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Verlander, seeking 1st World Series win, opens for Astros

Aaron Nola starts for the Phillies, the first third-place team to reach a Series
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Philadelphia Phillies manager Rob Thomson speaks to the media ahead of Game 1 of the baseball World Series between the Houston Astros and the Philadelphia Phillies on Thursday, Oct. 27, 2022, in Houston. Game 1 of the series starts Friday. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Justin Verlander was answering questions about his start for the Houston Astros in Friday night’s World Series opener when the head of the opposition’s baseball staff took the unorthodox step of walking into the interview room to extend a hand.

“Where did you start your career again?” Philadelphia Phillies executive Dave Dombrowski said with a grin.

As Detroit’s general manager, Dombrowski made Verlander the No. 2 pick in the 2004 amateur draft.

“He’s still wearing the same cologne,” Verlander told his audience. “It’s a very distinct one. I remember that smell.”

Verlander has a nose for success, not just fragrance — it was Paul Sebastian, Dombrowski said later. The 39-year-old right-hander likely is headed to his third Cy Young Award in his first season back from Tommy John surgery, going 18-4 with a major league-best 1.75 ERA to give him a 244-133 record, a 3.24 ERA and 3,198 strikeouts in 17 seasons.

Yet he remains in search of his first World Series win after going 0-6 with a 5.68 ERA in seven Series starts.

“This guy’s pitched well,” Verlander’s former manager in Detroit, Jim Leyland, said in a telephone interview. “These guys are human. They can have a bad game every now and then. And if it’s on a big stage, it gets magnified a little bit.”

Houston swept Seattle and the Yankees in the playoffs and could join the 1976 Cincinnati Reds (7-0) as the only teams to go through the postseason unbeaten since the division era started in 1969.

Aaron Nola starts for the Phillies, the first third-place team to reach a Series and a franchise that has brought just two titles to Philadelphia — compared to five won by the Athletics before leaving town after 1954.

Houston is in the Series for the fourth time in six seasons and second in a row under manager Dusty Baker after losing to Atlanta in six games last year. For a significant segment of fans, Houston’s 2017 champions are remembered as the Cheatin’ Astros, the fallout from the scandal in which Major League Baseball determined Houston used a video camera to signal opponent pitches to its batters.

Verlander is among five players on the Series roster left from the 2017 Astros, joined by second baseman Jose Altuve, third baseman Alex Bregman, first baseman Yuli Gurriel and pitcher Lance McCullers Jr.

“Dusty and I both would like to check off my first World Series win, his first World Series championship,” Verlander said. “There’s been games in the World Series that I don’t deserve a win. There’s been games that I thought I pitched well enough where we could get a win and it just didn’t work out. At this point in the season personal goals like that just don’t matter. Try to win the game however you can.”

Verlander will be starting his third Series opener. He lost to St. Louis as a rookie in 2006, giving up a two-run homer to Albert Pujols, and to San Francisco in 2012, allowing a pair of long balls to San Francisco’s Pablo Sandoval. In 2017, he lost Game 6 and married supermodel Kate Upton three days after Game 7.

“When he was in the minor league system, I told our broadcaster, Jim Price, I said, ‘Jim, I know this is high ground, but I said I’d compare him to Nolan Ryan,’” Dombrowski recalled.

Verlander throws nearly as hard as he did at his peak, averaging 95 mph this year with his fastball, 1 mph less than in 2009. His location has become refined since he was acquired by the Astros in August 2017.

“He was able to locate that fastball up in the zone, where it looked like a good pitch to hit but they couldn’t get to it,” Leyland said.

Verlander mixes in sliders and curves, and throws a couple of changeups per game, often in a key situation.

“One of those things that just comes with time, logging innings, instincts,” he said. I’ve talked to some guys before about what I see and I’ve come to realize just not everybody sees what I do. I don’t know exactly why. I would assume it’s just paying attention and pitching for a long time.”

He will pitch on eight days’ rest since beating the Yankees in the AL Championship Series opener. Nola, a 29-year-old right-hander who has spent his entire career with the Phillies, lost to San Diego in the NL Championship Series that same day.

Phillies manager Rob Thomson had no doubt about giving the ball to Nola for the first Friday opener in the Series since 1915.

“He actually just told me right when we stormed the field,” Nola recalled of Sunday’s pennant clincher. “We hugged each other and he told me then.”

Thomson, a baseball lifer who coached for the Yankees from 2008-17, moved to the Phillies in 2018 and took over when Joe Girardi was fired on June 3. He is seeking to join Bob Lemon of the 1978 Yankees and Jack McKeon of the 2003 Marlins as the only midseason replacements to manage a champion. He is the first Canadian to manage a team into the Series.

“I’m a proud Canadian and I love my country. I love what we stand for. But to tell you the truth I’m just happy to be managing a team in the World Series,” he said.

Baker noted he may have a spiritual edge this year.

“Last year was the death of Hank Aaron and also we were playing the Braves. So the way I look at it, much as I like Hank and as much as he loves me and each other, he was probably rooting for the Braves last year,” Baker said. “I figure now he’s rooting for me.”

—Ronald Blum, The Associated Press

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