White Sox Ace Chris Sale Moves To 9-0
CHICAGO (AP) -- Chris Sale went the distance on a masterful four-hitter on Thursday night, becoming the first major league pitcher since 2008 to win his first nine starts, and the Chicago White Sox edged the Houston Astros, 2-1, to snap their season-high four game losing streak.
Sale walked none and struck out a season-high nine en route to his second straight complete game. No other pitcher has more than seven victories in the big leagues this season.
The Arizona Diamondbacks' Brandon Webb had been the last to post a 9-0 record in his first nine starts. The last White Sox to accomplish the feat was Eddie Cicotte in 1919, when he won 12 in a row.
Houston broke the shutout bid in the eighth, when Evan Gattis clubbed Sale's first pitch for a home run.?
Sale lowered his earned run average to 1.58, second to teammate Jose Quintana (1.54) in the American League. He retired the first five batters, allowed a single to Gattis in the second inning then mowed down the next 12 before Jose Altuve singled in the sixth.
In the fourth inning, Sale caught George Springer looking for his 1,068th career strikeout, which moved the left-hander past Doc White into ninth place in franchise history.
Jerry Sands' two-out single off Collin McHugh (4-4) staked Chicago to a 1-0 lead in the second. The hit scored Todd Frazier, who had opened with a single and stole second base.
Alex Avila hit a sacrifice fly for the second run in the seventh.
McHugh allowed two runs and five hits in seven innings to take the loss, his first after three straight wins. He walked one and struck out a season-high eight.
Chicago threatened to break on top in the first, but Springer leaped high to snare Jose Abreu's drive before it cleared the fence.
VENTURA CHANGES SOX
Chicago manager Robin Ventura shuffled the lineup in an attempt to snap his team out of its funk. Carlos Sanchez replaced slump-ridden 2B Brett Lawrie, who did not start for the first time this season, while Jerry Sands filled in for DH Avisail Garcia. Sanchez batted second and SS Jimmy Rollins slid down to sixth in the order.
"Every team is going to go through a stretch like this," Ventura said. "How they respond, obviously, you pay close attention to it as far as personalities, how they interact, how they come to the ballpark ... All that is stuff you look at."
TRAINER'S ROOM
White Sox: RHP Nate Jones was available out of the bullpen. He left the game on Tuesday after being struck on his left foot by a line drive.
UP NEXT
White Sox: Quintana (5-2, 1.54) will get the start versus the Kansas City Royals in the first game of a three-game set on Friday. The left-hander has a 1-6 record in 18 career starts against the division rivals.
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