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Breaking down the Mariners’ breakdown vs. Astros, plus Giants, Jets rise in Power Rankings

Breaking down the Mariners' breakdown vs. Astros, plus Giants, Jets rise in Power Rankings


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YORDAN ALVAREZ AND THE HOUSTON ASTROS

There are moments every postseason that are remembered for a very, very long time. If the Houston Astros end up winning the World Series, they’ll look back at the very first game of their postseason run fondly.

Yordan Alvarez launched a walk-off, three-run home run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning to cap a stirring 8-7 comeback win over the Mariners in Game 1. The home run had plenty of historic significance:

  • First ever postseason walk-off home run when trailing by multiple runs
  • Second ever postseason walk-off home run by a team down to its final out, joining Kirk Gibson‘s iconic 1988 World Series blast
  • Fourth ever postseason walk-off home run when trailing and first since Joe Carter‘s 1993 World Series winner
  • First time in Astros postseason history they’ve won after trailing by multiple runs through eight innings (had been 0-48)

The fact that Alvarez even had a chance to walk it off speaks volumes to the Astros’ depth.

AL Cy Young lock Justin Verlander gave up six runs in just four innings, but four relievers combined to allow just one run over five innings. Jose Altuve went 0 for 4 in the leadoff spot, but Yuli Gurriel had three hits, including a home run, and Alex Bregman‘s eighth-inning homer halved the deficit from 7-3 to 7-5. Jeremy Pena‘s clutch ninth-inning single kept the rally alive and, crucially, chased closer Paul Sewald from the game (more on that in a bit).

This was a massive win for the Astros. Instead of needing to beat Luis Castillo tomorrow to avoid an 0-2 deficit, they’re in the driver’s seat thanks to a comeback for the ages.

Honorable mentions

And not such a good morning for…

SCOTT SERVAIS, ROBBIE RAY AND THE SEATTLE MARINERS

The Mariners truly could not have asked for much more: an early lead, a hot top of the lineup, the opposing starter — the likely Cy Young winner, no less — chased early and your own starter pitching well against a loaded lineup. They still lost, and there are two major questions to answer. How and why?

  • How could Andrés Muñoz — who hadn’t given up a home run since June 10 — give one up in a key juncture in the eighth inning?
  • How could Paul Sewald hit rarely used rookie pinch-hitter David…

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