HOUSTON (AP) The Latest on the World Series (all times local):
3:50 p.m.
Alan Porter will work home plate for Tuesday night’s World Series opener as part of an umpiring crew headed by Gary Cederstrom.
Doug Eddings will be at first, Cederstrom at second, James Hoye at third, Lance Barksdale in left and Sam Holbrook in right.
Jim Wolf will be in the replay room in New York for the first two games, then join the crew in Washington for Game 3 as Porter moves to the replay room. That puts Porter in position to umpire behind home plate in a Game 7.
Jerry Meals will be the replay assistant throughout the Series.
Cederstrom is working the Series for the fourth time, Holbrook for the third, Wolf for the second, and Barksdale, Eddings, Hoye and Porter for the first.
The crew will wear a patch in memory of Eric Cooper, who died last weekend after developing a blood clot following knee surgery. Cooper had worked the Division Series between the New York Yankees and Minnesota as part of Cederstrom’s crew.
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3:30 p.m.
After all those relievers Houston hitters faced this postseason with the Tampa Bay Rays and the New York Yankees relying so early and heavily on their bullpens, the Astros should get multiple at-bats against Washington starters in the World Series.
That more traditional approach by the Nationals means a lot of Max Scherzer and Stephen Strasburg.
”It’s a grind,” said leadoff hitter George Springer, though he believes the Astros do an extremely good job of adjusting when facing a pitcher more than once in a game.
”I’m the last person that’s going to tell you it’s easier to face Scherzer and Strasburg in the first couple games just because they’re traditional pitchers,” manager AJ Hinch said.
While the Astros didn’t see many Rays or Yankees pitchers twice in the same game, they saw them multiple times during the series.
”If you want to do well against the Nats, you’ve got to beat their starters, and then make them make decisions as the game goes on,” Hinch said. ”If you sit back and kind of wait for the bullpen or wait for them to make a decision, you’ll look at Strasburg and Scherzer throwing 120, 130 pitches and you’ll be too deep in the game to make up a difference.”
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3:05 p.m.
Astros reliever Ryan Pressly says he expects to be able to pitch in the World Series.
Pressly threw only one pitch in the clinching Game 6 of the ALCS on Saturday night, getting Didi Gregorius of the Yankees on a soft grounder. But the reliever had to leave the game after aggravating his surgically repaired right knee – he had the procedure in August and missed time.
”Not going into too much detail about my knee,” Pressly said before a workout. ”I think we’ll be fine.”
Manager AJ Hinch said the Astros would announce their roster prior to Game 1 on Tuesday night.
”Quite honestly, the health of Ryan Pressly is going to be key in those decisions. He’s going to do some things on the field today. Hopefully get off the mound. He’s feeling better. We anticipate him being available and ready to go,” Hinch said.
”But until we clear him as active we’re going to have to hold off on our roster,” he said. ”There could be a change or two either based on health or based on matchup.”
Pressly was an All-Star this season, going 2-3 with a 2.32 ERA in 55 games. He struggled in the playoffs against Tampa Bay and New York, allowing four runs and six hits in 2 2/3 innings over six games.
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2:45 p.m.
Before playing in the World Series, Gerrit Cole attended the Fall Classic as a fan in 2001, 2002, 2012 and 2017. The 2001 matchup of Arizona and the New York Yankees went seven games, and the Diamondbacks won when Luis Gonzalez singled in the ninth inning off Mariano Rivera.
”That was just a really special World Series I think for the whole country,” Cole said. ”It was probably the only time most people felt some empathy for the Yankees. And then Gonzo just ripped it right out.”
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2:17 p.m.
Justin Verlander will follow Gerrit Cole and start Game 2 of the World Series for Houston against Washington on Wednesday.
Zack Greinke will start for the Astros on Friday when the Series resumes at Nationals Park.
”Greinke gets to hit. That’s going to be fun for him,” Astros manager AJ Hinch said Monday.
Greinke has a .225 batting average with nine homers, including three this season for Arizona before he was traded to Houston on July 31.
Houston plans a bullpen game for Game 4 on Saturday.
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