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Houston Astros vs. Texas Rangers: Jacob deGrom celebrates debut anniversary with 8 shutout innings masterclass in tense 1-0 showdown

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On the anniversary of his MLB debut, Jacob deGrom offered a reminder of why he remains one of the game's elite arms. Nearly 11 years to the day after he first pitched in the majors, deGrom delivered a vintage performance, tossing eight scoreless innings to guide the Texas Rangers to a narrow 1-0 victory over the Houston Astros on Thursday night at Globe Life Field.

Houston Astros vs. Texas Rangers : Jacob deGrom shuts down Astros as Jake Burger's homer seals tight 1-0 victory

The night was billed as a pitcher’s duel, and it more than lived up to the hype. Two-time Cy Young Award winner deGrom, who has battled back from Tommy John surgery and missed most of the past two seasons, was in complete control. The 36-year-old scattered five hits, walked just one, and struck out seven, showing off his trademark precision and velocity in the process.


For deGrom, it was the longest outing since April 2021, when he blanked the Nationals during his time with the Mets. Thursday’s start wasn’t just dominant—it was also symbolic. Exactly 11 years earlier, a then-unknown deGrom made his MLB debut for the Mets against the Yankees. That night, he threw seven innings of one-run ball. On Thursday, he went one better.

The only run of the game came courtesy of Jake Burger, who led off the sixth inning with a towering 394-foot solo shot into the Rangers’ bullpen in right-center. It was his fourth home run of the season, and it came at a crucial moment. “Burger went deep leading off the sixth,” as described, and his swing proved to be the difference.


While deGrom was masterful, Astros starter Hunter Brown was nearly as impressive. The 26-year-old carried a perfect game into the fifth inning and notched a career-high nine strikeouts without allowing a walk. Brown scattered just three hits in his first career complete game. Despite the loss, his poise and precision stood out in a high-stakes matchup against one of the league’s best.

deGrom wasn’t without challenges. He allowed back-to-back baserunners in both the second and fourth innings but escaped unscathed each time. A strikeout looking on Jake Meyers and a swinging strikeout on Zach Dezenzo helped him work out of those jams. Even Jose Altuve fell victim to deGrom’s heat, swinging through a 98 mph fastball to end the fifth inning.

Closer Shawn Armstrong handled the ninth, working around a two-out walk to lock down his second save of the season.

The victory not only marked a statement game for deGrom but also added a milestone for manager Bruce Bochy, whose 2,195th win moved him past Sparky Anderson for sixth place on MLB’s all-time managerial wins list.

As the Silver Boot Series opened with a thrilling shutout, it was the Jacob deGrom of old—sharp, stoic, and surgical—who stood tallest.

Also Read: “I don’t take it for granted": Clayton Kershaw opens up on retirement talk ahead of his emotional 18th season debut with Dodgers
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