Major League Baseball
Houston 16, Minnesota 4
When: 8:10 PM ET, Wednesday, May 4, 2016
Where: Minute Maid Park, Houston, Texas
Temperature: 81°
Umpires: Home - Scott Barry, 1B - Tripp Gibson III, 2B - Jerry Layne, 3B - Hunter Wendelstedt
Attendance: 20847

HOUSTON -- Given the offensive reputation they established last season, the Houston Astros were due for the showing they had Wednesday night.

Jose Altuve and Carlos Correa both finished a triple short of hitting for the cycle, Jason Castro continued to provide production from the bottom of the batting order, and the Astros claimed the rubber game of a three-game series with the Minnesota Twins, winning 16-4 at Minute Maid Park.

The Astros (10-18) won consecutive games for the first time this season behind an unrelenting offensive attack. Altuve, the leadoff man, and Correa, who hit third in the order, each finished 3-for-5 with three runs and three RBIs.

Sandwiched in between Altuve and Correa, George Springer went 1-for-4 with a walk and two RBIs. Castro, the No. 9 batter, extended his hitting streak to six games, going 2-for-3 with a homer, two walks, three runs and four RBIs.

"This was a nice outburst for our team," Astros manager A.J. Hinch said. "This is a fun lineup when we get going like this. I was so proud of our guys for not conceding any at-bats tonight, and even as the game got underway, we kept coming back at them.

"I thought our guys really hung in there and did a good job of competing at the plate. Just a really good night across the board. I think everybody contributed in some capacity, so it was a good night."

The Twins (8-20) fell to 2-12 on the road with right-hander Phil Hughes earning an early shower. Hughes (1-5) surrendered six runs on six hits and two walks while lasting just two innings.

"I've had a lot of bad games in my career, a lot of bad starts, and in those situations where you don't even give your guys a chance out of the gate, you at least want to eat some innings for the bullpen," Hughes said. "I couldn't do that tonight."

In producing a season-high run total, the Astros posted eight extra-base hits and seven walks.

"It's disappointing like a lot of our series have been," Twins manager Paul Molitor said. "You win the first game, and then you go back-to-back games getting (14 total) outs out of your starter. It puts a lot of stress on our bullpen."

Altuve began the onslaught in his first plate appearance by socking his fifth leadoff home run this season. Springer walked, and Correa followed with an RBI double to left. Colby Rasmus added a run-scoring groundout.

Houston matched its three-run first inning in the second. Springer hit a two-run double to center in advance of Rasmus' RBI single.

Hughes wasn't around when Castro smacked a two-run, opposite-field homer off Twins right-hander Casey Fien in the third. Correa added the second homer off Fien an inning later, his solo shot to right marking his fourth on the year and first since the opening series against the Yankees.

Astros right-hander Mike Fiers struggled despite the run support. He surrendered a three-run home run to Twins second baseman Brian Dozier in the third inning and a run-scoring groundout to Danny Santana in the fourth. With the Astros leading 9-4, Fiers walked Byung Ho Park with two outs in the fifth, prompting an early exit.

The Astros kept on slugging, though, making a winner out of reliever Scott Feldman (1-2) and building some momentum with the American League West-leading Seattle Mariners arriving in town for a four-game series.

"It's nice to rattle off a couple of wins early in the first series of a 10-game homestand here," Castro said. "Now we just look to carry that momentum. It will be good moving forward to have a couple of wins under our belt moving into the rest of the homestand."

NOTES: Astros manager A.J. Hinch announced that LF Colby Rasmus would be out of the lineup Thursday night for the opener of the series against the Mariners. Rasmus, the American League Player of the Week for April 18-24, entered the series finale against the Twins in an 0-for-11 skid, but he went 1-for-4 with a walk and two RBIs on Wednesday. ... With RHP Ervin Santana (lower back strain) set to rejoin the Minnesota rotation after a stint on the 15-day disabled list, manager Paul Molitor announced his rotation for the weekend series against the White Sox. Santana (0-1, 3.15 ERA) will start the middle game Saturday, flanked by RHP Ricky Nolasco on Friday night and RHP Tyler Duffy in the series finale on Sunday. ... Astros RHP Collin McHugh picked up his 33rd victory in the last three seasons on Tuesday. Since Aug. 1, 2014, McHugh is 29-10 and ranks second only to Cubs RHP Jake Arrieta (32-9) in wins during that span.
Top Game Performances
Starting Pitchers
Minnesota   Houston
Phil Hughes Player Mike Fiers
Loss W/L No Decision
2.0 IP 4.2
1 Strikeouts 4
6 Hits 9
27.00 ERA 7.71
Hitting
Minnesota   Houston
Oswaldo Arcia Player Jose Altuve
2 Hits 3
0 RBI 3
0 HR 1
2 TB 7
.667 Avg .600
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Hits HR TB Avg LOB K RBI BB SB Errors
Minnesota 9 1 14 .250 13 6 4 2 1 1
Houston 14 3 28 .368 11 8 16 7 0 0
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