The Rangers head into a three-games-in-four-days stretch with momentum, but the next few decisions could shape how long this surge lasts.
Texas is back home after a demanding 10 games in 10 days and came through it with a 7-3 road trip, a six-game winning streak, and a return to over .500 at 44-43. The Rangers are now tied with the Seattle Mariners for the AL West lead, and Wednesday’s missed chance to win outright only sharpened the picture. A strong weekend against Detroit would keep Texas in buyer territory, exactly where president of baseball operations Chris Young wants the club to stay as he tries to make the case to ownership to spend.
The first issue is Brandon Nimmo, who has been out of the lineup since Monday. He ran into the right field wall at Rogers Centre in Toronto on Sunday while catching the final out, then had an MRI on Monday that showed a sprained A/C joint in his left shoulder.
He sat out the games in Cleveland, and with Texas taking its off day on Friday because of a World Cup match at AT&T Stadium, the club has to decide whether he’s ready to return or whether an injured list move makes more sense. If the Rangers place him on the IL Thursday, they can back-date the move to Monday.
If they wait, they can only back-date it three days. Texas could use the IL move Thursday and potentially get him back in a week.
That decision matters because the Rangers already have Wyatt Langford and Corey Seager on the IL, and they can’t afford to go four days without Nimmo if he isn’t ready.
The matchup on Thursday is no gift, either. Detroit sends Framber Valdez to the mound, and the Rangers know exactly what they’re up against.
Valdez has faced Texas 20 times, tied for the most against any opponent in his career, and the numbers lean his way. In those games, the Rangers have hit .202/.283/.294, with seven home runs.
Valdez has struck out 117 Rangers against 41 walks, and he’s 9-6 with a 2.80 ERA against them. At Globe Life Field, he’s been even tougher: Texas has slashed .179/.237/.279 against him in seven games, with five homers, while Valdez has posted a 3.50 strikeout-to-walk ratio and a 5-1 record with a 2.31 ERA.
The Rangers also have their usual problem with left-handed pitching, so this is a real test.
Texas did avoid two-time reigning Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal, but the Tigers still bring another challenge on Sunday in right-hander Casey Mize, who is coming off one of the best starts of his career. The bigger mystery, though, is who the Rangers will throw back at him.
Nathan Eovaldi is lined up for Friday and Kumar Rocker for Saturday. Sunday belongs to Jack Leiter on paper, but he is on the injured list.
Texas has used bullpen games for the last two turns, and it may not settle on a starter until the day comes. If the club wants a left-handed option, Tyler Alexander has been nearly perfect in that role.
If it wants a right-hander, Cal Quantrill is the likelier choice after working four solid innings in Toronto on Saturday. Texas could also pair the two and realistically cover five or six innings.
The situation reflects where the Rangers are right now. They signed Chris Paddack on Monday and designated him for assignment on Tuesday. Until Leiter returns, Jordan Montgomery is healthy, or another answer emerges, that’s the setup Texas has to work with.
In Other News...
Rangers Face An Awkward Deadline Problem In First Place
A strange little wrinkle has emerged for a Rangers club sitting tied for first in the AL West: ESPNs latest ranking of top 2026 trade deadline candidates included 100 names, and none of them were current Texas players. It is an odd place to land for a team that still looks very much in the race, especially with Wyatt Langford and Corey Seager both back on the injured list and the lineup already dealing with the kind of absence that can change how a front office thinks about July.
The bigger issue for Texas is that the roster does not lend itself to a clean deadline selloff. Some players do have trade value, but many are tied to long-term, expensive contracts, which makes them tougher to move as straightforward deadline chips. That leaves Chris Young in a familiar kind of spot: if the Rangers stay in the hunt, the more likely path may be to chase help rather than strip the roster down, even if the market list suggests Texas itself is not producing obvious trade bait. [Read more 🡒]
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For Texas, the timing makes the rumor feel more practical than speculative. The Rangers have shuffled through six different players at second base, with Nicky Lopez getting the recent starts there, so the position has remained unsettled while the lineup searches for consistency. Arraez would give them a very different look if they decided to chase him, but for now it remains the kind of deadline fit that sounds clean on paper and could become much more real depending on what San Francisco decides to do next. [Read more 🡒]
Rangers Catcher Crunch Is About To Test Performance Vs Payroll
The Rangers catcher picture has become one of the more complicated roster calls on the board as they sort through Danny Jansen, Kyle Higashioka and Elias Diaz, with the expectation that only two can stay in the mix. Jansens track record and contract situation give the club reason to keep him in the conversation, while Higashioka has carved out real value through the way he works with the pitching staff, even if the glove has not always been spotless.
Elias Diaz has made the decision harder by doing the most with his chances, bringing the kind of offensive and defensive efficiency that stands out in limited playing time. So the Rangers are left balancing recent performance against payroll realities and past commitments, with Jansens recovery adding another layer to a call that could shape how they handle the position going forward. [Read more 🡒]
