Astros' Justin Verlander passes Maddux, now 10th in strikeouts

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Saturday, May 25, 2024

OAKLAND, Calif. --Jake Meyers hit a three-run homer to highlight Houston's six-run fourth inning that backed Justin Verlander's winning start as the Astros beat the Athletics6-3 on Friday night.



Verlander (3-2) struck out nine over six innings to increase his total to 3,377, passing Hall of Famer Greg Maddux (3,371) for 10th on the career strikeouts list. He gave up two runs, one earned, on eight hits and didn't walk a batter for a second straight start and seventh time this year.



After another milestone to add to a long list of them, Verlander wasn't sure exactly how to feel.



"I feel like I should be more excited, but I feel like I'm a little more introspective and reflective," Verlander said. "A lot of sacrifices you make in this game, a lot of time away from the family, but I love it, so it's pretty amazing. I don't know if as a 21- or 22-year-old kid in professional baseball if I'd thought I'd be in the top 10 in anything. This sport's been around for so long. Hard to put into words, but a lot of thoughts, a lot of thoughts went through my mind."



When his teammates celebrated him once the special outing had ended, Verlander allowed himself to ponder the meaning.



Verlander said he remembers his first strikeout and recalled one against Hall of Fame slugger Frank Thomas here at the Coliseum. Verlander wears No. 35 because of Thomas.



"I have a lot of great memories here," he said.



A's manager Mark Kotsay, a former Oakland outfielder, has been witness to some of those.



"He's just tough. He's a Hall of Fame pitcher. He knows his game plan, and he executes it really well," Kotsay said. "He doesn't make a ton of mistakes."



Yordan Alvarez added an RBI double and Josh Hader finished the 2-hour, 31-minute game with his seventh save for the Astros, who began a seven-game road trip.



After right-hander Ross Stripling (1-9) retired the first nine Houston hitters in order, Jose Altuve singled to start the fourth for the first of four straight hits that included Alex Bregman's two-run single.



The A's drew an announced crowd of 9,676 for the series opener after winning two of three against the Colorado Rockies following an eight-game losing streak.



Miguel Andujar came off the injured list and immediately hit an RBI single in the first off Verlander and finished with three hits in his A's and season debut -- including another run-scoring single in the seventh.



Andujar's RBI marked the first time the A's have scored first in 18 games, ending the longest streak in franchise history. Batting cleanup, he also singled in the third.



Astros left fielder Chas McCormick robbed Max Schuemann of an extra-base hit when he crashed into the wall to make a great catch ending the eighth.



"That was a big play at the moment," manager Joe Espada said.



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