Tkachuk has goal, assist in Sens' 4-1 win over Rangers

The Ottawa Senators (stanley cup ring for sale) took advantage of their chances on special teams against the New York Rangers on Wednesday night.

Brady Tkachuk had a goal and an assist and the Senators earned a 4-1 win against the Rangers.

Bobby Ryan, Zack Smith and Brian Gibbons also scored while Anders Nilsson made 27 saves as the league-worst Senators picked up their second win in the past three games. Colin White also had two assists.

"We needed the energy to come from different sources tonight," Senators coach Marc Crawford said while dressing four defensemen under the age 25. "Our young guys played well. Our young defenseman all played well tonight. It's a big challenge, cause you are taking a step up and playing against NHL guys."

Lias Andersson scored for New York (cheap New York Rangers championship rings) and Henrik Lundqvist stopped 27 of 31 shots as the Rangers fell for the second straight game.

Ryan opened the scoring when he sent a wrist shot past the glove of Lundqvist at 12:14 of the first period. Chris Tierney delivered the puck from below the goal line to set up Ryan for the power-play goal. Tkachuk also assisted on the play.

"We played a full 60-minute effort tonight," Nilsson said after his 11th victory with Ottawa since he was traded from Vancouver earlier this season. "We had good power play and a good PK."

While skating down a man 1:15 after the first goal, the Senators doubled their advantage when Smith redirected a puck past Lundqvist. Smith's ninth of the season was set up when he and Magnus Paajarvi executed a give-and-go around Rangers defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk.

Pavel Buchnevich, who returned after missing one game with an upper-body injury, also failed to pick up Smith driving to the net.

"It was just an embarrassing effort all around from us," Rangers defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk said. "I don't know if we just expected the game to come easy or whatever it was tonight, but we certainly didn't put forth an effort that deserved a result."

Ottawa converted on a two-man advantage at 3:51 of the second period to extend its lead to three. Tkachuk collected a loose puck near the side of the net and stuffed it home for his 22nd of the season. White and Thomas Chabot assisted on the play.

The Rangers converted a short-handed chance of their own when Anderson performed a nifty backhand, forehand deke to beat Nilsson at 4:52 of the second period. Vladislav Namestnikov and Brendan Smith assisted on the play.

Lundqvist, who has only two wins since Feb. 1st, was denied his 450th NHL (championship rings for sale) victory for his sixth consecutive game.

"It doesn't matter if you played 14 years or 40 games in this league, there is always a reason to go out there and leave everything you got," Lundqvist said. "It's just disappointing because it comes down to a couple of plays if our effort is a little higher I think there are no goals."

Gibbons scored his eighth of the season at 14:58 of the third period to make it 4-1. White and Gibbons completed a nifty passing sequence that led to the tap-in opportunity to seal the game for the Senators.

"We were just flat, very very flat," Rangers coach David Quinn said after the game. "Not a lot of emotion, not a lot of passion, not a lot of enthusiasm on the bench."

Game notes
Prior to the game, the Rangers announced that Mika Zibanejad has been named the winner of the 2018-19 Steven McDonald Extra Effort Award. The award is presented annually to the Ranger who, as chosen by the fans, "goes above and beyond the call of duty." "He works hard on both ends of the ice and makes a difference all over the ice, more than any other player on this team," Lundqvist said of Zibanejad. "He deserves it." ... Rookie center Filip Chytil missed the game and is considered day to day. ... Andreas Englund made his season debut for Ottawa. The defenseman has played six NHL (stanley cup ring) games over the past two seasons.

Comments (0) Posted to Generalna 07/30/2019 Edit

Kepler's single gives Twins walk-off win over Athletics

After watching the Oakland Athletics (cheap Oakland Athletics championship rings) stage a late rally to take the lead for the third straight game, it might have been easy for the Minnesota Twins to get frustrated. Instead, they got back to work and Max Kepler came up with another huge hit. Kepler drove in four runs, including the game-winner to cap a two-run rally in the ninth inning, and the Twins beat the Athletics 7-6 on Sunday.

"Kep's been doing it all year for us," said Twins (custom championship rings) manager Rocco Baldelli. "He's done it against everyone that we've thrown him up there against." Kepler also doubled and hit his 24th home run of the season as the Twins came back after blowing a 4-0 lead. His base hit in the ninth was his second walk-off hit in as many months.

Trailing 6-5 entering the ninth, the Twins got a one-out single from rookie Luis Arraez, his third hit of the game. Ehire Adrianza followed with his third hit as well, a triple off Liam Hendriks (2-1) that tied the game. After Hendriks struck out Jason Castro, Kepler lined the first pitch into left-center for his third hit.

"I heard the crowd behind me. It kind of gave me goose bumps for a second, and I could feel the emotions get ahold of me," Kepler said. "And then I just took a deep breath and zoned in on the pitcher." Hendriks had picked up saves in each of the previous two games and hadn't allowed an earned run in 20 2/3 innings. "These guys worked their tails off today and I couldn't bring it home," said Hendriks, who blew his first save since taking over as Oakland's closer in late June. "It's disappointing in that regard." Reliever Kohl Stewart (2-1) earned the win after pitching a scoreless ninth as the Twins earned a split of their four-game series with Oakland.

The Twins (cheap Minnesota Twins championship rings) jumped ahead 4-0 in the second on Kepler's three-run homer off A's starter Daniel Mengden, but Oakland cut that lead in half in the fifth when Josh Phegley hit his 10th homer of the season against Twins starter Michael Pineda.

The A's kept chipping away and eventually took the lead with two runs off reliever Trevor May in the eighth inning. Pinch-hitter Chris Hermann's RBI double tied the game, and Phegley hit a sacrifice fly to put the A's on top 6-5.

But the Twins kept grinding and pulled out a big win ahead of a three-game showdown with another AL first-place team, the Yankees, who come to town on Monday. "I think with this win the team has to lift up a little bit," Adrianza said. "We've got a pretty big series coming -- we face a pretty good team and we have to fight these three nights."

ROSTER MOVE
After the game the Twins optioned RHP Zack Littell to Triple-A Rochester. Littell had pitched in three straight games, including striking out the only batter he faced on Sunday. The team said it would announce a corresponding move on Monday.

I'M WALKING HERE!
Both starting pitchers came into the game riding extended streaks with good control, but both had trouble finding the plate on Sunday. Mengden hadn't walked a batter in his previous three starts, covering 18 innings, but he walked five Twins in just 3 1/3 innings. Meanwhile, Pineda was fifth in the major leagues in fewest walks per nine innings this season and had walked just three batters in his previous five starts, covering 29 innings. But he tied his career high with five walks in 5 1/3 innings.

LEFT STRANDED
The Twins (world series rings) left 12 men on base through the first eight innings and failed to drive in a runner on third with fewer than two outs four times on the day. But Baldelli chose to take a more optimistic view of the situation. "The fact that we had those guys on base was a good sign,." he said. "We would much rather have that than the alternative."

Comments (0) Posted to Generalna 07/26/2019 Edit

Strome, Georgiev help Rangers beat Maple Leafs 2-1 in OT

The New York Rangers (New York Rangers championship rings for sale) were glad to finally get another win. Ryan Strome scored 1:48 into overtime as the New York Rangers beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 2-1 Saturday night to snap a five-game losing streak. Pavel Buchnevich also scored for the Rangers and Alexandar Georgiev finished with 44 saves as the Rangers won fur just the second time in 13 games (2-6-5).

"Obviously our goalie was huge but we did a lot of good things too," Rangers coach David Quinn said. "It's one of the most dangerous teams in the league and I thought we did a real good job in a lot of areas and finally won an overtime game," The Rangers lost the last five times -- and 10 of the last 11 -- when the game went beyond regulation. On the winning goal, Andersen had just made an amazing save on Boo Nieves on a 2-on-1 but the puck went to Strome who stuffed it in from the left side of the net to give the Rangers their second win in 13 games (2-6-5).

Zach Hyman scored for the Maple Leafs (stanley cup ring for sale) and Frederik Andersen stopped shots. With Boston beating Florida 7-3, Toronto fell seven points behind the second-place Bruins in the Atlantic Division. "I thought we did a lot of good things tonight. I didn't think we got in our own way," Maple Leafs coach Mike Babcock said. "Obviously a disappointing way to end. I didn't think we were as good tonight as we've been in the last two games but I still thought we had lots of opportunity." Added Hyman: "It just wasn't going in. Give credit to their goalie, he played great. I thought (Andersen) played great as well." Buchnevich ended a scoreless deadlock 19 seconds into the third, beating Hyman to the puck in a mass of bodies in front of Andersen after Brady Skjei's shot from a bad angle produced a fat rebound. It was Buchnevich's 18th goal of the season.

The Maple Leafs (championship rings for sale) tied it 8:33 after a rush by Morgan Rielly opened up the Rangers' defense and John Tavares fed Hyman for his 19th into a wide-open net. It was Toronto's 33rd shot on the night. That was all the Maple Leafs could get against Georgiev, a second-year Bulgarian who had a career-high 55 saves in New York's 4-1 win against Toronto in New York on Feb. 10. "I have big respect for that team, obviously one of the top in the league," Georgiev said. "You know that you have to bring your best game to be able to (defeat) those guys."

Toronto center Auston Matthews took 16 shots but only four got to Georgiev. Another four were blocked and eight missed the target. "(You) just keep going," Matthews said. "It's eventually going to go in. If it's not tonight, it's going to be tomorrow. If it's not tomorrow, it'll be the next game." Tavares was hurt later in the third, sent flying by a cross-check from Rangers defenseman Marc Staal in front of Georgiev. The star center skated off slowly, hunched in pain after finally being helped to his feet. Staal was penalized on the play. Tavares returned for the power play, almost scoring.

Toronto (cheap Toronto Maple Leafs championship rings) was coming off a 4-2 win Wednesday in Buffalo but lost for the sixth time in nine games (3-4-2). Georgiev was busy from the get-go, forced to stop a dangerous wrist shot from Auston Matthews on the Maple Leafs' first shot. Toronto outshot New York 6-1 to start. The Rangers began to fight back, tying the shot count at 7-7. Matthews had two more good chances on a late power play in the period. Toronto outshot the Rangers 13-11 in a sloppy first period that saw New York win just 24 percent of face-offs. It was more of the same in the second with Toronto outshooting the visitors 9-2 to start the period. Georgiev was rock-solid, however, with a highlight-reel pad save on Hyman from point-blank range. "It just wasn't going in," Hyman said. "Give credit to their goalie, he played great. I thought (Andersen) played great as well."

Comments (17) Posted to Generalna 07/19/2019 Edit

Twins rally, slow charging Indians 5-3 to win series opener

Slowing Cleveland's (Cleveland Indians championship rings for sale) charge in the standings, Jorge Polanco's two-run double in the seventh inning rallied the AL Central leaders to a 5-3 victory Friday night that ended the Indians' six-game winning streak in the opener of a showdown series. The Twins, who led the division by 11 1/2 games last month, took advantage of an error in the seventh inning by reliever Nick Goody before Polanco delivered his clutch, two-out hit off Oliver Perez (2-2).

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"Any time you give good teams anything, it can come back to bite you," Indians manager Terry Francona said.
The Twins (custom championship rings) took a small chunk out of Cleveland as Nelson Cruz and Mitch Garver homered for surprising Minnesota, which saw its huge lead dwindle to 5 1/2 but slowed the Indians for at least one night. "It was a great way to start out the second half against a good team that's playing very well," Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said. "We continually forced ourselves into good situations until we finally broke through." Zack Littell (2-0) pitched a scoreless sixth, Ryne Harper worked the seventh and left-hander Taylor Rogers got six outs for his 13th save.

Carlos Santana connected for his 20th homer for Cleveland. The Indians trimmed six games off Minnesota's (world series rings for sale) lead by going a major league-best 21-8 since June 4. Goody came in to protect a 3-1 lead and got one out in the eighth before he couldn't cleanly field a slow roller by Miguel Sano. The right-hander compounded his problems by walking Ehire Adrianza before getting a second out. However, Max Kepler made it 3-2 with an infield RBI single -- on a call that was overturned by video replay -- before Polanco followed with a drive over rookie center fielder Oscar Mercado's head, scoring Adrianza and Kepler.

"I knew I hit it well, and as soon as I hit it, I knew it was going to the wall," Polanco said. "I was just looking for a good pitch to hit." Francona felt Mercado could have made a better play. "It looked to me like right off the bat he got his feet a little bit tangled up and then he turned the wrong way," Francona said. "And after that it was too late." Garver made it 5-3 in the eighth with his 14th homer.

This young Minnesota team seemed to be showing signs of feeling pressure with the three-time defending Central champions nipping at their heels. But the Twins shook off two errors and came back to stun the Indians, who have been riding high and hoped to keep the momentum after hosting a memorable All-Star Game and epic Home Run Derby.

Indians (cheap Minnesota Twins championship rings) starter Mike Clevinger allowed just one run -- the homer to Nelson in the first -- over five-plus innings and was in line to get the win before Cleveland's bullpen had a rare meltdown. The Indians fell to 37-4 when leading after six innings. Roberto Perez's two-run single gave the Indians a 3-1 lead in the fourth.

A first-time All-Star at 33, Santana led off with his homer. Santana, who was beaten in the first round of the All-Star Home Run Derby by eventual winner Pete Alonso, has reached base safely in 30 straight games -- the majors' longest current streak. the first, Cruz guessed right and drove a 96 mph fastball from Clevinger over the wall in center and into shrubbery next to Minnesota's bullpen. It was the Twins' 167th homer, one more than all last season.

Comments (0) Posted to Generalna 07/15/2019 Edit

Rays past Yankees 4-3, Jul 7, 2019

With one big swing, Travis d'Arnaud made sure the Tampa Bay Rays (championship rings for sale) and New York Yankees didn't go into extra innings for the third consecutive day.

D'Arnaud hit a two-out homer off Chad Green in the bottom of the ninth inning, lifting the Rays past the Yankees 4-3 on Saturday.

"I'm still on cloud nine right now," d'Arnaud said. "We definitely needed that."

Aaron Hicks had tied it at 3 in the top of the ninth for the Yankees, homering on a 2-2, two-out pitch from Colin Poche (2-1).

D'Arnaud's winning homer on the first pitch against Green (2-3) into the right-field seats got the Rays back within 7 1/2 games of the AL East-leading Yankees, who had won the first two games of a four-game series in extra innings. Tampa Bay is 3-9 against New York this season.

"It happened fast," Green said. "Hicks putting a great at-bat together there in the ninth, it's just frustrating."

It was just New York's (world series rings) third loss in its last 19 games.

Nate Lowe hit a go-ahead two-run homer off CC Sabathia in the seventh that gave Tampa Bay a 3-2 lead. He hit his first big league homer Friday night off Masahiro Tanaka.

Lowe was hit by a Sabathia pitch with two on and two outs in the second.

"Yeah, that was nice," Lowe said of his homer.

Sabathia went a season-high seven innings, giving up three runs and seven hits.

The Yankees (cheap New York Yankees championship rings) went up 2-1 in the seventh on Hicks' RBI single off Jose Alvarado, who left with two outs with a right oblique strain.

"The doctor did say it could be between two-to-six weeks depending on the MRI, which is going to be tomorrow," Alvarado said through a translator.

Blake Snell, last year's AL Cy Young Award winner, kept the game tied at 1 by getting a shallow fly to right from Aaron Judge and Hicks' comebacker with the bases loaded in the fifth.

"We made it tough on Snell, although we couldn't quite break through," Yankees manager Aaron Boone said.

Judge, who fanned in his other two at-bats against Snell, is 1 for 12 with eight strikeouts overall against the left-hander.

Snell allowed one run and five hits over five innings. He went 2/3 with a 9.64 ERA in six starts last month.

Brett Gardner put the Yankees up 1-0 on a second-inning homer. He has homered in consecutive games for the third time this year and 13th overall.

D'Arnaud had an RBI single later in the second for the Rays (cheap MLB Teams championship rings).

Comments (0) Posted to Generalna 07/11/2019 Edit

Springer's single in 10th lifts Astros over Angels 11-10

After missing a couple of chances to put the game away Sunday, the Houston Astros (Houston Astros championship rings for sale) felt fortunate to finally close it out in the 10th inning.

George Springer hit a game-ending, RBI single in the 10th and the Astros beat the Angels 11-10 Sunday after a violent collision at home plate knocked Los Angeles catcher Jonathan Lucroy out of the game.

The Astros' Yuli Gurriel hit a grand slam to homer in his fifth straight game, and All-Star Ryan Pressly (2-1) allowed one hit in a scoreless 10th for the win.

Josh Reddick led off Houston's 10th with a double off Taylor Cole (0-1) before Springer hit a ball to the right-center gap with one out to give Houston the victory.

"We left a lot of guys on base, but at the end of the day, we found a way to win it," Springer said.

Mike Trout homered twice for the Angels, who watched Lucroy get carted off in the eighth inning after being bowled over by Jake Marisnick. Lucroy was taken to a hospital, and the team said he would get a CT scan and be evaluated for a concussion and nose fracture.

"It certainly didn't look like a clean play," Los Angeles manager Brad Ausmus said. "I don't know what actually happened, but it looked like Marisnick took a step to the left and bowled into him with his arm up. The call was right. Really, I think Major League Baseball should probably take a look at it. Consider some type of suspension, quite frankly."

The Astros (custom championship rings) loaded the bases with two outs in the ninth, but Hansel Robles struck out Tyler White to send it to the 10th.

There were runners at second and third with no outs in the eighth when rookie Yordan Alvarez sent them both home with a single to center to tie it at 10. The bases were loaded with one out when Marisnick attempted to score on a flyout by Springer.

Marisnick crashed into Lucroy as he attempted to field the throw, and the catcher immediately fell on his back. He didn't move for a few seconds before struggling to sit up. Marisnick tagged home and then leaned over Lucroy to see if he was OK. He lifted his head off the ground a few seconds later as blood dripped from his nose.

Angels (mlb world series championship rings) players rushed to the plate as trainers checked on him. He was lifted to a sitting position after a couple of minutes and held a towel to his nose. He was then helped to a cart and taken off the field while clutching a bloodstained towel.

Marisnick was called out for colliding with Lucroy and the call was upheld after a crew chief review to end the inning.

"I watched the play again and it looks -- he just drops right in front of me and once I kind of made a decision it was too late," Marisnick said. "It was a bad play and I hope he's OK."

Trout has an American League-leading 28 home runs and set a franchise record for home runs before the All-Star break.

Trout had a solo shot in the sixth before Gurriel's slam in the bottom of the inning tied it at 8.

"Yuli has been incredible," manager AJ Hinch said. "I know he needs a little bit of rest at this break, but man I want to put him in the lineup tomorrow. He's doing such a good job of being clutch and getting good pitches to hit."

There was one on in the eighth when Trout connected off Will Harris to straightaway center field to put Los Angeles on top. Trout, whose previous high before the break was 26 home runs, has hit six homers in the last five games. Ausmus marveled at what Trout's production in the last few weeks with he and the team dealing with the passing of pitcher Tyler Skaggs, who was found dead in his hotel room on Monday.

"Considering what happened this week, it's kind of remarkable that he's been able to focus that much in the batter's box and be that hot," Ausmus said.

Shohei Ohtani added a two-run home run for the Angels in a five-run third inning that gave them the lead.

The Angels (MLB Teams championship rings for sale) led by four after Trout's home run in the sixth inning.

Gurriel has hit nine homers in his last 11 games to give him 14 this season after he finished with 13 last year.

Tony Kemp put Houston up early with a two-run homer in the second. Lucroy had an RBI triple in the fifth to make it 7-2.

Comments (0) Posted to Generalna 07/08/2019 Edit

Pirates rally in 9th to edge Cubs 6-5

The Chicago Cubs (Chicago Cubs championship rings for sale) splurged on closer Craig Kimbrel last month in hopes of shoring up the back end of their spotty bullpen.

So far, the seven-time All Star is fitting in for all the wrong reasons.

Jung Ho Kang scored on Corey Dickerson's sacrifice fly to cap a frantic ninth-inning rally off Kimbrel and lift the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 6-5 victory over the struggling Cubs on Wednesday night.

Kimbrel (0-1) came on to protect a one-run lead and pick up his second save since signing a three-year deal with Chicago. Instead he trudged to the dugout with his teammate walked off with his first loss since joining the Cubs. The Pirates used a walk, a flare that turned into a double and some aggressive base running to win their third straight.

The closer walked Elias Diaz on a full count with one out. Kang followed with a double to right that Chicago's Willson Contreras couldn't track down. Diaz beat the throw to the plate from Chicago second baseman Addison Russell on Adam Frazier's fielders' choice. Kang sprinted home when Kyle Schwarber's heave from left field following Dickerson's fly ball was late to set off a giddy celebration.

"I think my stuff was moving and I was throwing it where I wanted to a little bit more, but didn't get the results," Kimbrel said. "That doesn't always work out."

Not the way the Pirates are playing.

Pittsburgh (cheap Pittsburgh Pirates championship rings) has won 12 of 17 following a seven-game losing streak to pull within one game of .500 (42-43).

"That was nuts. Craziest ending to a game that I've ever seen," said Pittsburgh first baseman Josh Bell, who hit his 26th home run of the season and added a double to give him 59 extra-base hits, the most ever by a National League player before the All-Star break. "I feel like that just adds to the momentum."

Starling Marte collected three hits for the Pirates. Frazier's streak of hits in seven straight at bats ended in the first but he singled in the seventh. Melky Cabrera went 3 for 4 and delivered a two-run home run off Chicago starter Yu Darvish but was also thrown out at home by Contreras to end the eighth while trying to score on a single by Colin Moran.

All it did was set the stage for Pittsburgh's (world series rings) 21st comeback win of the season.

"We play hard from the beginning to end," Diaz said. "It's special."

REELING CUBS

Victor Caratini homered from both sides of the plate for the Cubs, including a go-ahead two-run shot in the seventh off Francisco Liriano to give the Cubs a 5-4 lead. Javy Baez added his 22nd home run for Chicago but the Cubs lost their fourth consecutive game.

Chicago (cheap championship rings) missed a chance to pull even with Milwaukee for first in the jam-packed NL Central, where all five clubs are separated by 4 1/2 games heading into July 4.

"These kinds of losses are difficult but you have to come back and play the next day," Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. "That's how the game is set up. I do like the fact that we played a better brand of baseball. We did a lot of things well in spite of not having everybody out there."

No team has been able to take control of the division. Chicago looked like it was ready to in early June, but an 8-19 stretch brought the Cubs back to earth.

Chicago president Theo Epstein has threatened changes if the Cubs don't get going, and Chicago called up outfield prospect Robel Garcia on Wednesday after he racked up 21 home runs in the minors following a five-year stint playing in Italy.

Garcia ended up striking out in the eighth in his first big-league at bat, but by then Caratini had already given the Cubs the lead.

Caratini's fourth home run of the season and second of the game put Darvish in line to win his first game since April 27. Darvish endured a stretch of 10 straight no-decisions -- the longest by any starting pitcher in 42 years -- before a loss to Atlanta last week. He worked crisply for most of his 6 2/3 innings, allowing four runs on seven hits with six strikeouts and no walks while throwing 62 of his 86 pitches for strikes.

Comments (0) Posted to Generalna 07/04/2019 Edit

Rays beat Rangers 6-2, June 30, 2019

Snell (5-7, 4.87 ERA) struck out 12 over six innings for just his second win in 10 starts and the Tampa Bay Rays (cheap Olympic Champion Rings championship rings) beat the Texas Rangers 6-2 on Sunday.

"The way that I feel and what I'm doing I believe it's better than last year," Snell, the reigning AL Cy Young Award winner, said. "Consistency, swing-and-miss, strikes, less walks, weak contact, everything. The only thing that's bad is ERA and length that I'm going in starts."

Snell gave up three hits during an 80-pitch outing. He had an 11.94 ERA (17 1/3 innings, 23 earned runs) in five previous starts this month.

"Did a lot of things actually very similar to what he's been doing," Rays manager Kevin Cash said. "Just a little better at command and location to those pitches."

Snell threw first-pitch strikes to 17 of 20 batters.

"He wasn't really doing that before," Rangers manager Chris Woodward said. "When he's ahead in the count, he's a Cy Young winner for a reason."

Tommy Pham homered for the Rays, who won consecutive games for the first time since June 9-10. The first AL wild card leaders went 13-16 in June.

Four Tampa Bay (custom championship rings) relievers completed a four-hitter that included 17 strikeouts.

Texas got a two-run homer from Joey Gallo.

After Kevin Kiermaier had an RBI single and Willy Adames added a run-scoring single off Jesse Chavez (3-3) the fourth, Pham's fifth-inning solo shot made it 4-2.

Chavez allowed four runs and five hits in six innings.

Kiermaier had an RBI triple in a two-run eighth.

Gallo's two-run homer in the fourth off Snell got stuck on the "D-Ring" catwalk, which is approximately 70-feet above the right-field seats.

"I didn't notice that it didn't come down," Gallo said. "But that was a pretty cool home run off a guy who's really nasty."

Gallo had the only Texas (MLB Teams championship rings) hit through three innings, a leadoff bunt single in the second against a shift that had four outfielders and three infielders on the first-base side of second.

He was thrown out on another bunt attempt in the seventh against Colin Poche with a runner on first and no outs, and Texas trailing 4-2.

"Obviously a lot came into play," said Gallo, who talked with Woodward about the situation before the at-bat. "It's a tough lefty who struck me out the day before. Obviously if I lay one down and get it a little more over to the left, we're having a different conversation about it."

Cash was ejected by plate umpire Bruce Dreckman in the second for arguing after Avisail Garcia took a called third strike.

"Bruce Dreckman does a tremendous job," Cash said. "We just didn't see eye-to-eye."

Comments (0) Posted to Generalna 07/01/2019 Edit


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