No. 1,000 was nothing new for Nolan Arenado.
Arenado hit a tiebreaking homer for his 1,000th career hit and the Colorado Rockies rallied to beat the Washington Nationals 7-5 Monday night.
Arenado also doubled twice and drove in two to help the Rockies win for the seventh time in eight games. He is the ninth Rockies player to reach 1,000 hits, getting there with a solo shot off Wander Suero (1-2) in the seventh to make it 6-5.
“I’m just thankful I was able to put the team ahead there and have a good quality at bat against a guy throwing hard and throwing really good cutters,” Arenado said. “I just tried to hit the ball hard there.”
Washington manager Dave Martinez said Suero’s pitch to Arenado went over the middle of the plate.
“With a guy like Arenado you’ve got to make a better pitch than that,” Martinez said. “He’s a really good hitter. He’s one of the premiere players in the game and you’ve got to make your pitches.”
The Rockies located the home run ball, convincing the fan who caught it to give it up in exchange for balls autographed by Trevor Story and Charlie Blackmon. Clubhouse manager Mike Pontarelli put the ball in a case and presented it to Arenado after the game.
“This is real cool,” Arenado said with a smile.
Mark Reynolds and pinch-hitter Raimel Tapia also homered for Colorado, and Trevor Story singled twice and drove in a run to extend his hitting streak to 11 games.
Brian Dozier had a three-run home run for the Nationals, who could not hold two- and three-run leads.
Tapia connected off Kyle Barraclough in the Rockies’ eighth.
Wade Davis got three outs for his second save, capping a strong showing by Rockies relievers, who picked up faltering starter Tyler Anderson by not allowing a run over six innings. Chad Bettis stabilized the game for the Rockies by working three innings and Seunghwan Oh (1-0) worked a hitless seventh.
“Those guys have been doing a great job for us all year,” Reynolds said. “Bettis came in and threw three innings, really good work, then Oh and (Scott) Oberg and Wade. They haven’t had too many leads to pitch with this year, but when they do have the lead, they tend to hold it and keep us in games. And to fall behind twice and win this game against a really good team, it’s a confidence boost.”
Washington catcher Yan Gomes said the Rockies relievers were tough to crack.
“We knew coming in they had a pretty decent bullpen,” Gomes said. “It was just a matter for us to put some good at-bats together. We did, we were just one knock away from away from breaking the game open, just like they were. We took some good approaches, it just didn’t go our way.”
Arenado helped defensively in the ninth, snaring pinch-hitter Kurt Suzuki’s sharply hit grounder to third, stepping on the bag for the force before going to first to complete a game-ending double play.
Colorado evened the score for the second time with a three-run fifth, highlighted by Reynolds’ two-run homer off Jeremy Hellickson, who allowed a season high five runs on nine hits in five innings.
With the score tied at 2 and runners at first and second following successive walks in the fourth, Dozier drove a 2-0 offering deep into the left field bleachers to put Washington up 5-2 and chase Anderson, who was reinstated earlier in the day from the 10-day injured list (left knee inflammation). Anderson allowed five runs and four hits in three-plus innings in his shortest outing of the season.
Howie Kendrick put Washington on top with a two-run single in the first, but Colorado evened it in its half of the inning on Arenado’s RBI double and Ryan McMahon’s RBI single.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Rockies: LHP Kyle Freeland will miss his scheduled start Tuesday night after going on the 10-day injured list because of a blister on his left middle finger. The move was retroactive to Friday. … INF Daniel Murphy is nearing a return from the 10-day injured list, which he has been on since April 1 after fracturing his left index finger diving for a ground ball. Murphy has gone 2 for 13 with a double and three walks in three rehab games at Triple-A Albuquerque.
UP NEXT
Nationals: LHP Patrick Corbin (1-0, 2.36 ERA) is set to make his 22nd career start against the Rockies on Tuesday night. He has eight wins against them.
Rockies: No announcement had been made regarding a Tuesday night replacement for Freeland.
MONDAY IN THE MAJORS
— The Tampa Bay Rays have put an end to their season-high four-game losing streak by rallying past Kansas City. Mike Zunino returned from the paternity list and slammed a go-ahead, two-run homer in the seventh inning to send the Rays to a 6-3 win over the Royals. Zunino had missed three straight games before hitting his first home run since coming to the Rays from Seattle last winter.
— Gio Urshela singled home Gleyber Torres in the 14th for his second extra-inning RBI of the night to push the Yankees past the Angels, 4-3. Brian Goodwin delivered a tying RBI single with two out in the 12th before Los Angeles lost for the seventh time in eight games. Luke Voit homered in the first inning to run his consecutive on-base streak to 33 games.
— The Twins won their fourth in a row as Jorge Polanco went 4-for-5 with a two-run homer and four RBIs in their 9-5 win over the Astros. Max Kepler and Nelson Cruz had RBI singles around Polanco’s two-run single in a four-run sixth as the Twins built a 7-1 lead. C.J. Cron put Minnesota ahead with a two-run double in the first, and Jason Castro led off the second with a home run to back Jake Odorizzi, who held Houston to two runs over 5 2/3 innings.
— Stephen Piscotty homered and drove in three as the Athletics downed the Rangers, 6-1 to end a three-game skid. Chris Bassitt was a winner in his season debut, allowing two hits over five innings after being recalled from Triple-A Las Vegas last week. Fernando Rodney pitched the ninth for his 907th career appearance, moving him past Cy Young for 24th on baseball’s career list.
— Dexter Fowler had a four-hit game, belted his first home run of the season and collected four RBIs as the Cardinals hammered the Brewers, 13-5. Paul Goldschmidt hit his ninth home run and went 3-for-5 as St. Louis outhit Milwaukee, 18-5. The Brewers lost for the fifth time in six games despite homers from Ryan Braun, Hernán Pérez, Yasmani Grandal and Travis Shaw.
— David Peralta laced a bases-clearing triple and Christian Walker smacked a two-run homer while the Diamondbacks scored seven times in the seventh inning of a 12-4 rout of the Pirates. Pittsburgh reliever Nick Burdi left in tears with a right arm injury, two years after undergoing Tommy John surgery. Burdi shrugged his right arm after releasing a pitch, then crumpled to the ground.
— Steven Matz atoned for a dismal start last week in Philadelphia by holding the Phillies to one run and three hits over six innings of the Mets’ 5-1 victory. Jeff McNeil hit a solo homer and Pete Alonso drove in two runs as New York won for the second time in six games. Phils outfielder Bryce Harper was ejected in the fourth inning and bolted out of the dugout toward plate umpire Mark Carlson before he was held back by two coaches.
— José Abreu and James McCann each homered and combined for nine RBIs as the White Sox crushed the Orioles, 12-2. McCann’s three-run blast highlighted a four-run fifth before Abreu added a two-run shot in a four-run seventh. Abreu also had an RBI single and a two-run single to finish with five RBIs.
— The Red Sox and Tigers were rained out at Fenway Park, creating a day-night doubleheader for Tuesday.