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Rangers
continue to discourage fans
by
Eric Spikes
reporter
The Texas Rangers
have a history of not meeting the standards of the bleacher
inhabitants of Arlington, and 2008 is shaping out to
a slice of the same ol’ pie.
The trend of mediocre play can be quite
disturbing for a fan with anger issues on free bat night.
Once were faint glimmers of victory at
the ballpark in Arlington. Years of chilled champagne
existed, and baseball games were so good fans could
almost taste them.
Those years have been brushed away like
dirt from home plate.
The Rangers won the Western Division in ’96, ’98
and ’99. But each year that blaze of baseball
fever was stomped out by a pinstripe shirt.
In the three years the Rangers participated
in playoffs, they won only one game—the first,
pitched by John Burkett—and lost the next nine.
While going through a rebuilding period,
the Rangers are relying on up-and-comers still in the
muck of the minors.
Youngsters such as Elvis Andrus and Jarrod
Saltalamacchia are waiting for a crack at the big leagues.
A surprise burst of solid pitching from
Kevin Millwood this spring planted seeds of hope. Millwood
has turned men into boys at the plate. Showing flashes
of this same greatness is Vicente Padilla, another straggler
from the year prior.
The Rangers have managed to sign All-Star
MVP Michael Young and the ever-improving Ian Kinsler
to multi-year deals.
New centerfielder Josh Hamilton is leading
the American Leagues in RBIs and hitting .310.
These factors, along with their highly
touted Minor League system, have the Rangers and their
fans counting down to the light of day.
Only the rest of the season will let fans
know if they can come out of the dark and cheer in the
light.
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