• The Astros, the team that struck out the fewest times this season, struck out 16 times, the most for them all year.
  • Leury García, he of the 31 career homers over nine seasons, hit the longest and biggest homer of his life, a 438-foot, three-run blast in the third to cap a three-Garcia at-bat: Leury homered off Yimi after Luis threw the first two pitches.
  • This was the first postseason game ever in which nobody pitched three innings—not even with 12 pitchers taking the mound.
  • Five White Sox pitchers retired the last 16 batters with just three balls leaving the infield.
  • Twenty-nine of the 51 outs were strikeouts, including eight looking on the emphatic calls of umpire Tom Hallion—half of which MLB.com showed as balls out of the strike zone.
  • The White Sox scored three runs in the fourth on eight groundballs. The key play was the polite bump from Grandal after he hit a grounder to Houston first baseman Yuli Gurriel with runners at first and third. Gurriel threw home, where he assuredly had Luis Robert out trying to score from third. But Gurriel’s throw glanced off Grandal’s shoulder, deflecting it away from a protesting catcher Martin Maldonado. Robert dove so hard into home that he wiped out Hallion.
  • Grandal began the comeback with an opposite field, two-run homer in the third off a 3-2 changeup from Luis Garcia. It was the first extra-base hit for Chicago in the series after it had gone two straight games without an extra-base hit for the first time in 300 games. The last time the Sox had gone a second straight postseason game without an extra-base hit, they weren’t really trying: Game 1 of the 1919 World Series, infamous for the Black Sox scandal.
    Maybe this game was so weird that it stands on its own, an October anomaly rather than one in a series. But that would underestimate all the goodwill the Sox gathered. Tim Anderson is smashing singles where the Houston defense isn’t. Jose Abreu, who began the series at DH while battling the flu, is healthy and in his usual RBI machine form. Ryan Tepera’s slider and Aaron Bummer’s sinker are on point. And the Guaranteed Rate Field crowd came up big with their first chance to roar in the postseason since 2008.