Daily Press

Seager steps up, but Rangers’ win costly

Texas loses Garcia, Scherzer to injuries

- By David Brandt

PHOENIX — Corey Seager smashed a homer that rocketed off his bat at a speed few other mortals can match. Then he made a sliding stop and started a double play in the eighth inning that might have saved the game.

The star shortstop is once again playing at a different level in October.

That’s good for the Texas Rangers, who may need more of those individual heroics after a costly victory put them ahead in this World Series.

Seager clubbed a two-run homer and turned in a terrific defensive play, Max Scherzer combined with four relievers for a gem on the mound and Texas beat the Arizona Diamondbac­ks 3-1 on Monday night to take a 2-1 lead in the Fall Classic.

“This is what you play for. This is where you want to be at this moment,” said Seager, the NLCS and World Series MVP for the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2020. “Fortunatel­y for me, having experience with this, it’s always driven me. I’ve been fortunate enough to be part of some good teams and experience these things.”

Texas overcame injuries to Scherzer and slugger Adolis García in improving to 9-0 on the road this postseason, this time in front of more than 48,000 fans at Chase Field.

The 29-year-old Seager smoked a two-run homer into the rightfield seats as part of a three-run third after Diamondbac­ks rookie starter Brandon Pfaadt left a firstpitch changeup high in the zone.

The ball left Seager’s bat at 114.5 mph, which made it the hardest-hit World Series homer in the Statcast era, dating back to 2015.

García cut down Christian Walker at the plate with a stellar throw from right field in the second, stifling some early Arizona momentum. García exited in the eighth with tightness on his left side after appearing to get hurt on a swing. He went to a hospital for an MRI to determine the severity of the injury.

Scherzer threw three scoreless innings before leaving with back tightness. Jon Gray, Josh Sborz, Aroldis Chapman and José Leclerc combined to keep Arizona’s offense quiet most of the evening.

Scherzer said he was having back spasms and would know more about his availabili­ty for a potential Game 7 over the next 48

hours.

Game 4 was Tuesday night at Chase Field.

The D-backs rallied in the eighth when pinch-hitter Emmanuel Rivera led off with a double against Chapman. Geraldo Perdomo followed with an RBI single, making it 3-1. But then Chapman worked out of the jam, striking out Corbin Carroll before Seager started a clutch double play, sliding on his knees to field a hot smash from Ketel Marte before flipping to Semien, who relayed to first.

After García threw out Walker, the Rangers grabbed the lead in the third. Nathaniel Lowe hit a leadoff double and scored on a two-out single by Semien, his first RBI in 10 games. Seager then launched his no-doubt homer deep into the right-field seats to make it 3-0.

Texas is 9-0 this postseason when scoring first, and the Rangers are the first team in major league history to win their first nine road games in one postseason.

It was Seager’s fifth homer this postseason. The four-time All-Star also was one of the heroes in Game 1 of this Fall Classic, belting a tying homer in the ninth that helped rally the Rangers to a 6-5 victory in 11 innings on García’s home run.

The 25-year-old Pfaadt had been a revelation in the postseason with a 2.70 ERA through four October starts, despite a 5.72 ERA during the regular season. He wasn’t quite as good on Monday — giving up three runs on four hits and two walks over 5 innings, striking out four.

Scherzer gave up two hits and two walks while striking out one.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP ?? The Rangers’ Corey Seager hits a two-run homer off Diamondbac­ks starting pitcher Brandon Pfaadt during Game 3 of the World Series on Monday night in Phoenix.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP The Rangers’ Corey Seager hits a two-run homer off Diamondbac­ks starting pitcher Brandon Pfaadt during Game 3 of the World Series on Monday night in Phoenix.

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