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From Last Place to World Series Champions, the Rangers Provide Hope for All MLB Teams

Kerry Miller
Nov 2, 2023
PHOENIX, AZ - NOVEMBER 01: Manager Bruce Bochy #15 of the Texas Rangers acknowledges the crowd during the trophy presentation after Game 5 of the 2023 World Series between the Texas Rangers and the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field on Wednesday, November 1, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Texas Rangers won the World Series 5-0. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images)
PHOENIX, AZ - NOVEMBER 01: Manager Bruce Bochy #15 of the Texas Rangers acknowledges the crowd during the trophy presentation after Game 5 of the 2023 World Series between the Texas Rangers and the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field on Wednesday, November 1, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Texas Rangers won the World Series 5-0. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

From their humble beginnings as the Washington Senators in 1961, the Texas Rangers churned through generations of fans who knew only pain.

When they first got close to the mountaintop in 2010 and 2011, they were agonizingly denied joy by a comic book villain: Mr. Freese.

At long last, though, there is jubilation in Arlington, as the Rangers finished off what has to be the most absurd postseason run in the history of professional sports. With the 5-0 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks Wednesday night, they capped off a perfect 11-0 record on the road en route to their first World Series title.

Now, imagine reading that last sentence two years ago.

These same Rangers were a 102-loss dumpster fire.

Texas' three team leaders in innings pitched in 2021 each had an ERA north of 5.00. The Rangers had three All-Stars that season, but they traded two of them away a few weeks later. The farm system ranked bottom top 10 in the majors.

It was a low point with no end in sight.

And all it took was a MASSIVE influx of cash to turn things around.

Right before the lockout began, the Rangers committed a combined $500 million to Corey Seager and Marcus Semien.

When they still finished 38 games behind the Astros in 2022, they threw another $185 million at Jacob deGrom and just kept stockpiling starting pitchers like Nathan Eovaldi with eight-figure salaries, eventually getting both their seventh (Max Scherzer) and eighth (Jordan Montgomery) such pitchers at the trade deadline.

That's right, the Rangers had eight starting pitchers making at least $10M in 2023.

Throw in talking a three-time World Series-winning manager (Bruce Bochy) out of retirement, calling up an incredible rookie (Evan Carter) for the final few weeks of the regular season and, inexplicably, a Creed's Greatest Hits album and you've got yourself a world champion.

"You want to create an environment that is going to bring out the best in the players," Bochy said back in May. "Have them comfortable. Have them play with freedom, freedom that you need to play with to be the best that you can be. Not feeling pressure or anything. It's a culture you want to have."

Even after losing deGrom to a season-ending injury that evidently only Texas didn't see coming, it was clear less than two months into the season that all the spending had worked and they had become the best team in baseball.

There were season-long (and even postseason-long) questions about the bullpen, but the slugging and the rotation were always going to give this team a real chance to win it all.

To be sure, spending like there's no tomorrow isn't a foolproof plan. (See: New York Mets, New York Yankees and San Diego Padres.) Nor is it even a viable option for at least half of the MLB franchises. I mean, you try telling fans in Kansas City or Pittsburgh that it only takes about a billion dollars to fix your team in a hurry and see how well that line is received.

However, though the Rangers didn't necessarily provide the universal blueprint for going from zero to hero in the span of 24 months, they did provide the hope, becoming just the third team to ever win the World Series two years after suffering at least 100 losses. (The others being the 1914 Boston Braves and the 1969 New York Mets. Hat tip to the legendary Sarah Langs of MLB.com for that note.)

And let's not forget that the Rangers improving from 60 wins to 90 wins wasn't even remotely the most drastic two-year turnaround.

That Arizona team they just defeated in the World Series? Suffered 110 losses two years ago, finishing dead last in the National League by a nine-game margin before improving by 32 games in two years.

And the Baltimore team Texas swept in the ALDS? Another 110-game loser in 2021 who had by far the worst run differential that season before improving by a staggering 49 games—and without spending like Texas did, to put it lightly.

Either one of those small-market teams could have won it all this year if they didn't need to play home games against the Rangers in the postseason.

So even if your favorite team is down bad these days, this season provided plenty of shining examples of how quickly fortunes can change in this sport if just a couple of rookies pan out in a big way.

Now, with the way the Rangers are set up to run it back again in 2024, perhaps they aren't providing much hope to teams who suffered 100 losses in 2022. They aren't losing all that much aside from Montgomery and Mitch Garver, so if they happen to be the lucky ones signing Josh Hader in free agency and if deGrom is actually able to make it back from Tommy John surgery by August, mercy, Texas really should become the first back-to-back champs since the 1998-2000 New York Yankees.

But why couldn't the Cincinnati Reds (100 losses in 2022) win it all next year if they at least do something to improve their pitching this offseason?

What's keeping the Washington Nationals (107 losses in 2022) from riding their young core to a big year, if Cade Cavalli makes it back from Tommy John surgery or the highly touted outfield pair of Dylan Crews and James Wood is 2024's dynamic first-year duo?

Even the Oakland A's...well, OK, let's not get carried away.

Hope springs eternal in the offseason.

And thanks to the Rangers (as well as the Diamondbacks and Orioles), there should be even more of it than usual this winter.

Rangers Parade 2023: Route, Date, Time, Live Stream, TV Info After World Series Win

Nov 2, 2023
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - NOVEMBER 01: Marcus Semien #2 and Corey Seager #5 of the Texas Rangers celebrate after beating the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-0 in Game Five to win the World Series at Chase Field on November 01, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - NOVEMBER 01: Marcus Semien #2 and Corey Seager #5 of the Texas Rangers celebrate after beating the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-0 in Game Five to win the World Series at Chase Field on November 01, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

The Texas Rangers finally won their first World Series title, defeating the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-0 in Game 5 on Wednesday night.

Let the partying begin.

According to multiple reports, the parade will held in Arlington on Friday at 1 p.m. ET.

According to Matt LeClercq of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Arlington officials are expected to release additional parade details on Thursday, but the celebration will be at Arlington's Entertainment District, where the Rangers' Globe Life Field is housed.

"It's been a long awaited celebration," Arlington spokeswoman Susan Schrock told LeClercq.

MLB Network traditionally broadcasts World Series parades for a national audience, so the expectation is that Friday's celebration can be watched on the channel or on MLB.com.

It should be quite the party.

The organization began in Major League Baseball as the Washington Senators back in 1961 before moving to Texas and becoming the Rangers in 1972. In that time, the team only reached the World Series three times, losing to the San Francisco Giants in five games in 2010 and the St. Louis Cardinals in seven games in 2011.

In total, the Rangers have only reached the playoffs nine times in their 63 years of existence. So yes, Wednesday night was probably very cathartic for long-standing fans of the franchise, and Friday likely will be quite the celebration.

"To be a part of this, it's just really special," World Series MVP Corey Seager said after the game. "... It's a really cool moment right now."

"They're all different, and this one's really special," he added. "To be the first one in franchise history, that says a lot. This group's resilient, and man did we fight."

Video: Bruce Bochy Says Rangers 'Just Wrote History' During World Series Celebration

Nov 2, 2023
Texas Rangers manager Bruce Bochy holds up the trophy after Game 5 of the baseball World Series against the Arizona Diamondbacks Wednesday, Nov. 1, 2023, in Phoenix. The Rangers won 5-0 to win the series 4-1. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
Texas Rangers manager Bruce Bochy holds up the trophy after Game 5 of the baseball World Series against the Arizona Diamondbacks Wednesday, Nov. 1, 2023, in Phoenix. The Rangers won 5-0 to win the series 4-1. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

The Texas Rangers are World Series champions after capping a five-game Fall Classic win with a 5-0 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Wednesday.

Afterward, Texas manager Bruce Bochy spoke to the victorious Rangers in the road clubhouse and told them that they just "wrote history."

Texas wrote history in two notable ways.

For starters, the Rangers won the first World Series since the franchise's inception as the Washington Senators in 1961.

Second, not only did Texas set the MLB playoff record for most road wins in a single postseason, but the Rangers also won the most road games without a single loss as well.

Sarah Langs of MLB.com provided the details.

Numerous Rangers wrote their own history and/or joined elite lists along the way, including right fielder Adolis García, who set the single-season playoff record for most RBI (22). Will Smith became the first player to win three consecutive World Series with three different teams.

Bochy became the sixth manager to win four World Series. Evan Carter set the record for most doubles (nine) in one playoff as well. Corey Seager became the fourth player to win multiple World Series MVP. And so on and so forth.

But in the present tense, the Rangers have rightfully earned their perch on top of the baseball mountain after a tremendous postseason.

Rangers' Corey Seager Wins 2023 World Series MVP Award After G5 Win vs. Diamondbacks

Nov 2, 2023
Texas Rangers' Corey Seager celebrates after hitting a two-run home run against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the ninth inning in Game 1 of the baseball World Series Friday, Oct. 27, 2023, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez)
Texas Rangers' Corey Seager celebrates after hitting a two-run home run against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the ninth inning in Game 1 of the baseball World Series Friday, Oct. 27, 2023, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez)

For the second time in his career, Corey Seager is the World Series MVP.

The Texas Rangers shortstop was named the 2023 World Series MVP after helping his team seal a 5-0 series-clinching win in Game 5 of the Fall Classic on Wednesday night at Chase Field.

Seager also won the World Series MVP award in 2020 as a member of the Los Angeles Dodgers.

The 29-year-old is now just the fourth player in Major League Baseball history to win multiple World Series MVP trophies since the award's inception in 1955. He joins Hall of Famer's Sandy Koufax, Bob Gibson and Reggie Jackson as the only players to win the award twice.

Seager was brilliant in this year's Fall Classic, slashing .286/.375/.762 with three home runs, six RBI and 16 total bases on six hits in five games.

The two-time Silver Slugger also delivered the team's first hit in the seventh inning of Game 5 to break up Zac Gallen's no-hitter. The hit was the first of three consecutive hits by the Rangers that resulted in the team taking a 1-0 lead.

Seager, who is in his second season in Texas, signed a blockbuster 10-year, $325 million deal with the Rangers in December 2021 as a free agent. To Texas fans, he's certainly already lived up to that contract.

Seager was dominant in the regular season for the Rangers, slashing .327/.390/.623 with 33 home runs, 96 RBI and two stolen bases in 119 games. Through the entire 2023 postseason, he hit .318/.451/.682 with six home runs and 12 RBI in 17 games.

With Seager claiming his second championship and the second World Series MVP award of his career, he'll certainly be ready for the massive celebration that's in store for the Rangers over the coming weeks.

Rangers Win 1st World Series vs. D-Backs, Hyped by MLB Fans as 'Team of Destiny'

Nov 2, 2023
Texas Rangers' Marcus Semien celebrates his two-run home run with Jonah Heim against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the ninth inning in Game 5 of the baseball World Series Wednesday, Nov. 1, 2023, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)
Texas Rangers' Marcus Semien celebrates his two-run home run with Jonah Heim against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the ninth inning in Game 5 of the baseball World Series Wednesday, Nov. 1, 2023, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

The Texas Rangers have won their first-ever World Series after defeating the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-0 in Game 5 of the Fall Classic on Wednesday to earn a 4-1 series victory.

Both teams were held scoreless through six innings, with Texas going without a hit during that span against D-backs starter Zac Gallen. Nathan Eovaldi bent but never broke as he routinely got out of tough jams to throw six shutout innings and ultimately earn the win.

However, Texas got on the board in the seventh after Rangers designated hitter Mitch Garver's RBI single scored Corey Seager.

Texas held onto that 1-0 lead into the ninth before breaking it open with four runs. Jonah Heim's single to center field scored two after the ball got by outfielder Alek Thomas on an error.

Marcus Semien later drove Heim home with a game-sealing two-run homer.

Josh Sborz shut the door in the ninth, and with that, the Rangers hoisted their first World Series trophy since entering Major League Baseball as the Washington Senators in 1961.

Texas didn't even make the playoffs until 1996 and endured significant postseason heartbreak in 2011 after coming just one out away from defeating the St. Louis Cardinals for the World Series.

But the Rangers are on top of the baseball world now after playoff run that included sweeps of the Toronto Blue Jays and Baltimore Orioles, a hard-fought seven-game ALCS win over the Houston Astros and an emphatic World Series victory over the upstart Diamondbacks in five. Fans are calling them a "team of destiny" following a fantastic postseason.

Texas endured a tough road just to get to this point.

Their best hitter, Seager, missed 43 games largely due to thumb and hamstring injuries.

Their best pitcher, Jacob deGrom, started just six games before suffering a torn UCL in his right elbow that forced him to undergo Tommy John surgery.

Texas also started hot but was just three games over .500 after May. The Rangers had to fight just to make the playoffs but found themselves two-and-a-half games up with just four to go. Losing three-out-of-four in Seattle led to Texas losing its AL West lead by tiebreaker to Houston, meaning the Rangers had to get to the World Series the hard way through the wild card.

But Texas then cruised through the first two rounds and took down the defending World Series champions in Houston before winning its first AL pennant in 12 years.

In the World Series, the Rangers lost the hottest hitter in baseball, right fielder Adolis García, due to a strained oblique after Game 3. Star pitcher and midseason acquisition Max Scherzer was lost for the series as well due to back spasms that forced him to depart Game 3 after three innings.

Despite everything, Texas bore down and beat Arizona 11-7 in Game 4 before shutting the D-backs out in Game 5.

Simply put, this was a well-deserved World Series victory for a resilient team. The Rangers got great performances from Seager, the World Series MVP, and a host of others in the batting order, the starting rotation and the bullpen for a great team win.

Manager Bruce Bochy also deserves credit after winning his fourth World Series title following three victories in San Francisco (2010, 2012, 2014). In addition, reliever Will Smith became the first-ever player to win World Series in three straight years with three different teams (Atlanta Braves, Astros, Rangers).

And with that, the 2023 baseball season is over. Congratulations are in order for a great Rangers team well-positioned to be perennial playoff contenders for the foreseeable future. Twenty-nine other teams now find themselves chasing Texas, and they'll get a chance to get to work in that regard soon enough as hot stove season gets going in earnest.

Marcus Semien, Rangers Wow Fans Without Adolis García in World Series Game 4 Win

Nov 1, 2023
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - OCTOBER 31: Mitch Garver #18 and Marcus Semien #2 of the Texas Rangers celebrate after Semien hit a home run in the third inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks during Game Four of the World Series at Chase Field on October 31, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - OCTOBER 31: Mitch Garver #18 and Marcus Semien #2 of the Texas Rangers celebrate after Semien hit a home run in the third inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks during Game Four of the World Series at Chase Field on October 31, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

The Texas Rangers may be short handed, but that didn't stop them from moving to within one victory of their first World Series title in franchise history.

Neither did the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Texas remained undefeated on the road in the postseason with an 11-7 victory over the Diamondbacks in Tuesday's Game 4 of the Fall Classic at Chase Field. The American League representative now leads the series 3-1 and has the opportunity to close it out with another road win in Wednesday's Game 5.

Prior to the dominant performance, the Rangers received some unfortunate news when they announced slugger Adolis García and pitcher Max Scherzer would be out for the remainder of the series because of injuries. The loss of García was particularly concerning since he was incredible during the playoffs with eight home runs in 15 games.

It also put the onus on the rest of the offense to produce, and it answered with an explosion of runs that featured homers from Marcus Semien and Corey Seager, who combined for four hits and seven RBI.

The showing caught the attention of social media:

The outcome of the game figured to come down to whether a Rangers offense missing García could take advantage of a bullpen game for the Diamondbacks. After all, Arizona started Joe Mantiply but removed him after he retired four of the first six batters he faced.

It surely regrets that move now.

https://twitter.com/jay_jaffe/status/1719522047334715846

Texas scored five runs in the second inning thanks to a wild pitch, two-RBI triple from Semien and two-run homer from Seager. The visitors' offense set the tone and was far from done while Andrew Heaney allowed just one run in five innings on the other side.

The Rangers scored five more runs in the third inning thanks to a two-run double from Travis Jankowski and a three-run long ball from Semien.

As if that wasn't enough, Jonah Heim launched a solo home run to lead off the eighth for even more insurance. The additional runs after the second inning proved to be important because the Texas bullpen struggled to close out the win down the stretch.

Semien, Seager and everyone else who delivered in the Rangers' lineup deserve plenty of credit for lifting up the offense with García sidelined. If they do so one more time, they will be lifting up the World Series trophy.

Rangers' Adolis García, Max Scherzer off 2023 World Series Roster with Injuries

Oct 31, 2023
PHOENIX, AZ - OCTOBER 30: Adolis García #53 of the Texas Rangers looks on prior to Game 3 of the 2023 World Series between the Texas Rangers and the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field on Monday, October 30, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Rob Tringali/MLB Photos via Getty Images)
PHOENIX, AZ - OCTOBER 30: Adolis García #53 of the Texas Rangers looks on prior to Game 3 of the 2023 World Series between the Texas Rangers and the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field on Monday, October 30, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Rob Tringali/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

The Texas Rangers announced that starting pitcher Max Scherzer and right fielder Adolis García have been removed from the World Series roster due to injuries. They have been replaced by left-handed relief pitcher Brock Burke and infielder/outfielder Ezequiel Duran, respectively.

Earlier Tuesday, manager Bruce Bochy told reporters that the duo could be replaced on the roster shortly.

Those moves are now official, and Scherzer and García's Fall Classics are over.

On Monday, Scherzer started Game 3, which resulted in a 3-1 Rangers win to put Texas up 2-1 in the best-of-seven series. Unfortunately, he left after three shutout innings due to back spasms.

García's injury appeared to occur after he flew out to center field in the top of the eighth inning.

The prognosis for both men one day later didn't bring about good news.

The Rangers had already omitted García from the Game 4 starting lineup before Bochy's announcement. Travis Jankowski will play right field in his place.

Texas notably bumped Evan Carter down to cleanup and moved Mitch Garver up to the No. 3 spot. Garver notably did damage there during the ALDS against the Baltimore Orioles, hitting a grand slam in Game 2 en route to an 11-8 win.

Losing García is a devastating blow for the Rangers. García has hit eight home runs alongside a single-season playoff record 22 RBI in the postseason. He notably hit a game-winning home run in the bottom of the 11th inning in Game 1 to give Texas a 6-5 victory.

Scherzer is a tough loss as well, considering that he would have been in line to start Game 7 should the series go that far.

As Bob Nightengale of USA Today noted, the Rangers have dealt with injuries all year, with the most notable one being a torn right UCL for ace Jacob deGrom, who underwent season-ending Tommy John surgery.

However, García and Scherzer are big losses, especially with the Diamondbacks being in position to potentially tie the series up at two games apiece.

As far as the replacements go, Jankowski hit .263 with one homer and 30 RBI this season. His speed (19 stolen bases) and defense are notable assets for Texas as it tries to put the series away.

Duran brings some pop to the table, hitting 14 home runs with 46 RBI and a .768 OPS in 122 games this season.

The left-handed Burke served as a reliever. In 53 appearances, he went 5-3 with a 4.37 ERA.

If the series goes to seven games, right-hander Jon Gray figures to be the top option. Gray has been moved to the bullpen for the playoffs but was a starter during the season, going 9-8 with a 4.12 ERA (1.29 WHIP) and 142 strikeouts in 157.1 innings (29 starts).

Rangers' Aggressive Approach to Free Agency, Trades a Lesson to Risk-Averse MLB

Zachary D. Rymer
Oct 31, 2023
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - OCTOBER 30: Evan Carter #32 and Corey Seager #5 of the Texas Rangers celebrate after Seager hit a home run in the third inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks during Game Three of the World Series at Chase Field on October 30, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - OCTOBER 30: Evan Carter #32 and Corey Seager #5 of the Texas Rangers celebrate after Seager hit a home run in the third inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks during Game Three of the World Series at Chase Field on October 30, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

The Texas Rangers may not be World Series champions just yet, but that doesn't make it too early to say the rest of Major League Baseball should heed their lesson.

As it is, the Rangers are two wins from winning their first championship after coming back from a blowout loss in Game 2 to take Game 3 from the Arizona Diamondbacks on Monday. The final was 3-1, but the game mostly didn't feel that close.

Which is remarkable, considering the Rangers had to deal with not one, but two major in-game departures.

First it was veteran ace Max Scherzer, who was forced out by back spasms after tossing three scoreless innings to start the game. Then it was Adolis García, AKA the hottest hitter in the galaxy, leaving in the eighth inning with tightness in his side.

Even if neither did in Game 3, there's a non-zero chance of these injuries causing trouble for the Rangers in what remains of the World Series. They're going to need what healthy stars they have to carry the load.

It's a good thing, then, that their maneuvering over the last two years has left them with plenty of those.


The Rangers, Game 3 and Return on Investment

The Rangers have a 2-1 lead in the World Series in large part thanks to their $325 million shortstop.

It may have been García's solo home run that won Game 1 for Texas, but it was Corey Seager's two-run homer in the ninth that made it possible. One could say it was arguably the bigger hit, but there's no "arguably" about it according to Championship Win Probability Added. It rates Seager's homer as the biggest hit of the entire 2023 season.

Then on Monday, the other half of the Rangers' $500 million double play combination got in on the fun.

That's Marcus Semien, who preceded another two-run homer by Seager with a run-scoring single that got the Rangers on the board in the third. The two of them later teamed up on a huge twin killing to get Aroldis Chapman out of a jam in the eighth:

Even if he was the only one who gave up a run, Chapman has at least one thing in common with two other pitchers that Rangers manager Bruce Bochy called on in Game 3: It was by way of bold roster moves that brought them to town.

Chapman and Scherzer, who have 15 All-Star selections between them, arrived in Texas via the trade market in June and July. Appearing in between those two and throwing three scoreless innings was Jon Gray, whose four-year, $56 million contract makes him Texas' second-highest paid pitcher.

In case anyone's not picking it up, the gist is that these Rangers are built upon hired guns. It's even quantifiable, as their 26-man roster is tied for first in free agents, sixth in trade acquisitions and just 28th and homegrown players.

And this is fine. Lest anyone doubt it, a quick stroll down Memory Lane to 2021 is in order.


Just 2 Years Ago, the Rangers Seemed Screwed for a Long Time

It's not just that the Rangers were bad in 2021, though they certainly were in losing 102 games. It's also that they seemed hopeless.

The '21 season always was going to be a rebuilding campaign, but the Rangers made so little progress throughout it that their future looked even dimmer at the end of the year. To wit, B/R's Joel Reuter put them at No. 27 in his Future Power Rankings for 2024.

The Rangers didn't just lack talent at the major league level, after all. They also had a middling farm system. The very existence of contending luminaries like the Los Angeles Dodgers, Houston Astros and Atlanta suggested that was a major problem, because...

Well, because a modern MLB contender can only be built upon homegrown talent, with big-ticket signings and trade acquisitions coming later. This is the basic summary of the status quo, but all the available evidence left little doubt this was the case.

But rather than take the slow, steady and seemingly only path back to contention, the Rangers opted for the baseball equivalent of a Get Rich Quick scheme.

It involved spending a league-high $828 million in free agency across the 2021-22 and 2022-23 offseasons, with Jacob deGrom, Nathan Eovaldi and Andrew Heaney joining Seager, Semien and Gray in drawing big bucks from Rangers ownership. And Scherzer and Chapman weren't the only goodies to arrive via trade, as that was also how Jordan Montgomery, Jonah Heim and Dane Dunning also became Rangers.

The Rangers aren't batting 1.000 on these moves. Manager Chris Woodward and president Jon Daniels didn't even keep their jobs as the 2022 season brought more disappointment in the form of a 94-loss season. Tommy John surgery will keep deGrom sidelined deep into the 2024 season.

But if nothing else, the Rangers always figured to succeed in boosting local interest in their product and getting fans to show up to fill Globe Life Field's still-new seats. That panned out this year, as Texas was the fifth-biggest gainer in average attendance.

Less certain was whether the Rangers' aggressive shopping would ever reverberate in the win column, and this is that point.


The Rangers May Not Stop Winning Any Time Soon

Even if the Rangers didn't technically end the 2023 season in first place in the American League West, they finished with exactly as many wins (90) as the division-winning Astros and indeed spent 136 more days in first place.

This would have been a successful season for Texas even if it hadn't found its footing in the playoffs. But that's happened, and in historic fashion no matter what comes next.

At the least, the Rangers will exit these playoffs with an all-time record nine wins on the road. They also hold another record with a home run in 14 straight games:

Even if the Rangers do fall short of closing out the Diamondbacks, they'll be able to look ahead with unequivocal optimism.

Save for Montgomery, Chapman and the generally unheralded Mitch Garver, all the core members of this year's team are due to return in 2024. And far from letting it fester while they were loading up on veterans, the Rangers have also built their farm system into the sixth-best in MLB.

They already know the crown jewel of said system can hack it in The Show. That's Evan Carter, who hit .306 in 23 games in September before getting even hotter to the tune of a .333 average in October.

It is, of course, possible that it will all come crashing down on the Rangers in future seasons. The San Diego Padres and New York Mets found success with similar all-in, overnight approaches to winning until, suddenly, they didn't. They're the cautionary tales here.

There are nonetheless teams who should view the Rangers as something more like an ideal example. The Boston Red Sox and San Francisco Giants should be intrigued by the notion that contenders don't need to be built on homegrown players first and high-priced veterans second. It can, in fact, be done the other way around.

Two more wins, and the Rangers will even have a championship trophy to prove just how well it can work.


Stats courtesy of Baseball Reference, FanGraphs and Baseball Savant.

Rangers Wow MLB Fans in World Series Win vs. D-Backs amid Scherzer, García Injuries

Oct 31, 2023
Texas Rangers starting pitcher Jon Gray throws against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the sixth inning in Game 3 of the baseball World Series Monday, Oct. 30, 2023, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)
Texas Rangers starting pitcher Jon Gray throws against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the sixth inning in Game 3 of the baseball World Series Monday, Oct. 30, 2023, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

The Texas Rangers lost starting pitcher Max Scherzer after just three innings due to back tightness on Monday night during Game 2 of the World Series, while slugger Adolis García exited in the eighth inning with left side tightness. Oh, and they were on the road.

They won anyway.

Marcus Semien and Corey Seager handled the offense, Jon Gray and the rest of the bullpen arms were spectacular and the Rangers earned a 3-1 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks in what could have been a very tough night for the AL champions.

Semien opened the scoring with a second-inning single, while Seager stretched the lead to three with a two-run blast in the third:

The pair also turned a nifty double play to end a hairy eighth inning:

MLB pundits and fans alike gave them their flowers for those clutch moments:

And then there was Gray.

The pitcher made another superb bullpen appearance on Monday, giving up just one hit while striking out three. He helped lock down the middle innings after Scherzer was forced to leave the game.

"It's never easy in a moment like that," Gray said of replacing Scherzer during the Fox broadcast. "It's just a moment to pick up the guys, come in and not let that turn into something bad for us. Really fill up the zone and attack, that's what we did."

He did indeed, throwing 25 strikes in just 30 pitches while leaving everyone who watched the game impressed:

Gray—who was also spectacular in a Game 1 relief appearance, going 1.2 innings while giving up just one hit and striking out four—went from potentially starting Game 4 to an emergency appearance in Game 3. He couldn't have handled it much better.

The Rangers' bullpen was excellent in general on Monday night—a welcome development after a rocky regular season—as Josh Sborz, Aroldis Chapman and José Leclerc combined to give up just one run in the final three innings to preserve the victory.

It was a crucial win. But the Scherzer injury has left the Rangers pitching staff with some serious questions to answer.

Who will start Game 4 now? Will the Rangers be forced into what would essentially be a second straight bullpen game? If Scherzer is done for this series and it goes to seven games, who will start that decisive contest?

Perhaps even more importantly, is García's World Series over? He's been absolutely amazing for the Rangers in its current run, with eight homers and 22 RBI this postseason. His loss would be devastating.

So while the Rangers won the battle in Game 3, the odds may be even further stacked against them in the war after Monday's injuries.

Rangers' Adolis García Removed from World Series Game vs. Diamondbacks After Injury

Oct 31, 2023
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - OCTOBER 30: Adolis García #53 of the Texas Rangers waits in the on deck circle in the sixth inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks during Game Three of the World Series at Chase Field on October 30, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - OCTOBER 30: Adolis García #53 of the Texas Rangers waits in the on deck circle in the sixth inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks during Game Three of the World Series at Chase Field on October 30, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Adolis Garcia left in the eighth inning during Game 3 of the World Series between the Texas Rangers and Arizona Diamondbacks due to an injury.

After flying out to deep centerfield, Garcia was seen grabbing his oblique as he jogged to first. He was replaced by Travis Jankowski in right field.

The Rangers did not provide an official update on his injury. Garcia has been a postseason hero in 2023, winning ALCS MVP after Texas defeated the Houston Astros in seven games.

The 30-year-old continued his strong play in the Fall Classic, throwing out Christian Walker at home earlier in the night.

Garcia has hit .323 with eight home runs this postseason, knocking in 22 RBIs while recording an exceptional 1.108 OPS. He's produced countless iconic moments over the past month, culminating in a walk-off home run to swing Game 1 in Texas' favor.

Following the game, Rangers manager Bruce Bochy explained how Garcia helps galvanize the rest of the roster.

"He might have turned it up a notch, to be honest. He saved us there," Bochy said, via AP News. "You can see it in him. He gets everybody fired up."

It would be a huge blow to the Rangers' offense if he's is forced to miss an extended period of time. In that scenario, Texas would rely on Corey Seager to elevate his game even further to replace Garcia's production.

Seager has been excellent in the postseason as well, hitting .298 while crushing five homers and knocking in 10 RBIs.

The Rangers will hope that Garcia's injury isn't severe, as the series continues quickly. Game 4 is on Tuesday night at 8:03 p.m. ET.