Two Separate Games
We didn't have a doubleheader last night in Houston. It only played out like one.
The Nats and Astros traded two-spots in the 1st inning, before Stephen Strasburg and Justin Verlander settled down, keeping the score locked at 2 through six innings. Then, as if a switch was flipped, everything changed.
Kurt Suzuki homered off Verlander to begin the 7th, which opened the floodgates. Before it was over, Washington had rallied for six runs to put game two away.
The Nationals 12-3 victory sends them home for the next three games -- if necessary. Friday night, Washington will host the city's first World Series game in 86 years, having already turned the tables on the team with the best home record in baseball this season.
The Nats and Astros traded two-spots in the 1st inning, before Stephen Strasburg and Justin Verlander settled down, keeping the score locked at 2 through six innings. Then, as if a switch was flipped, everything changed.
Kurt Suzuki homered off Verlander to begin the 7th, which opened the floodgates. Before it was over, Washington had rallied for six runs to put game two away.
The Nationals 12-3 victory sends them home for the next three games -- if necessary. Friday night, Washington will host the city's first World Series game in 86 years, having already turned the tables on the team with the best home record in baseball this season.
(My image of Suzuki is from the April 7th Mets/Nats game at Citi Field.)
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