The 2023 World Series is now a best-of-five series. The Arizona Diamondbacks rebounded from Friday's Game 1 gut-punch loss to even the series 1-1 with a Game 2 win over the Texas Rangers on Saturday (ARI 9, TEX 1). Right-hander Merrill Kelly was terrific in seven innings and the offense chipped away against Jordan Montgomery before blowing it against the bullpen.
Kelly limited Texas to one solo homer in his seven innings. He struck out nine, joining (who else?) Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling as the only D-backs pitchers to strike out at least nine batters in a World Series game. Tommy Pham led the charge offensively with four hits, though eight different D-backs scored a run and six different D-backs had an RBI. It was a total team effort.
Arizona's offense did not strike out until the eighth inning -- they struck out 14 times in Game 1, their most since Sept. 8 -- and the 6-7-8-9 hitters in the lineup went a combined 7 for 13 with five runs scored, four runs driven in, three walks, and one strikeout in Game 2. The D-backs won Game 2 because their starter was better and because their bottom of the lineup did more damage.
Here now are our takeaways from Game 2 of the 2023 World Series.
Kelly was dominant
Zac Gallen may be the ace, but Merrill Kelly has been Arizona's best starter this postseason, and he was outstanding in Game 2. Kelly retired the first 11 batters he faced and the last seven batters he faced, and held the Rangers to one run -- a Mitch Garver solo home run on a pitch way down and in -- in seven innings. He punched out nine.
Corey Seager and Adolis García, the dynamic duo that led the Rangers to the Game 1 win (and throughout the postseason), went a combined 0 for 6 with two strikeouts against Kelly, who faced only two batters out of the stretch all night. He got multiple swings and misses on four different pitches and only seven of the 24 batters Kelly faced hit the ball out of the infield. It was dominance.
Through four postseason starts Kelly has a 2.25 ERA, and he's averaging six innings per start. In three of his four starts he allowed no more than one run, and, in Game 2, he became the first starter to complete seven innings in a World Series game since Stephen Strasburg and Gerrit Cole in 2019. Given the stakes, it's fair to say Game 2 was the biggest start of Kelly's career. He rose to the occasion and turned in one of the best World Series pitching performances in recent memory.
The D-backs made Montgomery grind
On Monday, Jordan Montgomery came out of the bullpen to throw 2 1/3 innings and 32 pitches in the Game 7 win over the Houston Astros in the Championship Series. It was the first time in his career he'd come out of the bullpen between starts, and the disruption to his routine might -- might -- have impacted Saturday's performance in Game 2 of the World Series.
Montgomery was missing nearly 2 mph off his sinker and curveball, his two best pitches, and he didn't get a swing and miss until his 50th pitch. The D-backs strung together four straight hard-hit balls to score two runs in the fourth inning. Gabriel Moreno went deep, Josh Jung made a stellar play to rob Christian Walker, Tommy Pham doubled, then Lourdes Gurriel Jr. singled him in.
Moreno's home run was his fourth of the postseason -- he had seven in the regular season -- and ties him with Gene Tenace (1972), Mike Piazza (2000), Jason Varitek (2003), Salvador Perez (2015), and Mike Zunino (2020) for the second most ever by a catcher in October. Sandy Alomar Jr. holds the record with five homers as a catcher in the 1997 postseason.
Anyway, even with reduced velocity and swing-and-miss-ability, Montgomery held the D-backs to just those two runs through six innings. Manager Bruce Bochy got a little greedy though. He sent Montgomery back out for the seventh inning and, two batters later, the D-backs stretched their lead to 3-0. Montgomery was charged with a fourth run later in the inning.
On one hand, Montgomery was better than his pitching line -- four runs in six innings -- would lead you to believe. On the other hand, the D-backs put a runner on base against him in every inning but the first, so the majority of Montgomery's 74 pitches were high stress. Montgomery was not as sharp in Game 2 as he was earlier this postseason, and the D-backs capitalized.
Truth be told, Arizona has been the better team through two World Series games. They were a Paul Sewald meltdown away from winning Game 1. The meltdown happened and the loss counts, but the D-backs were the better team most of Game 1, and they were certainly the better team in Game 2. They were better on the mound and in the batter's box. Manager Torey Lovullo should feel very good about the way his team has played even though the series is tied 1-1.
Marte kept his hitting streak alive
No player in baseball history has had a longer postseason hitting streak than Ketel Marte. The D-backs second baseman slapped a two-run single in his fourth at-bat of Game 2, extending his hitting streak to a record 18 postseason games. That is every postseason game of Marte's career. Here are the longest postseason hitting streaks:
- Ketel Marte: 18 games and counting (2017-23)
- Hank Bauer: 17 games (1956-58)
- Derek Jeter: 17 games (1998-99)
- Manny Ramirez: 17 games (2003-04)
- Several tied at 16 games (most recently Michael Brantley from 2020-21)
Marte is hitting .333/.354/.556 through 14 games this postseason, and although it took until his final at-bat to extend his hitting streak in Game 2, it was not a meaningless hit. He broke the game open with a two-run single that stretched a 4-1 lead to a 6-1 lead. In the postseason, ever little bit of breathing room is appreciated, especially after what happened in Game 1.
The D-backs released Nick Ahmed in September, at which point Marte became the team's longest-tenured player. He has been their best player this postseason -- he and Yordan Alvarez have been the two best players in the postseason period -- and now he has a record hitting streak to his name. Marte has stood out all October.
Snakes alive
The D-backs have avoided the dreaded (but not insurmountable) 2-0 series deficit. The best-of-seven has been reduced to a best-of-five and the D-backs now have home-field advantage. Chase Field will host Games 3-5. Sunday is an off-day, then the World Series will resume Monday night. Rookie Brandon Pfaadt (3-9, 5.72 ERA) and future Hall of Famer Max Scherzer (13-6, 2.77 ERA ) are expected to start in what will be a matchup of extremely different resumes.
Below are our live updates and analysis from Game 2 of the World Series.