Road Warriors: Rangers blank Diamondbacks to win franchise's first World
Series
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[November 02, 2023]
By Rory Carroll
(Reuters) -The Texas Rangers kept up their sensational play on the
road, shutting out the Diamondbacks 5-0 in Game Five of the World
Series in Arizona on Wednesday and delivering the franchise its
first Major League Baseball championship.
Diamondbacks ace Zac Gallen took a no-hitter into the seventh inning
but gave up three consecutive hits beginning with a single to Corey
Seager and ending with an RBI up the middle to Mitch Garver that
broke up the scoreless affair.
The Rangers added four more runs in the top of the ninth, all but
extinguishing any hope of a Diamondbacks comeback as Josh Sborz
struck out Ketel Marte looking to seal the triumph, leading players
to pile on top of each other in the middle of the field.
"Everything I've ever worked for was for this moment," said
shortstop Marcus Semien, who blasted a two-run homer in the ninth.
"Kind of a crazy game when you're getting no-hit through six, Gallen
was unbelievable tonight, but we came through. Once Corey got the
first hit, everybody kind of woke up."
It was the Rangers' MLB record 11th straight road victory in the
postseason, and Sborz said the club took pride in their ability to
stay focused amid the madness surrounding them.
"It was hostile territory everywhere we went and we just stayed
calm, did our job, and played the way we did all year," he said.
While Gallen rolled through his first six innings at Chase Field, it
was an entirely different story for Rangers starter Nathan Eovaldi.
The righty had traffic on the bases in each of the first five
innings and had his back against the wall when the Diamondbacks
loaded them up in the bottom of the fifth.
But he elicited a harmless ground ball from Lourdes Gurriel to end
the threat and got his first 1-2-3 inning in the sixth before
handing the ball over to Aroldis Chapman.
"I don't know how many more rabbits I had left in my hat," Eovaldi
said. "I didn't really help myself out in a lot of those situations
and other times they put together quality at-bats... but we were
able to come out on top, that's the main thing."
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Nov 1, 2023; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Texas Rangers manager Bruce
Bochy (15) celebrates with his team after winning the 2023 World
Series in five games against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase
Field. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports
TEXAS TURNAROUND
The championship marks a dramatic turnaround for the franchise,
which lost 102 games in the 2021 season.
The front office responded to that futility aggressively, signing
Seager, who was named World Series MVP for the second time on
Wednesday, and Semien as part of a rapid rebuild.
It paid off and now the team, which was founded in Washington in
1961 and has played in Texas since 1972, is only the third club to
go from losing 100 games to winning it all within a two-year span,
joining the 1914 Boston Braves and 1969 Mets.
Perhaps the most important component of their transformation came
when ownership lured three-time World Series winning manager Bruce
Bochy out of retirement.
"I was in Nashville just relaxing and had three years off, and to
come back and be in this position, I've said so many times, I'll say
it again, I'm blessed," Bochy told reporters.
Bochy joins an elite list of managers who have won at least four
titles, including Joe McCarthy (7), Casey Stengel (7), Connie Mack
(5), Walter Alston (4) and Joe Torre (4).
"To be mentioned with those names, I never thought in my wildest
dreams when I started managing that I'd be in this position," he
said.
(Reporting by Rory Carroll in Los Angeles; Editing by Jacqueline
Wong and Gerry Doyle)
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