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'No fear': Rangers rookie Evan Carter's playoff heroics continue with wild double play vs. Astros

As Jose Altuve scampered back to first base, Corey Seager relayed a throw to Marcus Semien, who stomped on the second-base bag emphatically.

For the moment, Altuve was ruled safe. But Semien knew. Seager knew. And Altuve probably knew, too – he’d committed a significant gaffe in a crucial moment of a playoff game.

Of course, Evan Carter’s latest bit of playoff heroics had a great deal to do with that.

Game 1 of the American League Championship Series was put to bed after a wild sequence featuring a diverse cast of playoff heroes old and new. But it was Carter’s wonderful catch that set the sequence in motion and preserved a 2-0 Rangers victory to gain the upper hand in this ALCS.

For Carter, it’s not pressure, just fun – even as he’s only been in the big leagues for a month yet has mastered the art of playoff baseball these past two weeks. In Game 1, he kick-started the Rangers’ victory, hitting a hustle double off Justin Verlander and scoring the game’s first run – all Texas would need – in the top of the second inning.

Sunday’s final act was even more compelling.

After Josh Sborz issued a leadoff walk to Altuve in the bottom of the eighth, the Rangers summoned Aroldis Chapman to record the next three outs. The history was rich: Chapman’s last ALCS appearance in Houston ended with Altuve hitting a walk-off Game 6 home run to send the Astros to the 2019 World Series.

Chapman was also the walk-off loser at Minute Maid Park in Game 2 of the 2017 ALCS, Altuve racing home with the winning run on a Carlos Correa double.

Suddenly, many of the principals would meet again.

Chapman was tabbed to face Alex Bregman, who skied a slider to deep left field. With Minute Maid Park’s Crawford Boxes lurking just 315 feet away from the plate, hearts raced throughout the state.

Carter, who made his major league debut Sept. 8, had never played in Minute Maid Park and its funky outfield. Saturday, teammates Robbie Grossman – a former Astro  - and Travis Jankowski went out there with the rookie and showed him, as he said, “showing me the ropes."

Lesson learned. Carter scampered back to the wall, leapt and pulled the ball out of the sky as much as it fell from it. That paired with his early bit of hustle only burnished a postseason rep in a second season where he has seven hits in 18 at-bats (a .388 average) and a .520 on-base percentage.

Evan Carter makes a leaping catch to start a double play in the eighth inning of Game 1.
Evan Carter makes a leaping catch to start a double play in the eighth inning of Game 1.

“We're playing a game. And it's a fun one, too,” he told reporters Sunday night. “I'm just out here having a great time. I have a lot of great teammates around me.”

The play was just halfway over. Altuve ostensibly did the right thing. He got to second base and froze – no Bryce Harper uber-aggression here – and then scampered back to first after Carter’s catch.

But it seemed everybody but Altuve saw him fail to re-touch second after edging past the bag. It was not a hard sell by Semien and Seager to convince manager Bruce Bochy to challenge the call.

“That was close,” said Astros manager Dusty Baker. “He had his foot still on the bag. And that was a matter of interpretation. But his left foot was past the bag.”

It was overturned. Double play. And four outs later, the Rangers had the upper hand.

While it seems they’ve been in the playoffs forever – and on the road for all but one game of it – the Rangers still have seven more wins to reach their goal. They don’t anticipate their rookie hitting a wall any time soon.

Maybe just scaling them or sending balls over them.

“He's got the youthful enthusiasm and he's just excited to be here,” said Bochy. “He's not in awe of anything. Just no fear in this kid since he's come up.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Evan Carter's wild catch helps Rangers take ALCS Game 1 vs. Astros