Jose Altuve left the yard in each of the first three innings Tuesday night, leading the Houston Astros’ explosive beginning in their rivalry clash with the Texas Rangers.
The barrage gave Altuve homers in four consecutive plate appearances going back to Monday’s game and five homers in six plate appearances, the most in a two-game span in Astros history and tied for the most over two games in MLB history. He is the first player since at least 1961 (expansion era) to hit a home run in four consecutive innings, and the fourth to hit five home runs in six plate appearances, joining Manny Ramirez (1998), Shawn Green (2002) and Josh Hamilton (2012).
Aided by Altuve’s first three-homer game in the regular season, Houston scored three runs in each of the first three innings on their way to a 14-1 blowout victory.
“It was just one of those days where you feel really good,” Altuve said. “I was just trying to get my pitch, put a good swing and it happened.”
Altuve started the game with a blast to left off Rangers starter Nathan Eovaldi, who was making his first start since July 18 due to a forearm strain.
Altuve’s second long ball of the night was also against Eovaldi and ended the right handers frustrating night after just 1⅓ innings and four runs given up. Altuve’s third blast was against reliever Dane Dunning.
He did not come to the dish during the top of the fourth and grounded out in the fifth, then struck out in the seventh before being lifted from the game.
“Obviously, it’s a good thing to do,” Altuve said of his big night. “Especially in the situation where we are right now, trying to win the division. So, it’s good.”
Just over a week after hitting for the cycle, Altuve became the first player in Astros history with a cycle and a 3-HR game in the same season. He is only the second player in MLB history to accomplish both feats fewer than 10 days apart, after Joe DiMaggio of the New York Yankees in 1948.
Altuve has been peppered with a showering of boos all through the series with the Rangers, he is public enemy number one, but the taunting does not seem to have bothered him, in fact, it had the opposite effect. After his third homer on Tuesday, he was 7-for-9 in the first 12 innings of the series with 5 homers, 5 RBIs and 6 runs scored.
“That was just unbelievable,” Astros manager Dusty Baker said. “I mean, he was on the ball.”
According to ESPN Stats & Information research, Altuve became just the fourth player to homer in each of the first three innings of a game. The others were Carl Reynolds (1930), Mike Cameron (2002) and Manny Machado (2016).
He also joined the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Mookie Betts as the only players this season to record back-to-back multihomer games.
Altuve’s four homers in four straight plate appearances tied the major league record. The scorching tear could hardly have come at a better time. With their win Tuesday and the Mariners’ loss in Cincinnati, the Astros took sole possession of first place in the AL West for the first time this season.
“Obviously, this doesn’t happen very often,” Altuve said. “Last month of the season where we are trying to get to first place, stay there, so good timing.”