0-16 with men on base, and 0-7 with men in scoring position. That’s pretty ugly. No wonder we can’t score. We can set up good, but we can’t deliver.
That’s pretty much the whole story. In fact, our only run came on a Nelson Cruz solo home run. That’s it. Scott Baker was quite good. Eight innings, six hits, just the one solo home run, and eight strikeouts. A pretty good performance.
Scott Feldman wasn’t as good as that, but he wasn’t bad. Six innings, five hits, three earned runs on five strikeouts. He deserved better. Sigh.
Feeling flat. Meh.
(This is a short commentary, as I only have a couple of minutes to update before vacation bible school starts at church shortly).
G88: Padilla blows this one, Rangers lose 5-3
Well, that was annoying. The only reason I’m writing was because I took the annoyed two line sentence stance I do for two of the last three games before the All-Star break.
The game started off pretty good, with a Josh Hamilton home run right over the wedgie that would have made the right field foul pole in Fenway Park proud of the “ball curve” path it took. Went most of the way up the stairs there, too – a pretty nice poke. In fact, Josh did pretty well overall in the game. He went 3-3 with 3 RBI’s and a run scored.
He was, however, the only Ranger with more than one hit. He was also the only Ranger who got anything other than a single. He was the only Ranger who got any RBI’s at all – Josh drove in all three.
However, it wasn’t enough as Vicente Pidente was rather hittable. He did stay out there a long time – seven innings. But in that time, he gave up eleven hits. I suppose the only thing that kept it from being worse was the fact that he didn’t walk anyone. The big blow was a three run home run by Jason Kubel in the third. Which actually was the close of the scoring. Neither team scored any more after the top of the third inning.
Pidente settled down, and put up zeroes during innings four through seven. But the damage was done.
Further damage was done when you look at the scoreboard and see that Seattle and Oakland won. Fortunately, Oakland was playing Anaheim, and the A’s won, so we didn’t lose any ground on first place, but it tightened up a bit below us.
AL wins again over NL by score of 4-3
I’m not going to say much, as I’m pressed for time, and I want to write this before I forget.
Well, the AL won again. No major shock there. It seems to happen all the time.
I really enjoyed the Presidential video before the game. I didn’t think I would given the subject (real life people), but I ended up enjoying it.
Nelson Cruz didn’t play in the game, but he had his moment the night before in the Home Run Derby.
Michael Young made a play in the field that looked like he’d been playing third for 10 years.
Josh Hamilton went 1-3 with an RBI. Michael Young also went 1-3.
Neither had any major impact on the game, except for perhaps Young’s play, which I think saved a run at the time.
Nelson Cruz and the Home Run Derby
When it was announced that Nelson “Sail Around the World” Cruz was going to be in the 2009 Home Run Derby, I don’t think anyone expected much out of him. I mean look at who he was playing against. Ryan Howard, Albert Freakin’ Pujols, Prince Fielder. Not that Nelson Cruz is a slouch – he’s having a great power season. But come on, he’s not Ryan Howard or Albert Pujols. I think just about everyone EXPECTED Pujols to win the thing before it started.
Nelson came out, and showed some power in the first round. He tied Prince Fielder for most in the first round with eleven home runs. He also seemed to love the “Big Mac Land” sign in left field. First, he hit the thing, making a quite audible bang. A few later, he hit a ball right over the sign, and then the next swing after that one he hit it WAY above the sign, up into the fourth and upper deck. Quite a titanic shot. They only said it went 440 ft, but it looked a heck of a lot longer than that!
He had some that were quite impressive, and I enjoyed seeing Cruz perform. Obviously because I’m a Rangers fan I liked that, but I think I would have enjoyed that performance had I not known him ahead of time.
In round two, Nelson only had five home runs, but it was enough to give him second place after the second round, putting him in the finals against Prince Fielder. Nelson seemed a little out of gas, although when he did connect, it was good. Check out this chart of where all his hit balls went:
There’s a video montage of Cruz’s home runs via this link over at mlb.com. Stupidly, they don’t allow you to embed video remotely, or I’d do that. Anyway, the ball that hit the Big Mac sign was his second home run. The one that went over the Big Mac sign was the eighth home run (roughly 1:34 into the video clip), and then the titanic shot was right after that at time mark 1:39.
Again, I liked seeing him get as far as he did, and I don’t think there’s anything bad with him second. Was a nice showing for him on the national stage.
Now that’s the nice-y stuff. Here’s the complaints…
1) TOO FREAKIN’ LONG! – Nelson Cruz didn’t come up to bat until the show was already about twenty minutes long. They had this silly thing first where someone came out, and pointed where he wanted Albert Pujols to hit a home run – and he tried. Twice. Didn’t get it. Pujols took like a dozen balls before he swung it seemed. Wow. I don’t really have a problem with this in theory, but given the problems this event has with being peceived as too long… Waiting 20 minutes to actually start is stupid. Perhaps this could have been after it was over, or inbetween rounds 1 and 2 or something like that? Come on.
2) TIME SLOT – This is more a TiVo/DVR thing, but.. Does anyone believe it will stay within it’s time slot of two hours? Come on – this hasn’t ended in under two hours in like, ever… Even before it started, I padded it by an hour, and you know what? It didn’t even fit. My TiVo recording ran out (to record something else at 10PM) when Fielder was batting in the final round. Fortunately, I immediately flipped over to my iPod touch and the MLB At Bat app, which was showing the derby live streamed. I was able to see the end of it that way, but when the Derby doesn’t fit within a three hour allotment of time (one of which was a grant from me), that’s just STUPID. If I remember right, they finished the first round just a few minutes before the two hour mark. Good lord, that’s nuts.
3) Chris Berman: I know a lot of people dislike Chris Berman. I like him a lot – but for football. I’ve never been a fan of his baseball commentating. Even saying that, I’ve always kind of liked him in the HR derby. But not anymore. I think it’s time for a change – his shtick needs to go. I think they should put someone else in there. But NOT Joe Morgan. I could do another entry on why he needs to be replaced, too. ESPN has enough guys on their roster, they could stick someone else in there. Put John Kruk there, we could see the Randy Johnson / John Kruk footage every year. :)
4) Talking over at bats: I believe it was Joe Mauer this year, but it seems there’s always a player that is up at bat, and the announcers are busy talking to some baseball player or exec or something during that player’s Derby atbat. But they don’t talk about the guy at the plate – they’re talking about anything BUT him. While I’m not a Twins or Joe Mauer fan, if I was one, I’d be pissed they weren’t talking about my guy, and talking about anything else. That kind of stuff should be between rounds, not DURING them. Shut up! What would be nice would be using the alternate language feed TV stations almost never use to let me hear what’s going on in the stadium, but shut off the announcers.
I’m undecided about ESPN’s home run tracker thing. The “put a trail on the ball” as it flies out of the park. I kind of thought that the NHL tried that some years ago with “Superpuck“, and it went away when the real fans started a revolt over the idea. I expect the same thing will happen here. If they try bringing it in on their regular coverage, I might have to have a stronger reaction.
On the positive side, I am so glad they stopped having some sideline reporter accost the player when they come out of the box. They always asked them stupid questions like “What did it feel like when you hit home run #4?” I mean come on – who cares? That was auto skip stuff on the TiVo. At least it’s gone – last night they just sent a kid with Gatorade and a towel, which is what it should be.
Overall, I think the derby is fine. I know a lot of people rag on it, but I think it’s just minor tweaks and it can be OK. Does anyone remember the last home run derby that wasn’t led by Chris Berman?
And for a laugh, check out this link, which is a drinking game based on the 2009 Home Run Derby. Made me chuckle for sure.
G87: Rangers drop series with a 5-3 stinkbomb loss.
Well, that was annoying. I didn’t think games 1 & 3 would be topped for annoying losses.
I was wrong.
G86: Rangers & Millwood lose annoyingly to Seattle, 4-1
Darnit. This was the same way we lost the first game in the series, more or less.
Here’s the bottom line. Kevin Millwood was great through six. Stunk up the joint worse than any pitcher the Rangers have ever had in the seventh. Lost the game, 4-1.
Made me mad.
That’s pretty much it.
G85: Rangers homer their way to 6-4 win in Seattle
This is good old classic Texas Rangers baseball. Much has been made of the 2009 edition being built on the classic baseball axiom of “pitching and defense”. That much is true, our pitching and defense is improved this year. But Friday night’s win was pretty much the old fashioned way of doing it. We homered our way to the win.
It’s ironic that we win where 100% of our runs were accounted for by home runs on the day that Nelson Cruz was added to the All-Star roster (replacing injured Torii Hunter), and the night we heard that Cruz was going to participate in the home run derby.
It got started in the second inning when Hank Blalock hit a ball way out over the right center field fence. You kind of saw Ichiro making a half hearted jog in the general direction, so you knew it was gone before the ball was seen on TV.
The next inning was a three run shot by Michael Young. This was an opposite field job, which Ichiro came within inches of making a spectacular steal of the home run ball, but it landed a mere inches past his glove. This home run gave us the lead back – we were down 2-1 at that point. Nice for Young to get some numbers going again. He’s got 106 hits at the moment just slightly past the halfway point. As long as he stays on the field, 200 shouldn’t be a problem again.
The third and final home run was by Nelson Cruz. It was a titanic shot into the upper tank in left field. It was WAY up there – you don’t normally see home runs hit up there. Perhaps Seattle fans do as they see more games in that park than we do, but I can only recall a shot by Arod going up there awhile back. But it was an absolute no doubter of a shot, even Nelson stood there and watched for a bit.
Scott Feldman started the game, and had a pretty good outing. Six and two thirds innings giving up seven hits, one walk, and just two earned runs. Not a bad outing. Derek Holland followed up on him, and technically allowed two earned runs, but htey scored on a hit off of Jason Jennings. Shame.
Frank Francisco came in and pitched a scoreless inning of relief to get his fifteenth save of the season.
Overall, a nice win. Hopefully we can win out in Seattle and go into the break on a strong note. We remain a half game ahead of Anaheim for the division lead, and Seattle is now 4.5 games back.
G84: Rangers lose game rather annoyingly; 3-1 to Mariners
Tommy Hunter got screwed. He pitched six innings, allowing just four hits. No runs, three walks. 104 pitches. He was quite good. He matched Felix Hernandez very well. Felix went eight innings, three hits one run.
It was a spectacular pitching matchup. In fact, the one run we only had was on a wild pitch after a double steal. Definitely a manufactured gift run. The only three hits we got were all singles. Two of them were by Hank Blalock, and the other was Michael Young. That’s it. That was the sum of our offense.
So to come out of that in the late innings with a 1-0 lead was quite impressive. The fact that we could win the game with so little offense was quite surprising.
So the three run home run that CJ Wilson gave up in the bottom of the eighth was particularly annoying. When the ball was hit, all I could think of was “Shit!”. That’s pretty much my one word review of this game.
SHIT.
G83: Andruw Jones homers 3 times on way to 8-1 win
Well, this game was really about one thing. Well, two.
The most important one was the fact that the Rangers took over sole possession of first place again. This win was a big deal, as we went into Anaheim not solely in first place, and left with sole possession of first. That’s a big deal.
However, the sexier thing was the fact that Andruw Jones had a three home run night. He had one in the first, one in the third, and one in the fifth. Only four RBI’s though – two of them were solo home runs. Those weren’t the only home runs, though. Two other Rangers had them – Taylor Teagarden & Marlon Byrd. So this was a big power game. Nice that it was us with the power instead of the other way around. We also had a couple of doubles, so seven of the 12 hits were extra base ones. That’s a nice display, for sure.
Josh Hamilton & Elvis Andrus took ofers, but everyone else had at least one hit. Three guys had two, so it was nice offensive display to leave in the mind of the Angels as we left town with the lead.
Vicente Padilla had a good outing. Six innings, and just one earned run. A few too many hits (eight), but it didn’t damage his line. Six innings of one run ball is always a good thing. Jason Grilli, Eddie Guardado, & Darren O’Day came within one walk (Grilli) of throwing three perfect innings of relief. Something really nice.
Speaking of Darren O’Day, I was hearing some love for that pickup on XM Radio’s MLB talk channel this afternoon, so that’s nice to hear.
Boy, was this nice to come out of Anaheim the way we did.
G82: Rangers back in first with 8-5 win over Anaheim
Again, I refuse to call them the Los Angeles Angels. They’re in Anaheim. Sorry Moreno.
I think pretty much everyone figured that John Lackey was going to last more than two pitches, and he’d be the good pitcher he really is. Last night was certainly the chase there. At least for awhile. Through the first four and two thirds, Lackey was putting up zeroes. We had a few chances, but he always danced his way out of trouble. Then came the fifth inning.
Elvis Andrus tried bunting for a single, but hit it poorly, it went straight towards the pitcher, so he was thrown out. After that, Ian Kinsler struck out swinging. Looked like another Lackey style inning. Then, as Josh Lewin said, the wheels came completely off. Seven straight Rangers reached base. After two outs! Here’s a rundown:
- Single by Michael Young
- Single by Josh Hamilton
- Home Run by Andruw Jones (on a two strike count, if I remember right)
- Double by Hank Blalock
- Walk by Marlon Byrd
- Walk by David Murphy
- Wild Pitch, scoring Blalock
- Single by Saltamaccha, scoring Byrd & Murphy
After that, John Lackey was pulled from the game. He was relieved by Mark Bulger who stopped the bleeding in that inning. That was a six run outburst, all after two outs in that inning. Most impressive.
Overall, our offense managed fourteen hits. Only one guy took an ofer, that being David Murphy. But even David managed a walk, and scored, too.
Pitching for us was led by Dustin Nippert, who looked quite different with that beard. Also, he appeared to be wearing a rather thick necklace, which may have been new. The reason I think that is that he had a big tag of some sort on his left shoulder. It was either from his uniform, or the necklace. It was gone after the first inning. :) Anyway, Nippert was making his 2009 debut, and wasn’t terribly great. He didn’t survive the fourth inning. Gave up seven hits and a walk for three runs overall. The run output wasn’t horrible, but seven hits in less than four innings is not. He was “meh”. I’ve seen worse lines, but was really far away from even “just good”.
That forced our pen into action early. Derek Holland threw two innings of relief, and allowed just a single hit. He also allowed a run, but it was unearned. In what would have been his final batter, Saltamacchia dropped an easy popup in front of the plate. Holland was relieved, and Jason Jennings had some issues getting guys out (he walked two more, loading the bases before getting out of it). Anyway, Holland was quite good. Two innings, 19 pitches, no runs. The rest of the pen only allowed a single run, and that was from Frank Francisco, who gave up a solo home run in the bottom of the ninth. While Jennings didn’t allow any runs, he had some major control problems, and probably should have had a few runs on his book the way he pitched. Darren O’Day & CJ Wilson looked good, too.
The first game of the formal second half of the season put us back into a tie for first place with Anaheim.
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
- 11
- …
- 22
- Next Page »