs.
Astros starter Luis Garcia (15-8) pitched six innings of one-run ball, allowing three hits and one walk with four strikeouts. Garcia is 7-0 in his last eight starts with a 3.20 ERA, and his seven wins since Aug. 12 lead the AL. For the season, Garcia is tied with Shohei Ohtani for fourth in AL wins.
“He was very good,” Astros manager Dusty Baker said. “He’s using his fastball more and is locating well, which sets up his breaking stuff. The best pitch in baseball is still a well-located fastball. If you locate that, it opens up everything else. He’s had a good year.”
Garcia surrendered his lone run in the second inning when Choi doubled and Christian Bethancourt singled, but the young right-hander responded by retiring the next nine batters and 14 of the next 15. He did all that despite “feeling under the weather,” according to Baker, and Garcia was unavailable to speak postgame.
Ryne Stanek, Bryan Abreu and Rafael Montero each pitched a scoreless relief inning to secure the win in front of 35,809 fans, with Montero recording his 14th save. Usual closer Ryan Pressly was unavailable after closing out Saturday’s win.
Kluber settled in after allowing the two quick hits, giving up six hits and just those two runs across five innings, striking out four. One came against Astros slugger Yordan Alvarez, who struck out swinging in the fifth inning with two runners on and two outs.
“I felt good,” Kluber said. “The first two hitters, a bunt single and then I got ambushed on a pitch that probably got a little more of the plate than I would have liked. But for the most part, I was able to execute pretty well today. Unfortunately, their guy (Garcia) just pitched a little better.”
In a matchup of teams bound for the 2022 AL postseason, Houston (104-55) won for the fifth time in six games against the Rays, all during the past two weeks. After losing Friday’s opener, the Astros won the next two games to take the series.
The Rays (86-73) are scuffling as the postseason approaches, having lost nine of their last 13 games. Choi led Tampa Bay’s sluggish offense Sunday with two hits and a walk in four at-bats, and he scored their lone run.
“We’re just not firing right now,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “But I’m confident the guys will get it going. You certainly have to credit Houston’s pitching, but I don’t think we’re our best version, right now. We’ve still got time.”
STANDINGS CHECK
The Rays are now guaranteed to open the postseason on the road as either the second or third AL wild-card team. Tampa Bay currently has the AL’s third spot and is no longer able to catch Toronto, which holds the AL’s top position. After defeating Boston on Sunday, the Blue Jays lead the Rays by four games with only three left to play. Only the top wild-card team will host its initial series.
By winning, the Astros clinched MLB’s second-best record after the Dodgers, giving Houston home-field advantage versus all other potential postseason opponents.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Rays: INF Yandy Diaz (left shoulder strain) was out of the lineup for a second straight day. After clinching a postseason spot Friday, Cash suggested it was a precautionary measure. Diaz had a pinch-hit RBI in Saturday’s ninth inning.
David Peralta started Sunday’s game in left field but was removed after a first-inning flyout due to right hip tightness. Miles Mastrobuoni shifted to the outfield and Aranda, who had the game’s lone error, replaced Mastrobuoni at second base. Peralta said postgame that he felt better and had no concern of missing postseason games, though Cash said Peralta would sit out Monday.
UP NEXT
Astros: After missing one start due to illness, RHP Lance McCullers Jr. (4-1, 2.38 ERA) returns Monday against Philadelphia for the opener of a three-game home series to conclude Houston’s regular season. The Phillies have yet to name their starter.
Rays: RHP Tyler Glasnow (0-0, 3.00 ERA) will make his second start since returning from Tommy John surgery when Tampa Bay opens a series in Boston. The Red Sox will counter with LHP Rich Hill (8-7, 4.41 ERA).