Story and photo by Lou Roesch
Copyright 2019 All Rights Reserved
HOUSTON, TEXAS (October 20, 2019) Long before the first pitch was thrown in spring
training, the Houston Astros had a mantra “Take It Back.” Those three words
came after the presumed 2019 regular season MVP Alex Bregman sat down with
Houston president Reid Ryan and the marketing staff. On Saturday night, October
19, 2019, the Astros seized back the American League pennant after being
knocked out last season by the Boston Red Sox. The 6-4 defeat of the New York Yankees
leaves Houston only four games from seizing back the title of world champions.
Astros second baseman Jose Altuve, the ALCS MVP, saw to that with a walk-off
two run homerun at Minute Maid Park.
Houston jumped on Yankees starter Chad Green in the
opening frame. With two on, first baseman Yuli Gurriel launched a sinking liner
into the Crawford Boxes in left field and Minute Maid went into a frenzy. The
atmosphere began to intensify the closer New York drew. In the second, the
Bronx Bombers answered back plating Did Gregorious on a cutting the deficit to
two. Two innings later, the deficit was one as Gio Urshela, the Cartagena,
Columbia native, took Houston reliever Jose Urquidy deep to centerfield.
The game would stay that way utill Houston got the
insurance run back on a fielder’s choice off the bat of Bregman. The chess
match between Astros manager AJ Hinch and Yankees skipper Aaron Boone continued
unabated as each side squandered scoring opportunities till the ninth. Houston
brought in their closer Roberto Osuna to seal the victory instead he allowed New
York back in. Leadoff hitter DJ LeMahieu dropped one over the outstretched
glove of George Springer into the seats in right setting the stage for Altuve.
Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman appeared to have the
Astros number throwing 12 straight strikes in retiring the first two Astros
hitters before the wheels fell off. Springer drew a walk on five pitches as
Altuve stepped to the plate.
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“It’s going out to left,” ace Gerrit Cole,
as later recounted to Fox Sports, predicted on the Astros’ bench when Altuve came
to the plate in the ninth. “And it’s going deep.”
With what would be the last pitch of the
ALCS, Altuve crushed the 324th pitch of the game deep into the night
(407ft) sending Houston to its second World Series in three years sending the
more then 43,000 in attendance into not just a frenzy but a rabid frenzy.
“This is one of the best places to play,” manager A.J. Hinch said. “To reward [the fans] with that experience of the
walk-off homer, give them a chance to just go crazy at close to midnight and
know that we’ve got more baseball to be played. We still have home-field for
the World Series. It’s why we worked our tail off to get as many wins as we
could. It is for them. We want to hang another flag for them, and we’re four
wins away.”
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