BOSTON — The Houston Astros are sending an early message to the rest of baseball.
They’re playing and sounding like they’re the best.
Tyler White’s two-run double capped a five-run first inning, Josh Reddick hit a solo homer and the Astros kept rolling, beating the Boston Red Sox 7-3 Saturday night for their 10th straight victory.
“I feel like this is the team to beat,” Reddick said. “We have the target on us, even though we didn’t make it all the way last year.”
Michael Brantley had three hits and an RBI for Houston (31-15), which matched the best start in franchise history — along with the 2017 World Series winning team — after 46 games. It’s the Astros’ second 10-game streak this season.
“We want to keep winning as many games as we can,” Houston manager A.J. Hinch said. “Obviously, it’s a huge accomplishment. These guys out here, they’re playing hard, they’re playing well, we’re playing good defense, we’re pitching, we’re hitting. When we play all facets like that, we have a chance to win every night.”
Christian Vázquez hit a solo homer for the Red Sox, who had won six of eight.
The Astros can complete a three-game series sweep Sunday when they send left-hander Wade Miley against Boston ace Chris Sale.
It’s the first meeting between the teams since the Red Sox ousted Houston in last fall’s American League Championship series en route to their World Series title.
Josh James (1-0) got the victory with three innings of hitless relief after starter Corbin Martin went four, giving up three runs, two earned, in his second major league start.
Boston spot starter Hector Velázquez (1-3) retired just one batter, giving up five runs and three hits with two walks and had a spattering of boos cascading down as he walked off.
“I made a couple of mistakes and tried to battle through it. I just couldn’t,” he said through a translator.
George Springer opened the game with a triple off the center-field wall, just over a leaping bid by Jackie Bradley Jr. on the first pitch. Brantley made it 1-0 with an RBI double over the head of right fielder Mookie Betts’ leap at the shorter bullpen wall before Reddick’s sacrifice fly.
Yuli Gurriel’s bloop single made it 3-0 and chased Velázquez. White then hit reliever Colten Brewer’s first pitch down the right-field line for a two-run double.
“That’s what they do,” Boston manager Alex Cora said. “They battle with two strikes and they put good swings with two strikes. It was a bad one today.”