No commentary from me on this game.
Arod wins Player of the week award
Rangers shortstop Alex Rodriguez, who returns to Seattle tonight as an opponent for the first time, has been named the American League’s Player of the Week for April 9-15.
Rodriguez batted .450 (9-20) with four homers and 13 RBIs in six games during the week, leading the AL in homers, RBIs, total bases (22) and slugging percentage (1.100). He was 6-for-10 with four homers and 13 RBIs in the three-game sweep of Oakland. Rodriguez drove in 11 runs in the final two games, one shy of the club record for RBIs in consecutive contests set by Rusty Greer on Aug. 22-23, 1997, vs. Chicago.
A-Rod has homered in three straight games, one shy of the Texas club record, which has been accomplished six times. His career-best is home runs in five straight games — Aug. 11-16, 1999, with Seattle. Rodriguez had two homers in one game for the 15th time in his career on Sunday, his 16th overall multi-homer game (he has one three-home run game to his credit). He is 9-for-14 with four homers and 13 RBIs in his last four games after going 8-for-33 with no homers and two RBIs in Texas’ first nine contests.
This marks the fifth time that Rodriguez has been awarded the AL’s weekly award. He last won it in the second week of the 2000 season, April 10-16.
G14: Arod returns to Seattle, and loses 9-7
What a circus atmosphere. I probably would have been really into it if I was in Seattle – I know I would have worn Ranger colors, too. For some reason, I just don’t see myself getting assaulted in Seattle. Now, I wouldn’t try that if say, Derek Jeter came to Texas, and we were going to the Bronx. :)
However, I was sitting in my living room, and that’s not the same thing as being there. I would have liked to have been there, but from what I could see, it was definitely a circus. You’ll see in the photos below some of it – but the loudness was surprising. I knew he’d be booed a lot, and cheered when he messed up, but it still didn’t compare – even though some of the cooler stuff was announced. My favorite thing a fan did was sit there with a fishing rod with a dollar bill attached, trying to reel in Arod. Now that was funny, yet uncool at the same time. I laughed at that one.
As for the game itself? Well, Ryan Glynn had NOTHING. He has always had a problem with walking a lot, and he did that tonight too. However, he just seemed to have even less than his usual mediocre to bad outing. If Helling has a night like this Tuesday, I can see the folks clamoring for a change. I have to admit I’m surprised at Glynn, as he didn’t pitch this way in spring training.
Our bats kept us in the game for the most part – Raffy did his best, hitting two home runs in the game – the first two in Safeco this season, but we just gave up too many. I have a feeling that will be the story of the season.
G13: Rangers sweep A’s behind 10-8 win
Hopefully, I get to use this graphic a lot this season. :)
It was really nice to see us bust out in this fashion, scoring over 30 runs against the A’s. I don’t like the fact that we’re giving up so many – we have the worst ERA in all of baseball so far. We won’t be able to carry the team that long on just the sticks. We need some better pitching. Still, a win is a win, and I’ll take as many as we can get. Especially when we have to chase the Twins (!) for best record in baseball. :)
Anyway, Arod continued his onslaught this weekend in Oakland, going 2 for 3 with 5 RBI’s for a total of 13 for the weekend. It was really awesome to see our offense wake up. Our pitching? Well, Oliver gave up too many and exited too short for a starter. Our bullpen let them back in the game when they shouldn’t have.
It seems that anyone pitching as closer has inherited John Wetteland. First off, Crabtree couldn’t pitch – he was having back spasms. Second, Venafro, who did pitch for a save, proceeded to walk the bases full before getting the job done. I wonder if we can have a closer that goes 1-2-3 anymore! :)
G12: Rangers outlast A’s, win 9-8
As I started watching this game, I felt good. Kenny Rogers looked pretty good early on. We jumped on Barry Zito for a bunch of runs early on, going up 8-0, on the strength of the bottom of the lineup, who really delivered well.
However, the biggest bat was Arod, who seemed to be the Arod that was envisioned when he was signed. He went 3 for 5, with six RBI’s, a 3 run home run, and some pretty good defense. This is the ARod that I suspect Seattle is so annoyed at losing. I know I would be. :)
However, as the game went on, our bullpen stupidly let the A’s back in the game – they tied the game up 8-8 in the 8th inning. I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. When you’re up 8-0, you deserve to win. :) Anyway, ARod came through in the 9th again, delivering an RBI to put us up 9-8, after Curtis & Velarde (both great surprises so far this season) singled, setting the table.
Mr. Wetteland (ahem, excuse me, Tim Crabtree) got his fourth save in true “#35 fashion”. He put a couple on before getting the job done. Crabtree said he learned a lot from Wetteland, he wanted his uniform, and so far, he’s filling John’s shoes very well – taking all aspects of John’s pitching (especially the heart attack style of saving games). :)
G11: Texas beats up on Oakland, 13-1
This is the type of game that the 2001 Texas Rangers were supposed to have been playing all along. The big bats break out in a major, major way, and our pitching keeps ’em down.
Quite frankly, I expected to win this game, but not quite by this large of a margin. The game started off great enough, with home runs by Rusty Greer & Randy Velarde to lead off the first. That’s all we really needed. :)
However, we didn’t stop there, really teeing off on Cory Lidle. Arod finally got his first home run as a Ranger, which was nice to see. Geez, just about everyone had a contribution here, only Pudge was hitless, going 0-6.
We ended up getting 4 runs off of Mike Magnante, and one off of Jeff Tam. Our pitching on the other hand, was stellar. Doug Davis did our tired bullpen a job, going 6.2 innings, giving up just one run. Zimmerman & Venafro, who pitched the remaining 2.1 innings didn’t give up anything, which was nice to see.
I hope that these offensive stats are the start of something nice, not just an abberation.
G10: Rangers stink it up, lose 13-2
Ewwwwwwwww… That’s about all I have to say about this one. Major stinker. As I’m writing this 3 days later, I don’t feel like jogging my memory to remember this piece of crap. :)
Rivals.com closing
Rivals.com – the folks who courted me for awhile, and then abandoned me and went with Jamey Newberg’s Minor League Report site is folding. This means that the NMLR will be changing location. If you don’t subscribe to Jamey’s daily email report on the Rangers, I suggest you contact him now about getting on the list for two reasons. One, it’s a great list, and two, you’ll know where his web site will be re-located.
G9: Benji Gil does in Rangers, 7-2
Well, of the three games against the Angels, this is the one I figured we’d lose, because of Ramon Ortiz. Never in my dreams would I also expect us to get beat by Benji Gil! Man, Benji Gil was on fire against us – I doubt it was because of us, but he certainly seemed like a far better shortstop than at any time he played with us. It was even interesting to hear Bill & Tom almost fawning over him.
Not a whole lot to talk about in this one – the main story was Ramon Ortiz shutting us down for 7.2 innings – he ran out of gas at the end, and gave up a couple of runs, but was outstanding in his pitching. I went to look for him on my fantasy leagues, and of course, he was taken on 3 of 4 – I nabbed him for another one, dropping Doug Davis from that team.
Anyway, Randy Velarde continues his early season onslaught, getting a double and an RBI – he’s been a spectacular pickup for us – surprised me, that’s for sure. Speaking of pickups, I’m rather glad we have Caminiti, even though he’s not batting all that great so far – his defense at third is a major upgrade over Lamb or Tatis.
Hopefully, we’ll do better tomorrow.
G8: Rangers beat Angels, 7-5
Well, here starts the chain of games that keep you up past midnight. I was watching on my TiVo, so it made it a little better, as I didn’t start watching the game until 9:45, but when you can take the commercials out, it goes faster. :)
Darren Oliver has already won as many games as he did last year on his second start of the season. That’s great and sad at the same time. However, he again pitched like he didn’t really want it – being wild all over the place, not being terribly consistent – but showing just enough to get the job done. Makes me wonder if he pitched against someone good like the Yankees or the Indians – he’d be 0-2 instead of 2-0.
Tim Crabtree really tried to give the game back to Anaheim, it seemed. His first pitch hit a batter, and the next pitch was a double, scoring the guy he hit. However, he got it together, and the game finished with a 7-5 for the home eleven.
A Rod got booed pretty loudly when he came up to bat – I’m not terribly sure why. I can certainly understand him being booed in Seattle, or in one of the other cities where he had talked to about signing, but it kind of surprises me about him being booed all over the place. I wonder if he’ll get booed in Minnesota, too? Ruben Mateo looked good, getting three RBI’s on a base clearing double, finally coming through with the bases loaded.
Mark Petkovsek pitched well again, proving probably that his first two outings were an aberration. Overall a good game, if a bit wild with Oliver on the hill. Still, a win is a win. :)
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