Houston – There was a frightening injury. There was chaos and confusion.
There was an advance of two points wasted for the second consecutive night.
And then another circuit by Fernando Tatis Jr. sailed on the exterior wall in a hurry, collecting things at least temporarily on the course for a team whose road trip started with a few bumps.
The longest circuit of the Tatis season, 427 feet and in the eye of the striker beyond the central field in seventh round, allowed a difference on a night where he scored all the points of the paadres in a 3-2 victory against the Astros on Sunday.
The game started horribly for the Padres, whose 16-6 record remains in the major leagues despite their losing the first two games in the series here and continuing to lose important players.
This time, Luis Arraez was transported from the field attached to a stretcher board after a collision during the first round.
After Tatis started the match with a walk, Arraez put a sacrifice stroke, then ran at full speed in the second second goal player from the Astros, Mauricio Dubón, who covered the first goal and had just received the launch of the Launcher Valdez while crossing the bag.
The exact nature of the Arrive injury was not immediately clear, although manager Mike Shildt Shildt declared in a television interview carried out before the top of the third round that Arraz had “a little cup on his jaw” and there was some concern about the stability of the jaw.
The Padres announced shortly after the departure in Arraez that he was transported to Houston’s Methodist hospital for a more in -depth assessment. He was “stable, aware, responsive and capable of moving his ends,” said the team, and had returned to the clubhouse by the end of the match.
Arraez was crushed on the ground after having run in Dubón. The Arriz face seemed to break in Dubón’s shoulder, and the smallest snatch fell back, eyes closed.
The coach of the first base, Dave Macias, immediately knelt next to a motionless Arraez, who was lying for his part, as a member of the Astros medical staff delimited by the neighboring canoe. Toreez quickly rolled on the back while the athletic coaches of Padres and Shildt sprained from the third basic canoe.
Tatis walked from its place on the second goal and was held next to Dubón. Manny Machado, who was on the bridge, also descended the first baseline, where he and Tatis kneeling for several minutes.
Arraez finally caught the hand of sports coach Mark Rogow and held it until he was loaded in the cart on the stretcher board and with a splint on his neck.
Shildt, Machado and Tatis bowed their heads and Shildt seemed to pray while emergency medical technicians are preparing to get to the table.
Before Arraez was chased, Shildt leaned over him and patted him on his chest. Arrazed handed down and briefly caught the back of Shildt’s neck.
Sports coach Ricky Huerta accompanied Arraez out of the field.
The match resumed after about 15 minutes and Machado worked 12 steps.
It appeared that the long half-manche would end quickly on a double group group from Xander Bogaerts. But the launch in the first by Dubon was low and moved away from the first basic player Christian Walker, which makes Bogaerts in safety while Tatis ran the third and sprinted at home.
Oscar Gonzalez followed with a double bordered in the corner in the left field which sent Bogaerts Sprinter to the third base while coach Tim Leiper invaded him by the house. But Bogaerts turned to look to the left field and stopped, apparently never seen Leiper, and the sleeve ended on a fly ball on the right field by Yuli Gurriel.
Tatis also sprout in the third round after hitting a ball on the ground inside the first goal bag and below, after the right defender Cam Smith and to the corner while Tatis Sprinta around the bases and arrived at the third standing.
Gavin Sheets, who replaced Arraez, followed with a group on the right side which bounced on the glove of a diving walker for a simple RBI.
The starter of Padres Dylan ceases did not allow a Baserunner in the first two sleeves. He failed a runner in the second goal in the third and another in the fourth before the Astros beat the match in the fifth.
Meyers, whose single in the third had been the first safe blow, led the fifth round with a double. He went to third place on a single by Smith and scored on one that Dubón fled in the central field, where the second goal player Jose Iglesias obtained his glove on the ball before he fell to the ground.
Cease struck Jose Altuve before walking Isaac Paredes to load the bases. The connection race entered a sacrificial fly by Yordan Alvarez before the end of the Channel on a field.
Cease took 31 locations to navigate this round, and it was replaced by Alek Jacob to start the sixth.
The paadres threatened to give him an advance when Machado and Bogaerts started the Channel with simple.
But after the grouping of choice of a Gonzalez field player put runners in the corners with a withdrawal, the Yuli Gurriel fly ball in the central field was too shallow for Machado to try to score, and Jose Iglesias ended.
After the explosion of Tatis, Jacob obtained the first outing at the end of the seventh.
Shildt then went to Jason Adam, who obtained the last two withdrawals from this round and had to obtain four in the eighth when his sweeper who ended a withdrawal from Jeremy Peña rebounded in front of the receiver Martín Maldonado and Peña at the first goal.
Adam withdrew the following two strikers and Robert Suarez worked a 1-2-3 ninth to return to the MLB top with nine stops.
This article will be updated.
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