This was a pretty good pitcher’s duel.
David Huff tossed a complete game for Cleveland to get the win. 9 innings, just four hits and a walk. Was a great line. Matt Harrison went seven innings, giving up just five hits, a walk, and one earned run. It’s unfortunately the two unearned runs that cost him and the team the game.
There wasn’t much to the Rangers offense. Four hits total. Two of them by Michael Young, and one of those scored both runs. Was a two run home run in the fourth. The other two hits were singles by Elvis Andrus & Vlad Guerrero. Not much offense, but those two runs were holding up well.
We were only six outs away from the win. Then they made two errors in quick succession after having made just four in the first previous eight games combined. One was Elvis, and one was Michael Young, so it was pretty surprising.
Sadly the sweep got away from us.
G8: Rangers are strong against CLE, beat ’em 6-2
The Rangers got out early in this game, and never looked back. Colby Lewis started the game. It was supposed to be CJ Wilson, but he came down with a case of food poisoning and couldn’t start. So Lewis took the hill, and did a pretty great job.
He came out a bit earlier than I think he should have, but he did get into a bit of trouble in the sixth – mostly due to his high pitch count (117 in 5.1 innings) Overall, his line was not bad outside of that. 5.1 innings pitched, three hits, four walks, and two earned runs. However, the big deal in his line was the strikeouts. TEN of them in 5.1 innings. That’s sixteen outs on his ledger, and ten were strikeouts. Makes me wish he didn’t throw so many pitches, as he probably could have gotten way more than 10.
Dustin Nippert, Darren Oliver, Chris Ray, & Neftali Feliz came in after him. None of them allowed any runs. Although Ray allowed two walks in 0.2 innings. Feliz got his second save.
But this game was more about offense. First off, the Rangers had 15 hits total. Only Michael Young had none. He’s now batting .156 for the season. He’ll eventually be fine, but it is a very Mark Teixeira style slow start for him. Arias only had one hit, lowering his batting average to just .440 :) Josh Hamilton came alive. 3-4 this game. He drove in the first RBI of the game in the first inning. Elvis Andrus also had three hits. Pedro Borbon woke up a bit after being virtually asleep offensively so far. 2-4 with two RBI’s and a run scored. Chris Davis had two doubles. But the big exclamation point was Nelson Cruz, who had another home run. Sadly it was a solo shot, as Josh Hamilton was thrown out trying to steal third right before the home run.
The win felt good, and felt like a game we were going to win almost immediately. We’re now 5-3, and are in first place in the AL West. That’s quite cool. :)
G7: Rangers win out in extra innings 4-2 over Tribe
Rich Harden started his second game of the season. It went better than the first one, although it ended up with the same decision. That’s a no decision. Rich was wild again, walking three and giving up five hits in his six innings of work. The tribe scored one in the first and one in the sixth off of him. The first one though was a solo home run off the bat of Shin-Soo Choo. Given that came with nobody on, and most of the rest of the stuff he gave up led to just one run, one could say he did decently, all things considered. Technically it was a quality start, but it didn’t feel like one. Given the way Harden was presented to us, I expect 7 innings, 12 strikeouts, and 4 hits, maybe one run each game he pitches. Granted, the Harden we know before he signed here says we’re not likely to get that, but he is the guy most likely to strike out 15 or something. He did good, although it still felt like a letdown to me.
Dustin Nippert & Darren Oliver pitched the next two frames, and by this point, it was the bottom of the ninth. So Ron Washington brings in Frank Francisco. This is the same day that Washington said this to the press:
Rangers manager Ron Washington said on Monday he’s going to use reliever Frank Francisco in the sixth or seventh inning — preferably in non-pressure situations — while he gets himself together.
Uh, OK. Bringing him in in the bottom of the ninth in a tie game certainly qualifies for THAT. But, he did manage to pitch a perfect inning, although he had a liner to short, and a flyball that went to the warning track. It could have quite easily been worse.
The Indians threw out Fausto Carmona. He’s an enigma, he could be freakin’ fantastic, or he could be all over the place. We saw a bit of both today, but mostly the good pitcher. Carmona went eight innings (111 pitches), allowed five hits, four walks, but just two earned runs. Both coming in the fifth. And one of those was on a wild pitch by Carmona himself (the other was on an RBI single by Michael Young).
Overall, there wasn’t a ton of offense. The Rangers had eight hits. Two by Joaquin Arias, who has had a torrid few games here. Two by Nelson Cruz, who leads the league in everything. The rest were scattered.
The game went to extra innings, our first of the year, and I hate these. Long time readers of my site have heard me rant about how many times the Rangers lose in the 10th inning. Not this time. Josh Hamilton got on board, and Nelson Cruz hit another home run to win the game 4-2 in 10 innings. Neftali Feliz came in, mowed down the Indians in the bottom of the 10th for a save.
I would have preferred Harden get the win, but I’ll obviously take the win.
G6: Rangers offense comes alive, we win 9-2
The Rangers finish the last game on the homestand with a nice win. 9-2 over the Mariners. Our offense woke up, and it wasn’t just Guerrero & Cruz. We had a nice spread of it amongst the lineup. In fact, the only Ranger not to have at least one hit was David Murphy. But he was excused because of the extremely bizarre way he got on base the two times he did. He reached on two consecutive at bats via catcher’s interference. I don’t think I’ve ever seen that happen. Oh, I’ve seen the interference happen from time to time, but never two straight at bats from the same guy. Very weird.
Vlad Guerrero went 3-5, and his batting average sits at .500 for the season so far. Quite gaudy. However, the bigger surprise here is Joaquin Arias. He went 3-5, making it two consecutive games he had three hits. His average also is at .500. Arias isn’t too far off of Guerrero in at bats, either. To this point, Arias has 16 at bats, and Guerrero has 24. So it’s not one of those “Oh, he’s just gone 3-6 for the season, so he’s .500” deals. I think most people see Arias as a “hanging on” guy – that he’s only here because Kinsler is out, and we didn’t have a seriously better option. He definitely is seizing this time, it will make for an interesting choice once that time comes.
Josh Hamilton looked good, as he had a couple of doubles. Elvis Andrus had a triple. Mike Young had a home run. So we had some nicely spread out offense. Was good to see that. We did have a guy thrown out at home, and also at second to end an inning, on a really bizarre play. But overall, the offense showed up, and showed up well. Nine runs and sixteen hits. Yeah, it was there.
Pitching was pretty good, too. Scott Feldman pitched way better than he did on opening day. This time, it was seven innings, seven hits, and two runs (although one was unearned). He got his first win of the season, and his ERA sits at 2.57 after two starts. Doug Mathis & Chris Ray each pitched scoreless innings (although Mathis’ inning wasn’t terribly smooth).
But it was a good win. Something nice to get out on the road with, as the Rangers don’t come back home until Friday the 23rd. In the interim, we go through Cleveland, the Bronx, & Boston. That could be rough. Cleveland won’t be AS hard as the other two, but it has (on paper) the possibility of being ugly. We’ll get an early test as to how good this team really is.
Perhaps it’s good we’re going in there without a closer that is awfully wobbly. I can see Feliz being the closer for this whole road trip quite easily.
G5: Frankie F blows it, Rangers lose 4-3
On paper, I thought this game was going to be a Mariners win. Felix Hernandez versus Matt Harrison. Especially after Matt had not had any mound time (when it counts) in ages.
But what we got was not what I was expecting. Felix Hernandez was good. Yes. But Matt Harrison was just a smidge better. Just look at their lines:
Hernandez: 7IP, 7H, 3R, 2ER, 1BB, 5K, 1HR, 110P
Harrison: 6IP, 6H, 1ER, 1BB, 4K, 0HR, 110P
Yeah, Hernandez was out there longer, but he did give up more runs. The pitchers left the field with Harrison on top. Dustin Nippert and Neftali Feliz held down the fort. Nippert had a little harder time, as he gave up two hits, but neither surrendered a run.
Then Frank Francisco came in and laid an egg. A big stinky smelly one right in the middle of the diamond. For the second time in a few games, too. He gave up three hits, three earned runs and a walk. In 0.1 innings pitched. Faced just five batters, threw fifteen pitches. He was rather lustily booed, and his manager lost confidence, as Feliz was named the “temporary” closer not long after the game was over. Yikes!
It was annoying as hell, but lost in the annoyance was the fact that Joaquin Arias went 3-3 against Felix Hernandez. That was a really impressive feat. Wouldn’t have expected that from Arias, but we’ll take it.
P.S. I’m bloody sick and tired of Felix Hernandez being called “King Felix” – even by our own announcers. Come on Lewin. He’s not our player. That we’re promoting an opponent with an “ego boosting” nickname like that really bugs me. Most players (like say CoCo Crisp) have a nickname that’s part of their name. Yeah, his name is “Covelli Crisp”, but nobody calls him that. All the records and everything say Coco Crisp. Nobody calls him “King Felix”. He’s Felix Hernandez. If I was a Mariner fan, I might be inclined to say that, but I’m not. And I don’t think our announcers should be doing that, either. Grumble, grumble..
G4: Rangers win behind awakening bats, 6-2
Seattle comes to town, and they seem to be in the same place we are. Bats aren’t working, the pitching is OK, but no offense. And for most of this game, it appeared this was going to be the same old story for the 2010 Rangers. Using the word “old” to describe a pattern in Game 4 is somewhat comical.
Anyway, Ranger fans know that so far, the offense has been Vlad Guerrero & Nelson Cruz, and that’s it. Everyone was was batting close to zero. If not actually zero. For the first five innings, it seemed it was going to be the same this game, too. Nelson Cruz had a solo home run in the bottom of the fourth inning, which at the time tied the game 1-1. That changed in the bottom of the sixth, when our play by play went like this:
Michael Young grounds out
Josh Hamilton walks.
Vlad Guerrero doubled to the 407 sign, scoring Hamilton from first.
Nelson Cruz singles, scoring Guerrero.
Chris Davis singles, moving Guerrero to second.
Pitching change: Shawn Kelley comes in
Taylor Teagarden strikes out
Joaquin Arias singles, scoring Nelson Cruz. Davis to second.
Elvis Andrus singles, scoring Davis. Arias to third.
Julio Borbon files out to Bradley.
That’s the most sustained offense we’ve had the entire season so far. It resulted in a four spot in the bottom of the sixth. Something that was needed. Josh Hamilton also doubled in Michael Young in the bottom of the seventh, so the game ended with a nice offensive output. Hopefully that breaks the ice, and things start happening, as there’s no way that Guerrero & Cruz could carry us like that on their own for too long.
Anyone else thinking AL Player of the week for either (or both) of them?
Even though that was a big deal, I felt the bigger deal was Colby Lewis. Lewis was the beneficiary of the offense, but he didn’t need all of it, as he pitched nearly as well as CJ Wilson did the other night. Lewis looked fantastic. Way better than I ever remembered him as a Ranger before. He went seven innings, gave up one earned run on five hits, and four walks. Few too many walks, which was the down side to his performance, but it didn’t seem to hurt him much at all. Tossed 103 pitches, which was probably partly due to the walks. But still, it was a great performance, and he deserved the win.
To finish up, I had started working on a golden sombrero image for Taylor Teagarden, who I thought struck out four times, but the box score says it was just three. I’ll save the image, but I do have something positive to say about Taylor. He threw out Ichiro Suzuki on an attempted steal. Made Ichiro look like he was was Bengie Molina slow he was out by so much. That was impressive.
G3: CJ Wilson done in by bullpen, Rangers lose 3-1
Where have we heard that headline before? Eh? Anyone? Certainly not with the Texas Rangers.
C.J. Wilson took the hill, and like most Rangers fans, I probably wondered how this would work out. Yeah, he was brought up as a starter some time ago, but he’s been a reliever for such awhile that I don’t think most fans saw him as anything else other than a reliever. So it was to my surprise that he wasn’t only decent in his first start of the season, but quite good! His total line was seven innings pitched, five hits, two walks, and nine strikeouts. For an ERA of zero! That’s because he ALLOWED NO RUNS.
Neftali Feliz came in and struck out the side in the eighth and set it up for Frank Francisco.
Who stunk up the joint, giving up four hits, a walk and three earned runs in just 0.2 innings. His ERA is now 16.20. Bleargh. Darren O’Day and Darren Oliver cleaned up the mess, but the damage was done. This was a really spectacuarly pitched day, save for the 5 minutes Frank Francisco was on the mound.
The real shame of it was that we only scored one run. And that one was a gift – we scored on a wild pitch run in from third. That was it. The Rangers had just five hits. THREE of them were from Vlad Guerrero. Nelson Cruz & David Murphy each had one, too, but man. That’s some weak offense. Guerrero is batting .636 after the first three games. If you took him out of the equation, I bet our entire team batting average would be around .100. It’s pretty pathetic. That we scored enough in the first game to win is now looking like something of a miracle.
Ricky Romero & CJ Wilson both battled well. Was a great afternoon pitcher’s duel in great weather. It’s a shame neither of them got anything out of their efforts.
Chuck Morgan & The Wave
I meant to post this a few days ago when I first saw it, but I forgot about it. It’s still relevant. Railing against the wave is always relevant. Chuck posted this over on Jamey Newberg’s forums over the past weekend, and I wanted to copy it here for more people to see.
First off, let me add I cannot stand the wave. I think it is the stupidest thing ever created in sports. I cannot stand it, and it just shows me that people who do it have no interest in the game. In my opinion, if you do the wave, you deserve to be ejected from the stadium and never allowed to return. Unless you’re a kid (like under 10) That I don’t so much care about, but adults? No way. Get out. Now. Never return.
Anyway, here’s what Chuck had to say, and I have to say it was QUITE refreshing.
Subject: Thank You and Stop The Wave
As we get ready to start the season, thank you for all of your support of the Texas Rangers during the off season. Lets all hope this turns out to be magical season for all Rangers fans.Those can attend Opening Day, I hope you have a great time. Anytime you are at the ballpark, remember its a day at a ballgame, try to forget the bills, the traffic, work, etc., just have a good time, again, no worries, its a day at the ballpark. And as always, if you have a problem at the ballpark, shoot me an email and I will get you to the right people that can take care of your problem.
On another note, those of you that were at the exhibition game Friday probably saw a “wave” break out while we were hitting. This came up at Jamey’s Dallas gathering, somebody asked Chuck Greenberg if he could stop the wave. This goes against my old school baseball thinking “that if you pay to get in, you can do whatever you want as long as it is in the confines of good behavior”…but I would like our fans to get into the games like they do in Boston, New York, St. Louis and save the wave for another time. So, I have enlisted the help of Drew Sheppard to build me a graphic that will ask fans to wave at another time other than when the Rangers are hitting. Most of you are familiar with Drew’s work. There will be those that will be unhappy that we asked them to wave at another time…its okay to wave, just don’t do it when we have men on and a rally going.
We will see how it goes. Again, have a great time at the ballpark when you come to the games and if you have any questions any time, send me an email to cmorgan@texasrangers.com
Thanks
Chuck M
What we really need to keep an eye on are people like this. I found this picture I took on a game I went to August 1, 2009. This Ballpark vendor was trying to start the wave. Uh, NO, doofus. I hope you’re not still around.
G2: Rangers lose bizarre game to Jays, 7-4
This was a weird game.
First off, the non weird part. It was the first game I scored on my iPad. I’ve used the software called Scorepad for awhile now on my iPod Touch (and for a few years before that on my old Palm PDA), but now that I have an iPad, the screen real estate makes just about everything easier to do. If you have an iPhone, an iPod Touch, or an iPad, you should look at Scorepad. It’s good stuff. Anyway, about the game..
This was a very weird line game. The Blue Jays had seven runs on five hits, and three errors. The Rangers had four runs, also on five hits with an error. Two of the Jays errors came on the same play.
But we did get out first. Michael Young scored on a muffed play by Toronto third baseman Edwin Encarnacion. We had a chance to get more, as there were still runners on base, but we didn’t get anything. Toronto tied it up in the third on a ball that was a true textbook definition of wind swept home run ball. There was no way that ball should have gone out under it’s own power. Alex Gonzalez really lucked out there. It got worse in the fourth when the total number of walks given up by Rangers pitching game back to bite us.
Let’s put it this way. Between Rich Harden & Dustin Nippert, they pitched 6.1 innings. They walked NINE Blue Jays. It’s part of the reason the Blue Jays had more runs than hits. On top of that, there was a hit batter in there somewhere. But the two runs the Jays scored came on consecutive bases loaded walks. Not good. That was pretty deflating.
We got some good feeling back in the bottom of the fourth, as both Vlad Guerrero & Nelson Cruz walloped solo home runs on back to back pitches. That tied the game again at h3 in the bottom of the fourth, but that’s as close as we’d get. The Jays plated two more runs in the top of the fifth, then additional ones in the 7th & 9th.
Rich Harden was really all over the place, which was also bizarre as he struck out eight batters. Walked five. Had no control, but had enough stuff to strike out guys. It was maddening, because early on I thought if he went 7 or 8 innings, he’d strike out like 14 or 15 guys. Sigh. Darren O’Day continued to look good, and Darren Oliver gave up his first earned run of the year (including all his spring time). Overall, a not very well pitched game. Way too many walks.
On the positive side, Vlad Guerrero led what little offense we had by going 2-4. Chris Davis had a double, and Elvis Andrus singled in there, too. But Guerrero looked like old Guerrero, which was really nice to see.
Didn’t like the loss, but it’s still early. I’ll get over it quickly. Just concerned about Harden.
Salty to DL
- C Jarrod Saltalamacchia placed on 15 day DL
- C Matt Treanor recalled from AAA [ Link ]
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