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Boggs has career night as Rangers post third straight shutout
TEXAS 4, OAKLAND 0
 

By John Tranchina
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

ARLINGTON, Texas (Ticker) -- Rookie Brandon Boggs certainly has
made an impression on the Texas Rangers.

After appearing to be done for the night when he hurt his right
knee chasing down a foul ball on the game's second batter, Boggs
remained in the game and delivered three hits - including his
second career home run - and three RBI to lead the Rangers to a
4-0 victory over the Oakland Athletics on Friday.

Texas (17-20) now has won four in a row and eight of its last
10, while Oakland (22-15) had a four-game winning streak snapped
and remained tied with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
(22-15) for the American League West lead.

It was the third consecutive shutout for the Rangers, the first
time a major league club achieved that since the Florida Marlins
did it in August 2005.

"Everything is going great and those guys in the clubhouse
deserve all the credit, along with my coaches," Rangers manager
Ron Washington said. "If we pitch and catch the ball the way we
are now, our offense will put enough up there for us to be
successful."

Texas' scoreless streak now stands at 31 innings, the
second-longest span in franchise history, trailing a 39-inning
stretch from April 27-30, 1981.

Rangers starter Scott Feldman (1-1) carried a no-hitter into the
fifth inning before Ryan Sweeney singled to left with one out.
In just his second start of the season, Feldman surrendered just
two hits and four walks over six impressive innings.

"I thought I had pretty good stuff," Feldman said. "My command
was a little shaky in the second and third innings, but after
that, I went out there and tried to get ground balls. You're
not worried about breaking the streak, but it is contagious. You
see other guys going out there, how they pitch, how they attack
the hitters, and try and do the same thing."

"He hung in there," Washington said of Feldman. "He got in
trouble early putting men on the bag but he made pitches when he
had to. Sometimes that's what pitching is about, making
pitches when you have to."

The victory was just the second in Feldman's career and his
first in a start. He did not allowed a runner to reach third
base on Friday.

"I've been trying to be real aggressive and try and make them
hit the ball," Feldman said. "I know they're a patient team, so
I've tried to get ahead. It didn't always work, but I made
some good pitches when I had to."

"He's got late life on his fastball," said Oakland outfielder
Jack Cust, who had two hits. "He throws a cutter and a sinker
that just really runs. He throws them both the same speed, most
guys don't throw their cutter at the same speed as their
sinker. He was throwing both sides of the plate pretty well
today."

Jamey Wright and Joaquin Benoit each tossed a perfect frame
before C.J. Wilson pitched around a pair of hits in a scoreless
ninth.

Boggs made it 2-0 with a solo home run in the second, booming a
3-2 offering from Oakland starter Greg Smith (2-2) over the
left-field wall.

"It was a 3-2 fastball over the middle of the plate," Smith
said. "He was a good hitter tonight. I just made mistakes and
he took advantage. He waited for the mistake and he hit it."

The blast came one inning after Boggs seemed to injure his right
knee sliding into the side wall in left as he chased down a
foul ball by Daric Barton. Despite staying down for several
minutes, Boggs remained in the game.

"It was probably one of the hardest crashes I've had into a
wall," said Boggs, who never considered coming out. "I'm not
afraid to run into any wall. Luckily I got up with no injury.
It's just a little sore, but it's something I can play through.
It's feeling good. I can run, and as long as I can run, I can
play."

"I asked him if he'd be able to stay in there," Washington said,
"but before he could answer, Michael Young answered for him. He
said, 'He's not coming out.' That was enough for Boggs to say,
'I'm good.'"

Boggs' two-out double into the gap in left-center in the sixth
inning scored Josh Hamilton and Milton Bradley and extended the
Rangers' lead to 4-0.

"It's just another high I've got being up here in the big
leagues," said Boggs, who is now 7-for-11 (.636) with five RBI
in his last three games.

"After he hit the home run, I told him when you hit a homer off
a guy in your first at-bat, he has to be in your pocket the rest
of the day," Washington said of Boggs. "You can't let him off,
and I'll be darned if he didn't finish it off."

Oakland threatened in the ninth, as Cust and Frank Thomas each
singled, but Wilson got Emil Brown to ground into a double play
and then struck out Bobby Crosby to end it.

"We got a little something there in the ninth, and then C.J.
Wilson made a really nice pitch on Emil," Athletics manager Bob
Geren said. "You like to see that situation, Emil up like that,
usually good things are going to happen. He just made a really
good pitch on him."

Texas jumped out to an early 1-0 lead when Ian Kinsler led off
the first inning with a double that one-hopped the wall in left
field. He later stole third and then scored on Hamilton's
ground-out, giving Hamilton his major league-leading 37th RBI of
the season.

Smith pitched six innings, allowing four runs and six hits while
striking out four and walking two.

"I put the team in a hole early, giving them a 2-0 deficit like
that," Smith said. "And in the sixth, I just didn't make
pitches. The one to Hamilton on the double, the ball was up -
and the one to Boggs, I kind of hung a changeup."

"He pitched pretty well, he pitched well enough to win,
especially at this ballpark," Geren said of Smith. "Usually
that performance is well enough to win, but Feldman was just
better. He had a really good run on a fastball on one side of
the plate, and he cut it on the other side, made some really
good pitches on our guys."


 
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