Astros pen delivers, Nats waste chances — and now we have a series

WASHINGTON — The first World Series game in the nation’s capital in 86 years won’t exactly go down as a classic contest to remember, but the Houston Astros don’t care about baseball elegance or splendor. They just needed the W. The Astros will enjoy their 4-1 victory Friday that included baserunners all over the place, some magical 68 mph curveballs from Zack Greinke and a Houston bullpen that tossed 4⅓ scoreless innings that means we won’t see the first World Series sweep since 2012.

The World Series is now Washington Nationals 2, Astros 1 as we head into the critical Game 4 on Saturday night that will feature Patrick Corbin for the Nationals against some sort of bullpen game for the Astros. That pen delivered in Game 3 as Josh James, Brad Peacock, Will Harris, Joe Smith and Roberto Osuna allowed two hits in getting the final 13 outs. James got a big out in the fifth inning and Harris, who has been the team’s best reliever in the postseason, escaped a two-on jam in the sixth and retired all five batters he faced.

The Nationals had their chances off Greinke, leaving 12 runners stranded in the game. They went 0-for-10 with runners in scoring position, the 17th time in World Series history a team has gone 0-for-10 or worse with RISP and the first time since the 2008 Phillies went an all-time worst 0-for-13.

It was a grind. But now we have a series and Nationals fans learned a valuable lesson: Welcome to the World Series. Winning that title won’t be easy.

Some quick thoughts:

• James faced just one batter in the fifth inning when the Astros were up 3-1, but it was one of the more dramatic moments of the game. After Asdrubal Cabrera had ripped a two-out double to right field to put runners at second and third and knock Greinke from the game — Josh Reddick made a nice bare-hand grab as the ball bounded off the wall to hold Adam Eaton at third — James came in to face Ryan Zimmerman.

James got ahead with two high strikes and then threw a 98 mph heater up and in that spun Zimmerman on his rear end and elicited a chorus of boos from the crowd (and a visit from the trainer and manager Dave Martinez). Zimmerman regrouped and ran the count full, but James threw a riding 3-2 changeup to get Zimmerman swinging. James had also thrown the same pitch at 2-2. You don’t see too many back-to-back changeups righty on righty, especially from a guy who throws 98. Interesting sequence there from James and catcher Robinson Chirinos.

• Martinez faced a tough managerial decision when Sanchez came up to the plate in the bottom of the fourth with Victor Robles on third and one out and the Astros up 2-1. There were defensible decisions both ways on whether to hit for him.

Let him hit: Getting that run in there is vital and Sanchez is one of the worst-hitting pitchers in the majors (.115 this year with 24 strikeouts in 52 at-bats, .084 in his career). Plus, the top of the Houston lineup was coming up in the fifth for the third time through order and Sanchez’s numbers this season were terrible the third time through (.587 OPS allowed the first time, .702 the second time and .923 the third time).

Don’t let him hit: Have you seen the Nationals bullpen? Take out Sanchez and you still have to get 15 more outs with games on Saturday and maybe on Sunday. Plus, with the infield playing in, maybe Sanchez can squeeze in a lucky hit or something.

My initial thought was Martinez made the right move, that 15 outs is a lot to ask from that bullpen crew. But after looking up Sanchez’s third-time-through numbers and knowing the Astros had put a lot of baserunners on against him, I think the right call was going to the pinch-hitter and then giving Joe Ross or Wander Suero the fifth inning and pray.

Sanchez hit, ended up striking out on a bunt attempt and then Trea Turner squibbed a ball in front of the plate that Greinke made a nice play on. Sanchez then gave up a run in the fifth and Chirinos hit his home run in the sixth, so Martinez’s decision didn’t look great in retrospect, but I don’t think he deserves to get hammered for it.

• Another weird move came when Greinke batted in the second inning with runners on first and third and one out. Unlike Sanchez, Greinke is probably the best-hitting pitcher in the majors. He hit .280 this season and slugged .580, with three home runs and eight extra-base in 50 at-bats. Oddly, Greinke laid down a bunt, which moved Chirinos to second but kept Reddick at third base. Given that Sanchez doesn’t throw hard, it seemed like the perfect opportunity to have Greinke swing away (there only 22 sacrifice bunts in the majors all season in that situation). George Springer then grounded out.

• How to explain the bottom of the sixth? Well … there were 31 pitches before a ball was put into play. Yes, this game lasted more than four hours. The inning went strikeout, walk, stolen base, walk, pitching change, a foul ball that rebounded into Turner’s vulnerable area, a visit from the trainer, a strikeout and finally Eaton grounded out to first to end the inning. Not the kind of inning that makes baseball fun again.

• It’s always funny how itchy managers are with their bullpens in the postseason. One bad outing often means you get demoted in the pecking order. Ryan Pressly was great for the Astros in the regular season and even though Hinch said he threw the ball well in Game 3 when he got nickel-and-dimed in that six-run inning, he didn’t appear in this game. Meanwhile, the much-maligned Nationals bullpen received two scoreless innings from Joe Ross in his first appearance of the postseason and a clean nine-pitch inning from Wander Suero. That can at least give Martinez a little confidence if he has to go deeper in his pen than just Tanner Rainey, Sean Doolittle and Daniel Hudson.

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