Rangers Finally Put Winston Santos In A Spot Fans Had Waited For

After years of development and recent setbacks, pitcher Winston Santos finally took the mound for the Texas Rangers, marking a significant moment in his career despite a challenging debut performance.

The Texas Rangers finally handed Winston Santos the ball, and the No. 5 pitching prospect got his first taste of a major league game on Wednesday in Cleveland.

Santos, who had been called up last Wednesday while the Rangers were in Miami, was used for the final two innings of a 9-4 loss to the Guardians. Texas had promoted him from the minors before that game and sent Jose Corniell back to Triple-A Round Rock. Santos had pitched the night before, and the club waited a week before turning to him in a game.

He entered in the seventh with Cole Winn in trouble. Steven Kwan tripled, then scored on a Chase DeLauter single to push Cleveland ahead 6-3. Skip Schumaker then gave Santos the ball with DeLauter still on first.

The debut didn’t start cleanly. DeLauter stole second, advanced to third on a wild pitch and came home on a second wild pitch from Santos, which also walked Rhys Hoskins. Santos settled in after that and retired the next three batters.

He stayed on for another inning, but the Guardians got to him again. After a leadoff single by Kahlil Watson, former Rangers catcher Austin Hedges hit a two-run homer. Santos then retired the next three hitters.

His line: two innings, two hits, two earned runs, one walk and one strikeout. That left him with a 9.00 ERA.

The Rangers’ only other notable pitching move during the wait came Monday, when they signed Chris Paddack. That move required a 40-man roster adjustment, and Texas designated Paddack for assignment the next day before recalling Gavin Collyer from Round Rock.

Santos, 24 and from the Dominican Republic, has long been one of the organization’s more valued arms. Texas signed him as an international free agent in 2021 and added him to the 40-man roster last November to keep him out of the Rule 5 draft, along with Emiliano Teodo. He also appeared in the MLB Futures Game and was named a Fall Star at the Arizona Fall League last November.

His season got a late start after he injured his hand on a comebacker during Major League spring training. Through 11 starts at Double-A Frisco, he is 1-3 with a 7.44 ERA.

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