Rangers Finally Have Hope Again And One New Problem To Fear

Despite injuries and a mid-season slump, the Texas Rangers have surged to the top of the AL West with a sweep of the Blue Jays.

The Texas Rangers are suddenly sitting atop the AL West after a sharp trip through Toronto that got them back to .500 and flipped the division race.

A team that had just dropped back-to-back games to the Miami Marlins responded with four straight wins over the Blue Jays, moving to 42-42 and a half-game ahead of Seattle. The stretch came with some notable absences, too: outfielder Wyatt Langford went on the 10-day injured list with a left hamstring strain and is expected to remain out until after the All-Star break, while shortstop Corey Seager returned to the lineup after missing the previous 12 games with a concussion.

What stood out most in Toronto was how the Rangers handled the early innings. That’s been a problem all season, with Texas often forced to play catch-up. This time, the Rangers kept Toronto off the board for at least the first four innings in every game of the series.

Thursday’s opener set the tone quickly. Texas jumped out to a 6-0 lead after three innings behind home runs from Joc Pederson, Langford and Jake Burger.

MacKenzie Gore gave them seven innings and held the Blue Jays scoreless through four while striking out five. Toronto made it interesting late, cutting the deficit to one with a two-run homer in the ninth, but Jacob Latz finished it off by striking out the final batter in a 6-5 win.

Friday brought another early surge and another late Toronto push. Nathan Eovaldi was outstanding, winning his third straight start with seven shutout innings and nine strikeouts.

The Rangers built a 5-0 lead after three, getting a home run from Justin Foscue, and then held on for a 5-4 victory. Langford was injured in that game while hustling on a double.

On Saturday, Texas finally avoided the drama. The Rangers used five pitchers in a 7-4 win, but the pitching still included a four-inning shutout. Seager also made his presence felt in his return, homering in the sixth inning.

Sunday followed a similar script for much of the afternoon. Kumar Rocker worked six innings with five strikeouts, and Pederson homered in the first as Texas again turned in a seven-inning shutout effort. Toronto tied the game with a two-run homer in the eighth, but the Rangers came away with a 3-2 win after Jarred Kelenic, recently recalled from Triple-A Round Rock after Josh Smith was sent down, entered as a pinch runner in the ninth and scored the winning run on a wild pitch.

Texas now stays on the road for a three-game series in Cleveland beginning at 6 p.m. Monday. After that, the Rangers return home for a nine-game homestand that starts Thursday against Detroit and finishes out the first half.

In Other News...

Rangers Could Face A Risky First Round Gamble At 16

With the MLB draft approaching in Philadelphia during All-Star Week, the Rangers are weighing their options at No. 16 and one of the more intriguing names in that range is Alabama shortstop Justin Lebron. He brings the kind of athletic upside clubs love in the first round, with a mix of power and speed that gives him a chance to impact a game in multiple ways if everything comes together.

The catch is that his profile comes with some risk, and that is the sort of calculation Texas has to make when it is picking in the middle of the round. Lebrons tools suggest plenty of upside, but his recent performance against better competition has left enough questions about consistency that the Rangers will have to decide whether the ceiling is worth the gamble. [Read more 🡒]

Rangers Need One Type Of Deadline Bat More Than Ever

The Rangers offense has spent much of the season fighting uphill, and the most glaring issue is not just getting runners on base but getting them home. Texas has lurked near the bottom of the league in on-base percentage, slugging and overall run production, which has left the lineup searching for a more reliable way to cash in when opportunities finally appear.

That is why the trade deadline could push the front office toward a very specific kind of bat, the sort that may not change the shape of the lineup by itself but can change the outcome of an inning. For a club that has too often left traffic stranded, the appeal is obvious: find someone who can drive in runs, bring some order to the middle of the order, and give a slumping offense a better chance to turn chances into crooked numbers. [Read more 🡒]

Rangers Rotation Pressure Keeps Mounting As Veteran Starter Waits

Jordan Montgomery took another small step in his return Tuesday, making his second rehab start of the year for Double-A Frisco and looking sharp enough to keep the conversation going around the Rangers rotation. He worked two scoreless, hitless innings with three strikeouts and no walks, a clean outing that showed the left-hander is still moving in the right direction as he builds back from Tommy John surgery.

Even so, Texas is keeping the leash short for now, which makes sense given how carefully the club has handled his workload and how much strain the rotation has already absorbed. With Jack Leiter on the injured list, the Rangers can use every healthy arm they can get, but Montgomery is still being brought along slowly and remains a ways from being ready to help in Arlington. [Read more 🡒]