Taking a mulligan on this one.
ST18: Rangers pen stinks it up; Rangers lose 14-5
The game was good up until the third inning. The Rangers parked a five spot on the Padres ledger in the top of the third. Most of that came from a three run Nelson Cruz home run.
But then the Rangers surrendered a six spot in the bottom of the fourth, and then an EIGHT spot in the bottom of the eighth.
That was just ugly. Bleargh.
ST17: Rangers lose close one to Dodgers, 5-4
Before this game started, I told my wife it was the Dodgers, and I wanted to watch it on TV in the hopes that the Dodgers and Rangers would do something that happened in spring training the previous year. For one inning, the Dodgers and Rangers switched broadcast teams, which means we got Vin Scully doing the game. So I was looking forward to that, and then Scully got hurt this past week, and he did a Dodgers game, but he did the other split squad game back and their own park.
Still, it was nice to see the Rangers on TV. David Murphy, who on paper looks to have a hard time getting regular playing time in 2010, made a case for himself today. His first two at bats were a home run and a triple. Which immediately brings forth the idea of a cycle. That didn’t happen, mind you, but it set a tone for him. Later on, our Rule 5 guy, Matt Brown had his own home run. Taylor Teagarden had a double, and that accounted for half of our eight hits being extra bases. So we had some power this game.
Colby Lewis started this game, and I have to confess he looked better than I remembered him looking. His Japanese strikeout stuff was on display here, as he had six of them in his five innings of work. I wouldn’t call the outing dominating, but he certainly did well. Five innings, five hits, one walk, and two earned runs, one of which was on a solo home run he allowed. Had too many pitches for my taste (79). That’s not an obscenely huge number. In fact, it’s only four pitches over “recommended”, but it just felt like a lot more than that.
The only other pitcher the Rangers used was Derek Holland, who really hasn’t had a a dominating spring. Four innings, six hits, one walk, and three earned runs. Derek was charged with the blown save and the loss.
We had a shot to come back late, and blew it when we left a couple of men on base late (I think 2nd & 3rd). We didn’t, and those kind of losses bug me more than others, as we COULD have won. The kind of games that teams like the Yankees always seem to find a way to win.
ST16: Rangers blown out by Indians, 12-2
This sentence from the mlb recap says it all, IMO..
Brandon McCarthy allowed Marte’s grand slam and threw 42 pitches in the first inning.
After the fourth batter of the game, Brandon McCarthy & the Rangers were down 4-0. That was the entire tone of the game. McCarthy actually settled down a bit after the grand slam, and allowed just one more run in his four innings of work. However, Luis Mendoza was just as bad, and Pedro Strop also allowed a bunch (although some of his were unearned).
Blah. That’s about it for this game.
Matt Treanor
- C Matt Treanor acquired via trade with Brewers for Ray Olmedo [ Link ]
Reassignments
- IF Justin Smoak, OF Mitch Moreland, & OF Chad Tracy assigned to minor league camp.
ST15: Rangers win again, 6-4 over Brewers
I must still be whacked out from my big trip, because I sat down to watch this game, and I think I fell asleep somewhere in the second inning or so, as I don’t remember what happened with the game. Had to check online this morning when I woke up. :)
When the game started, it was delayed because Tommy Hunter ended up getting hurt during warmups. Guillermo Moscoso started the game for the Rangers, which definitely wasn’t the plan. Still Moscoso did decently enough. 2.1 innings, three hits, two earned runs. He did do well with strikeouts, as he punched out 4. Two of them were the first two batters of the game, which was cool to see. Willie Eyre followed with some scoreless relief.
Matt Harrison was third on, and pitched four innings. He did fairly well, too. Same thing as Moscoso. Same number of hits and runs allowed (two & three). However, Matt did VERY well with strikeouts. He punched out eight of the twelve outs he got while on the mound. I slept through that, so I didn’t get to see it, but that’s an impressive number for sure. Chris Ray finished up with a scoreless inning.
All told, the four Rangers pitchers combined for a total of 16 strikeouts, which is extremely unusual for Texas. Not sure if that’s a factor of an easy umpire, or Brewers who fanned too much or what, but it was definitely a number that sticks out.
Offensively, the Rangers hits were scattered amongst six different Rangers (only Elvis had more than one), but they were bunched together enough to make it count. We did have some power this game. Josh Hamilton had a monster first inning home run (which I did see) – it went out of the stadium completely as far as I can tell. Taylor Teagarden had a triple, and Elvis Andrus & Esteban German had doubles.
Hopefully Tommy Hunter isn’t hurt seriously and misses a lot of time.
MLB 2K10 Nelson Cruz Commercial
Ron Washington’s Story
So I’m driving around running some errands early this afternoon, and I have the XM talk channel on. They’re heading to commercial, and they say, “There is a breaking story, more on the update”. I figure, “eh, someone got released, or Strausberg got officially assigned to the minors”. By this time I get to the drive through teller at the bank, and they said “Ron Washington tested positive for cocaine use in 2009”, which prompted me to say out loud “Holy shit – that is a big deal”. I’m sure the teller heard me say that, but he didn’t ask me what I meant.
When they came back from break, Kevin Kennedy and some dude I don’t know who it is started talking about it, and at that time, not much in the way of facts were known. Before I get to my own thoughts on the matter, I feel compelled to get this point across in the graphic shown here.
While some might say that’s a harsh response, I have to say it was my honest and true immediate response to hearing the news. I mean, Ron has never done this before, and why at age 57 (I believe) when he’s fairly set in terms of his baseball career he felt it necessary to do that is beyond me. If he was a lifetime habitual user, I’d understand why he was doing it – but to START now? That’s where the dumbass comes from. I mean, really. Maybe we could get Seth Meyers and Amy Poehler from Saturday Night Live to do a “Really, Ron? REALLY??”
Here is the complete text of Ron Washington’s statement about this.
OK, the initial reaction remarks over, the attention then turns forward to “now what”? Thanks to Evan Grant, I’m going to copy this text of his regarding the “facts”…
The facts: Washington acknowledged he used cocaine last season sometime during the first half of the year and after he was rewarded a contract extension for 2010. Washington would not reveal any details of exactly how, where and when he obtained the cocaine, saying he bore the sole responsibility for what he called a “stupid mistake.”
• Washington was made aware of an upcoming drug test, immediately informed the Rangers and MLB of his use of the drug and entered a treatment program. He did, in fact, fail the drug test.
• Washington, who turns 58 on April 29, said it was the only time in his life he had used cocaine. When asked if he was saying that he had never used illegal drugs anytime in his life, he said only “I’ve never used this drug before.”
• Rangers GM Jon Daniels and President Nolan Ryan said the club discussed all possible options on the handling of Washington’s transgression. The club, however, could not reveal the failure of the drug test. That would have violated the confidentiality of the Collective Bargaining Agreement.
• Washington said he completed the terms of MLB’s drug treatment plan two weeks ago. He said he was tested three times a week as part of that treatment. He also said he would be willing to submit to more testing to help reinforce that he is “clean.”
• MLB officials declined to comment, citing confidentiality regarding the testing/treatment plan. They said they would have no comment on reaction to Washington’s announcement.
Given how much of a wide berth sports fans generally give players for far worse transgressions than this, the calls I’m seeing for “Fire him now!” just does not work in my mind. So many Cowboys fans STILL want to hoist Michael Irvin up on a freakin’ pillar despite all the shit he’s done, yet Washington deserves to be run out of town for a single offense, despite the fact that he was apparently rather pro-active, and informed both the Rangers and MLB about taking it before the results of a drug test was known. That’s not the kind of mentality from a person who was trying to hide something. Given that he’s passed every drug test since that one he failed, I’ll buy into the fact it was a one time thing that hasn’t been an issue since.
Everything I’ve read on ESPN, MLB, and the Rangers blog at DMN tells me that it’s a non issue to the team too. There were a lot of quotes of support from Nolan Ryan & Jon Daniels about this. One has to think that Chuck Greenberg knew for awhile, too. So I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt, but if he ever fails for it a second time, he needs to go immediately. I do think that it makes his leash shorter. His contract was already going to be up after this season, so I suspect if the team goes into a tailspin, he might not have as long a slide time grace period as he did last year when everyone was calling for his head (unjustly, I think). Overall, I think he’s a good baseball man, someone who has to deal with a lot of things that none of us do, and someone who made an epic level screw-up in judgment. I’ll be curious to see what Josh Hamilton has to say about all this, given his own past.
From what I’ve read, the Comissioner’s Office could still hand down some sort of punishment, but my gut feeling is that there won’t be any. So lets give Ron our support, and I’ll accept his apology, provide that turns out to be the truth of what happened. If it turns out something else happened he hasn’t said, I’ll likely change my opinion, but for now, I think we should applaud him for being forthcoming with the problem he caused. I don’t think he should be let completely off the hook – perhaps some sort of fine might be in order?
But my religion tells me to forgive, so I will. But I still think it was a really stupid thing to do, hence my use of “dumbass”. Again, don’t forget all the other sports figures we’ve forgiven for far worse than this. I did also like that “almost all” of his players showed up the press conference in support of him. Still want to hear what Josh Hamilton has to say.
Let’s get to April, eh? :)
UPDATE: I was talking to a friend of mine about all this, and he said something which reminded me of a point I wanted to make, but forgot to when I wrote this earlier today. It’s the quote in Ron’s statement that says “Washington, who turns 58 on April 29, said it was the only time in his life he had used cocaine. When asked if he was saying that he had never used illegal drugs anytime in his life, he said only “I’ve never used THIS drug before.” “This” drug? What others has he used? If there are other drugs involved, the question becomes how long ago? If it was 20+ years ago, who cares? If it was a year and a half or so? Then we’d care.
UPDATE 2: Given I wrote about a dozen game updates to catch up with the last week and a half, I wanted this up near the top, so I bumped it up, even though I wrote it yesterday.
ST14: Rangers boomstick thrashes Mariners, 8-1
The Rangers finally opened up with some power. Something that’s been lacking all spring. Nelson Cruz had two of them. Josh Hamilton & Chris Davis both had home runs as well. Nelson Cruz did quite well this game. Went 3-3 with 3 RBI’s, and three runs scored. Brought his batting average up to .448.
Outside of the home runs, we had just one double (Salty), and a bunch of singles. But the home runs were definitely the story of this game.
On the pitching side, the Rangers looked quite good, too. Not at the start, though. The first eight pitches of the game by Scott Feldman were balls, as he walked the first two batters of the game. But he calmed down after that, as those were the only two walks of the game. In all, Scott went four innings, giving up just three hits and one run. Which isn’t bad at all considering the way the game started. Darren Oliver followed, tossed two scoreless innings, and Dustin Nippert tossed three. Really great performance by our pitching staff.
Amusing moment when Milton Bradley was called out. He did a Milton for sure, dropped his bat at the plate, and got himself ejected for doing that.
I did get to watch this game on TV, which was cool, as I haven’t been able to see or hear many games this year so far.
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