For the last few years, I’ve always said that I hate it when the Rangers go up against rookies, or guys who have only pitched a couple of games in the majors. You’re supposed to score 8 runs in the first inning against guys like that, but we always seem to get shut down. Tonight was one of the latter.
The Tigers tossed Justin Verlander against us. Wow, did he look electric. As good as Curt Schilling and Josh Beckett looked against us a few days ago, Verlander looked better. He only allowed two hits over 7 innings while striking out 7 and walking two. Brad Wilkerson himself struck out three times this game. The only two hits we got at all were singles by Nevin & Blalock (who comitted his second error of the season already). The Tigers threw two relievers for the last two innings, but the game was over by then.
The reason it was over was that Kevin Milwood pitched more like the other bit name Scott Boras pitching client we have a recent history with and not the 2005 AL ERA leader. Milwood gave up four in the first frame on his way to giving up 5 total (4ER) runs on 8 hits over his six innings pitched. Although most of the damage was done in the first inning. Take that out, and he wasn’t too bad, but you can’t forget about the first, it happened. And it was enough. Hell, the first run was enough the way Verlander pitched.
Still, despite now being 1-5, I’m nowhere near ready to panic. I’m sure we’ll see an article by someone saying that it’s because Jaramillo isn’t here that we’re not hitting. There will be Internet forums where people will give up on the season completely, and radio call ins on Monday saying the season is over and start talking about how the Cowboys will go 16-0 because of Terrell Owens. Don’t panic. Wise words from the late Douglas Adams.
A change in direction for my Rangers site
You know, I’ve been thinking. It’s a lot of work collecting and putting together all the line scores, box scores, etc that I’ve put together for all the games over time. I’m thinking of dropping that stuff, and just concentrating on my reports only for the games.
Since the birth of my daughter, and especially now that she’s become a lot more mobile, there’s a lot more things pressing on my time. Collecting all that stuff takes a bunch of time to put together, and after thinking about it, I’m thinking that I don’t want to spend all that time daily. My work is about to get a whole lot busier, as the company I work for is about to have a major release, so I won’t have that free time. Putting all these things together has kind of made me feel like I don’t have to go “Oh jeez, I need to set aside 20 minutes to half an hour to gather it all”. The amount of time saved will be helpful. Plus with a weight off my shoulders, I will feel more like writing, which is something I’ve enjoyed the last few days when I’ve written at home from my (new) laptop.
I definitely will not stop doing the site – I still like writing, so hopefully I’ll be more inspired to do so on a regular basis with this new site alignment I’ve been thinking about the last few days.
I know I don’t generally get a lot of feedback to questions like this from folks, but I really would appreciate you saying something about this, as it would be a major change in what I do on my site. Thanks.
UPDATE SAT AFTERNOON: After sleeping on it, and giving it some thought I’ve decided that I’m going to go this route, for the reasons stated above. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t want to stop doing the site, but I thought about how much time it was taking me, and decided that at this point in my life it’s better if I don’t devote as much time gathering info I can just link to. Speaking of linking, I’ve decided to keep one part of the old stuff. For game recaps, I will be linking to the MLB.com recap page. That gives you the box score, as well as a story and game notes from each team. Underneath my commentary, you’ll see a link that says Game recap on MLB.com. That’s the link. It’s pretty unobtrusive, and requires me just to get a link – something I always look at anyway, so it’s no extra work.
Any further thoughts can be added via the comments section here. Thanks for visiting!
Red Sox fans worse than Yankee fans
For years and years, I used to hate Yankee fans. Why? I felt they were the most obnoxious group of people I could think of. I hated going to Ranger games when the Yankees came to town, because they always swore, were basically just jerks. I don’t mind them coming in the stadium and cheering – that doesn’t bother me at all. It was the WAY they did it. My wife refused to go. I didn’t begrudge them winning – even if some of the more recent attempts were just throwing money at it. On the field, if you win, you win.
And then something happened. The Sox won the World Series, and all of a sudden the spirit of jerk fans transferred to “Red Sox Nation”. I used to love going to Sox games, as the games would be good, the opposing fans would be nice, but it seems there’s a lot more jerks on the Sox side now than there ever wold be. Evidence this T-shirt by some mental zero when Johny Damon came to bat recently against the Sox. I don’t see fans in Oakland and Kansas City doing things like that, so it reflects squarely on the
That reinds me of that jackass in the outfield a year or two ago who took a swipe at Gary Sheffield. Remember that? Sheffield swiped back a little, but didn’t really do anything. What he should have done is gone into the stands and wailed on this moron. Or bring back Ty Cobb from the dead and have him do it. There’s an awful lot of jerk fans, and lately it seems like they’re in Red Sox Nation. I actually find myself enjoying going to Yankee games now and not Red Sox games. Surprised to hear myself say that.
That makes the “Sweep” thing the Hank’s Homies did at a game a year ago or so seem so much the sweeter. Thanks for that moment, guys, I loved it. :)
G5: Rangers lose to Tigers again, 5-2
The Rangers drop to 1-4 after tonight’s loss to the Tigers. It’s way WAY too early to panic, but it is disappointing. I was expecting to be 3-2 at this point.
This one started out the way most of our games went. We were in it early, and just a few things here and thre seemed to let the game slip away. John Koronka started, and looked decent early. Where have I heard that before – even just in this season so far? Despite his line (5IP, 6H, 4ER), he didn’t seem all that bad for me. I won’t be upset to see him get another start. He looked better than his line. Plus he’s a lefty, which itself is something that will probably earn him another start at least.
Rick Bauer, who was called up after RA Dickey was sent out after last night’s debacle followed Koronka. Bauer went three innings, giving up just one run on 4 hits. That wasn’t bad at all. I know he was called up to provide bullpen relief, as Koronka wasn’t expected to pitch very long, but he looked decent out there.
Mike Maroth, who usually gets bombed when he pitches against the Rangers turned it around tonight. He did have a lot of hits (8) for the innings pitched he had (5.1), but he only allowed one run.
We couldn’t get much of anywhere against the Tigers pitching tonight. We did have eleven hits overall, but only managed two runs against the Tigers. Young, Tex, & Nevin both had two apiece, and the rest were scattered amongst the lineup. Mike Young did get a home run – but everything else was a single. Unless you get a boatload of singles (way more than 11), you don’t always score a bunch of runs.
Ian Kinsler continued to impress, going 2 for 4, and raising his batting average to .462 for the season. In fact, after tonight’s action, here’s a comparison of stats. I’m sure in the long run this won’t remain the case, but for a purely homer reason it’s amusing to compare:
Runs Scored: Kinsler 2, Soriano 1
Hits: Kinsler 6, Soriano 4
Doubles: Kinsler 1, Soriano 0
Home Runs: Kinsler 1, Soriano 0
RBI: Kinsler 1, Soriano 0
Total Bases: Kinsler 10, Soriano 4
Walks: Kinsler 1, Soriano 0
Strikeouts: Kinsler 0, Soriano 4
Stolen Bases: Soriano 1, Kinsler 0
OBP: Kinsler .533, Soriano .375
Slugging: Kinsler .769, Soriano .286
Batting Average: Kinsler .462, Soriano .286
Salary: Kinsler $327,000, Soriano $10 Million
You’ve gotta love all that. :)
Dickey down
- P R.A. Dickey optioned to AAA
- P Rick Bauer purchased from AAA
- IF Eurbiel Durazo signed to a minor league contract [ Link ]
Box Scores
Does anyone know a place left that still publishes current text only box scores? Everyone wants to “fancy up” the box scores with their own version of “let’s put graphics in the box score”. Does anyone know of a site that publishes pure text based box scores like this? Thnanks.
G4: Rangers bombed to another loss, 10-6 on Thursday
This game’s tone was set almost immediately. On the second pitch of the game, Brandon Inge hit a home run over the left field wall. Then Magglio Ordonez. Then Chris Shelton. Then Shelton again. Then Craig Monroe. Then Marcus Thames. And shortly after that, R.A. Dickey was pulled out of the game. Dickey tied a major league record for most home runs allowed by a single pitcher in a game. Later on in the game, Brian Shouse allowed one too, so we gave up 7 home runs to the Tigers. That’s a lot of flyballs. Dickey faced 18 batters, and six of them got home runs. Not good at all.
Dickey’s knuckleball looked nothing like the one that Wakefield threw against us. His allowed a lot of runs too, but his at least moved like a knuckleball. Dickey’s ball tonight looked more like a slow hanging slider. From the looks of it on TV, it seemed like I could hit. It didn’t look good at all. The only possible saving grace (and probably the only thing that allowed Dickey to be in there long enough to give up 6 of them) is that 5 of the 6 were solo home runs (the 6th was a 2 run job). If there were runners, I’m sure he would have been pulled sooner. The guys on Baseball Tonight said tonight that “R.A.” stood for “Runs allowed”.
On the positive side, Ian Kinsler had a great night, going 3 for 3 (and a walk) with his first career home run, plus he deked RF Magglio Ordonez on the basepaths and got a double out of a ball that by rights should have been a single. He looked quite good tonight offensively. He did bobble a couple of balls, and also comitted the first error by the Rangers. But he did look good out there, despite the error. Mark Teixeira also went 3 for 4.
Mike Young (who had another error in the same inning as Kinsler) went 3 for 5 with a 3 RBI double in the bottom of the ninth. Mark Teixeira was also 3 for 5 with one RBI. The only other two hits by Texas were Phil Nevin & Adrian Brown. We had a couple of guys with a lot of hits, and not many scattered through the rest of the lineup.
Fabio Castro made his major league debut tonight in relief of R.A. Dickey. Castro went 3.2 IP and gave up 2 runs (only 1 earned). His line wasn’t great, but he did pretty well in his major league debut. No obscene lines (like 6HR allowed).
Yeah, we lost this game from the beginning, but it wasn’t near as annoying to me as the 2-1 loss last night.
G3: Rangers lose frustrating game to Sox, 2-1
Wow. That was one seriously good, but seriously frustrating game. A lot was written about Josh Beckett’s American League debut at home in Texas. A lot was written about how Beckett would dominate this game. And he did. He’s a good pitcher, I expect that. What I don’t think most people were expecting is that Kameron Loe stood toe to toe with him and was beating Beckett for most of the game. The Rangers went up 1-0 in the first inning and it stood that way until the seventh.
Loe was actually better than Beckett was, but the game’s difference was a home run Loe gave up in the seventh inning to Trot Nixon. That was the game. It was a shame, as Loe was brilliant. My heart sank on that, because I felt he deserved better than that. We couldn’t come back against the Sox. We came close against Mike Timlin, but Mark Teixeira was thrown out at the plate on a hit that I didn’t think we should have tried to score on. Oddly enough Boston didn’t bring in their closer (Foulke) to close out the game. They brought in Jonathan Papelbon. That raised a few eyes, I’m sure.
It was amusing to see Manny Ramirez stike out on some more high cheese for the second night in a row.
I hate writing about games that we should have won but lost due to one small thing. Sigh.
G2: Rangers beat up Wakefield and Sox, 10-4
Game two went a lot better than game one. As I’ve said a million times before when facing a knuckleball pitcher, you either are shut down and get nothing, or you tee off and score 50 runs. There doesn’t appear to be any middle ground. Tonight we got the “tee off” version. We faced Tim Wakefield, whom we always seem to have decent success against. And we got off quickly, going up 4-0 after the first four batters of the game with no one out. That pretty much set the tone for this game. All the offense that wasn’t there against Schilling was against Wakefield.
On the flip side, Vicente Padilla delivered what Millwood didn’t in the first game – a dominating pitching performance. He had great movement on all his pitches, a dominating looking curveball, and he threw some really nice smoke when he needed it. He struck out Manny Ramirez twice. In fact, Ramirez struck out three times (the other by Otsuka). He was definitely kept in check. Padilla looked really great, and I felt he could have come out for another inninmg, but I guess you don’t want to stretch ’em out too far this early in the season.
Offensively, we were led by Phil Nevin, who had a total of 5 RBI for the night on two hits. We had 13 hits in all, spread out pretty nicely. The only starter without any hits was Laynce Nix, who has been bashing the ball the first two games, but hasn’t anything to show for it yet. Oh, and Kinsler didn’t have any hits either, but that’s not a problem. Kevin Mench had two doubles, Mike Young got one for his first hit of the season, and of course being the Rangers we had three home runs (Nevin, Barajas, & Wilkerson).
Overall a much more enjoyable game for Rangers fans than opening day was. Tomorrow we face Josh Beckett, who will be pitching at home (he’s from Texas), so he’ll probably be way up for that game.
G1: Rangers lose season opener to BoSox, 7-4
Opening Day. What’s more fun than opening day? It’s a day that every baseball fan loves, a day for optimism, and all those other stereotypes you hear around now. But we had a beautiful day of weather, I was there at the game with my wife and baby, and it was wonderful. So was Curt Schilling. That’s the baseball story of this game. Curt Schilling. He dominated the Rangers, going 7 innings, giving up just two runs on 5 hits. The two runs were a line shot home run by Blalock into the wedge in the right hand corner.
A couple of highlights for me were watching Ian Kinsler make his major league debut, and getting a single off of Schilling. Schilling had a classy thing to say about it later when asked about giving up a knock to a rookie. Schiling said (something like) “He’s a major leaguer, he deserves to be there”. Nice statement by him. Kevin Milwood looked great in the first three innings. Then he seemed to run out of gas a bit too early, which is a surprise there. But again, Schilling locked us down pretty good.
It is definitely a bit more work when you have a one year old baby with you at the game. Credit to my wife who had to deal with most of it, as Samantha wanted mommy to hold her most of the time. Samantha normally would have napped for about two hours during the time we were there, so it made for a fidgety baby. But it all went well.
Parking was major ass, because I had to park all the way in the back of the parking lot out by Rt 30 and behind the Seimens building. I left about 2 hours and 45 minutes early, and I still couldn’t get to my usual parking spots. It was insane, I hate parking out that far. Next year we leave even earlier for opening day. Sigh.
There were some new ballpark things which I didn’t get a whole lot of time to check out. There is a new concert type area set up on the third base side on the hill next to Mark Holtz lake. I didn’t get much time to check it out, but it could be interesting. There was a new picnic area outside the old gates on the first base side. Both were constructed to have the same general astehtic (sp?) feel as the rest of the park around it, so it doesn’t stick out like a bright orange something going “I’m new!”. Neither I got much time to check out as we were running rather late due to the parking situation. But they definitely could be useful. Inside the park is where they should focus their attentions – new scoreboards, fix broken seats, missing cupholders, etc. The place is definitely NOT a dump, but there are certain things (fix the sound system) which would help overall in the experience.
Oh, and beer is $6 now. Sigh.
Baseball is back. Life is good.
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