Tag: Texas Rangers

Colby Lewis Injury: Updates on Rangers Pitcher’s Lat and Return

Texas Rangers starting pitcher Colby Lewis will miss up to two months after suffering a strained lat muscle, per T.R. Sullivan of MLB.com.

Continue for updates.


Lewis Won’t Begin Throwing for at Least 4 Weeks

Wednesday, June 22

According to Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, the 36-year-old will start his throwing program only after undergoing an MRI in roughly a month.

Lewis’ injury came Tuesday night during his start against the Cincinnati Reds. He pitched five innings and allowed six earned runs in an 8-2 defeat for Texas:

Losing the veteran right-hander for an extended period of time is a major blow for the Rangers. According to FanGraphs, Lewis’ 1.3 WAR is highest among Texas’ qualified starting pitchers, and his 4.24 FIP is lowest in the rotation.

The Rangers own the highest playoff chances (90.9 percent) of any team in the American League West, per Baseball Prospectus. That figure is bound to drop in the coming weeks. USA Today‘s Bob Nightengale noted how depleted Texas’ staff is quickly becoming:

A.J. Griffin looks close to stepping back on the mound for the first time since May 7. Wilson reported he’s in line to start Friday against the Boston Red Sox. Having Griffin back will help alleviate Texas’ injury problems, but manager Jeff Banister will still need to find replacements for both Lewis and Derek Holland.

Banister may have little choice but to call up Kyle Lohse. The 37-year-old had a 5.85 ERA in 37 appearances for the Milwaukee Brewers in 2015, and in seven minor league starts, he’s 2-4 with a 5.09 ERA. Relying on Lohse to fill a major league rotation spot is a last resort, but Banister is running out of options.

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Colby Lewis’ Bid for History Highlights Unsung Hero of Rangers’ AL-Best Rotation

The most productive starting pitcher in the American League‘s best rotation came close to making history Thursday. As a general concept, that sounds like something that would happen.

But, Colby Lewis? Texas Rangers? That’s unexpected and therefore a cool story.

With a 3.00 ERA through 13 starts, Lewis was already having a good season when he took the hill to face the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum. He made it better by taking a perfect game into the eighth inning and a no-hitter into the ninth inning.

Alas, a four-pitch walk to Yonder Alonso snapped Lewis’ perfect-game bid. And leading off the ninth, Max Muncy nixed the no-no with a double that Nomar Mazara missed by thaaaaaaat much:

“I thought he was going to get to it a lot easier,” Lewis said afterward, per the Associated Press (via ESPN.com). “It is what it is. You can’t throw your arms up in the air and get all mad about it. You have to go back to work.”

He did just that. Lewis also lost his shutout after losing his no-hitter—allowing an RBI double to Coco Crisp that was also nearly caught—but finished things off to seal a 5-1 win.

With his first complete game of 2016, the 36-year-old right-hander lowered his ERA to 2.81. That’s the best in a Rangers rotation that now leads the American League in ERA at 3.52. Coming on the heels of a 2015 season in which the Rangers’ rotation had one of the five worst ERAs in the AL, that’s surprising enough. And indeed, nobody’s ever said it’s easy to pitch at Globe Life Park in Arlington, Texas.

But more so than what the Rangers rotation as a whole is doing, it’s what Lewis is doing that boggles the mind.

It would be easy to explain it if Cole Hamels (whose 3.14 ERA is none too shabby, granted) was Texas’ best starter. He throws strikes with a low-90s fastball, and he can still make hitters look foolish with a changeup that ranks among the best ever. Like a lot of guys these days, he’s a strikeout pitcher.

It would also be easy to explain it if Yu Darvish were Texas’ best starter. His health has only allowed him to make three starts this season, but he proved in those he still has great velocity and a slider that may be as nasty as Hamels’ changeup. He’s also a strikeout pitcher.

Heck, it would even be easy to explain it if Martin Perez were Texas’ best starter. He can’t contend with Hamels or Darvish in terms of raw stuff, but his sinker gets approximately all of the ground balls.

Lewis, on the other hand, excels at neither missing bats nor at managing contact. As you’d expect from a guy with his age and his injury track record—he’s had shoulder, elbow and hip surgerieshis fastball hovers in the high 80s. Also, it’s doubtful his slider, curveball or changeup will ever be among the GIFs featured at PitcherList.com

This makes Lewis a hard guy to sum up on paper. He’s one of those guys you just have to, you know, watch.

That’s the only way to understand it’s not about what Lewis throws but rather how he throws what he throws. He’ll work both sides of the strike zone with a four-seam fastball and a sinker. He’ll also pitch backward, using his secondaries to get ahead before going to the heat. In general, the eye test says he’s good at sequencing his pitches.

This is the long way of saying the obvious: Lewis just plain knows how to pitch. Most days, that makes him a solid innings-eater. On a good day, it apparently make him damn near unhittable.

To echo the thoughts of CBS Sports’ Dayn Perry, however, the sustainability of Lewis’ current performance is a question mark. Maybe even a big question mark.

There are metrics that suggest Lewis is lucky to have his 2.81 ERA. The most basic is fielding independent pitching, which has Lewis rated as one of the luckiest pitchers in the American League.

That Lewis is walking only 1.7 batters per nine innings means he has one valuable skill, to be sure. But he’s only striking out 5.6 batters per nine innings despite all those strikes. Because of that, he needs good fortune on balls in play.

The best way to earn that is to induce soft contact. Lewis isn’t doing that. He entered Thursday with a 37.9 hard-hit rate, way above his career average of 31.7. According to Baseball Savant, his average exit velocity was 89.0 miles per hour. That’s basically the league average.

The number it all points to is .234. That’s Lewis’ batting average on balls in play. That’s far below his career norm of .297 and therefore likely due for a major regression.

That’s one reason nobody should be shocked if Lewis comes back to earth. Besides that, well, this is also the same guy who put up a 4.90 ERA across 2014 and 2015.

But the damage Lewis has already done should still make a difference in the end. He’s played an important role in establishing the Rangers’ six-and-a-half-game lead in the AL West, not to mention their three-game lead over everyone else for the top record in the American League. Even if they never get better, the Rangers should find themselves playing in October.

And even if Lewis is no longer their best pitcher by then, the Rangers will still be glad to have him.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

Follow zachrymer on Twitter 

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Colby Lewis Loses No-Hitter in 9th Inning vs. Athletics: Highlights and Reaction

Texas Rangers pitcher Colby Lewis is in the midst of a resurgent campaign at age 36, and it got even better Thursday. He narrowly missed a no-hitter and a perfect game during the Rangers’ 5-1 victory over the Oakland Athletics.

Lewis lost his perfect game when he walked Yonder Alonso in the eighth, his no-hitter when he allowed a double to Max Muncy to start the bottom of the ninth and his shutout when Coco Crisp drove Muncy home on a double.

Although he just missed history, Lewis still pitched a complete game and allowed a single run on two hits. He also struck out four batters and gave up only one walk. ESPN Stats & Info noted it was the first time someone broke up a no-hit bid in the final inning since last season:

Lewis didn’t just post impressive results. He sported good velocity deep into the contest as he stymied the Oakland hitters, as Daren Willman of MLB.com pointed out:

Lewis’ efficiency was almost as impressive as his stat line. Robert Brender of SiriusXM noted the Texas hurler threw only 75 pitches in those first seven innings, and Richard Justice of MLB.com tweeted Lewis was aggressive inside the strike zone:

The Texas offense helped set the tone in the late innings with two runs in the seventh and three in the eighth. Ian Desmond drilled a home run in the seventh, while Adrian Beltre finished with three hits and drove in two runs with a double in the eighth. 

Left fielder Ryan Rua also gave Lewis some help in the eighth with a leaping catch right in front of the wall, but Lewis walked Alonso on four pitches to end the perfect game. 

The no-hitter didn’t last much longer, as Muncy led off the bottom of the ninth with that double:

Lewis was already putting up career numbers through his first 13 starts of the year coming into Thursday, as MLB.com illustrated:

Lewis discussed his efforts after the win:

The Rangers rotation needed a boost after the team recently put Yu Darvish on the disabled list with shoulder discomfort, and Lewis provided that Thursday.

Even with the question marks surrounding Darvish’s health after he missed the 2015 season following Tommy John surgery, the Rangers are in first place in the American League West by 6.5 games. If Lewis continues to pitch at an effective level, Texas will have a formidable rotation that also features Cole Hamels and Martin Perez as it strives to reach the postseason for the second straight year. 

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Jurickson Profar Showing Star Talent Rangers Hoped for After 2 Lost Years

You can already imagine it on a shelf at your local book store: Better Late Than Never: The Jurickson Profar Story.

The last time I wrote about Profar was in late December, when the topic at hand was whether the Texas Rangers might find a team willing to trade for him as a reclamation project. The young shortstop was a former top prospect, sure, but at that point he was also:

  • A player with disappointing results in the majors.
  • A player coming off two consecutive lost years due to right shoulder problems.
  • A player who had no clear fit on the Rangers’ major league roster.

A trade was never likely, though, for reasons that Rangers general manager Jon Daniels was upfront about in a recent interview.

“Our feeling was, we’ve invested a lot of time in getting him healthy, so let’s see what we have,” Daniels told Jorge L. Ortiz of USA Today. “Teams are looking at him like, ‘We have a chance to get a really good player at a discount.’ It didn’t make sense for us.”

Flash-forward a few months, and the payoff from the Rangers’ roll of the dice on Profar is one reason among many they have the American League‘s best record.

After starting 2016 with a strong showing at Triple-A Round Rock, the 23-year-old out of Curacao is hitting .343 and pitching in all over the diamond through 17 major league games. In so doing, he’s looked a lot like the player everyone said he would be one day.

You don’t need to take your DeLorean that far back in time to find when Profar was everyone’s favorite prospect. He was the No. 1 prospect in baseball going into 2013 for Baseball America and Baseball Prospectus, with the consensus being that he was as complete a prospect as anyone could hope for.

Of his bat, BP’s Jason Parks praised the switch-hitting Profar for a “preternatural bat-to-ball ability” as well as “excellent pitch recognition skills/strike zone judgment.” None of this rang true, as Profar hit just .231 through his first 94 major league games. But in 2016, we can say, “Ah, there it is.”

Profar’s 16.4 strikeout percentage is safely below the major league average of 21.2 percent. He entered Monday with just one hit against four breaking balls, according to Brooks Baseball, but he was hitting .333 against fastballs and .429 against off-speed.

From the left side of the plate, where he’s logged most of his at-bats, Profar has also shown an ability to hit pitches on both the inside and outside part of the strike zone:

Mind you, one obvious elephant in the room is the small sample size. And there are two more.

The fact that Profar only has a .370 on-base percentage to go with his .343 batting average highlights that he’s been more aggressive than advertised. That’s making him reliant on batting average on balls in play, and there’s visual evidence (here, here and here) that his .393 BABIP is too good to be true.

A regression may only go so far, however. Profar’s batted ball profile reveals he’s not suppressing his BABIP by hitting a bunch of balls in the air and also that he’s making good use of the whole field. And as Baseball Savant can show, his exit velocity is on the up and up:

If Profar continues on this path, the extra hard contact will only help him maintain a high BABIP. With only two home runs to his name now, it would also lead to more power. That was something else he was supposed to have, as some used to see him as a potential double-digit home run hitter.

In the meantime, all Profar has to do on the other side of the ball is keep doing what he’s been doing.

Baseball America once described Profar as an “electrifying” defender due to his combination of soft hands, wide range and strong arm. With Elvis Andrus at shortstop and Rougned Odor at second base, how the Rangers would find a home for these talents was a good question at the start of the year. 

Their solution, as it turns out, has been to find multiple homes for Profar’s talents. He’s spelled Odor at second, Adrian Beltre at third and even Mitch Moreland at first. And though the defensive metrics claim Profar’s defense has been merely passable, the video tells a different story.

For instance, here’s Profar the second baseman ranging into the hole to rob Francisco Lindor:

And here’s Profar the first baseman making the kind of stretch that few first basemen/regular humans are capable of:

The fact that Profar has been able to do good work with the glove despite not playing a single inning at shortstop is a good sign for the Rangers. It shows he has the talent to expand his horizons beyond his natural position, which is something he may need to keep doing if he wants to stay in the lineup.

With Moreland and Prince Fielder both having poor seasons, it’s conceivable Profar could be used as an everyday first baseman. And to borrow an idea from Cliff Corcoran of Sports Illustrated, Profar logging some time in the outfield could prepare him to fill Ian Desmond’s shoes in center field if free agency takes him elsewhere this winter.

That’s presumably not what the Rangers had in mind when Profar had the look of a future superstar at shortstop a few years ago, but that does not matter in the grand scheme of things. Regardless of his position, they had every reason to hope that Profar would one day be an impact player on both sides of the ball. It took some patience, but he’s finally showing them he can be just that.

Basically, Better Late Than Never: The Jurickson Profar Story. Reserve your copy today.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

Follow zachrymer on Twitter 

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Yu Darvish Injury: Updates on Rangers Star’s Neck, Shoulder and Return

Texas Rangers pitcher Yu Darvish was scratched Saturday from his next start because of tightness in his neck and shoulder, and was placed on the disabled list Monday. It is uncertain when he’ll return to the mound. 

Continue for updates.


Shoulder Issue Forces Darvish Back to DL

Monday, June 13

Darvish is suffering from “shoulder discomfort,” according to Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News. The Rangers recalled Alex Claudio from Triple-A to take his spot on the 25-man roster.


Darvish Struggling to Stay Healthy

Darvish missed the entire 2015 season after undergoing Tommy John surgery. The Rangers took things slowly with his return in 2016, as he didn’t face live hitters until April 13 and didn’t make his first start until May 28 against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Darvish is a difference-maker when healthy, as the 29-year-old had a 3.27 ERA and 680 strikeouts in 545.1 innings from 2012-14.

Even a limited Darvish, who could be used as a weapon out of the bullpen later in the year to keep his innings count low, would make Texas exponentially more dangerous. The Seattle Mariners got off to a strong start this season, but the Rangers led the American League West by five games entering Monday.

Texas’ starting rotation has depth with Cole Hamels, Martin Perez, Colby Lewis and Derek Holland in the top four spots. Darvish is a true ace, however, and his return would allow Hamels to slot in as a strong No. 2.

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MLB Betting Preview: Seattle Mariners vs. Texas Rangers Odds, Analysis

Following a high-scoring four-game home-and-home series against the San Diego Padres, the Seattle Mariners (31-22) will travel to Arlington for the first of three games against the Texas Rangers (31-22) on Friday.

While the Mariners were busy rallying back to knock off the Padres 16-13 to win that interleague series Thursday, the Rangers enjoyed a day off and head into this American League West matchup as -140 home betting favorites (bet $140 to win $100) at sportsbooks monitored by Odds Shark.

Texas and Seattle are tied atop the division and will play each other six times in the next 10 games after splitting the first six meetings in early April. The Rangers are 9-3 in their last 12 since getting swept in a three-game road set versus the Oakland Athletics, while the Mariners lost three in a row to the Minnesota Twins before playing San Diego.

Despite outscoring the Padres 47-34 in that series, Seattle’s starting pitching is a big concern, especially after surrendering 27 of those runs in the last two games.

Taijuan Walker (2-5, 3.31 ERA) has seen the Mariners lose five of his last six starts, with his ERA gradually rising from a season-low of 1.44 heading into May. He suffered a neck injury against the Houston Astros on May 6 and has not been the same since.

Walker has surrendered nine home runs in his past five outings and gave up only one in his first five combined, which includes a 4-2 home victory against Texas back on April 13. The under cashed in that game and is 7-2-1 in his 10 starts this year. However, the over is 4-1 in the past five meetings, according to the Odds Shark MLB Database.

The Rangers hope ace Yu Darvish (1-0, 1.80 ERA) will continue to be as sharp in his second start as he was in his first when he allowed one run and three hits in five innings of a 5-2 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates last Saturday. He missed last season following Tommy John surgery and will continue to be on a pitch count after throwing 81 against the Pirates, with Texas expected to keep him under 100 in this outing.

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Rougned Odor Suspension Reduced: Latest Details, Comments and Reaction

Texas Rangers second baseman Rougned Odor’s suspension has been reduced by one game.

Odor, who punched Toronto Blue Jays outfielder Jose Bautista during a game on May 15, will be suspended seven games instead of the eight-game punishment the league originally handed out, according to Jon Heyman of MLB Network.

Odor’s suspension means Texas will call 23-year-old Jurickson Profar back up to the major league roster, according to T.R. Sullivan of MLB.com.

Before landing the right hook that shocked the baseball world, the 22-year-old Odor was having his best big league season to date. He was batting .286 to go along with seven home runs and became the Rangers’ go-to leadoff guy.

But since that punch to Bautista, Odor’s numbers have taken a hit; he’s batting .152 since May 16. Texas went 4-4 in that span. Odor filed an appeal with MLB, which allowed him to keep playing even after it announced his suspension.

While Bautista’s slide looked to be intentional, it was inevitable Odor would be suspended for throwing a punch, let alone connecting successfully.

Because of Odor’s struggles at the plate lately, this time off may help him to collect himself before rejoining the club. His suspension will begin on Friday. With Odor out, the Rangers have a good opportunity to see what Profar—their former top minor league player—can bring to the table.

Profar has not played for the Rangers since 2013 because of nagging shoulder injuries and sat out all of the 2015 season. He was slated to be the second baseman of the future when Texas sent Ian Kinsler to the Detroit Tigers for Prince Fielder, but that never came to fruition because of his injuries and the emergence of Odor.

Profar batted .284 and hit five homers in 41 games for Triple-A Round Rock this season. The Rangers could use that kind of production for the next week, especially at the top of the lineup.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

Follow Danny Webster on Twitter.

 

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Joey Gallo Recalled from Triple-A Round Rock by Rangers

After placing outfielder Drew Stubbs on the 15-day disabled list, the Texas Rangers announced Monday that they called up young star Joey Gallo to the major league roster from Triple-A.

The 22-year-old outfielder/third baseman from Las Vegas played 24 games for the Round Rock Express this season while batting .265 and hitting eight home runs. This will be Gallo’s second stint with the Rangers. He has appeared in 36 games and hit six home runs while batting .204 in his major league career.  

The Rangers called up Gallo on June 2 of last year, and he made an impact from the start. He went 3-for-4 at the plate in his first game and hit his first career major league homer in front of his home fans against the Chicago White Sox.

From June 2-17, Gallo batted .260 and hit five homers, including one off Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw at Dodger Stadium on June 17. Gallo’s production took a major hit over the next 11 games, as he recorded only six hits in 40 plate appearances.

The former Bishop Gorman High School product was called up again in September but continued to struggle. Gallo hit only one homer in 25 plate appearances while batting .143.

Stefan Stevenson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram noted Gallo would be available off the bench for the Rangers’ game on Monday at Globe Life Park in Arlington, Texas, against the Los Angeles Angels.

Gallo is capable of hitting any pitch he sees out of the park but struggled with his plate discipline during his time with the Rangers, striking out 57 times and drawing only 15 walks. But there’s no denying he brings much-needed power to the Texas lineup from the left side of the plate.

This could mean the Rangers will get their first glimpse of playing Gallo in the outfield. Texas is set at center field and left field with veteran Ian Desmond and 21-year-old Nomar Mazara, which means Gallo could move to right field.

Texas is 1.5 games out of first place in the American League West, but fans will get a look into the future with Gallo returning to the major league roster.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

Follow Danny Webster on Twitter.

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Josh Hamilton Injury Update: Rangers OF to Undergo Knee Surgery, Out for Season

Texas Rangers outfielder Josh Hamilton will undergo another knee surgery on June 8 and miss the remainder of the 2016 season, per Jared Sandler of 105.3 The Fan in Dallas and Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

The former MVP hasn’t played for the Rangers in 2016 after he experienced left knee soreness in February and started the year on the disabled list.

Hamilton had what MLB.com’s T.R. Sullivan called “cleanup” surgery in September, and he returned to the field and played through the 2015 playoffs. Then, the Dallas Morning NewsEvan Grant reported in November that Hamilton had a second surgery on the same knee after the season.

The 35-year-old looked to be set to return after the team sent him on a minor league rehab assignment in late April. However, the Rangers pulled him from the assignment May 5.

Injuries have dogged Hamilton throughout his career. Only once in nine years has he appeared in more than 150 games, and he played just 139 total games between the 2014 and 2015 seasons.

Wilson noted the team doesn’t see Monday’s news as a major setback:

The offseason addition of Ian Desmond and call-up of Nomar Mazara have stabilized Texas’ outfield in Hamilton’s absence, and the team is only 1.5 games behind the Seattle Mariners in the American League West.

Even with Shin-Soo Choo and Drew Stubbs heading to the DL, per Wilson, the Rangers have enough depth to cope without Hamilton this year, especially if they bring Joey Gallo back up to the majors.

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Shin-Soo Choo Injury: Updates on Rangers OF’s Hamstring and Return

Texas Rangers outfielder Shin-Soo Choo was placed on the disabled list Monday because of a strained hamstring.

Continue for updates.   


No Timetable for Choo’s Return

Monday, May 23

T.R. Sullivan of MLB.com reported on Choo’s trip to the DL. The Fort Worth Star-Telegram‘s Jeff Wilson reported on the muddled forecast for when Choo can return to the field.

Choo has a nice blend of power, speed and defense that makes him a solid everyday starter. His 3.5 WAR rating from last year, per ESPN.com, showed he’s well above a replacement-level player.

After appearing in 149 games last season, though, Choo hit the disabled list early in the 2016 campaign because of a calf injury. That ailment was expected to keep Choo out for a longer stretch of games than the 33-year-old missed in all of 2015.

But when Choo first went down, it created a chance for 21-year-old prodigy Nomar Mazara to take over in right field.

Mazara has immense upside and has proved himself ready to roll in the big leagues, evidenced by Texas’ decision to plug him in at the No. 2 spot in the lineup for his debut and his .304 batting average entering Monday.

The Rangers therefore don’t have to rush Choo back into action. They can keep giving Mazara game reps so he can gain experience, which will expedite his development and enhance his chances of becoming a true franchise cornerstone.

Especially since he’s already gone down with a rather severe injury this year, Choo should be given maximum time to recover so he’s fit enough to help Texas on a prospective playoff push.

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