Beltre belts walk-off homer to lift Rangers past A's
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[July 26, 2016]
By Art Garcia, The Sports Xchange
ARLINGTON, Texas -- With the game on
the line, there is no one the Texas Rangers would rather have at the
plate than Adrian Beltre.
The possible future Hall of Famer showed why again Monday night.
Beltre drilled a two-run walk-off home run with two outs in the
ninth, lifting the Rangers to a 7-6 win over the Oakland Athletics
at Globe Life Park.
"He leads this ballclub on the field," Texas manager Jeff Banister
said. "This is what he does. You can see the determination in his
face. He knows what's at stake. Two special at-bats tonight, none
bigger than the last one. It's just incredible and never stops
impressing anybody."
Texas (58-42) extended its winning streak to three games in the
opener of a seven-game homestand. The Rangers also upped their lead
in the division to 3 1/2 game with Houston's loss to the New York
Yankees.
Beltre's second homer of the game sailed into the A's bullpen off
closer Ryan Madson. The Rangers rallied from a 5-1 deficit to beat
their American League West rivals for the fourth straight time.
Beltre's ninth career walk-off home run put the finishing touches on
a 4-for-5 performance that also included three RBIs and three runs
scored. It was the first walk-off home run with the Rangers trailing
since John Hamilton hit one in 2012.
"I was looking for a pitch over the plate I could drive, hit a
double, hit a home run, exactly what I did," Beltre said. "I didn't
want to get behind a pitcher like that. He's a really good pitcher."
Madson was one out away from his 22nd save. Instead, his first pitch
to Beltre dropped his record to 3-4.
"I know he's a good first-pitch fastball guy," Madson said. "I got
maybe a little bold-headed and tried to beat him instead of putting
it in a good spot. I was feeling good with the heater I've had the
last few weeks, so I had confidence in it. Just ended up being
middle-middle, and to a fastball guy, first pitch, that's not where
I was aiming."
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Oakland (45-55) saw its three-game winning streak snapped. The A's
are still tied for the best record in the majors since the All-Star
break at 7-4.
Danny Valencia went 2-for-4 for the A's with three RBIs. He hit a
two-run homer in the first and tacked on a run-scoring double in the
third, as his batting average inched up to .302.
Valencia, though, was hardly surprised by Beltre's ninth-inning
heroics.
"Adrian Beltre is the one guy over there you say you can't let him
beat you," Valencia said. "But he always finds a way."
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Texas reliever Jason Diekman (2-1) was credited with the win, but
starter Martin Perez kept the Rangers in the game after getting
roughed up early. The lefty allowed five runs (three earned) through
the first three innings and gave up five extra-base hits before
retiring seven of the last eight batters he faced in six innings of
work.
Oakland starter Daniel Mengden often found himself in trouble and
couldn't make it out of the fifth after giving up four runs on seven
hits. The rookie did depart with a 5-4 lead.
The division rivals traded runs in the seventh to keep it a one-run
game. Josh Reddick's two-out single scored Matt McBride off Texas
reliever Matt Bush. Texas countered with Beltre's slicing homer just
inside the right-field foul pole against reliever John Axford.
All 13 runs by the two clubs were scored with two outs.
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The A's took a 2-0 lead in the first on Valencia's 13th home run of
a season. The shot to center came after Reddick reached on a two-out
error by shortstop Elvis Andrus, who pulled first baseman Mitch
Moreland off the bag with a wide throw.
Texas cut the gap in half in the bottom of the inning on Ian
Desmond's 19th homer. The two-out solo shot to right was Desmond's
second home run against Mengden this season.
Oakland tacked on another three runs in the third against Perez on
doubles from Jed Lowrie, Valencia, Khris Davis and Billy Butler. The
last three two-baggers came with two outs, each driving in a run.
The Rangers pulled within 5-2 in the fourth on Bobby Wilson's
two-out double to left to plate Beltre.
Texas got even closer on another two-out hit in the fifth, this one
from Rougned Odor, to drive home two runs and make it 5-4. After an
ensuing walk, Oakland manager Bob Melvin yanked Mengden in favor of
Marc Rzepczynski.
NOTES: Texas DH Prince Fielder is likely headed to season-ending
surgery, according to general manager Jon Daniels. Fielder is on the
disabled list with a herniated C5-C6 disk in his neck. Neck surgery
for a previous herniation in 2014 prematurely ended that season for
Fielder. Daniels said the loss of Fielder does not impact the club's
plans with the trade deadline approaching. ... Oakland OF Coco Crisp
(stiff neck) missed his second straight game. ... Athletics RF Josh
Reddick was back in the lineup Monday after missing two starts due
to back pain. ... Oakland called up IF/OF Max Muncy from Nashville
to take the place of RHP Jesse Hahn, who was sent down to the
Triple-A club.
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