Game 1 The Tampa Bay Rays held off the Houston Astros, 2–1, in a nail-biter to take Game 1 of the 2020 American League Championship Series on Sunday night in San Diego.
Blake Snell gave up six hits and two walks in five innings, while Valdez allowed just two runs on four hits in six innings. The difference in the game was a well placed two-out RBI single from
Mike Zunino in the fifth inning to give the Rays a 2–1 lead.
Diego Castillo earned the five-out save to preserve the Rays victory.
Game 2 Former Astro
Charlie Morton took the mound for the Rays against Tampa native
Lance McCullers Jr. for the Astros. In the bottom of the first,
Manuel Margot put the Rays up 3–0 with a 406-foot home run. Margot would also make a spectacular catch in the top of the second. With two runners in scoring position and two outs in the top of the second,
George Springer hit a ball to right field that sliced foul, but was caught by Margot, who flipped over the wall to secure the final out in the inning.
Carlos Correa would get the Astros on the board in the sixth with a home run off of reliever
Pete Fairbanks.
Mike Zunino would respond by hitting a solo home run in the seventh off of McCullers.
Nick Anderson picked up the a stress-filled save after loading the bases and getting
Alex Bergman to fly out to center.
Game 3 Joey Wendle gave the Rays a 2–1 advantage with a two-run single in the sixth, and
Hunter Renfroe separated the game with a two-run double later in Tampa Bay's five-run inning. In the inning, the Rays also got some help from a throwing error by
Jose Altuve and a pair of hit-by-pitches by
Enoli Paredes, and they never looked back. With a 5–2 win in Game 3 of the AL Championship Series on Tuesday night at
Petco Park, the Rays moved one win away from going to their second World Series.
Game 4 In the bottom of the third inning,
Tyler Glasnow walked
Martin Maldonado and
Michael Brantley before giving up an RBI double to
Jose Altuve, making the score 2–0. Tampa Bay answered back in the top of the fourth with a single from
Austin Meadows, followed by a home run from
Randy Arozarena, his fifth of the postseason. The game went quiet until the bottom of the fifth inning. Maldonado singled and
George Springer hit a towering home run, making the score 4–2 Astros. The Rays made some noise in the top half of the sixth inning, knocking three singles, but ultimately none came in to score. In the top of the ninth inning when Rays shortstop
Willy Adames doubled in
Joey Wendle, closing the gap to one run. Houston was able to hold on and win their first game of the series. On the night the Astros staved off elimination,
George Springer,
Jose Altuve,
Carlos Correa,
Alex Bregman and
Yuli Gurriel broke the record for most postseason games played together by any five teammates in baseball history.
Game 5 Eleven pitchers were used (seven by Tampa Bay) in a "bullpen game".
George Springer hit a home run to start the bottom of the 1st inning for the Astros.
Brandon Lowe tied the game in the 3rd, but the Astros reclaimed the lead in the bottom frame when
Michael Brantley hit a single to right field to score two runs.
Randy Arozarena hit a home run off
Enoli Paredes in the fifth inning for his sixth home run of the postseason to make it 3-2.
Ji-Man Choi tied the game in the eighth inning when he hit a home run off Josh James to tie the game at 3 Astros shortstop
Carlos Correa hit a walk-off home run in the ninth inning off reliever
Nick Anderson. The Astros became just the fourth team in MLB history to force a Game 6 after trailing a best-of-seven series 3–0 (after the
1998 Braves,
1999 Mets and
2004 Red Sox).
Game 6 Framber Valdez was matched against
Blake Snell. The Astros became just the second team to force a Game 7 in MLB postseason history after trailing a best-of-seven series 3–0 (after the
2004 Red Sox). Game 6's pivotal frame proved to be the fifth. Rays ace
Blake Snell entered hoping to preserve a 1–0 lead, but he was lifted after allowing a walk and a single to begin the inning. Snell was visibly unhappy with manager
Kevin Cash's decision to remove him from the game in favor of reliever
Diego Castillo. He ostensibly grew less happy as Castillo then gave up the lead. By the time the Astros half of the fifth inning was over, the Astros were up by a 4–1 margin thanks to a timely bunt by
Martin Maldonado and big hits from
George Springer,
Jose Altuve, and
Carlos Correa. The Astros would add one run in the sixth and two in the seventh and go on to win the game, 7–4.
Game 7 This was the first League Championship Series to reach a Game 7 since the
2017 ALCS, won by Houston over the
New York Yankees. The starting pitchers,
Lance McCullers Jr. for Houston and
Charlie Morton for Tampa Bay, had both pitched for Houston in Game 7 of the
2017 ALCS and Game 7 of the
2017 World Series. Tampa Bay became the first MLB team to win a Game 7 after taking a 3–0 series lead. Concluding matters was
Pete Fairbanks, who got
Aledmys Díaz to fly out to
Manuel Margot, to end the Astros' season and win the second AL pennant for Tampa Bay, the first in 12 seasons. Fairbanks earned his second save this postseason. The Rays became just the second team to win both a division series winner-take-all Game 5 and a League Championship Series winner-take-all Game 7 in the same year (after the
2012 San Francisco Giants). Postgame,
Randy Arozarena was awarded the
ALCS MVP. His seven home runs were the most ever by a rookie in a single postseason, breaking a tie with former Ray
Evan Longoria (2008). Only three players ever have hit more homers in a single postseason:
Barry Bonds (
2002 Giants),
Carlos Beltran (
2004 Astros), and
Nelson Cruz (
2011 Rangers).
Composite line score 2020 ALCS
(4–3):
Tampa Bay Rays beat
Houston Astros ==See also==