Skip to main content
Clear icon
61º

Garcia’s strong start helps Astros cool off Royals, 4-0

Houston Astros' Luis Garcia throws against the San Francisco Giants during the first inning of a baseball game in San Francisco, Sunday, Aug. 1, 2021. (AP Photo/Jed Jacobsohn) (Jed Jacobsohn, Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

HOUSTON – Luis Garcia pitched into the seventh inning and two relievers completed a four-hitter to lead the Houston Astros over the Kansas City Royals 4-0 on Tuesday night.

Garcia (10-6) struck out seven and scattered four hits across 6 2/3 sharp innings.

Recommended Videos



“He was very, very aggressive in the strike zone," Astros manager Dusty Baker said. “He was masterful."

Ryne Stanek got the next four outs before Kendall Graveman worked a perfect ninth. Houston increased its AL West lead to 4 1/2 games over Oakland, which has lost four straight.

Carlos Correa had two hits and two RBIs to help the Astros snap a two-game skid and improve to 2-4 against the Royals this season after dropping Monday’s series opener 7-1. Houston lost three of four in Kansas City last week.

Houston’s strong pitching performance cooled off the hot-hitting Royals, who had scored 26 runs during a four-game winning streak.

Royals starter Brady Singer (3-9) permitted seven hits and four runs in five innings, but just one was earned after his defense committed two costly errors in the first.

“You’d like to think when you have an inning like that you’re going to bounce back and it doesn’t set the tone, but it did," Royals manager Mike Matheny said. “Brady did a great job of fighting through, but a couple plays that we normally make (hurt)."

Jose Altuve reached on a fielding error by first baseman Ryan O’Hearn to start Houston’s first, and Michael Brantley walked before a one-out walk to Yuli Gurriel loaded the bases.

The Astros took a 1-0 lead when Altuve scored on a groundout by Correa.

Aledmys Díaz singled on a ball hit to shortstop Nicky Lopez and he made a throwing error that allowed two more runs to score, making it 3-0.

Correa was happy to see the Astros take advantage of the miscues early after their recent struggles against the Royals.

“It was huge," he said. “We caught a break and scored some runs there and it was enough to win the game."

Kansas City had runners at second and third with none out in the third but failed to score. Michael A. Taylor tried a straight steal of home but was tagged out to end the inning.

“Hitting really does set the tone for our club, and we miss an opportunity like that one, it puts us into a worse spot," Matheny said. “It affects us and unfortunately, we let that slip by."

Gurriel singled to start things off for Houston in the bottom of the third before scoring on a double by Correa that extended the lead to 4-0.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: 1B Carlos Santana was out of the lineup after he was injured running to first base in the ninth inning Monday. Santana has a Grade 1 hip flexor strain and is day-to-day.

Astros: 3B Alex Bregman (left quadriceps strain) worked out at the ballpark after playing a rehabilitation game for Triple-A Sugar Land on Monday night. Bregman will be activated Wednesday, Baker said. ... OF Kyle Tucker was reinstated from the COVID-19 injured list. ... OF Chas McCormick was placed on the IL with left hand soreness. ... RHP Bryan Abreu was recalled from Sugar Land and RHP Pedro Báez was placed on the injured list with right shoulder soreness.

UMPIRE CHANGE

There was a delay with one out in the bottom of the fifth when plate umpire Jim Reynolds had to leave the game. After Díaz popped out, Reynolds walked away from the plate and toward the home dugout. He was met by Houston’s trainer and they and the rest of the umpires talked for a couple of minutes and he drank some water before he left the field with the trainer. Both teams left the field and play resumed a few minutes later with Tony Randazzo, who started the game at second base, at home plate and no umpire at second.

It was unclear why Reynolds had to leave the game, but he did take a pitch to the face mask earlier in the game.

HOME BOY

Garcia has been great at home this season, posting a 1.83 ERA with 81 strikeouts in 13 starts. Tuesday was his third consecutive start at Minute Maid in which he did not allow a run, and he's struck out 23 batters in that span.

UP NEXT

Kansas City left-hander Mike Minor (8-11, 5.34 ERA) will oppose Lance McCullers Jr. (10-4, 3.21) when the series wraps up Wednesday.

___

More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports


Loading...