Rookies help Rangers defeat the Mariners

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    The Rangers got back to .500 last night behind contributions from the two most inexperienced players on the roster, Nomar Mazara and Brett Nicholas. Nicholas was making his MLB debut last night and went 2-4 with a single … Continue reading

Rangers Will Not Be 162-0 in 2016

The Texas Rangers lost their first game of the 2016 season in spectacular fashion last night losing 10-2 to the Seattle Mariners. It was a mixture of missed opportunities early and the new pieces of the bullpen not being able to keep it close late. This was different from Opening Day in that the team did hit, not well, but they did get hits and provided themselves with numerous opportunities throughout the game to give themselves a lead going into the 7th-9th innings. In the 4th inning Elvis Andrus and Robinson Chirinos provided run scoring singles, but outside of those hits, the Rangers could not get the big base hit when they had runners on base. Jared Sandler, who does the radio pre and post game shows for the Rangers, had this interesting tweet about the game last night.

That just is not acceptable. To me the one that stands out the most is the 7th inning. The Mariners had just went ahead 4-2 in the top of the inning, but the heart of the Rangers order was coming up in the bottom of the inning. Shin Soo Choo starts off with a 10 pitch walk. Prince Fielder then steps up and instead of continuing to make him work and trying to find his pitch, he swings at the first pitch and pops it straight up. Adrian Beltre then proceeds to do the same thing. Mitch Moreland works the count, but still ends up striking out on the 8th pitch. Fielder and Beltre have to be better there. It feels like they both went up with the approach of just swinging to just hit the game-tying home run. It did not work and in the end it did not matter. I still like what the team is doing. The approach at the plate for the most part has still been really good, the results and runs just have not been there yet. If they continue with this the runs will come, its just Hernandez and Iwakuma can be very difficult to face.

The concerning part of the game to me though is that Tony Barnette and Tom Wilhelmsen were just awful today. Barnette was making his MLB debut after spending the past 7 years in Japan. He started out well enough by getting the 2 of the first 3 hitters out, but then he left one up and over the plate to Leonys Martin who drove it in the left field corner to score Seth Smith. Then he allowed another single to Nori Aoki to make the score 4-2. At that point Bannister removed him in favor of Jake Diekman. He was able to get out of the inning with one pitch on a groundout against Ketel Marte. That was minor compared to the disaster Tom Wilhelmsen was. Wilhelmsen came in and took their chances of winning and flushed them down the toilet. He gave up a home run to Robinson Cano to lead of the inning, a double to Nelson Cruz, an RBI-double to Kyle Seager, a home run to Seth Smith, and then after a coaching visit he plunked Chris Ianneta and then proceeded to yell back-and-forth with the Mariners catcher. That got him ejected. So overall not the best night at the office and actually it might have one of the worst appearances of his career as his line ended up 0.0 innings pitched, 5 runs, 4 hits, 2 home runs given up. He was a disaster last night. The plunking of Ianneta led to both managers coming out onto the field and getting into it from their side of the diamond. It was ridiculous and completely unnecessary. I hope Wilhelmsen did not hit him on purpose, but the timing of it made it look like it was as it came right after the Seth Smith home run. Andrew Faulkner then ended up coming in and giving up another home run to Luis Sardinas to make it 10-2 and that would be game,set,match to the Mariners. It was a loss and it sucks, but it was one the Rangers deserved to lose. They did not come through with enough timely hits and the bullpen did not pitch well enough to give them an opportunity late. The loss drops the Rangers record to 1-1 and the Mariners improve to 1-1.

Other Game Notes

  • I got through all of that intro without even mentioning the starting pitchers. Iwakuma was not his usual dominant self against the Rangers, but he made the pitches when he needed to and was able to labor through 5 innings, giving up 6 hits, 2 runs, and 3 walks. Iwakuma was able to get out of jams in the 1st, 3rd, and 5th innings. The only time the Rangers got to him for runs was the 4th with the RBI singles by Elvis Andrus and Robinson Chirinos. So while he was not great he was good enough. The same can also be said for Martin Perez. He pitched 6 innings giving up 2 runs as well. He gave a run on a single to Chris Ianneta in the 2nd and then a solo home run to Nelson Cruz in the 4th inning. He was able to make big pitches though to get out of innings. In the second he got a ground ball double play off the bat of Dae-Ho Lee and then got another inning ending double play in the 6th off the bat of Kyle Seager. He left with the score tied 2-2. Iwakuma and Perez both did their jobs in giving their teams an opportunity to win. The bullpen for the Mariners pitched better than the bullpen for the Rangers. The Rangers still have not won a game that Iwakuma started for the Mariners since 2013.
  • Ian Desmond has had quite the introduction to the American League. Yesterday it was King Felix and today it was Hisashi Iwakuma. Two very difficult pitchers to face because of what all they bring to the table. Hernandez is about the variety of pitches and his ability to locate all of those pitches. Yesterday it was Iwakuma moving all of his pitches in and around the strike zone and from different arm angles. It made Desmond look helpless up there, especially in the 5th when he struck out on a pitch way up and out of the strike zone. Iwakuma is a master of putting the ball on different planes throughout an at-bat. He can run it high, have it dip into the dirt, or cut it to hit the corners of the plate. He leaves very few pitches in the middle of the strike zone. Everything is on the corners. It makes it hard for an umpire to call and even harder for the batter to hit. He did get his first hit though in the 9th when he beat out a groundball to Kyle Seager. It did have to be reviewed, but the review showed that he was safe. So he is no longer 0-for. Today should be easier Miley is not as dominant as these last two guys are.

Preview of Today’s Game

1:05 p.m., Fox Sports Oklahoma, Fox Sports SW, Wade Miley vs Colby Lewis

This afternoon is the rubber game of the series as both try to end the first series of the season with a home win. It would be a huge statement for either team to claim this first divisional series of the season. Wade Miley will be making his first appearance in a game for the Mariners after being acquired in the offseason from the Boston Red Sox. The left-hander will be looking to improve upon his 1-2 record and his 3.86 ERA in his career against the Rangers. Look for the Rangers to try to take advantage of his lack of control in the Rangers ballpark. In two starts there he has 1.286 WHIP(Walks at Hits/Innings Pitched). The Rangers hitters just need to be as patient at the plate as they have been in the first two games and then drive the ball when they have an opportunity to score runs. Keep an eye on the right-handed hitters today. I would not be surprised at all to see Ryan Rua get his first start of the season against the left-hander. Miley lost most lefties does not fare as well against righties as he does against lefties. I would expect Moreland to get the day off and for Rua to play first.

As for the Rangers Colby Lewis makes his first start of the season. Lewis resigned with the team in the offseason and had an up-and-down spring. Arizona is normally not good for a guy with his stuff though. He is a flyball pitcher and in Arizona fly balls turn into home runs very easily. The most important thing though is he got his innings in, he is ready, and he is healthy. The most important thing for him today is location. Can he spot his fastball on the corners of the plate? He needs to have his slider working and be enticing enough to swing at. When he is good that slider dips at the last moment down and away from the righties and down and in to lefties. When he is not good the slider looks flat and hangs up and over the plate. It needs to have that sharp brake to it. He also needs to his changeup working for his fastball to look better as well. At this point in his career he does not have what would be classified as great stuff, he has what would be considered good control and veteran poise out on the mound. That is what has made him successful throughout his career and what led him to a career high 17 wins last season. The key batters for him will be Robinson Cano, Nelson Cruz, and Kyle Seager. If he can silence their bats and keep them in ballpark he will be doing a good job.

Player to Watch

Review from Yesterday: I chose Roughned Odor yesterday and he went 0-3 with a walk and a run scored. He did score the tying run and for the second straight day he made a spectacular play in the field. I wouldn’t say it was a total loss. He did have an impact on the game early with his play in the field and in the one time he did get on base he scored. He did not have as big of a day though as Chirinos and Andrus had.

Today’s Player: LF Ian Desmond. I am going with this just off of feel and no stats to back me up. Desmond hit very well this spring, but has started with facing two pitchers he is not very familiar with and that has led to just one hit in the first two games. Today I believe will be different. It is a lefty on the mound and one that may leave one up and over the plate for Desmond to hit. I would not be surprised to see Desmond come through with a 2-5 type day. I believe he will make some sort of play in the field as Lewis is more of a flyball pitcher. So there will be more plays for Desmond and everyone in the outfield today. Ian Desmond is my player to watch for today.

Should be a good game with more runs scored by both sides. Hopefully the Rangers can win before they depart on a 7-game road trip to Anaheim this weekend then Seattle to start next week.

Go Rangers!!!!!!!

Rangers Stop Losing Streak Behind Martinez and Resurgent Offense

Nick Martinez collects his second win of the season in win against the Angels

Nick Martinez collects his second win of the season in win against the Angels

 

 

The Rangers ended their first losing streak of the season with an 8-2 win over the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim and improved their record to 4-5. Nick Martinez picked up his second win of the season as he continued his strong start with 7 innings of 1 run baseball. Jeff Banister having changed up the lineup again saw his team score 8 runs and hit 2 home runs. I guess this says that he needs to be changing the lineup everyday. It was a good team win though. The pitching was solid, the offense was great, and the defense helped keep the Angels off the board in key situations. Jeff Banister could not ask for a better win in the given situation. Lets get to what actually happened in the game though.

It was Nick Martinez going up against Drew Rucinski, who was making his first major league start. Martinez got off to a tough start. He allowed Erick Aybar a sharp single into the right-field corner, but Choo came up firing and was able to throw Aybar out at second. Mike Trout followed with a double and Albert Pujols walked putting runners at first and second with 1 out. He was able to get out of it with a lineout from Matt Joyce and a ground out from Rangers nemesis David Freese. In the bottom of the first the new Rangers top of the order was able to produce a run. Roughned Odor walked, stole second, and Mitch Moreland singled up the middle to get him home. They functioned as the top two hitters should and I loved Moreland’s approach with two strikes in that at-bat. He shortened his stroke and was able to hit a sharp grounder up the middle. It was nice to see him thinking there about just getting a base hit, rather than continuing to try for the home run. It looked like the lead would be short-lived though in the bottom of the inning as the Angels once again put pressure on Martinez. They were able to load the bases with one-out and their fastest runner coming to the plate in Erick Aybar. I thought for sure it would be difficult to get a double play grounder, but sure enough they did. Aybar hit it sharp enough at Odor that he was able to turn it quick enough to get Aybar out at first. Through two innings Martinez was up to 38 pitches. As I am watching this I am thinking that he may only be able to make it through 5 innings.  From there though he was able to calm down. It helped that the bats woke up in the bottom of the second inning.

The Rangers were able to put 3 more runs on the board all with two outs in the inning. They finally got a break to go their way when Mike Trout and Matt Joyce were converging on a drive to left center off the bat of Robinson Chirinos when neither one of them were able to catch it even though both were in position to catch it. That allowed two runs to score and allowed the Ranger players to be able to take a deep breath and just relax from that point forward. Odor followed up Chirinos’ double with one of his own that landed right in front of a dive from Mike Trout. That allowed the Rangers to be able to put 3 on the board that inning and extend the lead to 4-0. It was certainly an inning the team really needed and it allowed Martinez to settle in and pitch his game.

After the big second inning, Martinez retired 12 of the next 14 hitters from the third through the sixth inning and the score expanded from 4-0 to 8-0. The Angels didn’t even really pose another threat till the 7th inning. That is when the first two runners reached due to a single and throwing error from Adrian Beltre. After that though he was able to get out of the inning with only one run allowed. There could have been more, but Carlos Peguero was able to track down and catch Mike Trout’s drive to the wall. All in all Nick Martinez threw 7 innings. allowing 1 run, but 0 earned runs, 5 hits. 3 BB’s, 1 K. That makes it 14 innings he has thrown so far without giving up a single earned run. His ERA is still 0.00. He showed a lot of poise and maturity out there being able to get out of those first and second inning jams. Right now I feel decently confident about 3/5 of the rotation. I feel like Martinez is poised to be a really solid member of this rotation. He will have his bad starts from time to time, but he is continuing that success he had down the stretch of last season. The Rangers are going to need that if they have any dreams of competing. If they can get solid starts from Martinez every fifth day that will go a long way toward keeping that dream alive.

Other Game Notes

  • Robinson Chirinos had his first big game of the season. He caught a break in the second with that deep drive double to left center that landed between Trout and Joyce. The home run though was no joke. He drove that to deep left center field. It was a no doubter and gave him 5 rbi’s on the night. That was good for Robinson as he was in a 1-13 slump entering this game and had not had many quality plate appearances so far. He looked confident at the plate and the double in the second may be what he needed in order to get going. With it being a day game today I expect him to get the day off today and Carlos Corporan will be behind the plate.
  • Elvis Andrus has left the building. All Spring Training they talked about how Elvis had worked on changing his stance and tried to get stronger in order to be able to drive the ball into the gaps and into the outfield. In the past it looked like any hit he got was just a soft hit line drive. Last night he was driving the ball. He had two hits, but easily could have had 3 if not for Erick Aybar making a fantastic play with the infield drawn in. One of those two hits was a home run. It was Elvis’ first home run since May 21st of last year and snapped a string of 481 at-bats without a home run, the longest active drought in the major leagues. If he continues to get the bat behind the ball and driving it, the next drought will not be anywhere close to as long. The Rangers don’t need him to be a home run hitter though. They survived last season having Alex Rios hit 6th and only hit 4 home runs. What the Rangers need is for him to be getting on base, causing havoc on the bases, and helping to drive people in.
  • Prince Fielder strikes again with two more singles in his 4 at-bats, but he almost did hit a home run though. Jose Alvarez left one hanging in the fifth and Prince thought he had it, but he just got underneath it and flew out to right-fielder Collin Cowgill. He gets his average up to .405 though and for the first time this season, we did not see a massive shift from the Angels in his at-bats. Word is getting around that Prince is not pulling the ball anymore. That actually allowed him to get his second single when he hit it right back up the middle where the shortstop normally would have been.
  • And can we please calm down the talk on Carlos Peguero being like Nelson Cruz. Peguero has looked good so far, don’t get me wrong. I think he has been very solid and is filling in for Ryan Rua very nicely. He needs to do it longer than 5 games to be considered Nelson Cruz. Cruz even had to prove he could do it longer than 5 games. I remember back before he became the monster he is today that everytime the Rangers called him up he would hit two home runs in the first game he would play and then would go into a massive slump. Peguero is doing good, but lets calm down the Nellie Cruz talk until May or June. Lets see what he does over these next few weeks. For now I prefer the comparison to Kevin Kouzmanoff prior to his back injury from last season. A veteran who was given another shot and excelled until he got hurt.
  • It is an afternoon game today as it will be Anthony Ranaudo making his first start for the Rangers going up against the Angels Hector Santiago. Ranaudo was called up last night and Phil Klein was sent down after the game last night. Santiago will be looking to continue his success in Arlington from last season when he went 3-0 with a 2.22 ERA against the Rangers in their home ballpark. Ranaudo will be looking to make a good first impression on the Rangers coaches and management as he tries to keep in the rotation. Ranaudo will likely be given a short leash as Anthony Bass will be ready and waiting in the bullpen should Ranaudo falter. The game is today at 1:05 and will end this stretch of 10 straight days with games to open up the season. The Rangers get their first day off tomorrow before heading to Seattle to face the preseason division favorite Seattle Mariners. Go Rangers!!!!!!!!

 

The Cost of Competing

DANIELS

 

In professional sports every team is seeking a window. A window that while open gives them a chance at winning their sports ultimate prize. It could be the Lombardi Trophy, Stanley Cup, World Series, or NBA Finals. General Managers spend their lifetimes trying to acquire enough talent to be able to open that window. Windows normally only stay open for a very short time.  Very few GM’s actually get to open that window. That is why when teams get there they normally overspend in order to maximize that window. They never want to admit that the window is closed or is closing. This takes me to the Rangers and the decisions the front office has made to try to keep the Rangers window open.

Jon Daniels has been the Rangers GM since October of 2005. He spent the first 5 years of his tenure rebuilding the Rangers from the ground up. He rebuilt through shrewd trades, under the radar signings, and through the draft. Instead of moves made to compete immediately he slowly started to acquire more and more talent. He brought in players like Josh Hamilton, Adrian Beltre, Elvis Andrus, and Yu Darvish. All along he said that he wanted to get the Rangers to a point where they could compete every season. He didn’t believe in a window of opportunity. The Rangers made it to back-to-back World Series in 2010-2011 and came within an out of winning the 2011 World Series. Since then the Rangers have gotten farther and farther away from making it back to the World Series. They lost a 5 game lead with 7 games remaining in 2012 and then lost the Wild Card playoff game to the Orioles. Then in 2013 in a season full of injuries they lost a one game playoff to the Tampa Bay Rays. This season just shy of Memorial Day they sit 7 games back of division leaders Oakland.

This takes me to the point of the article. In order to stay in contention teams have to make trades that normally they wouldn’t make. Jon Daniels has made several in-season trades and now this season they are seeing that once full minor league system drained by all that talent that was traded away. It started in 2011 with the Koji Uehara trade that sent Chris Davis and Tommy Hunter to the Orioles. It was a sound trade at the time because the Rangers needed bullpen help, but Uehara did not provide anything and was left off of the World Series roster in favor of Mark Lowe.  In 2012 there was the trade for Ryan Dempster that sent Kyle Hendricks and Christian Villanueva to the Chicago Cubs. The team needed a starter after Colby Lewis went down with an injury, Neftali Feliz had Tommy John, Roy Oswalt and Yu Darvish were not pitching well, and so they traded for Dempster. One thing we saw with Dempster is what we see with most NL pitchers who make the transition to the AL. They do not pitch as well. Dempster in his time here did go 7-3, but with a 5.09 ERA, and in September that ballooned to 5.68 ERA in the month.  The big problem now is that Kyle Hendricks has blossomed in the Cubs organization and is on the verge of being called up. Ryan Dempster is no longer in MLB and was not resigned after the season.

In 2013 they made another trade with the Cubs this time for Matt Garza. They gave up Neil Ramirez, C.J. Edwards, Justin Grimm and Mike Olt to complete the trade. That made sure they got him, but while here Garza continued to be the head case he has been throughout his career. He called people out on Twitter, his behavior was unpredictable on the mound, and his performance just wasn’t what the team thought they would get. He ended up 4-5 with a 4.38 ERA, and allowed 5.02 Runs per 9 innings. The Rangers needed to make this trade because Colby Lewis had not come back, Matt Harrison was out for the season, Nick Tepesch and Justin Grimm were not able to pick up the slack, and they needed a veteran to help them get back to the playoffs. It just did not work either as the Rangers season ended in game 163 to the Tampa Bay Rays. Then this past offseason Daniels really wanted to shake things up. He traded longtime Ranger Ian Kinsler to the Tigers for Prince Fielder, let Nelson Cruz go without a multi-year contract offer, traded fan favorite Craig Gentry to the A’s for Michael Choice, and signed Shin Shoo Choo. Only one of those has really worked out.

Having to trade prospects is the cost of competing. It is what general managers will call a necessary evil, because the here and now is more important than the future. Unfortunately, it doesn’t always work out for the team acquiring the veteran. That is what the Rangers have found out as they have had to trade numerous prospects in order to stay in contention. That is what makes a GM’s job very difficult, weighing the question of whether or not to make a trade, and the future consequences of making that trade. Every GM battles with that decision in the offseason and especially during the month of July. Jon Daniels I am sure did not make any of these trades lightly. He knew what could happen, but he wanted to give his team a chance at getting back to the playoffs. The problem has come this year as the team has faced numerous injuries and no longer has the depth to cover up those injuries. Here is a sobering thought, if none of those trades had been made, here is what the Rangers lineup would look like.

LF Shin Shoo Choo

2b Ian Kinsler

1b Chris Davis

3b Adrian Beltre/ Mike Olt

RF Alex Rios

DH Mitch Moreland/ Mike Olt

CF Leonys Martin

C Robinson Chirinos

SS Elvis Andrus

This is the downside of trying to keep the window open. Does it produce exciting pennant race baseball? Yes it does. Does it bring regret later? It does that as well. Every team that competes for a period of time goes through that and now is the Rangers time to go through it. It may lead to a couple of down seasons, but players like Joey Gallo, Luke Jackson, and Jorge Alfaro are just a year or two away from being ready to contribute. That will give the team the shot in the arm that it needs and the ability to compete for the World Series again.

My Favorite Moments as a Rangers fan

The Texas Rangers have existed as a franchise since 1961 when they were born as the Washington Senators. Then in 1972 they moved the team to Arlington, Texas and became the Texas Rangers. This countdown takes a look at my 10 favorite moments as a Rangers fan. All of the moments tend to range from 1996-2013. I am 30 years old and have been a Rangers fan since about 1992. I didn’t go to my first game till 1994. I know I am leaving out several moments like Nolan Ryan’s no hitters, Kenny Rogers perfect game, Julio Franco All Star MVP, and several other moments from before 1996. I apologize for that, it just is that I was really too young to really appreciate it and remember it. So here are my favorite moments from 10-6.

10. The Rangers clinching the AL West in Oakland in 2010 with a Jorge Cantu Home run.

2010 was a breakthrough season for the Texas Rangers. The theme was, “Its Time”. It meant that it was time to break through and start winning. They had been making a steady climb up hill from 2007-2009. In 2010 the expectation was not to just compete, it was to win. All season long they made moves to help them win. They traded prospects for Cliff Lee, Bengie Molina, and Jorge Cantu. They were serious. The Lee and Molina moves worked out splendidly, but Cantu not so much. Cantu had always been known as a guy who drives in runs. Yet, in his almost two months with the Rangers he had yet to drive in any runs heading into the game against the Oakland A’s on September 21st. The Rangers were one win away from the clinching the division that day, but going into the 8th inning the score was 3-3. Cantu had an RBI single in his previous at-bat, and in the top of the 8th Cantu sent a long flyball to left-center that carried out over the wall and put the Rangers ahead 4-3. They would go on and hold on to that lead and clinch the division that day. That was pretty much the only thing Cantu did in a Rangers uniform. Mitch Moreland would go on to replace him at first base in the playoffs.

9. Nelson Cruz hits 6 home runs in 2011 ALCS.

The ALCS in 2011 was between the two best teams in the AL that season in the Texas Rangers and the Detroit Tigers. The Rangers were led by their powerful lineup with Josh Hamilton, Mike Napoli, and Adrian Beltre. The Tigers were led by MVP candidates Miguel Cabrera and Justin Verlander. They came into the series having beaten the Yankees in 5 games and the Rangers came in having beaten Tampa Bay 3 games to 1. It was a series that was a season in the making. The Rangers won 96 games and the Tigers won 95 games and due to a Rangers win and a Tigers loss in-game 162 the Rangers had the home field advantage. It was going to be a competitive series. The one thing no one was expecting though was the kind of show Nelson Cruz was going to put on. Cruz hit 6 home runs in this series. Two of them were hit in crucial moments. He hit a walk-off grand slam to win game 2 and he hit a 3-run home run in the 11th inning in game 4 to extend the lead to 7-3 and help the Rangers win that game. He followed that with two more home runs, one in-game 5 and one in-game 6. He helped carry the Rangers to the World Series that year. He won the MVP in this series with a .364 BA, 1.273 slugging%, 6 Home Runs, and 13 RBI’s. He was a machine that series. The Rangers ended up winning the series 4-2 and made it back-to-back AL pennants.

8. Rangers 11-10 Comeback against the Angels on August 1st, 2012.

This series came in late July early August. This series had importance to both teams. After a slow start the Angels had rallied to within 3 games of the Rangers division lead. The Angels wanted all 3 games to give them momentum heading into the home stretch and tie up the division. They did take the first two and were in great position to take game 3 up 7-1 going into the bottom of the 5th. The Rangers turned it around though with a four run 5th finished off by Elvis Andrus’ RBI single to score Ian Kinsler. So from there it stayed 7-5 till the 8th when David Murphy had an RBI single to score Adrian Beltre. That is when things offically got crazy. In the 9th Kinsler hits the game-tying home run and sends it to extras. Then in the 10th the Angels respond with a solo home run by Chris Iannetta and a 2-run home run by Albert Pujols. So you are thinking well they did come back, but it just was not meant to be tonight. The score was 10-7 and was 3 outs away from a loss that night and a series sweep that would have tied up the division. The Rangers under Ron Washington are a never say die group and on this night they responded in an unbelievable fashion. Nelson Cruz gets things started with a home run to make it 10-8. Michael Young reaches on an error, David Murphy walks, and then a single by Mike Napoli to load the bases with no outs. From what looked like a sure loss to a game you would expect them to win just like that. Mitch Moreland then singles to right field to make it 10-9 and Elvis Andrus steps up to the plate to win it with a 2-run single on a ground ball that gets by Alberto Callapso. The Rangers win the game and the Angels end finishing in the 3rd in the division.

7. Yu Darvish nearly throws a perfect game against the Astros in game 2 of 2013 Season.

Yu Darvish came over from Japan in the winter of 2011. The Rangers then proceeded to sign him to a contract in 2012. He came into 2012 hyped as the next great pitcher. He didn’t quite live up to that potential. He struggled his first few months with high pitch counts and a lack of control. He could not quite figure out how he wanted to attack hitters. It wasn’t till the last two months that he started to figure it out. He ended the 2012 season as the Rangers best pitcher and started the AL Wild Card game. Going into 2013 there was high expectations for Yu Darvish. It was expected that he would take that next step and become one of the best pitchers in all of baseball. He didn’t get the opening day start, Matt Harrison did due to his overall performance in 2012. Darvish though left no doubt in game 2 who was the better pitcher. In his first start of the season against the Houston Astros he proceeded to retire the first 26 hitters of the game. He was using a mixture of fastballs, curveballs, and an improved slider. He kept the Astros off-balance all night. It wasn’t until the 27th hitter came to the plate did he give up a hit. It was a ground ball single up the middle by Marwin Gonzalez past Darvish that rolled into the outfield. Darvish continued to bring it every 5th day the rest of 2013 as he went 13-9 with a 2.83 ERA and a league-leading 277 strikeouts. Finally, he finished second to Max Scherzer in AL Cy Young voting.

6. Juan Gonzalez hits 5 home runs in ALDS against Yankees in 1996.

Juan Gonzalez was one of the most feared hitters in baseball in the 90’s. He won two MVP awards. He would go on to win it in 1996 and again in 1998. Each time he was among the league leader in home runs and RBI’s. Going into this series no one knew how he was going to do or how the team was going to perform. It was the Rangers first time on the postseason stage. Many of their players were experiencing this for the first time. It was thought that going up against the more experienced Yankees would be too much for them. For most of the players you would be right, but Juan Gonzalez had one of the best series from an outfielder in postseason history. He hit 5 home runs in 4 games in that series. He was an unstoppable force, but unfortunately no one else could get their bats going and so after winning game 1, the Rangers proceeded to lose the next 3 and were done. That doesn’t take away from what Gonzalez did in those 4 games. He was spectacular, and his efforts will not be soon forgotten.