JoeSaunders
| SEASON | CAREER |
| W9 | 78 |
| L13 | 65 |
| G28 | 189 |
| IP174.2 | 1161.0 |
| BB39 | 354 |
| SO112 | 662 |
YuDarvish
| SEASON | CAREER |
| W16 | 16 |
| L9 | 9 |
| G29 | 29 |
| IP191.1 | 191.0 |
| BB89 | 89 |
| SO221 | 221 |
| SEASON | CAREER |
| W9 | 78 |
| L13 | 65 |
| G28 | 189 |
| IP174.2 | 1161.0 |
| BB39 | 354 |
| SO112 | 662 |
| SEASON | CAREER |
| W16 | 16 |
| L9 | 9 |
| G29 | 29 |
| IP191.1 | 191.0 |
| BB89 | 89 |
| SO221 | 221 |
They get a chance to start fresh Friday.
One chance - or the season will be over for the two-time defending American League champions long before another World Series.
"I don't feel any different," Washington said. "Other than the fact we have an opportunity to get back in the playoffs if we win a ball game."Still, the team that twice came within a strike of winning last year's World Series, never expected to be in this kind of postseason situation.
Instead of winning another division title, after being in first place for a majors-high 178 days this season, Texas hosts a winner-take-all AL wild-card game Friday night against Baltimore and former manager Buck Showalter.
Yu Darvish makes his MLB postseason debut for the Rangers against the only AL team the right-hander from Japan didn't face this season. Lefty Joe Saunders , a late-season acquisition by the Orioles, has never won at Rangers Ballpark.
The winner goes on to play the New York Yankees , another of Showalter's former employers, in the AL division series and will host the first two games.
Baltimore is in the playoffs for the first time in 15 years. Showalter, hired by the Orioles midway through the 2010 season, dismissed any notion that it means more to him getting to face Texas, where he managed for four years and then was replaced by Washington after the 2006 season.
"For our players and organization to get an opportunity, it's rewarding. We're trying to do everything possible to get back to Baltimore," Showalter said. "Personally, I thanked the players for letting me come along for the ride. `'Just a week ago, Texas had a four-game division lead with six to play after splitting a four-game series at home against Oakland. The Rangers lost five of those last six games, including a three-game sweep this week against the A's, who clinched the division title on the last day of the regular season with a 12-5 victory.
The Rangers had a 5-1 lead in the season finale before Oakland's big comeback, including center fielder Josh Hamilton missing a popup for a two-base error with two outs that allowed two runs to score and broke a 5-all tie.
The 4-9 span is their worst such slide of the season. The only other time they were swept in a three-game series was the first week of July at the Chicago White Sox.
"Just like any of our fans or anyone involved with our organization, there was a level of disappointment at first. A chance to win the division, and we couldn't put it away," general manager Jon Daniels said. "Then you take a step back and realize there are 20 teams that would kill to be where we are right now and would trade places with us in a heartbeat. ... We've got one of our best pitchers on the mound at home."While Darvish (16-9) is a rookie in the majors, the 26-year-old starter had plenty of postseason experience before the Rangers committed more than $107 million last winter to acquire Japan's top pitcher. He was 8-2 with a 1.38 ERA and five complete games in 11 postseason starts for the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters from 2006-11.
"He's an expensive one," Showalter said. "He's impressive. They gotten a return on everything they've invested. He's pretty special."The Orioles acquired Saunders (9-13 overall, including 3-3 in seven starts for Baltimore) on Aug. 26 from Arizona. The lefty has previous playoff experience for the Los Angeles Angels .
But Saunders is 3-7 with a 6.48 ERA in 11 career starts against Texas, including 0-6 with a 9.38 ERA in six previous starts at Rangers Ballpark.
"You can make numbers any way you want to," Showalter said. "If you're looking for pitchers with good numbers against the Texas Rangers , they're hard to find."It has been more than two years since Saunders pitched in Texas, and he allowed only one run in seven innings then. Now the Virginia native who grew up an Orioles fan is starting their biggest game of the season.
"It's a huge opportunity. It's been a blessing since I got traded over here, it's been an amazing experience," he said. "It'd be really nice to get a win for the club and get a playoff game back home. That's what this organization is asking me to do."Texas won five of the seven games in the regular season and scored at least 10 runs three times. That includes the May 8 game in Baltimore when Hamilton, the free-agent-to-be slugger, became the 16th player in major league history with four homers in a game.
Hamilton (43) and Adrian Beltre (36), the standout defensive third baseman limited to being the designated hitter against Oakland because of a strained left shoulder, have the most homers by a pair of big league teammates this season.
The Orioles have a pair of 30-homer hitters in Adam Jones (32) and Chris Davis (33), who is among seven former Rangers playing for Baltimore.
Davis was traded to the O's with right-hander Tommy Hunter in July 2011 for Koji Uehara , the righty reliever who retired 25 consecutive batters for Texas before giving up a single in his last outing.
"The big thing for us was coming in August and playing these guys and kind of dealing with the emotions of being back, being on the other side of things," Davis said. "Right now we're definitely excited to be in the postseason, and we really don't care who our opponent is. ... We're just glad to be in this situation."| HITTERS | AB | AVG | H | HR | RBI | BB | SO | OBP | OPS | SLG |
| Elvis Andrus | 5 | .400 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .571 | .971 | .400 |
| Adrian Beltre | 25 | .280 | 7 | 0 | 5 | 0 | 4 | .280 | .680 | .400 |
| Nelson Cruz | 20 | .300 | 6 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 3 | .300 | .950 | .650 |
| Alberto Gonzalez | 14 | .429 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | .429 | 1.000 | .571 |
| Josh Hamilton | 10 | .400 | 4 | 1 | 6 | 1 | 2 | .417 | 1.317 | .900 |
| Ian Kinsler | 24 | .417 | 10 | 4 | 8 | 3 | 1 | .464 | 1.464 | 1.000 |
| David Murphy | 4 | .000 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | .333 | .333 | .000 |
| Yorvit Torrealba | 7 | .429 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 1 | .500 | .929 | .429 |
| Michael Young | 28 | .357 | 10 | 1 | 3 | 4 | 6 | .438 | 1.045 | .607 |
Baltimore Orioles |
|||
| Date | Player | Status | Injury |
| September 29, 2012 | Oliver Drake | 60-Day DL | Right shoulder tendinitis |
| September 23, 2012 | Randy Wolf | 60-Day DL | Torn UCL, left elbow - out for season |
| September 11, 2012 | Jason Hammel | Day-to-Day | Left game - right knee injury |
| September 09, 2012 | Nick Markakis | Day-to-Day | Broken left thumb |
| September 02, 2012 | Chris Tillman | Day-to-Day | Left game - stiff right elbow |
| August 22, 2012 | Matt Wieters | Day-to-Day | Left game - right shoulder contusion |
Texas Rangers |
|||
| Date | Player | Status | Injury |
| September 28, 2012 | Mike Adams | Day-to-Day | Mild cervical strain |
| September 25, 2012 | Yu Darvish | Day-to-Day | Neck stiffness |
| September 23, 2012 | Josh Hamilton | Day-to-Day | Sinus problems |
| September 18, 2012 | Tanner Scheppers | Day-to-Day | Left game - Bruised right knee |
| September 13, 2012 | Mike Olt | Day-to-Day | Plantar fasciitis, right foot |
| September 13, 2012 | Josh Hamilton | Day-to-Day | Sore left knee |
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) -- Buck Showalter and the Baltimore Orioles will get another chance to overtake the New York Yankees .
The surprising O's have already beaten some big odds, getting past the two-time defending AL champion Texas Rangers and their Japanese ace, Yu Darvish , in the win-or-go-home wild-card playoff.
Joe Saunders pitched effectively into the sixth inning at a place where he had never won, Adam Jones delivered the tiebreaking sacrifice fly and the Orioles, in the playoffs for the first time in 15 years, eliminated the Rangers 5-1 Friday night.
"With our team it's just a bunch of guys that raised the bar and wouldn't give in and still haven't. Now they get a chance to win to roll the dice, and there's a lot of good card players in there," said Showalter, their manager.
The Orioles advanced to play the East champion Yankees, the AL's top seed - the teams split 18 games this season. The best-of-five division series starts Sunday at Camden Yards.
The upstart Orioles spent the whole second half chasing New York, never passing them and falling just short in a neck-and-neck race for the division title.
Turns out, the Yankees haven't brushed off these Birds just yet.
"Real proud of everybody. Tacking on runs were big, knew they were going to run at you," Showalter said. "But just a real proud moment for us."
"Our guys approached it and we talked about it being sudden life instead of sudden death, and we played that way. You've got to seize the opportunity. We don't get many," he said.
After twice coming with a strike of winning last year's World Series, this season is over that quickly for the Rangers, who were in first place for a majors-high 178 days this season. Texas loaded the bases with two outs in the ninth before David Murphy flied out to end it.
"We just didn't get it done," manager Ron Washington said.
The Rangers lost the AL West crown on the final day of the regular season, after being swept in three games at Oakland for a stretch of nine losses their last 13 games.
"I'm not stunned, I was right there watching it," Washington said.
Their worst slump of the season came at the wrong time for Texas, which a week ago had a four-game division lead with six games to play. Because of that, they couldn't avoid the majors' new winner-take-all postseason openers, and then couldn't get past their Orioles with their top pitcher on the mound.
"To be honest with you I never thought anything like this would happen," Washington said.
Wiped out by San Francisco in the 2010 World Series, the Rangers twice came within a strike of their first World Series championship last October against St. Louis.
When the Rangers committed more than $107 million last winter to acquire Darvish, they did so with the anticipation he'd be on the mound for many big games.
"Me and my teammates and the Rangers' fans, I don't think we all thought that it would end this early," Darvish said through a translator. "I mean, right now, no. I don't even know what I'm supposed to do tomorrow."
They never would have expected him being outdueled in a playoff game by Saunders, a late-season addition by the Orioles who had lost all six of his previous starts with a 9.38 ERA at Rangers Ballpark.
"Our main job tonight was be as calm as we could and not try to do too much," Saunders said. "I think we did that to the best. We just clawed and scratched our way to a couple runs and played great defense."
Saunders quickly gave up the Orioles' 1-0 lead in the first, but that was the only run he allowed in 5 2-3 innings. The left-hander struck out four and walked one.
"I love being the underdog. To knock off the defending two-time champs from the past couple of years is pretty amazing, I think," he said.
Even though it was the postseason, the Orioles stuck to the regular Friday night uniforms - including black tops and caps with script O's instead of the traditional smiling cartoon bird.
Four pitches into the game, they led against Darvish, who struck out seven in 6 2-3 innings.
Nate McLouth grounded Darvish's first pitch toward first baseman Michael Young . The longest-tenured Rangers player got charged with an error when he tried to backhand the ball, which ricocheted off the heel of his glove and away from him.
McLouth stole second base on the third pitch. J.J. Hardy then drove him in by grounding a hard single up the middle - the Orioles had only one more hit until a sequence in the sixth that needed some interpretation.
The O's had consecutive singles to start the sixth before Jones' sacrifice fly made it 2-1.
After backing up the plate when Jones hit the ball in the air, Darvish started stretching his shoulder and rolling his neck. Washington and pitching coach Mike Maddux went out to the mound to try to figure out what was wrong when their pitcher still looked uncomfortable.
Darvish's translator, Joe Furukawa, was also on his way out before initially being waved back by umpires. The six umpires then conferred before allowing the translator to come out while Darvish kept stretching and then threw a couple of pitches. Darvish said he had a cramp in the muscle on the top of his shoulder.
Darvish finished the sixth with a strikeout, and started the seventh with another, before Ryan Flaherty 's single and a sac bunt by Manny Machado . Derek Holland took over and gave up an RBI single by McLouth for a 3-1 lead.
Even though he was a rookie in the majors, the 26-year-old Darvish was 8-2 with a 1.38 ERA and five complete games in 11 postseason starts for the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters from 2006-11.
McLouth added a sacrifice fly in the ninth, when the Orioles scored twice against Rangers closer Joe Nathan .
Jim Johnson , who set an Orioles record with 51 saves, allowed a walk and two hits, including a two-out pinch single by 19-year-old Jurickson Profar , before Murphy's game-ending flyball to left.
Saunders, who was with Arizona until the end of August, benefited from three double-play grounders and some bad swings by slugger Josh Hamilton , the former AL MVP and free-agent-to-be who might have played his last home game in a Texas uniform.
Hamilton was 0 for 4 with two strikeouts, both on three pitches, including with a runner at second base to end the eighth. He swung at the first pitch his other at-bats - grounding in a double play in the first that did send home Texas' only run, and hit a comebacker to start the sixth.
Even if a second wild card hadn't been added this year, the Orioles and Rangers would have been playing a winner-take-all game since both had 93 wins in the regular season.
Under the old playoff rules, they would have met in a 163rd regular-season game the next day to determine the only wild card, with the winner hitting the road to open the division series.
With the new format, it was a postseason game after an extra day - when Washington gave his team off after being swept in Oakland and losing the AL West crown on the regular season's final day.
The new rules also eliminated the prohibition against teams from the same division meeting in the ALDS, setting up the Orioles and Yankees.
For the Rangers, they're headed into their longest offseason in three years.
NOTES: Orioles 1B Mark Reynolds got hit on his right hand by a pitch in the second. He then stole second, matching his stolen base total from the regular season before getting stranded there. ... The ceremonial first pitch was thrown by 86-year-old Sister Frances Evans, a longtime Rangers fan who was escorted by Nolan Ryan to a spot a few feet in front of the plate. She wound up and threw to former Rangers catcher Jim Sundberg .