fbpx
Connect with us

Baseball

Watch: Javier outstanding as Astros no-hit Phillies in 5-0 World Series win

Cristian Javier led Houston pitchers in an unprecedented World Series combined no-hitter Wednesday as the Astros beat Philadelphia 5-0 to level Major League Baseball’s championship showcase.

Javier threw six innings without surrendering a hit and relief pitchers Bryan Abreu, Rafael Montero and Ryan Pressly kept the door firmly closed as the Astros knotted the best-of-seven title series at two games apiece.

One day after the Phillies belted a World Series record-equalling five home runs in a 7-0 game three victory, Javier’s fastball flummoxed the host hitters.

The 25-year-old Dominican struck out nine and walked two in a dominant performance.

Abreu struck out all three he faced in the seventh inning and Montero retired the side in the eighth before Pressly worked around a one-out walk as he delivered the final three outs in the ninth.

The only other no-hitter in the 118-year history of the World Series was Don Larsen’s perfect game for the New York Yankees against the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1956.

“That’s crazy, man,” said Astros catcher Christian Vazquez. “We play for this and making it that special is even better.”

Astros manager Dusty Baker said Javier had delivered an “electric” performance from the mound.

“He threw the ball up, down, and that shows you that the best pitch in baseball is still the well-located fastball,” Baker said. “He was calm, cool.

“Man, it’s a strange series — they hit five home runs yesterday and then no hits today.”

The Houston hurlers were backed by a five-run outburst in the fifth that was keyed by Alex Bregman’s bases-loaded two-run double.

Chas McCormick led off the inning with a ground ball single off Phillies starter Aaron Nola.

Jose Altuve looped a single to left field and Jeremy Pena hit a sharp single to left off a breaking ball Nola hung over the plate to load the bases.

That spelled the end of Nola’s night, Jose Alvarado taking over on the mound with three on and none out.

Offensive surge

He plunked Yordan Alvarez with his very first pitch and Houston had their first run of the night.

Bregman followed with a two-run double to right field. Kyle Tucker’s sacrifice fly to center scored Alvarez as Bregman advanced to third then scored on Yuli Gurriel’s single to left field.

Alvarado finally closed out the inning by striking out Vazquez and Aledmys Diaz.

Javier — who had struck out J.T. Realmuto, Bryce Harper and Nick Castellanos in order in the bottom of the fourth — followed up the Astros’ offensive surge by retiring the next six batters he faced.

Of his 97 pitches, Javier threw 70 fastballs, and Vazquez said it was a pitch that could always be counted upon.

“It’s I think the best fastball I’ve ever seen,” the catcher said in an on-field television interview. “You can call it whoever is in the batter’s box and it’s going to be awesome. It’s going to be effective and it’s going to do the job.”

The victory means that after game five in Philadelphia on Thursday, the Astros will return to Houston for game six on Saturday and a potential game seven on Sunday.

“We’re happy to split the series and we can finish at home,” Vazquez said.

The Phillies, who had been unbeaten at home this post-season, are chasing their first World Series title since 2008.

Phillies manager Rob Thomson said Wednesday’s no-hitter was unlikely to leave a lasting psychological mark on his batting line-up heading into Thursday’s game five.

“We were no-hit in New York against the Mets and we came back the next day and won,” Thomson said. “These guys, they got a short memory. They’re going to go home tonight and go to bed and come back in here tomorrow and compete like they always do.”

The Astros, whose 2017 World Series triumph was later tainted by revelations of illegal sign-stealing, are in the championship series for the fourth time in six seasons.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement

World Cup News

Advertisement

More in Baseball