The Rangers’ Offense Shows Its Strength

By Noah Shelton @SheltonOKC

A particularly dangerous situation (PDS). That was the warning given by the National Weather Service Tuesday afternoon. The threat of severe weather lurked in the night sky at Globe Life Park Tuesday.

The severe weather held off, but the particularly dangerous situation was in full effect for the Yankees’ right hander Luis Severino. The Rangers scored one run in the first off a Prince Fielder single that allowed Nomar Mazara to score. Then, in the third, the flood gates opened and the runs poured in.

Ian Desmond walked with the bases loaded allowing Mazara to score again, Moreland hit a two-run single to center, a wild pitch allowed Desmond to score, then Andrus drove in Moreland on a single to center. Nicholas’ at bat would be the final of the inning after he was robbed by a diving catch in right field by Carlos Beltran.

Nine of the 10 runs scored by the Rangers on Tuesday night came with two outs and five of them came in the third. The Rangers’ offensive performance finally aligned with a superb pitching performance. And as you would expect, it was a sight to see.

A.J. Griffin went eight innings and allowed 1 run on 4 hits with 5 strikeouts through 98 pitches. Griffin’s eight inning performance was the longest outing of the year for a Rangers’ pitcher.

Griffin is “making a case for himself” said Jeff Banister.

Darvish still has at least four more weeks before his return, which leaves Griffin with as many as five more starts. The Rangers should have a good enough idea by that point of whether or not he is worth a spot in the rotation at the expense of, say, Holland or Perez.

The bats were back in Arlington on Tuesday night. Andrus went 3 for 4 with an RBI and a run, Desmond was 2 for 3 with a homerun, 2 RBI and 3 runs, and Rougned Odor recorded his third homerun of the year.

On his 21st birthday, Nomar Mazara was able to record 2 hits and 2 runs and continued to show advanced maturity for his young age.

“Every time I go to my apartment, I think about the past few weeks,” Mazara said. “It’s been the best three weeks I ever had in my life.”

The Rangers look to start a new streak on the winning side of things. A win tonight, to take the series, would be a great turnaround from the four game losing streak.

The matchup is NYY: Sabathia (1-1, 5.28 ERA) vs TEX: Perez (0-2, 4.50). Maybe Martin Perez can turn around his season tonight in a similar fashion to the Rangers’ Tuesday night beat down of the Yankees. His spot in the rotation may depend on it.

David Murphy Retirement

Rangers Lose Fourth Straight

By Noah Shelton @SheltonOKC

The Rangers served up another offensive dud Monday night in Arlington, losing 3-1 to that team from the Bronx. Coming off the sweep of the Astros, the Rangers are yet to win. The loss gives the Rangers its fourth straight.

Yankees’ pitcher Nathan Eovaldi had a no hitter brewing after 6 innings of work, and with the Rangers’ recent batting performances it seemed as if we were going to see the rare pitching feat accomplished. Just as the excitement was beginning to make its way around Globe Life Park Nomar Mazara shot a grounder through third base and shortstop, and the no-hitter bid was over in the seventh.

With Cole Hamels out with a groin injury, Cesar Ramos was called up from Triple-A Round Rock to start in his first major league game since May of 2014. The expectations going into Monday night did not involve a low scoring pitchers’ game, neither starter had recent success under their belts. Then, one inning into the game, each pitcher had retired the sides in just nine pitches.

Ramos worked his way through a bases loaded situation in the second, and it looked as if the Yankees’ struggles with runners in scoring position was going to continue Monday night. The Yankees found a way, however, from two solo homeruns and a RBI double from Mark Teixeira with a man on first.

Cesar Ramos’ performance was worthy of a win Monday night against the Yankees. It was impressive to see a high caliber performance from a guy who probably didn’t expect to be pitching against the Yankees on Monday going into the weekend. The Rangers have dipped into the reserves early this year and we are yet to see any disappointments.

“It’s amazing,” Andrus said when asked about the Rangers’ depth. “Having the depth is a huge help for us, and knowing we’re going to have guys to help us stay on top”

It looks as if the bullpen and offensive production have switched success rates. Just a week ago, the bullpen was looking shaky at times when trying to close out large leads. Now, the bullpen is pitching lights out, however, no run support is being given. Everything seems to be reversed lately. Ian Desmond went 3-4 on Sunday with a homerun which just adds to the craziness.

“We have faced a stretch of pitchers that match up fairly well against us.” Bannister said in reaction to the 3-1 loss to the Yankees. “I think that our offense is obviously a potent offense…I felt confident about the at-bats (tonight).”

The offense is struggling and the defense is flourishing. Once the Rangers’ performances align correctly, we should be in for a treat.

A Positive Moment in Monday Night’s Loss

Brett Nicholas hits the first homerun of his career off of one of the hardest relief pitchers in the league, Dellin Betances.

A Day With Baseball Is Better Than a Day Without

By Noah Shelton @SheltonOKC

There isn’t much that beats an early afternoon baseball game.

The Rangers and the Chicago White Sox were at it again for game two of the three game series Saturday. The Rangers, coming off a shutout loss on Friday night showed signs of tying the series in south Chicago Saturday afternoon. Rangers’ fans were especially optimistic heading into extra innings thanks to a homerun saving third-out catch by Nomar Mazara in the bottom of the ninth.

The right batters were on deck for the Rangers and Phil Klein struck out the side in order to close the 10th inning. But, after another inning similar to Friday night’s production, the Rangers would falter and White Sox’s reliever Matt Albers would advance his scoreless streak to 32 innings.

Nick Martinez entered in the 11th and would get into trouble facing a bases loaded situation after allowing two walks and a hit batter. The winning run for the White Sox came after the fifth batter of the inning, Jose Abreu, singled to left through a five player Ranger infield and allowed Austin Jackson to score.

There were some good moments Saturday afternoon: Colby Lewis allowed one run through 6 innings, Ian Desmond homered to center increasing his outlook on the year, and the Rangers rallied in the ninth after a sacrifice fly by Elvis Andrus allowed Desmond to add a game-high third run to his increasingly productive stat sheet.

Yes, the Rangers received its second straight loss, but it was great to see some Saturday afternoon baseball in early spring. There’s nothing like mowing the lawn and plopping down on the couch with a beer to enjoy some American pastime greatness while a cool afternoon breeze creeps through the house.