Wieters, Nationals beat Astros for 9th straight time, 4-3

HOUSTON -- Sean Doolittle got the save for the Washington Nationals on Tuesday night.

If not for Brandon Kintzler's work in the eighth, he wouldn't have had that chance.

Matt Wieters hit a two-run homer, Howie Kendrick had a two-run triple and the Nationals beat Houston for the ninth straight time, 4-3 Tuesday night in a matchup of division leaders.

Washington's winning streak over the Astros dates to 2012. The Nationals have won 13 of 14 against Houston since 2011.

The Astros threatened in the eighth against Kintzler when Josh Reddick and Yuli Gurriel hit consecutive singles and the Nationals intentionally walked Carlos Beltran with one out to load the bases. But Max Stassi grounded into a double play to leave Houston trailing.

"He certainly saved the game," manager Dusty Baker said. "They had bases loaded and one out and threw up a double-play ball, which is what everybody in the dugout was hollering. They were like: `Hey we need a double play.' If you strike him out, you're still not out of trouble."

Tanner Roark (10-8) allowed six hits and two earned runs in 5 2/3 innings and Doolittle pitched a perfect ninth for his 15th save.

Kendrick's triple tied it in the third before the Astros went back on top with an RBI single by Josh Reddick in the bottom half. Anthony Rendon doubled with two outs in the fourth before the homer by Wieters, which landed just to the right of straightaway center field, gave the NL East leaders a 4-3 lead.

"I was just trying to get a ball up," Wieters said. "(Charlie) Morton is good at getting groundballs, so I just wanted to try to get something that I could get underneath and stay through ... and I was able to do that on that one."

Morton (10-6) gave up four runs in six innings for the AL West-leading Astros.

George Springer led off the Houston first with a single, stole second and scored on a two-out single by Reddick.

The Astros went 3 for 11 with runners in scoring position.

"We are one big hit away it seems like," Reddick said. "We get a lot of guys on base. We just can't seem to pull through with that one guy to get us over the hump."

Beltran doubled off the wall in left-center field in the second and scored on a single by Derek Fisher.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Nationals: Baker said OF Bryce Harper (left knee bone bruise) isn't limping as bad as he has been, but that there is still no timetable for his return. ... RHP Max Scherzer (neck inflammation) is expected to come off the disabled list on Friday to start against the New York Mets.

Astros: SS Carlos Correa (left thumb surgery) took batting practice with the team on Tuesday for the first time since he was injured. Correa, who has been out since July 18, said he feels good and hopes to go on a rehabilitation assignment soon. ... Manager A.J. Hinch said that C Evan Gattis (concussion) to return to the lineup on Thursday.

LIGHTS OUT

Houston's relievers pitched three scoreless innings on Tuesday to extend the bullpen's streak of scoreless innings to 10 2/3 innings. It's the third straight game in which the bullpen hasn't allowed a run, which ties a season-long streak.

NICE START

Kendrick is hitting .338 with 16 RBI since being traded from the Phillies on July 28. He has 10 extra-base hits in just 20 games with Washington, highlighted by five homers.

UP NEXT

Nationals: Edwin Jackson (4-2, 3.43 ERA) is scheduled to start for the Nationals on Wednesday. Jackson allowed eight hits and one run in seven innings of a 2-1 win over San Diego in his last start.

Astros: Mike Fiers (7-8, 4.32) will start for Houston on Wednesday. Fiers yielded seven hits and three runs in 5 1/3 innings of his last outing against the Diamondbacks for his fourth loss in five games.

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