Streaking Tigers pounce early, pile on Astros

July 30th, 2016

DETROIT -- The Tigers welcomed the Astros to Comerica Park by putting up Minute Maid Park-type numbers, crushing Houston pitching for nine runs on 11 hits through the first two innings en route to a 14-6 win Friday night.
Detroit's fourth consecutive win, and sixth in eight games, left the two teams a half-game apart as they try to chase down the Blue Jays and Red Sox for the American League Wild Card spots -- with Houston 1 1/2 games back and Detroit 2 back. Their gap on Friday's scoreboard widened in a hurry after 's first-inning homer built a 2-0 Houston lead.
Much of Detroit's rally came off starter (7-7), who retired just five of the 15 batters he faced. Nick Castellanos posted RBI singles in each of the first two innings before ' three-run homer gave the Tigers a 9-2 lead after a seven-run second.

Second helping: Tigers strike back, bury Astros
"I think there were some balls left over the middle of the plate," Tigers manager Brad Ausmus said. "We've seen [McHugh] sharper. He's obviously a better pitcher than he showed tonight. We just took advantage of a couple balls that weren't where he wanted them."

That was enough for Matt Boyd (2-2), who labored at times to hold down Houston's offense but gave up three runs on four hits over five innings. hit a third-inning solo homer, but 's drive to center later that inning fell short at the fence.

added a three-run home run for Detroit in the sixth before provided a pinch-hit homer, his second drive out to left in as many games, in the eighth.

"It just seemed like every ball that [McHugh] left out over the plate they did some damage with," Astros manager A.J. Hinch said. "They did a good job situational hitting. They put up a big number in the second inning. We couldn't recover. A lot of pitches to hit, a couple well-timed hits, a couple hits that found holes. They did about everything right against Collin tonight."
MOMENTS THAT MATTERED
First-inning bounceback: Just as a shutdown inning from a pitcher can be important for a team that just rallied, so can a comeback inning immediately after a pitcher gives up early runs. Once Castellanos singled home , the Tigers had two runs and four hits through five batters to erase Houston's brief 2-0 lead.

"It means a lot," Boyd said. "Going out there, the last thing you want to do is put your team in a hole. And for them to come back and tie the game up, it makes it a lot easier to go out there and keep attacking."
McHugh rocked: McHugh's solid run of pitching came to an end with a thud. After posting a 2.49 ERA in his previous seven starts, the right-hander was rocked for eight runs and 10 hits in just 1 2/3 innings in his worst start since his first outing of 2016. That's when he was hit for five earned runs and three hits in one-third of an inning April 6 at the Yankees.
"They didn't really let me up for air," McHugh said. "We made good pitches sometimes, and they found ways to get the bat to it -- and every mediocre, borderline pitch we made, they made us pay for it. Obviously, it's not the way I envisioned this start to go." More >

Collins' contribution: All but one of Detroit's 10 hits off McHugh were singles, producing runs but not a defining blow. That came from Collins, who jumped on a changeup from reliever and drove it out to right for his three-run homer. Collins tripled and scored in the fifth to put the Tigers into double digits.

"The better he plays, the more we have to think about keeping him [after returns from the disabled list]," Ausmus said. "It's a simple fact. He seems to be learning to slow the game down a little bit."
Altuve stretches streak: Altuve's homer stretched his road hitting streak to 20 games and his road on-base streak to 36 games. It's the longest road hitting streak by an Astros player since Lance Berkman's 23-game run in 2009, and the longest by an AL player since Chicago's in 2014. Since May 1 (35 games), Altuve is hitting .482 on the road with a .528 on-base percentage.
QUOTABLE
"I know how it is. I'm a Dolphins fan. So every week, I either love everybody or want everybody fired. I get it. But it's our job as athletes, as the people playing, to stay even-keel, because we're the ones that have to do it. We can't get too high. We can't get too low." -- Castellanos, on riding the up-and-down emotions of the Tigers' season
GONZALEZ HURT
Astros first baseman , who extended his hitting streak to 12 games, left the game in the seventh inning with right hand soreness. He is considered day to day.
REPLAY REVIEW
Hinch successfully challenged a call in the eighth inning, when Marisnick was awarded first base on a throwing error by third baseman Castellanos as first baseman whiffed on the swipe tag.

WHAT'S NEXT
Astros: Right-hander (7-4, 4.69 ERA) will take the mound for Saturday's 6:10 p.m. CT game against the Tigers at Comerica Park. Fiers is 4-1 with a 4.10 ERA in his last nine starts, during which the Astros are 7-2. He worked seven innings Sunday to beat the Angels.
Tigers: (10-6, 3.64) will try to extend Detroit's winning streak to five and his personal winning streak to four when he takes the mound Saturday at 7:10 ET. Verlander hasn't lost since June 26, allowing six earned runs on 21 hits over 33 2/3 innings in five July starts.
Watch every out-of-market regular-season game live on MLB.TV.