Houston and Minnesota had their game suspended Wednesday night when a severe thunderstorm rolled through and halted play in the top of the fourth inning, with the Astros leading the Twins 5-1 on Jeremy Peña’s three RBIs and Jose Altuve’s home run.
The teams will pick up Thursday afternoon where they left off and play the last six innings, before staging the series finale at Target Field about a half-hour after the first game concludes. Both clubs will be allowed to roster an extra 27th player for the second game.
José Urquidy won’t get to keep working on what he started, but he gave the Astros — who have an eight-game winning streak going — a boost with three solid innings on the mound.
The right-hander gave up a double to Max Kepler and an RBI single to Jorge Polanco to fall behind in the first inning, but the Astros roared back against Twins starter Chris Archer with two runs in the second and three in the third.
Archer needed 75 pitches to get through three innings. One of the runs in the second was unearned, thanks to a passed ball by catcher Gary Sánchez that moved up runners at first and second.
Jose Siri had a two-out RBI single in the second, and Peña — whose predecessor at shortstop, Carlos Correa, joined the Twins this season — had a two-out, two-run single in the third.
With Yennier Cano warming up to start the fourth in place of Archer, lightning began to flash more frequently as the rain fell harder from the darkened twilight sky. As soon as the grounds crew raced onto the field to arrange the tarp, fans fled for the overhangs and concourses to stay dry before soon being asked to take shelter amid high winds.
In the bottom of the third, Sanchez had at least a double stolen from him with a leaping catch at the wall by left fielder Yordan Alvarez to save a run and end that inning. Thunder rumbled right after the grab, as if on cue, and Urquidy put his hand on his head in smiling disbelief about the defensive assist from Alvarez.