The Red Sox and Astros are back at it at Fenway Park for Game 5.
With the American League Championship Series tied at 2-2, the series is headed back to Houston for at least one more game on Friday. Here’s the full schedule.
Since 1985, there have been 32 LCS or World Series that were tied 2-2. The winner of Game 5 has gone on to take the series in 21 of those.
Chris Sale will be on the mound for Boston, and Framber Valdez for Houston, in a rematch of Game 1.
Watch on Fox Sports 1 and listen on WEEI (93.7 FM in the Boston area).
Globe writer Julian McWilliams will be offering live commentary throughout the game. Follow along below, and click here to refresh.
See more Red Sox coverage | Live box score | Live play-by-play | How to watch
An interesting approach from Sale — 5:53 p.m.
Interesting tidbit: Sale only threw Altuve one fastball in that at-bat to end the top of the third.
Sale tossed him seven sliders in that nine-pitch at-bat, including five straight.
Sale is avoiding the four-seamer against Altuve. First-pitch sinker, then five straight sliders, then back to the sinker on pitch seven before a slider for the K on pitch 8. 4 strikeouts through three innings for Sale, who's at 46 pitches.
— Alex Speier (@alexspeier) October 20, 2021
The Sox can’t solve Valdez’s sinker — 5:45 p.m.
Valdez’s sinker is his go-to pitch, and so far the Red Sox haven’t been able to solve it or him.
He’s induced three ground outs and broken two bats on the sinker through two innings — one against Schwarber, then Devers. He plays his curveball off the sinker, and got Martinez to chase on that pitch for strike three and froze Hunter Renfroe on it, too.
What Chris Sale needs out of the Sox’ offense — 5:35 p.m.
The Red Sox have scored just two runs dating back to last night’s first inning, when Xander Bogaerts hit a two-run shot. Solo homers don’t hurt you. Sale responded well in that inning following Alvarez’s solo pop. It’s up to the offense now to pick up some slack.
Astros strike first again — 5:25 p.m.
That was not a bad pitch by Sale, just a quality swing by a powerful hitter in Yordan Alvarez. It’s his second homer of the postseason He came into today hitting .320 in the playoffs with a .480 slugging percentage.
What the Red Sox offense needs to do differently — 5:19 p.m.
The offense needs to be more effective in key moments. They were 0 for 9 with runners in scoring position, leaving 11 runners on base.
RED SOX: Hernández CF, Schwarber 1B, Bogaerts SS, Devers 3B, Martinez DH, Renfroe RF, Verdugo LF, Arroyo 2B, Vázquez C.
How Sale looked in the first — 5:17 p.m.
Sale needed nine pitches to get out of that one, topping out at 97 mph. He didn’t have his changeup in his last start, but seems as if he has it for now. He got Bregman to check-swing on his changeup before inducing a groundout.
What should we expect from Chris Sale? — 5:05 p.m.
The Sale of old is always a plus, but even before the injury, Sale was never really that good in the playoffs. He posted a 5.76 ERA prior to this year in the playoffs in seven games, four of which were starts. Sale has to just weather the storm and try to keep the game from blowing open early.
How the Astros have been against Chris Sale — 5:00 p.m.
Astros vs. Sale: Jose Altuve 8-24, Michael Brantley 8-41, Alex Bregman 1-6, Carlos Correa 4-19, Aledmys Díaz 1-3, Yuli Gurriel 3-8, Martín Maldonado 2-11
What is one good thing the Red Sox can take from last night? — 4:55 p.m.
The team used Garrett Whitlock for two innings but stayed away from Tanner Houck, who will likely be called on to eat some innings if Sale struggles.
The Sox lost their momentum. Can they recover? — 4:45 p.m.
Momentum in baseball is as good as the next day’s starter and Chris Sale hasn’t been good, so you could say momentum is on the Astros’ side — particularly with how they swung the bats in that ninth inning.
Sale lasted just 2 ⅔ innings in Game 1 and surrendered a run before manager Alex Cora pulled the plug. On the other side, the Red Sox will see Framber Valdez, who also ran into his share of trouble in his Game 1 start. Valdez went 2 ⅔ innings as well, giving up three runs.
Lineups — 4:25 p.m.
ASTROS: Altuve 2B, Brantley LF, Bregman 3B, Alvarez DH, Correa SS, Tucker RF, Gurriel 1B, Siri CF, Maldonado C.
Pitching: LHP Framber Valdez (11-6, 3.14 ERA)
RED SOX: Hernández CF, Schwarber 1B, Bogaerts SS, Devers 3B, Martinez DH, Renfroe RF, Verdugo LF, Arroyo 2B, Vázquez C.
Pitching: LHP Chris Sale (5-1, 3.16 ERA)
About last night — 4:20 p.m.
Yes, the umpiring hurt the Red Sox in the Game 4 loss. But plenty of blame is on their plate, too. Chad Finn dives in.
A lucky souvenir — 4:05 p.m.
At least one person had a good time near Fenway last night. An Allston man happened to be outside the park when Xander Bogaerts launched a home run all the way over the Green Monster seats. He watched the ball ricochet around Lansdowne Street before scooping it up.
“I said, ‘some guy’s gonna get lucky,” Espinal said, before recounting precisely how that guy turned out to be him. “It hit under a gate sign across the street on Lansdowne Street and bounced all the way back. It bounced pretty high onto the back side of the Green Monster. I had one chance to catch it.”
Today’s weather report — 3:55 p.m.
It’s warming up in the Boston area as the week continues. It will be around 65 degrees at first pitch, with lows expected into the 50s later on.
Julian McWilliams can be reached at julian.mcwilliams@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @byJulianMack. Katie McInerney can be reached at katie.mcinerney@globe.com. Follow her on Twitter at @k8tmac.
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