Pro Hogs

Keuchel tosses complete game

Houston Astros starting pitcher Dallas Keuchel, right, throws to Oakland Athletics' Josh Reddick, left, during the eighth inning of a baseball game Wednesday, July 30, 2014, in Houston. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

HOUSTON (AP) — In at least one category, Dallas Keuchel is Clayton Kershaw's equal. For at least one three-game series, Houston was better than Oakland.

Keuchel pitched a four-hitter and Robbie Grossman homered to cap a six-run first inning that sent the Astros past the Athletics 8-1 Wednesday.

Keuchel (10-7) pitched his fourth complete game of the season, tying Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw for the major league lead. And the Astros, 20 games under .500, won the series from the AL West-leading Athletics.

"(The A's) do a lot of things well," Keuchel said. "To get a complete game and get a win is something special in its own right."

Marc Krauss beat out Oakland's try for a double play in the first, and the Astros went on to match a season high for runs in an inning.

Keuchel struck out five and walked three.

Manager Bo Porter lauded Keuchel's "plus-command" and willingness to use his secondary pitches. As he mixed his pitches up, Kuechel kept he A's guessing and forcing the type of contact that can make for a good day.

Josh Donaldson hit his 23rd homer for Oakland's only run.

Jason Hammel (0-4) remained winless in four starts since the A's acquired him with pitcher Jeff Samardzija from the Cubs earlier this month. Hammel was 8-5 before the trade.

Krauss hustled for an RBI grounder that kept the first inning going. After Jonathan Singleton walked, Matt Dominguez singled home a run, and another scored when center fielder Billy Burns bobbled the ball.

"I'll tell you, I think the biggest play of the game was Jason Castro going hard into second base and Marc Krauss absolutely giving the effort in which he gave getting down the line," Porter said. "That's the way the game is supposed to be played. To both of those guys' credit, they did a tremendous job in that situation."

Carlos Corporan added an RBI single and Grossman, a late addition for the ill Chris Carter, homered into the right-field seats.

Hammel's day ended in the fifth when Singleton hit his eighth home run.

"He had trouble getting the ball down again and in the next couple of innings when he got the ball down he was effective," A's manager Bob Melvin said. "That's where the movement takes over, the downhill plane and everything that makes him successful. And he had a tough time finishing guys off when he was ahead."