Atlanta vs. Houston
Game 1 {{Linescore|
Andy Pettitte faced
Tim Hudson in Game 1. Hudson struggled in his half of the first, giving up one run (on
Morgan Ensberg's RBI single) on a walk and two hits, but got out of the inning with a crucial double play. Pettitte allowed a home run to
Chipper Jones to tie the game, but otherwise cruised. The game remained 1–1 until the third when a bases-loaded (on a double and two walks) two-run single by Ensberg made it 3–1 Astros. A hit-by-pitch loaded the bases again, but Hudson got
Adam Everett to ground out to end the inning. Next inning,
Brad Ausmus hit a leadoff double, moved to third on a sacrifice bunt, and scored on
Craig Biggio's sacrifice fly to make it 4–1 Astros. In the Braves' fourth,
Andruw Jones hit a two-run home run to make it a one-run game. A walk and a bunt single put the tying run in scoring position later in the inning, but
Brian Jordan grounded into a double play to end the rally. Pettitte would help his own cause in the seventh with the game still at 4–3, doubling and scoring on an RBI hit by Ensberg. It was now 5–3 and Hudson was finished. In the eighth, with
Chris Reitsma pitching, the Astros opened the floodgates with a five-run rally, loading the bases on two singles and a walk before
Jeff Bagwell's RBI single made it 6–3 Astros.
John Foster in relief struck out
Lance Berkman, but walked Ensberg to force in a run before a wild pitch scored another. After
Jason Lane was intentionally walked to reload the bases,
Orlando Palmeiro capped the inning's scoring with a two-run single that made it 10–3 Astros. The Braves scored two runs on Jones's RBI double in the eighth with two on off
Dan Wheeler and the ninth on
Johnny Estrada's RBI single after a leadoff triple off
Russ Springer, but
Mike Gallo got
Rafael Furcal to hit into the game-ending double play as the Astros won Game 1 10–5.
Game 2 {{Linescore|
Roger Clemens faced
John Smoltz in Game 2. Smoltz ran into trouble when he allowed two consecutive singles with one out. After a forceout,
Jason Lane singled in
Lance Berkman to make it 1–0 Astros. He intentionally loaded the bases, but got out of the inning with no more damage done. Then the Braves struck back against Clemens. With two outs and two men on,
Brian McCann came up in his first ever postseason at-bat. He then slammed a three-run home run to right field, becoming the first Brave ever to homer in his first postseason at-bat. That sparked the Braves as they would go on to score two more in the third on a two-run double by
Adam LaRoche. Smoltz pitched masterfully and the Braves added to their lead in the seventh on RBI singles by
Andruw Jones and
Jeff Francoeur off
Chad Qualls. The Braves' victory in Game 2 was their last postseason win until 2010.
Game 3 {{Linescore|
Jorge Sosa faced
Roy Oswalt in Game 3. Sosa fell behind early, allowing a double and hit-by-pitch before
Morgan Ensberg's double and
Jason Lane's sacrifice fly gave the Astros two runs in the first. The Braves tied the game in the next inning with back-to-back two out RBI singles by
Brian McCann and Sosa. However,
Mike Lamb hit the go-ahead home run in the bottom of the third. The two pitchers dueled until the bottom of the seventh when
Chris Reitsma once again came into a close game. Reitsma allowed a double and single and the Braves' bullpen could do little to stop the Astros' rally.
Lance Berkman hit an RBI single off
John Foster, then
Joey Devine allowed an RBI double to Ensberg and RBI single to Lane.
Adam Everett's sacrifice fly off
Jim Brower capped the inning's scoring. The Braves got a run in the eighth thanks to an RBI double by
Andruw Jones off
Dan Wheeler after
Marcus Giles singled to lead off against
Roy Oswalt, but no more.
Brad Lidge pitched a scoreless ninth as the Astros won Game 3 7–3.
Game 4 {{Linescore| The final game of the series lasted 18 innings and set records as the longest game in the history of Major League Baseball's postseason, both in terms of time and number of innings. This was two innings longer than another Astros playoff game that had the previous record for innings,
Game 6 of the 1986 NLCS, which went 16 innings, with the
New York Mets prevailing 7–6. It also broke the record for the longest playoff game duration with 5 hours and 50 minutes, beating Game 3 of the
2000 National League Division Series between the San Francisco Giants and the Mets, which lasted 5 hours and 22 minutes. This record was broken (by of an inning) by Game 2 of the
2014 NLDS, when the
San Francisco Giants defeated the
Washington Nationals 2–1. Coincidentally enough,
Tim Hudson started both the 2005 and 2014 games, in the former as a Brave and the latter as a Giant. Additionally,
Adam LaRoche was on the losing team in both games, playing for the Nationals in 2014. Coincidentally also, the score of this game matched the score of Game 6 of the 1986 Series, except that in 1986, the Astros were on the losing end. In the third, the Braves struck first when Rafael Furcal walked, Marcus Giles hit a force play before
Chipper Jones walked and a hit-by-pitch to
Andruw Jones loaded the bases off Astros starter
Brandon Backe.
Adam LaRoche's grand slam put them up 4–0. In the fifth, Giles singled and Jones doubled before
Andruw Jones's sacrifice fly scored Giles to make it 5–0 and knocked Backe out of the game. The Braves then loaded the bases, but
Mike Gallo in relief got a ground out to escape further damage. In the bottom of the inning, the Astros loaded the bases on three singles but only scored once on pinch-hitter
Orlando Palmeiro's sacrifice fly. In the top of the seventh, LaRoche attempted to score from first on
Jeff Francoeur's double, but was thrown out at the plate in what proved to be a crucial play. Francoeur moved to third on the throw home but was stranded.
Brian McCann's home run in the eighth off
Wandy Rodriguez made it 6–1 Braves, but in the bottom of the inning, Hudson walked
Brad Ausmus and allowed an infield single to pinch-hitter
Eric Bruntlett to end his night.
Kyle Farnsworth relived Hudson and got one out, but threw a wild pitch that advanced Ausmus and Bruntlett to second and third and walked pinch-hitter
Luke Scott on a full count to load the bases.
Lance Berkman then hit a grand slam to cut the lead to 6-5. In the ninth and down to their final out, Brad Ausmus hit a solo home run that barely cleared the left-center wall and Andruw Jones's glove off Farnsworth to tie the game and force extra innings. Each team had opportunities to score in extra innings. In the top of the tenth, Atlanta's
Ryan Langerhans doubled with one out off Astros reliever
Chad Qualls, but he was stranded. In the bottom of the tenth, Scott hit what appeared to be a walk-off home run down the left-field line, but the ball hooked at the last second and barely missed the foul pole. Scott grounded out. Houston nearly scored when Berkman doubled with two outs, but Braves reliever
Chris Reitsma intentionally walked
Morgan Ensberg retired pinch-hitter
Jeff Bagwell to end the inning. In the eleventh, the Braves put runners on second and third with one out, but Astros closer
Brad Lidge escaped the jam. In the top of the 14th, the Braves loaded the bases with one out off
Dan Wheeler, but Wheeler struck out McCann and got a force play to keep the game tied. In the bottom of the 15th, the Astros put runners on first and second with one out, but Braves reliever
Jim Brower got Ensberg to ground into an inning-ending double play. The Astros got three innings of relief by
Roger Clemens, appearing as a pinch-hitter in the 15th inning (hitting a sacrifice bunt) and pitching in relief for only the second time in his career and his first time since 1984 (and appearing this time only because the Astros were out of pitchers). Clemens atoned for his Game 2 loss with three scoreless innings, striking out four, and allowing only one hit.
Chris Burke hit the
game-ending home run with one out in the bottom of the 18th off Atlanta rookie
Joey Devine, giving Houston the series victory and sending them to the NLCS to face the
St. Louis Cardinals. In addition to being at the time the longest postseason game in MLB history, it was also the only postseason game to include two grand slams, Lance Berkman's and
Adam LaRoche's. At the time, some commentators pointed to this game as the greatest game in Houston Astros history, and one of the best games in the history of MLB playoffs. Even more remarkable than the game's length, perhaps, is the fact that the fan who caught Chris Burke's walk-off homer in the 18th was the same fan who had caught Lance Berkman's grand slam in the eighth (Section 102, Row 2, Seat 15); the fan later donated both balls to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Composite box 2005 NLDS
(3–1): Houston Astros over
Atlanta Braves ==Notes==