The Dodgers threw starter John Ely out there on this game, and in the first inning, he looked quite good. That was about it, though. I was actually ready to write a Dodger fan I know and praise Ely. Then he wasn’t nearly as good after the first inning. :)
The Rangers first run came in the second after David Murphy doubled in Nelson Cruz.
We put up a three spot in the third when Ian Kinsler doubled, Elvis Andrus reached on a fielding error, and then Josh Hamilton popped his first home run of the spring. A huge shot that went over the right field bullpen. Looked pretty big on TV, that’s for sure!
We added our final run in the in seventh when we had a single, walk, single group of guys.
Our pitching was “eh”. Feliz started the game on a day when we got the latest flip/flop about closer/starter with him. He went four innings, gave up three hits and a run and a walk. Not bad. Eric Hurley wasn’t too bad, either. He also went four innings, giving up four hits and a run (no walks). However, we tried to give it back with the guy we ran out in the 9th, Miguel De Los Santos. He only went one inning, but gave up the Dodgers 3rd & 4th runs in the 9th inning. He got out of it, but was pretty wobbly looking, despite his line not being THAT awful on pure numbers.
De Los Santos was sent to the minor league camp after that.
ST16: Rangers lose to Giants, 11-8
I missed 100% of this game, and I’m pressed for time today, so I’m not going to be commenting on this one. Except, Hi Randy. I know you’ll say something. :)
ST15: Rangers take down White Sox, 4-1
I watched this full game Saturday afternoon, even scored it with my new scoring software. Managed to keep track of all the goofball substitutions, too. All but the last one. The White Sox did me a favor, and didn’t substitute anyone (except pitchers) until the ninth inning, when they pinch ran for one guy. The sub was one of the “who is that” guys, so I ignored that substitution. Rangers didn’t go the same way, it was the usual spring training mess. But I managed to keep on top of it.
This was also the first TV broadcast by John Rhadigan, who is replacing Josh Lewin as the TV play by play guy. My review of his first outing is that he was nervous, but didn’t make any major gaffes. The only possible downside I see is that Rhadigan might be too much like Lewin’s predecessor, Bill Jones. I liked Bill Jones too, but Jones was a lot like Tom Grieve, and when Grieve is parterened with someone who is like him, it doesn’t get as much out of Tom. Josh was so “out there”, he got a lot of stuff out of Tom that we probably wouldn’t have heard of anywise. It’s unfair to John to label him Bill Jones II this early on, but I don’t see Rhadigan being as “out there” as Josh was, so hopefully he can find a way to get a lot out of Tom, too.
Finally, I was disappointed we got IMMEDIATELY into the food in the booth stuff in the first game. I really REALLY was hoping that would have gone out the door with Josh.
Game wise, Matt Harrison looked awesome. He made the big guys in the Chicago lineup (mostly Adam Dunn) look silly. Which is big. Matt is one of the guys who needs to ramp it up this year. Time for him to get it going and pitch the way he should be. This was a good sign, although the team was mostly made up of lesser players (Chicago did what we did to them a few days previous). Still, it’s hard to argue with Matt’s line. 4IP, 2H, 0R, 0BB, 4K. He looked good.
So did the other guys who followed him. Mason Tobin, Pedro Strop, Tucker, & McClung. The only Ranger pitcher to give up a run was Cody Eppley, who gave up the lone Sox mark on the scoreboard.
Offensively, we had two outbursts that accounted for all of our runs. Andres Blanco tripled down the right field line, scoring two. That was in the second. In the fourth, Doug Deeds (who is having a nice spring) singled, scoring the other two. That was it for the scoring, we were done in the fourth.
But it was nice to have Rangers baseball back on TV. Be nice in about a week and a half once the wholesale changes stop. Makes it a lot easier to score. :)
ST14: Rangers get first tie of spring, 5-5 to Reds
It wasn’t quite Bud Selig sitting in the stands in Milwaukee, but the Rangers & Reds played to a 5-5 tie on Friday. Heard on Saturday that the umpires won’t go extra innings at all? That was new to me. But ties in spring training aren’t too uncommon, just not a regular occurrence.
The Rangers ran just three pitchers out there this game. Colby Lewis started and went four. Michael Kirkman followed, went four as well. The final pitcher was Tateyama, on a day where his homeland was devastated. Lewis gave up two earned runs (three overall), and Kirkman gave up just one run – it too was unearned. Tateyama also gave up a run, so they all had something on their line. Kirkman was the best, though – just two hits and no walks over four innings with six punchouts. A lot of people have him as a dark horse for biggest pitching surprise in 2011. His overall line this spring has been quite good, I could see it. But I’m not the best prognosticator with young guys like that. :)
This game was more a power game than usual. The entire lineup had ten hits. Six of them were extra base hits. There were four doubles (Kinsler, Torrealba, Moreland, & Gentry). Kinsler also followed up with a two run home run, and the final one was by a guy I’d never heard of for us – Michael Olt. That one tied the game in the bottom of the ninth.
But that was it. Didn’t go any further, the game stopped there. 5-5 tie. Not a lot to say either, I missed this game totally.
ST13: Rangers lose close one to White Sox, 7-6
In a game where the White Sox came to Surprise, bringing mostly backups and minor leaguers to play, we lost to them anyway. Although, it wasn’t due to the fault of new staff ace, CJ Wilson.
Wilson started the game, and went four, as we’re now starting to stretch out a little more. Gave up just three hits and a walk. One run, punched out three. Nice outing. 59 pitches, which for four innings is right at average. So it was a good outing.
Unfortunately, the guys who followed him can’t say the same. The first reliever was Dave Bush, who I don’t think will make the club, but my gut feeling can’t quite rule it out, either. He wasn’t nearly as good. Went three innings, six hits, two walks, three runs. Did punch out three, but threw a bazillion pitches. OK, not quite that many, but he did throw SEVENTY over three innings. I’d call that laboring for sure.
Yancy Brazoban did have a scoreless frame before giving it up to Mark Lowe, who blew the save, giving up the final three runs on three hits and a walk. Bla.
Still, the pitcher of this group that probably will see the most action is CJ Wilson, and he was fine, so I have to rely on that for the good pitching thing to take from this game.
Offensively, this was a no power attack. Everything was a single except one double by Mike Napoli. Kevin Cash & Elvis Andrus had two hits – everyone else had just the one. Just well put together coupled with the four walks overall. Nothing terribly sexy to write about this one reading from the box score. :)
Bah. We lost. That’s about it for this one. Except for Craig Gentry’s impression of Rodney McCray. Not exactly funny, but that’s all I could think of when I read about that one.
ST12: Rangers roll over A’s on Wednesday, 9-2
Dallas Braden is a guy I liked last year. Yeah, he pitched for the A’s, but that team has a lot of young pitching that’s quite good. QUITE good. Braden was one of them. I’ve drafted Braden (along with Trevor Cahill) on a few of my fantasy leagues. However, this game, Braden was NOT a guy I wanted to draft.
His line was pretty bad. In his 2.2 innings of work, he gave up six hits and a walk. Five runs, three earned. 59 pitches – yeah, not good. The Rangers teed off on him. I still think he’s a good pitcher – even the best guys have the occasional bad outing. Not that Braden’s “the best”, but it’s not uncommon when the date in March is a single digit.
Our old pal Brandon McCarthy threw against us, and had the best outing of any of the A’s pitchers this day. He too went three innings, gave up four hits and a run with no walks. A lot of pitches though (54). Still, his bottom line was better than any other Oakland pitcher. Oh, and Blevins gave up three late in his one inning of work.
None of that compared to Texas pitching. Derek Holland started, and nailed it – he had a great performance. He too went three innings, but gave up just two hits. That’s it. No runs, no walks, and punched out four. Only 37 pitches, so he was fairly efficient too. Gotta love that. In a spring where so much was made (at least nationally) about us not having Cliff Lee, several of our guys (Holland, Matt Harrison for starters) are having really good springs. It’d be nice if this is real, and not just a mirage, as it’s time (get it – last year’s slogan – ha) for these guys to be what they can be. “They’re just young guys” isn’t going to cut it anymore.
Offensively, we had a lot of things going on, but not a ton of power. Of the 14 hits overall, three doubles (Young, Torrealba, & Chavez) and a home run (Napoli) were it. Four of the guys had two hits, and the rest were scattered all over the lineup. Even three of the late inning subs got in on the fun, too.
But for me, the best thing of this game was Derek Holland. Man do I hope this is real and not just a spring training mirage. There even was a separate article on mlb.com about Holland and his spring. Check that out, too.
ST11: Rangers lose close one to Angels, 2-1
I didn’t see or hear any of this game, as I was somewhat sick last night. However, the recaps I read and all that show a very strong pitching performance turned in by the Rangers.’
Eric Hurley started this game, went three innings, and gave up no runs and no hits. Walked two, but that was it. Seth McClung & Brett Tomko also tossed no run outings. Cody Eppley gave up an unearned run, and the other run was given up by Ryan Tucker. Combined, the staff only gave up two runs (one earned), and four hits overall. Very strong performance.
Problem was that the Angels staff was just a tad better. They only allowed one Ranger run, if we had double the hits the Angels did.
Still, one doesn’t mind 2-1 losses, although too many of them, and it can get aggravating. :)
We’re now 6-5 in the spring.
ST10: Rangers lose to Giants, 4-1
While the score wasn’t outrageous, it felt like October again. Lost to the Giants, 4-1.
I’m skipping writing a lot about this game as I’ve been feeling sick the last day or so, and saw very little of this (the TV broadcast for the Giants was available on mlb.tv as a freebie).
Tommy Hunter was rocked in the fifth – he gave up all four runs the Giants got all in the same inning. Pat Burrell’s two run shot was the big driving force there.
The Rangers offense was mostly not there – just six hits total. Two by Chris Davis (both doubles), who continues to play well. In fact, three of the six hits were doubles (Torrealba had the other one). Yorvit also had the lone Rangers RBI.
Former Ranger Casey Daigle pitched in this one for San Francisco.
ST9: Rangers bomb Brewers, 8-1 on Sunday
The Rangers got out to a lead on Sunday, and never looked back. Wasn’t a big lead early on (just 1-0 after one), but we never lost that lead after that. Was 2-0 after 3, 5-1 after 4, 6-1 after six, and 8-1 after eight. So the lead pretty consistently rose.
A large part of that was Matt Harrison who looked (well, sounded) quite good on the mound Sunday. He only pitched three innings, but from the sounds of it, he could have gone a lot more. Overall, it was 3IP, with 1 hit, 1 walk, and 36 pitches to 11 batters. Pretty decent line. If he can keep that up, it’ll be a good shot and making – AND HOLDING a slot in the rotation. He’s one of those guys who needs to get it together now, the years of being a young pitcher are past, he needs to get the job done, or he’ll fade pretty quickly from attention.
Tateyama followed, and gave up the run the Brewers did get. Three hits, and it could have been worse, had it not been for some nice D behind Tateyama. Yancy Brazoban did the best tightwalk rope impression. He walked the bases loaded, then didn’t allow anything to score. Bit surprised by that. The other bullpen appearances all went one inning, didn’t allow any runs, but all allowed at least one hit, except for Cody Eppley, who was perfect in his inning of work.
Offensively, we had 15 hits in all. Two doubles (Hamilton & German), two triples (Young and Hamilton), and a home run (Chris Davis). In fact, Chris Davis sounded extremely good. His line bears that out. 3-4 with a run scored, and three RBI’s.
Crush wasn’t the only one with 3 hits this game. Josh Hamilton & Michael Young also had three hits apiece. Young actually did crush one better in the RBI department. He had four. Between Davis (3) and Young (4), that accounted for 7 of the 8 runs the Rangers got right there. Listening on the radio, it just clicked. The offense sounded good. The pitching (well, most of it) was good too. Good game in general!
I even managed to make it all the way through scoring the game util they started changing like 6 and 7 guys in the lineup all at the same time. :)
ST8: Rangers lose walkoff game to D’Backs, 3-2
I listened to this game on the radio all the way through. That’s the first time that’s happened this spring so far. Most of the games have happened when other “real world” stuff was happening for me. This time I sat down to score the game – which is a challenge on the radio during the spring. But I tried anyway. Ran into a problem with my new scoring software, and had to stop, but I still listened to the game.
Despite being in it until the end of the game when we lost in a walkoff, the Rangers didn’t have much offense to speak of. We did have some power, but not much of it. Here’s the total Rangers offense:
Double by Esteban German
Solo home run by Ian Kinsler
Solo home run by Mitch Moreland
Single by Elvis Andrus
Walk to Mitch Moreland
That’s it. In fact, the home runs were the only runs we got. One in the first, one in the third. In fact, the Diamondbacks got their single runs in the first & third as well. Problem is they had one in the bottom of the ninth, too. Bah.
Colby Lewis was all over the place. Pitched three innings, allowed three walks and four hits. His first and third innings were wild. His middle inning went quite well, but it was sandwiched around a couple of teeter totter innings. They didn’t quite fall down and stink up the joint, but it was wobbly enough to let a few runs across.
Michael Kirkman however, was really quite good. His three innings had just two hits and a walk, with no runs allowed. Sounded good on the radio.
Despite the loss, it was a pretty well pitched game, outside of two innings.