October 25, 2019

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Astros Beat Nationals 4-1 In Game 3 Of 2019 World Series

Houston Astros’ Michael Brantley hits an RBI single during the third inning of Game 3 of the baseball World Series against the Washington Nationals in Washington.

Alex Brandon/AP


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Alex Brandon/AP

The Houston Astros beat the Washington Nationals 4-1 in Game 3 of the 2019 World Series in a game they had to win, breaking the Nationals’ eight-game winning streak in the postseason.

Houston, trailing the series 2-0, led the scoring with an RBI single in the second inning by right-fielder Josh Reddick after shortstop Carlos Correa doubled off of Washington’s starting pitcher Aníbal Sánchez.

The Astros added another run in the third inning on a single by left-fielder Michael Brantley, scoring second-baseman José Altuve, who had doubled and reached third base on an error by the Nats left-fielder Juan Soto. Houston’s 2-0 lead after three innings proved to be all they needed to take Game 3.

“I just liked the competitiveness of our at-bats,” Astros manager A.J. Hinch said in a postgame interview. “We were kind of pretty focused on handing the baton to the next guy, which is really important. We’re at our best when we do that.”

The Nationals got on the board in the bottom of the fourth inning on a triple by center fielder Victor Robles, scoring first baseman Ryan Zimmerman who had opened the frame with a walk, making the score 2-1.

The Astros responded with a run in the fifth inning after José Altuve doubled and Brantley singled for his second RBI, extending their lead to 3-1.

The Nats had chances to score, stranding eight runners over the first five innings, and 12 overall.

Houston chased Nats’ starter Sánchez in the top of the sixth after he gave up a homer to catcher Robinson Chirinos and then walked pinch hitter Kyle Tucker. The homer made the score 4-1.

Here’s what made this a must-win game for Houston: no team in the history of the Fall Classic has ever come back to win after losing the first three games. The Astros made sure they would not be in that position.

Game 3 was the first World Series game played in the nation’s capital since 1933.

Game 4 in Washington will feature Nationals lefty Patrick Corbin against the Astros’ rookie Jose Urquidy.

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Some Baseball Players Are Entering ‘Income Pooling’ Agreements To Fix Imbalance

A career in baseball is a gamble. A few guys make a ton of money, and most make very little. Some baseball players are taking advantage of that imbalance and entering into “income pooling” agreements.



AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

Game 3 of the World Series is tonight, featuring baseball players earning millions of dollars. Among those watching the game, all those minor league players earning way less money. There’s a company that’s pushing a big economic idea to try and balance out that inequality. Kenny Malone of our Planet Money podcast and NPR’s sports correspondent Tom Goldman tells us about it.

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON: Got it, got it, got it.

TOM GOLDMAN, BYLINE: I met Logan Ice at spring training earlier this year.

KENNY MALONE, BYLINE: Ice is a minor leaguer who says the salary for a player like him is around $8,000 a year.

LOGAN ICE: But that doesn’t account for living. That doesn’t account for food – granted they feed you a couple of meals a day.

GOLDMAN: There are really only two options for baseball players – make the majors and make it huge or get stuck in the minors earning bupkis.

MALONE: But a company called Pando says it has a third option. Charlie Olson is the CEO and says this would work for any level of baseball player.

CHARLIE OLSON: There’s nothing that’s too low. So…

MALONE: What about right now, Kenny Malone in the studio?

OLSON: That’s too low (laughter). That’s too low.

MALONE: You’ve never even seen me throw a curve ball.

OLSON: As long as you are on contract by a professional baseball organization, you are available to be a client of Pando’s.

GOLDMAN: Pando wants minor leaguers to join what it calls income pools.

MALONE: And here’s how this works. A handful of players join a pool and make this deal. Whoever makes it big is going to kick some of their earnings back to the rest of their pool members. Also, Pando is going to get a little cut because that is their business model.

GOLDMAN: Nobody has to pay a cent until they’ve made it to the majors and they’ve made $1.6 million. Then that guy has to kick 10% of his salary back to his pool mates.

OLSON: Baseball can be zero-sum when your best friend gets called up and you didn’t. Now all of a sudden, when your best friend gets called up, a little bit of you did.

GOLDMAN: One of the first players Pando recruited was Logan Ice.

ICE: I was like, what’s the worst thing for me as a player that could happen, financially?

MALONE: And he thought, well, it only costs me money if I make it huge, and then I do have to kick money back to my pool.

ICE: That’s the worst thing that could happen to me, is I’m filthy rich…

MALONE: (Laughter).

ICE: …And I’m giving people money, and I’m helping them so much more than that money’s hurting me. If that was the worst thing that could happen to me, I’m game.

MALONE: Pando’s business model does raise some questions. For example, do irrationally confident athletes really think they need this kind of an insurance policy?

GOLDMAN: Will having that policy make them less motivated to succeed?

MALONE: The question Major League Baseball is asking is about competition. Will a pitcher go easier on a batter if they’re in the same pool, for example?

GOLDMAN: Pando’s CEO Charlie Olson isn’t worried.

OLSON: I’m sure we can all kind of agree that there are many ways in which a player might be motivated to see a player on another team succeed. And yet, at the end of the day, competition reigns.

GOLDMAN: Charlie Olson says there are now about 140 players in income pools, and as of this season, three of those players have made the major leagues.

MALONE: And Pando is now expanding. They’ve launched income pools for professional football players and are about to launch pools for business people – people graduating with MBAs and big ideas that may be worth a fortune or bupkis.

GOLDMAN: Tom Goldman.

MALONE: Kenny Malone.

GOLDMAN: NPR News.

(SOUNDBITE OF SNARKY PUPPY’S “XAVI”)

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Rio Mira: Tiny Desk Concert

Credit: Shuran Huang/NPR

For just about fifteen minutes, the members of Rio Mira created a living and very melodic connection to Africa. Set behind a large marimba — and drums that are unique to their corner of the world — the members of the band performed music that is the legacy of enslaved people who were in both Ecuador and Colombia. Rio Mira takes its name from a river that separates Ecuador and Colombia and empties into the Pacific Ocean.

Rio Mira’s three songs in this performance are dominated by the marimba and accompanied by drums from both Europe and Africa. “La Pepa de Tangaré” references the culinary joys of life and, like the rest of their set, celebrates life along the river: soft breezes, loving friends, the embrace of Africa and, of course, lots of festejando (partying)!

If you’re a little rusty on your college Spanish classes, the extended narration in “Román Román” tells the tale of a village man who has healing powers and challenges death.

For me, the principal attractions to this group are the instruments and the musical skills that were handed down for generations along the river, and how they eventually ended up here on this video for you to enjoy. I dare you to not move your hips along with these infectious grooves!

SET LIST

  • “La Pepa de Tangaré”
  • “Román Román”
  • “Mi Buenaventura”

MUSICIANS

Esteban Copete: marimba; Karla Kanora: vocals; Benjamín Vanegas: vocals; Carlos Hurtado: vocals; Sergio Ramírez: bombo macho; Carlos Loboa: cununos; Tito Ponguillo: bombo hembra

CREDITS

Producers: Felix Contreras, Morgan Noelle Smith; Creative Director: Bob Boilen; Audio Engineers: Josh Rogosin, James Willetts; Videographers: Morgan Noelle Smith, Jeremiah Rhodes, Maia Stern, Beck Harlan; Associate Producer: Bobby Carter; Production Assistant: Paul Georgoulis; Executive Producer: Lauren Onkey; Senior VP, Programming: Anya Grundmann; Photo: Shuran Huang/NPR

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