The Rangers found another late surge Friday night, and it looked awfully familiar.
Tied at 3 going to the bottom of the eighth, Texas broke things open again, this time with four runs in the frame and Jake Burger finishing the job with a three-run homer. That pushed the Rangers to a 7-3 win, and it came on the heels of the same kind of eighth-inning burst they used in Tuesday’s opener against the Angels, when they were tied at 3 before scoring five in the bottom of the eighth and closing it out on Alejandro Osuna’s three-run shot.
The late innings also followed a similar script on the mound. Against the Angels, Chris Martin allowed a run late, Cole Winn threw a scoreless appearance, and Tyler Alexander handled the ninth. Against the Astros, Martin was charged with two runs late, Winn was again scoreless, and Alexander again pitched the ninth.
Before the bullpen got involved, Cal Quantrill gave the Rangers exactly the kind of start they needed while filling in for Jack Leiter. He worked six innings and allowed just one run, which came on a Yordan Alvarez home run.
The strikeout total was light - Quantrill had only one K on Friday - and he barely missed bats, getting just two swings and misses on 79 pitches. Still, he kept Houston in check and gave Texas a chance to take over late.
Quantrill’s role may not last much longer. Jordan Montgomery’s return isn’t far off, with a timeline that points to the end of the month, and if everyone is healthy - a big if, as noted - Quantrill would move back to the bullpen. For now, though, he’s giving the Rangers useful innings in the rotation.
The seventh inning brought more stress for a bullpen that was already short-handed because Jacob Latz had thrown 41 pitches the night before. Skip Schumaker went to Chris Martin, and the inning turned quickly.
Martin allowed a bloop single to LaMonte Wade, Jr., then watched Cam Smith line out hard to Evan Carter before Yainer Diaz crushed a home run down the left field line to tie the game. After a routine fly out, Martin was lifted for Cole Winn, who retired all four hitters he faced.
Martin’s numbers continue to look rough. His ERA is up to 8.31, and he also carries a 7.40 xERA and 6.57 FIP.
The sample is still small - just 13 innings across 15 games - because he has spent time on the injured list. Even so, the Rangers could use a return to form from him, especially with the bullpen looking so ragged.
That said, the clock is ticking. The trade deadline is approaching, Texas is likely to look for relief help if it stays in the playoff race, and Martin’s spot could be in jeopardy if he doesn’t turn things around soon.
The good news for Texas was that it didn’t have to sit on the Martin mess for long. The offense went right after Astros reliever Bryan King, who entered with a 2.03 ERA in 38 appearances and a nine-game scoreless streak.
He had allowed only one run since Joc Pederson homered off him on May 27. The Rangers changed that in a hurry.
Wyatt Langford led off the inning with a homer, and Burger later added his three-run blast to blow King’s ERA up to 2.85.
That gave Texas 15 home runs in eight games this month.
Langford’s day stood out again, and for good reason. He’s now hitting .276/.324/.506 on the season with a 1.9 bWAR in just 42 games, production that looks MVP-caliber over a full year. The Rangers also got more loud contact throughout the night: Wyatt Langford’s homer was 108.6 mph, Joc Pederson’s blast came off at 107.7 mph, Brandon Nimmo doubled at 105.2 mph, Josh Jung singled at 104.4 mph, and Burger’s homer left the bat at 101.0 mph.
The pitch velocities told their own story too. Quantrill’s sinker reached 95.8 mph and averaged 94.4 mph.
Martin’s fastball hit 94.8 mph. Winn got up to 96.2 mph with his fastball, and Alexander’s fastball topped out at 91.6 mph.
In Other News...
Rangers Fans Are Suddenly Rethinking A First Round Pick
Justin Foscue has gone from a name attached to frustration to one that is starting to look a lot more interesting for the Rangers. The 2020 first-round pick has taken a real step forward in 2026, hitting .290/.363/.570 with seven home runs over 43 games, a stretch that has forced a fresh look at a player who once seemed stuck after a rough start in the majors.
The turnaround matters because it changes how Texas can think about a former top pick whose early big-league numbers had left plenty of doubt. Foscue is no longer just a prospect story or a reminder of past struggles, and his work against left-handed pitching has made him more than a feel-good rebound candidate. The bigger question now is how much of this surge the Rangers can count on going forward. [Read more 🡒]
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That matters now because the Rangers are heading into the draft with the 16th overall pick and a front office that can point to a recent track record instead of a hope-and-pray philosophy. The bigger question is whether this run of hits is the start of a true organizational edge or just a strong stretch that still needs one more impact player to make it feel complete. [Read more 🡒]
