Astros make all kinds of history in 18-1 demolition of Dodgers, with HRs by Jose Altuve and Christian Walker

Astros make all kinds of history in 18-1 demolition of Dodgers, with HRs by Jose Altuve and Christian Walker

On the first pitch of Friday’s game, Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Ben Casparius allowed a homer to Houston Astros third baseman Isaac Paredes. It didn’t get much better from there for the Dodgers.

Powered by a season high-tying five homers (but somehow not the most homers by a team this Fourth of July), the Astros coasted to an 18-1 win in the opener of a high-profile three-game series. The proceedings got bad enough that Dodger fans began chanting “Start the fireworks!”

Six different Astros players scored multiple runs, with Jose Altuve leading the charge. The second baseman went 3-for-3 with two homers, a double, two walks, four runs and five RBI. He entered the game without a regular-season home run at Dodger Stadium in his career, then added a pair:

That second homer was part of a 10-run inning for the Astros, the first time the Dodgers allowed double-digit runs in an inning since April 23, 1999, the longest such streak in baseball. That was the game in which Fernando Tatis hit two grand slams in a single inning

The Astros hit a grand slam in this inning too.

All of that was at the expense of reliever Noah Davis, who was left to wear it with the game already out of reach. His final line: six hits, 10 earned runs and three walks allowed in a 1 1/3 innings of work. His ERA now sits at 19.50.

The only Dodgers pitcher who didn’t allow a run was infielder Miguel Rojas who threw a scoreless ninth while down 17 runs. Casparius ended up allowing six earned runs, while Jack Dreyer and Anthony Banda yielded a single run in multiple innings of work.

The lone Dodgers run came on a solo homer by All-Star catcher Will Smith.

The other tormentor of the Dodgers was first baseman Christian Walker, who regularly punished the team during his time with the Arizona Diamondbacks. While he’s struggling this year, he entered the game slashing .341/.401/.783 at Dodger Stadium

On Friday, he hit a homer for a sixth straight game at the ballpark, tying the record for the longest streak by a batter on the road against a specific team in MLB history per MLB.com’s Sarah Langs. That span includes two multi-homer games.

He can go for the outright record on Saturday. Per Langs, the only players with more homers in their first 43 games at a specific venue than his 20 at Chavez Ravine are Mark McGwire, Willie Mays and Alex Rodriguez.

Dodger fans will at least have a better reason to tune in for Saturday, as Shohei Ohtani will take the mound against Framber Valdez for his fourth start since returning from UCL surgery.

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