DETROIT - The Tigers gave the Astros their first losing streak since mid-June and their first arrangement misfortune out and about since before that. Justin Upton's two-run twofold and excellent hammer upheld six scoreless innings from Justin Verlander as Detroit took the elastic match of the three-amusement set with a 13-1 win Sunday at Comerica Park. The Tigers turned into the primary group to win consecutive diversions from the Astros since the Rangers on June 12-13. Houston lost a street arrangement surprisingly since dropping two of three at Cleveland from April 25-27. "We contended our tails off for three days," Upton said. "Notwithstanding what our record is, these folks come to contend each day. At an opportune time [in the season], we simply didn't win enough recreations. We're in the circumstance we're in, and it's no one's blame however our own, yet we can hang our cap on the way that we came to contend each day." HOUE@DET: Upton talks about his great execution Watch on MLB.com In spite of the fact that Astros starter Lance McCullers Jr. (7-3) worked out of early inconvenience, the Tigers in the end wore him out before devouring Houston's warm up area. Miguel Cabrera's second drive to one side field fence drove in Upton as a feature of a two-run fifth inning before Upton's twofold off the high divider in right-focus against Joe Musgrove helped the Tigers pull away with a three-run 6th. "I couldn't care less about my numbers, by and by," said McCullers, who has a 9.64 ERA in his previous four begins. "I think I've gone out there the past couple times and put the group in an awful spot with the way I've tossed, so's all the more disappointing." An inning later, Upton lifted an inverse field shot off Tony Sipp for his second fabulous hammer of the season to place Detroit into twofold digits, topping a five-run outline. James McCann included a two-run homer off Tyler White, who moved from a respectable starting point to pitch the eighth for Houston. HOU@DET: McCann hits a two-run shot in the eighth Watch on MLB.com "Truly, it was pleasant to see the bats wake up and score a cluster of runs," Tigers director Brad Ausmus said. "We have some folks who are beneath their standards as far as creation." Verlander (6-7), beginning the day preceding the non-waiver Trade Deadline with expanding odds of remaining in Detroit, had his own particular early issue with Houston's imposing lineup. He stranded eight Astros over the initial four innings before resigning his last seven hitters, gaining his initially win since June 27. HOU@DET: Verlander hurls six scoreless innings Watch on MLB.com Minutes THAT MATTERED Verlander strands bases stacked: Unlike Verlander's last meeting with the Astros in May in Houston, where a three-homer inning left him with a no-choice, his potential enormous inning Sunday accompanied two strolls and a solitary in the second, stacking the bases with two outs. With American League MVP Award competitor Jose Altuve on deck, Verlander worked in front of youngster Derek Fisher with fastballs before motivating him to ground out on a curveball, finishing Houston's best risk. "We had [Verlander] a couple diverse innings where we could've broke things through and put a tiny bit of weight on him," Astros director A.J. Hinch said. "Couldn't concoct a major hit, which is the thing that you have to do against the better pitchers when you get a few open doors." HOU@DET: Verlander resigns Fisher to end the danger Watch on MLB.com Romine's running catch: The Astros didn't have much hard contact off Verlander, not to mention any additional fair hits, yet Brian McCann sent right defender Andrew Romine hustling to the corner on a drive to begin the 6th. Romine kept running down the ball for a rushing discover before colliding with the fence, keeping the Astros from kicking a rally off. HOU@DET: Romine keeps running into the divider to make the catch Watch on MLB.com QUOTABLE