We just can’t break out the brooms. Thought we had it in hand, but the Royals came back and beat us like we beat them the previous two games, although with not as many runs on the scoreboard. :)
It started off with the major league debut of Eric Hurley for the Rangers. Eric sounded like he was pretty decent. He got burnt by a few home run balls – all four runs Eric gave up were to the longball. For a major league debut, going six, giving up four on six hits and three strikeouts – but more importantly, no walks! All in all, I’d say it was a pretty good start. Assuming he stays in rotation, and isn’t sent back out again, his next opponent will likely be the Atlanta Braves back home, a slightly better hitting team than the Royals. Let’s see what happened.
Offensively, we were held to just seven hits, but they were efficient, as we pushed across five runs on them. KC didn’t help much, giving up just one walk all day. Michael Young took another ofer for the second game in a row, dropping his average below 300 again (to .299). Josh Hamilton was the only Ranger with more than one hit (two doubles), the other five were scattered, although two of them were back to back home runs by German Duran (three run) & Ian Kinsler (solo).
The game was lost by Frank Francisco, who gave up the tying and winning runs in the bottom of the eighth, losing it for Hurley. Oh well. On to Shea Stadium and the Mets.
G67: Rangers win 11-5 behind big seven spot in seventh
Through six innings, this game felt a lot like the game that preceded it. Rangers starter wasn’t exactly bad, but his line was not great at the end. Vicente Padilla was the 2007 version of himself. Not bad, but not really that good. His final line was six innings, seven hits, three walks, five runs (four earned). Meh. He was victimized most by Mark Grudzajklwslfkkzb (har) who had a double, and a two run home run, and four RBI’s in all. The Royals picked away with small amounts of runs (two in the third, one in the fifth, two in the sixth) until we were down 5-1 going into the seventh.
Kyle Davies started for Kansas City, and pitched like Gil Meche did the game before, pretty darned well. Davies allowed just a single run over his six innings pitched. He did walk a lot – five, to go with six hits. But he got outs when they counted. Then we got to the Kansas City bullpen.
Then we got to the seventh where it seemed Kansas City just couldn’t get anyone out. To save time, I’ll post the play by play from the game. It pretty much tells the story, but I’d be remiss in mentioning the big blast – a grand slam by David Murphy, his first ever career slam. Came off a lefty, too.
Rangers 7th (Rangers 8, Royals 5) — Pitcher Change: J. Fulchino replaces K. Davies. R. Vazquez triples to center field. I. Kinsler reaches on throwing error by M. Aviles, R. Vazquez scores; I. Kinsler to 2nd. M. Young walks. Pitcher Change: J. Gobble replaces J. Fulchino. J. Hamilton singles to center field, I. Kinsler scores; M. Young to 2nd. M. Bradley walks, M. Young to 3rd; J. Hamilton to 2nd. D. Murphy hits a grand slam to right field on a 2-0 pitch, M. Young scores; J. Hamilton scores; M. Bradley scores. M. Byrd doubles to center field. Pitcher Change: Y. Yabuta replaces J. Gobble. F. Catalanotto out on a sacrifice bunt, Y. Yabuta to M. Teahen, M. Byrd to 3rd. G. Laird out on a sacrifice fly to J. Gathright, M. Byrd scores. R. Vazquez grounds out to M. Teahen. (7 Runs, 4 Hits, 1 Errors, 0 LOB)
There was some SERIOUS booing coming from the stands in Kansas City over this inning. We tacked on some more in the ninth with the second home run by David Murphy in the game (a solo shot). We got two more on some more singles. It was a pretty good offense this night. Yeah, it’s Kansas City, but you always like seeing more runs than less.
I also take responsibility for ending Michael Young’s hitting streak. I posted that graphic yesterday of Gabe Kapler’s 28 game hitting streak from some years ago, and then Young’s stopped at 23. :)
Michael Young & Gabe Kapler
OK, Michael Young is at 22. I wonder how much longer until the Dallas Morning News creates this series of graphics. You guys remember this?
Funny thing about that graphic is that when the DMN was doing that, they pre-made the graphics up to like 32 or something like that, and they were all just sitting on their server. If you found out the actual URL for the file, you could manually see the ones beyond 28. Was amusing to me at the time to see how far they thought the streak would go. :)
G66: Back to .500 AGAIN with 5-4 comeback in Kansas City
This was one of those games where you had a sinking feeling as it progressed. There wasn’t any one incident where you go “AHA! – That’s the problem!”. It was one of those where Kevin Millwood was not terribly sharp. He wasn’t a complete pile of suck, but he wasn’t the good Millwood we’ve had this year. The Royals were picking away at Kevin over the game. KC got single runs in the first (Guillen single), fourth (Buck single), and fifth innings (Gordon home run). We countered with a run in the top of the sixth (Hamilton FC), but KC got a two spot in the bottom of the frame (Aviles single, Gathright single), killing any good vibes from the top of the inning.
So we go into the down 5-1, and to be honest, I almost turned off the game. My family went out to a nice dinner at a restaurant downtown with our church group, and by the time we got back, got our girl down to bed, it was late, and I was in a post Mexican food coma in the first place. Good thing I didn’t give in to that, because the top of the eighth was a great inning to be a Rangers fan. It started out like no big deal, with two quick outs (Vazquez groundout, Kinsler fly out). But the the fun began. Michael Young walked, and then the huge break of the game, Josh Hamilton reached base on a fielding error by Mark Teahan at first. It should have ended the inning, but it was allowed to continue. That was the floodgate key we needed, because it was immediately followed by first a pitching change (to Brett Tomko), and then:
Double by Milton Bradley, scoring Young and Hamilton
Single by David Murphy, scoring Bradley
Pitching Change (to Yabuta)
Single by Gerald Laird
Single by Chris Shelton, scoring Murphy
That tied up the game at five, and it was quite a moment. You kind of wanted to take the lead then, especially as there was a walk after Shelton’s single before the final out was made. The momentum was going, and you wanted to take the lead right then. But we didn’t.
We did in the ninth. It was funny, Josh Lewin & Victor Rojas were talking about how the Royals reliever Ramon Ramirez has a habit of uncorking wild pitches. Turns out he was let down by John Buck who had a passed ball, allowing Ian Kinsler to score the winning run, setting off a celebration by Milton Bradley on the base paths that might be one of the most excited things I’ve seen a player do on the field, outside of winning a championship or in one of those walk-off mob scenes.
I did manage to see all this, and didn’t succumb to the Tex-Mex coma I was dangerously close to falling into. :)
I’d be remiss if I didn’t say something about the new giant scoreboard in center field. I mean, this thing was bloody massive! Check out this picture I saw over at the Royals site in the section they have about their overall ballpark renovation:

I mean it’s friggin HUGE! They didn’t even have the crown topper on it – there was a shot of the crown lying in disgust in the dirt out back. But even without that, it’s gigantic! I read a bit about it, and I believe it beats the previous record holders for scoreboard size (UT Austin, San Francisco, & Atlanta). All these giant boards are really making the little tiny thing in our ballpark look like a joke. We need a REAL scoreboard, Chuck. I know it’s not up to you, but we need something that doesn’t make it look like we have a tiny little old black and white 10 inch TV set in comparison. The problem with our park is even if you did have a scoreboard that huge, where would you put it? Can’t put it where the current board is. You’d have to do something like Cleveland did, but we’d have to rip out say Sections 301-306 or so in the ballpark. Not that anyone sits up there except for opening day anyway.
Come on Nolan. Push Hicks into it!
Luis Mendoza
- P Luis Mendoza activated from the 15 day DL and optioned to AAA
G65: Rangers get win in series finale, 6-3
Well, this game had a few rather entertaining moments, both of them involving Rays players. One was the pitcher and catcher arguing on the mound after a home run ball by German Duran. Then we saw footage of the two of them continuing to argue in the dugout, eventually going down the walkway, followed by half a dozen players and coaches. We didn’t see THAT, but one has to assume there was some sort of altercation. Matt Garza (the pitcher) did not return for the next inning. His numbers weren’t all that bad, really (4IP, 6H, 3ER, 2HR), so I have to assume he was taken out due to his actions outside the lines. The second entertaining moment was Eric Hinske being ejected in the sixth inning. The final one was Rangers Captain catching a foul ball. Rather enjoyed that.
This game was also monumental in that it’s the game I finally got my three year old to understand that a “Home Run” was not when someone was running. She used to think a home run was when anyone started running. But I convinced her today that Home Run was when someone hit the ball with a bat over the fence, and then they got to run – that was a Home Run. Enjoyed that parental moment a lot. :)
Michael Young and Josh Hamilton were out of the game for rest, mostly. With tomorrow off, it’s not a surprise that you rest guys on the last day before a scheduled day off. To pick up the slack, we recalled German Duran from AAA so that we could stop with the oddball scenarios that ended up with Gerald Laird playing third. Duran playing third allowed Vazquez to sub for Michael Young, who was ailing.
The offense didn’t suffer a whole lot with two of our top three producers out. David Murphy got it started with a home run in the first inning, pulled right over the wedgie in right field. It stayed that way until the fourth inning, when German Duran jacked a two run home run just to the left of the 400 sign in dead center field, promoting the fracas with Matt Garza. We tacked on another run in the fifth on a couple of walks and a single. A couple more singles came in the seventh (single, steal, single), and the eighth on another home run by Ramon Vazquez.
On the Rangers pitching side, Doug Mathis started for the Rangers. After a wobbly first inning where he still put up a zero, Doug got a lot better. In all, Doug went 5.1 innings, giving up just two runs (both towards the end of his time on the hill), both on a home run to BJ Upton. If it wasn’t for THAT, he would have had a donut up there. But donuts are what the pen put up after him. Frank Francisco, Eddie Guardado, & CJ Wilson followed up and combined for 3.2 innings of shutout ball. Probably the reasons for the shutout were that none of the uniform numbers were 45 or 53.
Anyway, it was nice to get a win to end the series and the homestand. It’s weird, as the Rays are a team we can’t seem to beat. Been a series winning for every series since late April except for the two against Tampa Bay.
We head on the road against Kansas City, who isn’t that great overall, but has Jose Guillen going about as a hot as Milton Bradley right now. Then it’s interleague action for the rest of the month, as we have series against the Mets, Braves, Nationals, Astros, & Phillies before we see the AL again on the final day of the month, in Yankee Stadium.
God Bless Tom Grieve
There was a nice article in the Dallas Morning News in Saturday’s paper about Tom Grieve, his career, and his forthcoming cancer surgery. Unfortunately, I cannot find a link to it online. If you know where it is, please post a link to it in the comments. As his surgery is in the next couple of days, I’d like to lift up a prayer for Tom. I don’t know how to contact him personally, so I will have to use this site as my vehicle for prayer.
Dear God, our father in Heaven, I’d like to lift up Tom Grieve to you. His surgery for cancer is this week, and you are a God of healing. You are a God that can do anything. I pray that you will be in the hearts, minds, and hands of the Doctors who will be performing the surgery on Tom. I pray that your will be done during the surgery, and that your mighty hand will be with Tom, and that any cancerous cells be removed from his body, never to return again. Tom has brought so much joy to so many through his body of work with the Texas Rangers baseball team that I pray that the love and joy that is your nature be with Tom’s family at this difficult time. I pray that his recovery be speedy and swift and that Tom is able to return to the life and the place that you have put him in for the enjoyment of all of the fans of the Texas Rangers baseball club. I pray all this in your son’s name, Jesus Christ our saviour. Amen.
Tom, I’m hoping you will see this before your surgery – I know you’re a busy man, and know that I will be in prayer for your recovery from the surgery this week.
G64: Rangers drop close one to Rays, 5-4
I was at this game, and despite the heat out there, I was quite comfortable. I was sitting in Section 326, and there was quite an nice breeze going. After third inning, I actually moved UP, and ended up sitting in the absolute last row – there was almost nobody up there, and it was quite nice – very breezy up there. Enjoyed that. One other comment about the ballpark. I don’t like that the Rangers have cut the number of ushers in the sections over the last 5-6 years. When my wife and I first got our season tickets in 1997, there was an usher for every section. You never had to worry about coverage. Not anymore – they’ve been cutting them (to cut operational costs), and there seems to be one for every three sections now. Chuck Morgan’s announcement of “The ushers are now passing through the aisles distributing All-Star ballots” was a lie. They weren’t. As was the other lie that they would collect them in the sixth. I haven’t seen that happen in the upper decks in YEARS. Better check into that, Chuck. I even ASKED the one usher for some All Star ballots, since I never picked any up. He said he didn’t have any (despite seeing them in his back pocket), and then never came back with any for me. Rather poor ushering, actually. In fact, the policy of going to the front of the section to see what the section is doing between innings has gone away in the upper decks. You’re lucky if you see that happen in anything but a handful of sections.
OK, complaining about the ushers aside… It ended up being a good game, even though we lost. Scott Feldman started for Texas, and again was hit with no run support. Scott gave up a two run home run in the second inning, but that’s all he let cross the plate in his seven innings of work. His record is 1-2 in eight starts, but he really should be something like 4-5 and 1-2 at this point. He has pitched better than his record shows. Joaquin Benoit followed him, and is acting like the Benoit of old. For the last year or so, you liked seeing him come out, but not now. He’s reverted to the “Oh crap, here come two more runs for the other team” Benoit of old. Bleargh. Jamey Wright came in for the ninth, and gave up a run, but it was an odd one. Jamey was not paying attention to Jason Bartlett on base. Bartlett stole second, then stole third, and finally scored on what was called a wild pitch by Wright, but looked like a passed ball to my eyes. One amusing thing in the field was due to Michael Young coming out of the game, we had to stick Gerald Lard out at third for the last few innings of the game. My guess is this is why Saltamacchia did not attempt to throw to third when Bartlett was stealing third.
Offensively, the Rangers didn’t do a ton against Andy Sonnanstine. He went only five innings, giving up just two runs. The Rangers managed just nine hits overall, and scattered four runs. However, the bottom of the ninth was the most interesting. Down two, we had Josh Hamilton come up with the bases loaded and got a run in on a fielder’s choice. The Milton Bradley came up, and had one of those really weird plays you never want to see. Bradley shot a ball up the middle, which looked off the bat based on fielder positioning would be a single up the middle to tie the game. However, it pinballed off the pitcher, went to Iwamura the second baseman who threw to first to end the game. Darned frustrating way to lose the game there.
But in all, one of those losses you don’t mind losing, because it wasn’t like 14-3, or your guys do something monumentally dumb. Yeah, we lost, but it was’t for a lack of a fight – that’s what I end up caring about. Did we fight? Did we seem to try? If so, than yeah, I don’t mind losing as much. It’s the 14-3 ones where we have seemingly given up that I don’t usually want to write about.
Also, when leaving, the new road that the Rangers installed between home plate and third base exits was blocked off. There was a motorcycle stunt exhibition going on out there. What was funny about it is I heard NOTHING about it announced inside the stadium during the game. You’d think with something like that, it would be announced. I didn’t stay and watch – I figured that given the way the Rangers have screwed up parking in 2008, the people who stayed and watched that were less people in front of me with their brake lights on.
Duran back up
- 3B German Duran recalled from AAA
- P Elizardo Ramirez designated for assignment [ Link ]
G63: Rangers shut down by Kazmir again, lose 12-4
Despite the final score of this one, it was a pitcher’s duel for the majority of the game. In fact, going into the eighth inning, the score was still 3-1. Last week, we were totally shut down by Scott Kazmir, and he comes to Arlington, and does it again.
Scott went eight innings, giving up just six hits and two earned runs. One of the earned runs was a Ian Kinsler solo home run, but other than that, we didn’t garner much of a sustained attack. Kazmir was quite solid again – in fact, beyond just “solid”. Eight innings, two runs, six strikeouts, no walks. Yeah, he was pretty darned good.
Vicente Padilla came back from the bereavement list to start this game, and he also pitched pretty good. Not as good as Kazmir mind you, but Pidente went six innings, giving up five hits, three earned runs, with no walks and three strikeouts. Vicente’s downfall here was the longball. Of the three runs on his ledger, two of them were solo home runs. You always want to minimize damage by having allowed home runs be solo home runs, but a run is still a run, and when going up against a guy like Scott Kazmir, the less the better.
I actually admit to stopping watching the game after the top of the eighth. Once the Rays went up 6-1, I switched over and started playing videogames. I see from the box score that the pen stunk it up. Robinson Tejeda, who probably is on his last legs with the Rangers gave up three earned runs in his 1.2 innings of work. But the real kicker was Kameron Loe. Oddly enough, Kam allowed no earned runs, but there were a total of six runs scored by Tampa Bay during Kam’s frame. All six were unearned, but UGH. Six runs allowed. Major suckage there.
We had a minor uprising in the bottom of the ninth, but it just took us from being down from ten runs to just eight. We lost this game hard in the 8th and 9th innings.
I did enjoy the games I played on my Xbox 360 though. :)
Oh yeah, Sidney Ponson. I think most Rangers fans expected the Sidney Ponson experiment to end with a streak of four or five losses in a row with 35 runs given up during that time, and an era around eight. That’s not what happened. Sidney was released by the team (technically DFA’ed, not officially released yet) with good numbers on the field. His final stats with the Rangers:
9 Games
4-1 W/L
3.88 ERA
55.2 IP
71 H
36 R
24 ER
3 HR
16 BB
25 K
Pretty darned decent numbers, actually. So the DFA of Ponson came as quite a shock. Officially, the Rangers stated the reason as conduct unbecoming a player, and unprofessionalism (I’m paraphrasing). The link above has some more details.
It’s nice to see in this town that imports players like Deion Sanders, Terrell Owens, Pac-Man Jones, Tank Johnson, and Michael Vick (mark my words, he’ll be here eventually) that a team would have the balls to cut a player for being disrespectful. I applaud that. Too bad the local NFL team doesn’t have the same kind of morals regarding player behaviour in management, otherwise I could probably like them.
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