{"id":103562,"date":"2022-10-21T07:57:05","date_gmt":"2022-10-21T07:57:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/astros-vs-yankees-score-alex-bregmans-three-run-hr-gives-houston-2-0-alcs-series-lead\/"},"modified":"2022-10-21T07:57:05","modified_gmt":"2022-10-21T07:57:05","slug":"astros-vs-yankees-score-alex-bregmans-three-run-hr-gives-houston-2-0-alcs-series-lead","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/astros-vs-yankees-score-alex-bregmans-three-run-hr-gives-houston-2-0-alcs-series-lead\/","title":{"rendered":"Astros vs. Yankees score: Alex Bregman’s three-run HR gives Houston 2-0 ALCS series lead"},"content":{"rendered":"
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The Houston Astros are two wins away from their fourth American League pennant in the last six years. Thursday night, the Astros hung on to beat the New York Yankees in Game 2 of the ALCS (HOU 3, NYY 2). Alex Bregman provided the game-winning swing and, for the second straight night, the Yankees struggled simply to make contact in important at-bats. <\/p>\n

Historically, teams that take a 2-0 series lead in a best-of-seven have gone on to win the series 84 percent of the time. The series is far from over, but the Astros are sitting pretty. They have five opportunities to win two games. The last team to erase a 2-0 series deficit was the Dodgers over the Braves in the 2020 NLCS. The Yankees last did it against the Braves in the 1996 World Series. <\/p>\n

Here are four takeaways from Game 2, plus a look at what’s next. <\/p>\n

1. Bregman opened the scoring <\/h2>\n

For only the second time in 2022, the Minute Maid Park roof was open Thursday night. Over the last three years, the home run rate to left field has been about 13 percentage points higher with the roof open than with the roof closed, and that little extra boost may have helped Alex Bregman and the Astros take an early 3-0 lead in Game 2. <\/p>\n

In the bottom of the third, Bregman beat Luis Severino to his spot and parked an inside fastball into the Crawford Boxes for a three-run home run. At 91.8 mph, it was the fifth weakest-hit postseason home run of the Statcast era (since 2015), and similar batted balls go for a hit only 4 percent of the time. But, it landed in the seats, and that’s all that matters. Suddenly it was 3-0 Astros. <\/p>\n