Rangers come back to beat Rockies
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[August 11, 2016]
ARLINGTON, Texas -- The Texas
Rangers figured out a way to win again in their last at-bat on
Wednesday, this time by making the Colorado Rockies choose between
two equally undesirable options.
Pitch to Carlos Beltran or Adrian Beltre with the tying run on third
base and winning run on second in the eighth inning.
The Rockies made the wrong selection, choosing Beltre.
The third baseman's single scored two runs, sending Texas to a 5-4
comeback victory over the Rockies, the Rangers' league-best 36th
come-from-behind victory.
Texas earned its fifth consecutive win, including three straight in
their last at-bat against the Rockies. The series' first two games
were played in Denver.
The RBIs were Nos. 1,536 and 1,537 for Beltre, who tied Joe DiMaggio
for 47th all-time. The 37-year-old veteran, who is batting .411 with
five RBIs in his past four games, hit the second pitch he saw off
right-handed reliever Adam Ottavino into center to score Mitch
Moreland and Shin-Soo Choo.
Elvis Andrus struck out to start the Rangers' eighth, but Moreland
reached on an error by Colorado first baseman Mark Reynolds. Boone
Logan (1-2), who took the loss by allowing two unearned runs, then
hit Choo to put runners on first and second with one out.
Ian Desmond, who had two RBIs, advanced the runners with a groundout
to first.
With first base open, Colorado manager Walt Weiss elected to walk
Beltran intentionally to load the bases for Beltre, who drove the
ball past diving shortstop Cristhian Adames.
"I knew that could happen with first base open," Beltran said of the
potential to be walked. "Adrian was 0-for-3; they decide to pick
their match. Sometimes those matches can go wrong. It came out good
for our way."
Texas left-handed reliever Jake Diekman (3-1) earned the victory
despite giving up a run in two-thirds of an inning. Right-hander
Matt Bush pitched a perfect ninth for his first major league save.
The Rangers are 26-8 in one-run games this season, and they again
worked their magic in the late innings.
Texas topped Colorado by scoring three in the ninth on Monday. On
Tuesday, the Rangers tied the game with four in the eighth and
scored the game-winner in the ninth.
"Pick your poison in that situation," Weiss said of his
eighth-inning decision Wednesday. "At that point, I'm taking my best
shot. I felt like that was Ottovino (instead of Jordan Lyles, who
was pulled)."
Both starting pitchers took no-decisions.
Texas' Martin Perez, vying for his first victory since June 26,
extended his winless skid to eight games. The lefty surrendered one
run on four hits and two walks while striking out three over 5 2/3
innings.
Colorado lefty Jorge De La Rosa went five innings, giving up three
runs on seven hits and three walks while striking out one.
The Rangers took a 3-1 lead into the eighth thanks to Desmond's two
RBIs and Jonathan Lucroy's solo home run in the sixth.
The Rockies, though, touched up the Rangers bullpen, putting runners
on first and second with one out off Texas right-handed reliever
Keone Kela, who had given up only one run on two hits in his
previous nine games before walking Nolan Arenado and allowing a base
hit to Reynolds.
David Dahl's triple down the right field line off Diekman scored
both to tie the game.
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Rangers relief pitcher Jake Diekman (41) throws in the eighth inning
against the Colorado Rockies at Globe Life Park in Arlington.
Rangers won 5-4. Mandatory Credit: Ray Carlin-USA TODAY Sports
Raburn's sacrifice fly to left scored Dahl with the go-ahead run.
Dahl extended his hitting streak to 16 games.
Colorado leadoff hitter Charlie Blackmon went 3-for-5 and is
7-for-13 with four runs in the first three games against Texas.
Since June 20, Blackmon has at least one hit in 39 of 46 games.
"Our offense has done a great job," said Weiss, whose team fell to
15-11 since the All-Star break. "We've gotten some big hits in big
at-bats. We're playing well in many aspects. Just got to put
together nine complete innings."
The Rockies scored once on two hits and two Rangers errors in the
first. Blackmon led off with an infield single and advanced to
second on Perez's throwing error. DJ LeMahieu, the next hitter,
drove him in with a base hit to give Colorado a 1-0 lead.
Desmond answered with his first RBI in the second, a base hit to
left that brought home Jurickson Profar. Desmond's sacrifice fly to
center in the fourth gave the Rangers a lead, as Elvis Andrus, who
led off with a single, crossed the plate with Texas' second run.
With two outs in the fifth, Lucroy hit a 2-1 pitch from De La Rosa
over the center field wall.
"It's a great energy (booster)," Beltran said of winning with
another late rally. "At the same time, we would love to win a clean
game. I can't imagine how the opposing team feels after these three
days losing like that. (It) is awful for anyone. The fact that it
has worked out for us ... we're happy about that."
NOTES: Following the recommendations of two surgeons, Texas DH
Prince Fielder (neck surgery) formally announced his retirement
before the game. "The doctors told me that with two spinal fusions,
I can't play major league baseball anymore," Fielder said. ... Texas
activated OF Drew Stubbs from the 60-day disabled list and optioned
OF Ryan Rua to Triple-A Round Rock. To make room on the 40-man
roster, INF Kyle Kubitza was designated for assignment. ... Texas
RHP Colby Lewis (60-day DL) threw off the mound for the first time
on Wednesday since going on the DL with a strained oblique. ...
Texas RHP Tanner Scheppers, who hasn't pitched all season after knee
surgery, threw live batting practice with no apparent issues,
manager Jeff Banister said. ... Colorado OF Carlos Gonzalez (ankle
inflammation) was out of the lineup for a second straight game.
Manager Walt Weiss said he was day-to-day.
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