Detroit Tigers' Justyn-Henry Malloy hits first MLB home run in 9-1 loss to Texas Rangers
ARLINGTON, Texas — Justyn-Henry Malloy saved the Detroit Tigers from embarrassment with the first hit and the first home run of his MLB career.
Malloy, who hadn't reached base safely in his first eight plate appearances, hit a solo home run to left-center field to begin the sixth inning of Wednesday's series finale at Globe Life Field, breaking up Texas Rangers right-hander José Ureña's perfect game.
The Tigers still lost, 9-1.
Thanks to Malloy, the Tigers (31-31) weren't completely lifeless against Ureña, who owns a 4.80 ERA in his 10-year MLB career. Ureña, 32, pitched for the Tigers in 2021, posting a 5.81 ERA across 100⅔ innings in 26 games (18 starts).
Ureña retired the first 15 batters he faced in Wednesday's game.
In the sixth inning, Malloy stepped to the plate and refused to swing at the first four pitches. Three pitches were outside of the strike zone for balls; one pitch was painted on the down-and-away corner of the zone for a called strike.
The fifth pitch traveled 413 feet to the seats in left-center field.
Malloy crushed a middle-in sinker with a 105.9 mph exit velocity for his first hit and first home run in the third game of his MLB career. He cut the Tigers' deficit to 4-1.
First career hit ✅
First career home run ✅ pic.twitter.com/6FzpKK6pQP— Detroit Tigers (@tigers) June 6, 2024
After Malloy's homer, Ureña retired the next five batters he faced before walking Gio Urshela on eight pitches with two outs in the seventh inning.
In total, Ureña sent down 20 of 22 batters with one hit, one walk and six strikeouts across 6⅔ scoreless innings. He received a standing ovation from the fans at Globe Life Field as he walked from the mound to the dugout.
Malloy collected the second hit of his career — and the Tigers' second hit of the game — against right-handed reliever David Robertson in the eighth inning. He hit an inside curveball for a ground-ball single into left field that deflected off the third baseman.
The Tigers, squandering a three-game winning streak, finished with two hits and one walks. The Tigers scored just six runs in the three-game series against the Rangers.
A short start
Right-hander Kenta Maeda threw just two pitches in his 10th start for the Tigers this season. He exited the game with right side abdominal discomfort in the first inning.
The Tigers called left-handed reliever Joey Wentz out of the bullpen, only for Wentz to walk the bases loaded with three consecutive two-out walks.
Wentz fell behind 3-0 in the count to Wyatt Langford with the bases loaded, but he escaped the jam to end the first inning by firing three strikes in a row, capped off by an elevated fastball for a swinging strikeout.
But the Rangers took a 1-0 lead in the second inning with an RBI single from Corey Seager. The Rangers then upped their lead to 2-0 with Josh Smith's solo home run to open the third inning.
Wentz allowed three runs on four hits and four walks with two strikeouts in 2⅔ innings. Of his 65 pitches, 32 were strikes and 33 were balls. He threw first-pitch strikes to six of 15 batters for a poor 40% first-pitch strike rate.
The third run scored after Wentz's departure.
He exited with a runner on first base and two outs in the third inning, replaced by right-handed reliever Mason Englert. Jonah Heim crushed Englert's first-pitch hanging slider for a two-run home run to right field, making it 4-0.
The two-run homer represented the final run charged to Wentz and the first run charged to Englert.
Costly errors, Zach McKinstry pitches
The Rangers took a 6-1 lead with two runs in the sixth inning, a result of second baseman Colt Keith's two-out fielding error. A hard-hit grounder took a tough hop, deflected off Keith's glove and rolled into shallow center field.
A run scored on the fielding error for a 5-1 margin. Smith, the next batter, delivered an RBI single to center field for a 6-1 advantage. To avoid further damage, Englert struck out Adolis García with a nasty down-and-away changeup.
Englert, who threw 53 pitches, allowed three runs (one earned run) on four hits and one walk with one strikeout.
Left-handed reliever Andrew Chafin surrendered three runs (two earned runs) in the eighth inning, making it 9-1. The first run scored on a single; the second run scored on a throwing error by first baseman Mark Canha; the third run scored on a single.
Chafin used 34 pitches to get one out, so the Tigers replaced him with position player Zach McKinstry and sent Malloy to right field for his first MLB appearance in the outfield.
McKinstry retired back-to-back batters on four pitches in the third pitching appearance of his career.
His four pitches averaged 40.5 mph.
Contact Evan Petzold at epetzold@freepress.com or follow him @EvanPetzold.
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This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit Tigers' Justyn-Henry Malloy gets first HR in 9-1 loss at Texas