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ARLINGTON, Texas(AP) The
Texas Rangers
left home still mathematically in contention for a playoff spot and with
Michael Young
ready to return to the lineup.
The Rangers' chances of ending their 10-year postseason drought would be a bit more realistic had they not blown a late five-run
lead in their home finale Sunday and lost 7-6 to the
Tampa Bay Rays
, the defending American League champions just playing out the season.
''I love the fact that we didn't quit, that we kept fighting and eventually won,'' Rays manager Joe Maddon said. ''It's a
tough circumstance to play in and I love what we did. Last road game, we'd done nothing good against a team that's trying
to get into the playoffs. And we come back to win.''
And deal a staggering blow to the Rangers. With seven games left, Texas trails by six in the division and wild-card race.
The AL West-leading Angels beat Oakland 7-4 on Sunday, and wild-card leader Boston lost 4-2 at the
New York Yankees
.
Texas opens a four-game series Monday night in Los Angeles before finishing the regular season with three games in Seattle.
''Most of us got an idea of how perfect you have to be in September,'' Rangers starter
Brandon McCarthy
said. ''You have to win the games you're supposed to win and come back and win the ones you're not supposed to win.''
McCarthy did his part.
The Rangers led 5-0 when the right-hander threw his last pitch with two outs in the eighth, after an error by third baseman
Chris Davis
extended the inning. Four relievers faltered after that.
''I missed a routine ground ball and that was the game. We had the momentum, two outs, it's a play that's got to be made,''
Davis said. ''My error definitely took the momentum away from us.''
Young, the All-Star third baseman who has missed 22 of the last 23 games with a strained left hamstring, said he would be
back in the lineup Monday. Davis would then move back to first.
Fernando Perez
drove home the go-ahead run with a squeeze bunt in the ninth for Tampa Bay, which scored three times in the eighth and four
in its last at-bat to avoid its second sweep in Texas this season.
Ben Zobrist
had a two-run single in each of the final two innings.
Perez, who entered as a pinch runner in the eighth, laid down the safety squeeze bunt after Zobrist's two-run single off
Frank Francisco
(2-3).
Carl Crawford
also had an RBI single in the ninth.
''Fernando's bunt was absolutely perfect, perfectly executed,'' Maddon said.
Nelson Cruz
and
Marlon Byrd
homered for Texas, which scored 29 runs in the three-game series after totaling 19 in its previous nine-game homestand. That
2-7 stretch pushed the Rangers to their largest playoff deficit all season.
McCarthy gave up two runs, both unearned, and six hits over 7 2-3 innings in his fifth start since spending nearly two months
on the disabled list because of a stress fracture in his right shoulder blade.
He quickly got the first two outs in the eighth before the error by Davis and a walk. Darren O'Day and C.J. Wilson both faced
two batters and failed to retire any of them, before Francisco came on to strike out pinch-hitter
Gregg Zaun
.
But Francisco, who had converted 24 of 27 saves, got himself in trouble in the ninth. The right-hander walked two and gave
up three hits before hard-throwing rookie
Neftali Feliz
took over to face Perez.
Randy Choate
(1-0), the fourth of six Tampa Bay pitchers, gave up the homer to Byrd in his only inning, the eighth.
Lance Cormier
got the final out for his second save.
The Rangers went in front on Cruz's 33rd homer, a two-out shot in the second that snapped a 4-for-30 slump.
Cruz also had a leadoff single and scored in Texas' three-run fifth against rookie left-hander
David Price
.
Ian Kinsler
doubled in Cruz before
Elvis Andrus
' squeeze play turned into an run-scoring bunt single and
David Murphy
hit a sacrifice fly.
After replacing McCarthy in the eighth, O'Day walked
Evan Longoria
and gave up a two-run single to Zobrist that made it 5-2. Wilson allowed an RBI single to
Willy Aybar
and hit B.J. Upton with a pitch before Francisco came in.
NOTES: A strange ending to the Rangers fifth: Andrus was caught stealing at third for the third out on the same pitch Byrd
drew a walk. Byrd, who hadn't even left the batter's box, still had to go to first base to be credited with the walk. ...
Upton had gone six games without a strikeout until ending the fourth with his 149th - and then added No. 150 in the ninth,
fifth most in the AL. ... Byrd's homer in the eighth, his third in two games, gave him his first 20-homer season.
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