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Astros vs. Rangers score, ALCS Game 3 highlights: What we learned as Houston shells Max Scherzer

The Houston Astros defeated the Texas Rangers 8-5 in Game 3 of the American League Championship Series on Thursday night. The Rangers now lead the best-of-seven series by a 2-1 margin. The Astros are, of course, seeking their second consecutive World Series championship.

The Astros received a strong start from Cristian Javier, who did not allow a hit until the late stages of the fifth inning. Offensively, Houston maintained pressure on the returning Max Scherzer throughout his four-inning start. The Astros then broke open the game against the Rangers bullpen.

The two sides will meet again on Thursday in Game 4 of the series.

Here are four other things worth knowing about the Astros' Game 3 victory.

1. Astros' lineup comes alive

The Rangers had scored just four runs through the first two games of the ALCS. That after averaging more than five runs per game during both the regular season and the Division Series. On Thursday, they hit like their normal selves.

The Astros plated their first run in the second inning, when Yordan Alvarez scampered across the plate on a wild pitch. Martín Maldonado, whose bat often leaves a lot to be desired, then drove in two with a single. Jose Altuve launched a single home run in the third inning to put the Astros ahead by a 4-0 margin.

Mauricio Dubón made it 5-0 with a single in the fourth inning. Then, in the seventh, the Astros fully broke the game open, as the aforementioned Alvarez delivered a two-run single to make it 7-2. The Astros added one more run in the eighth to give them eight on the night.

Thursday represented the second-most runs the Astros have scored this postseason. They scored nine runs in Game 3 of the ALDS.
Rangers third baseman Josh Jung tried his best, homering twice, but it wasn't enough for Texas to fully close the gap.

2. Starters offer contrasting nights

The big story heading into Game 3 was how Rangers ace Max Scherzer would pitch after missing more than a month with a strained teres major muscle in his right shoulder. The answer: not as good as Scherzer is accustomed to pitching. He finished his night having surrendered five runs on five hits and a walk over the course of four innings pitched and 63 total pitches.

On the other side, Astros righty Cristian Javier offered his second consecutive good playoff start. He didn't allow a hit until the fifth inning. He then surrendered a two-run home run to Josh Jung to give the Rangers life. Javier's home run shattered what had been one of the longest scoreless streaks to begin a playoff career in MLB history among starting pitchers:

Overall, Javier allowed two runs on three hits and a walk in 5 2/3 innings. He struck out three batters on 85 pitches. Javier had previously allowed no runs on one hit and five walks in five innings of work versus the Minnesota Twins.

3. What does a 2-1 series lead mean?

To state the obvious: the Astros improved their odds of winning the ALCS with their victory in Game 4. Teams to go up 3-0 in a best-of-seven series have historically won 97.5% of those sets. Conversely, teams holding a 2-1 advantage have won their series 70.3% of the time. The Rangers, then, are still the overwhelming favorites to win the pennant -- that's just common sense given they need to win one fewer game to do it -- but it's not a fait accompli.

4. What's next?

The two sides will meet for Game 4 of the ALCS on Thursday night. First pitch is slated for 8:03 p.m. ET. The Rangers have not announced their starter, but could roll with lefty Andrew Heaney (10-6, 4.15 ERA). The Astros are expected to turn to right-hander José Urquidy (3-3, 5.29 ERA).

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Live updates
 

Yeah, it's a very good, very deep lineup.

 

Josh Jung batting eighth says all you need to know about the depth of the Texas lineup.

 

Bochy hinted Scherzer would probably be around 74-80 pitches tonight, so an eight-pitch first inning is a welcome thing for Texas. 

 

Perfect first for Scherzer

A strikeout and two fly outs.

 

Ah, predictions. I missed that. Rangers win 5-3. Corey Seager homers. 

 

That ball from Altuve really carried. Didn't look like a warning-track ball off the bat. 

 

And there it is

Two pitches, one out for Mr. Scherzer.

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No one wanted to answer my question but I think the Astros squeak this one out when Scherzer can't get into the fifth inning and the bullpen finally fails them.

 

My prediction is Altuve will open the game with a warning track fly out.

 

As we get underway...

Any predictions?

 

We're just over an hour away from first pitch

Yordan Alvarez, for his part, said he's feeling fine physically after reportedly being ill earlier in the series.

 

Carter to bat No. 3 tonight

Rangers outfielder Evan Carter has been the breakout young star of the postseason. He enters tonight hitting .350/.536/.700 in his first seven postseason games. Impressive stuff from someone who debuted in September.

Tonight, Carter will bat third for Texas.

"After seeing him for four or five, six games, whatever, I said this kid could hit at the top of the order. We liked him where he was, he was flipping the order getting back to Marcus and Corey. So he was a good table setter," manager Bruce Bochy said before the game.

 "And then we decided to put him in the five hole. It didn't phase him. I knew it wouldn't phase him. It makes sense. If you look at the quality of the at-bats, seeing the pitches, taking his walks or finding a way to getting the barrel on the ball, just makes sense."

 

And here is the Rangers lineup:

 

What's at stake tonight?

It's pretty straightforward: if the Rangers take a 3-0 lead, their chances of winning the series improve to 97.5%, according to empirical data. 

 

Here's tonight's Astros lineup

 

Welcome to our Game 3 coverage

We're almost exactly two hours from first pitch.

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Scherzer is the big question of the night

Our Dayn Perry asked earlier today: just what can we expect from the Rangers ace after missing more than a month due to a strained teres major muscle in his shoulder?

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