Watch CBS News

Astros Beat Up Paxton To Complete Sweep Of Yankees

HOUSTON (AP) — Jose Altuve hit two homers, Carlos Correa homered with three RBIs and the Houston Astros completed their first ever sweep of the New York Yankees with an 8-6 win Wednesday night.

The Astros needed late-game comebacks to win the first two games of the series but used a four-run fifth inning to break the finale open and held on for their sixth straight win despite a big eighth inning by the Yankees.

It's the first time since 2004 the Astros have swept a homestand of at least two series. They beat the Athletics three times this weekend before the Yankees arrived.

Altuve, who has homered in three straight games, hit his first one off James Paxton (1-2) to tie it at 1 in the first inning after Brett Gardner hit a leadoff homer for New York.

The Astros were up by 1 with no outs in the fifth inning when Altuve connected off Paxton again. The towering shot clanged off the light pole atop the wall in left field to make it 4-2.

A single by Michael Brantley chased Paxton, who was replaced by Tommy Kahnle. He was greeted by a two-run home run by Correa that extended Houston's lead to 6-2. Houston made it 7-2 on an RBI single by Jake Marisnick with two outs in the inning.

Houston starter Collin McHugh (2-1) allowed four hits and two runs while striking out nine in six innings for his second straight win.

Yankees slugger Luke Voit hit a two-run homer off Josh James with no outs in the eighth, DJ LeMahieu hit an RBI double and Clint Frazier added a sacrifice fly to make it 7-6. There were two outs in the inning and a runner on third when Ryan Pressly took over and struck out pinch-hitter Gary Sanchez.

George Springer's first hit of the game came on an RBI single off Zack Britton with no outs in the eighth to extend the lead to 8-6.

Pressly stayed on for the ninth, allowing one hit in a scoreless inning for his first save.

The Astros jumped on Paxton for eight hits and five runs in four-plus innings after he went 4-0 with a 2.05 ERA in four starts against them last year while with Seattle.

Gardner's leadoff homer was the 15th of his career.

Altuve's first homer was initially ruled a double, but a review showed that it was a home run. Yuli Gurriel tripled to center field — a line drive misplayed badly by Gardner — with two outs in the first to make it 2-1.

Houston padded the lead on an RBI double by Correa with one out in the third.

The Yankees cut the lead to 3-2 in the fourth when Gleyber Torres, who got on with a double, scored on a sacrifice fly by LeMahieu, who finished with three hits.

TRAINER'S ROOM:

Gary Sanchez didn't start Wednesday because of tightness in his lower leg.

3B Miguel Andujar (right shoulder) made 25 throws from 60 feet Wednesday. "I think he felt a lot better than he expected," manager Aaron Boone said. He will play catch and swing a bat Friday. If that goes well, he'll start throwing from 90 feet Saturday.

Boone said OF Giancarlo Stanton (left biceps strain) hit off a tee on Wednesday. OF Aaron Hicks (lower back strain) will do soft toss, hit off a tee and run on a treadmill this week, and Boone said they hope that by next Wednesday he'll be hitting in the cage and be on the field running and throwing.

YANKEES MOVE:

New York optioned RHP Jonathan Loaisiga to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre after Tuesday's game and recalled RHP Joe Harvey from Scranton before Wednesday's game. Harvey made his major league debut in the fifth inning and yielded one hit in two scoreless innings.

UP NEXT:

New York is off Thursday before beginning a series against the Chicago White Sox on Friday. The Yankees haven't announced their Friday starter, but Boone said CC Sabathia will come off the injured list to make his first start of the season Saturday.

(© Copyright 2019 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.