Rangers Farm Report: Games of Friday 23 September

Box Scores

AAA: Round Rock 1, at Tacoma (SEA) 4
Round Rock: 5 hits, 0 walks, 11 strikeouts
Opponent: 6 hits, 3 walks, 11 strikeouts
Record: 76-69, eliminated

SP Lucas Jacobsen: 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 3 SO, 20 P / 13 S, 2.25 ERA
RP Spencer Howard: 5 IP, 4 H (2 HR), 3 R, 0 BB, 6 SO, 4.17 ERA
RP Drew Strotman: 1 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 2 BB, 2 SO, 9.00 ERA
LF Ezequiel Duran: 1-4, 2B, .283/.316/.543

Round Rock has lost eight of ten on the road trip. Opener Lucas Jacobsen struck out the side around an error and walk. The Rainers swung at nine pitches and came up empty on five. Spencer Howard pitched well more often than not, but the “not” included two homers.

Waiver-claimed Drew Strotman made his first appearance. 92-95 FB, 85-90 cutter/slider, low-80s curve.

Seattle OF prospect Cade Marlowe, signed out of Division II West Gerogia for the princely sum of $5,000, has three homers in three nights. Marlowe homered twice against Frisco while in AA Arkansas.

AA: off
The Texas League championship series begins Sunday in Frisco.
Elsewhere
Texas’s low-A and high-A leagues were won by Tampa Bay affiliates (Bowling Green, Charleston) for the second straight year. Charleston defeated Down East in five games last year. The Rays are quite the organization.

Today’s Starters
AAA: Miller
AA: off

Rangers Farm Report: Games of Thursday 22 September

Box Scores

AAA: Round Rock 1, at Tacoma (SEA) 10
Round Rock: 5 hits, 3 walks, 10 strikeouts
Opponent: 9 hits, 4 walks, 13 strikeouts
Record: 76-68, eliminated

SP Cole Winn: 5 IP, 6 H (2 HR), 7 R, 2 BB, 7 SO, 90 P / 59 S, 6.42 ERA
RP Ryder Ryan: 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 SO, 3.72 ERA
RP Kyle Cody: 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 SO, 4.32 ERA
RF Elier Hernandez: 3-4, .299/.356/.528

With the caveat that I haven’t see a second of last night’s outing, Cole Winn appears to have been very much on his game for five innings, after which the troubles returned. Winn cleared five on 64 pitches, walked none, and faced only two over the minimum.

Unfortunately, his 6th proceeded double, single, single, homer, walk, walk.  Still, that’s probably his lengthiest dominant stretch of the season.

AA: Frisco 5, San Antonio (SDG) 2
Frisco: 7 hits, 10 walks, 9 strikeouts
Opponent: 7 hits, 0 walks, 10 strikeouts
Frisco wins best-of-three semifinal 2-0

SP Cody Bradford: 6 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 9 SO, 97 P / 73 S, 0.00 ERA
RP Owen White: 1 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 0 SO, 0.00 ERA
RP Nick Starr: 0.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 0 SO, 0.00 ERA
RF Aaron Zavala: 2-3, HR, 2 BB
3B Thomas Saggese: 2-3, 2 BB
LF Kellen Strahm: 1-2, 2 BB, SB
1B Trevor Hauver: 1-2, 2 BB
C David Garcia: 1-3, HR, BB

I’m always circumspect about predicting playoff victors because the minor leagues are chaos and I’ve seen the better team fall frequently, so in this case it was nice to see the better team quickly take care of business.

Cody Bradford saved one of his best starts of the year for a critical moment. In 2022, Bradford has three starts of 6-7 innings with zero runs and zero walks. All came against the San Antonio Missions. 

Owen White! He’s back. Out for two months with an “forearm fatigue,” as foreboding a pair of words as you’re likely to see, White needed only seven pitches to complete the 7th. Avery Weems (1.1 IP, 2 R) ran into some 9th-inning trouble, but Nick Starr finished the game successfully just like Tuesday.

Aaron Zavala homered again, this time in the 1st with one on to build an early lead that would never be threatened. Catcher David Garcia homered in the 3rd. Trevor Hauver drew a bases-loaded walk in the 4th and singled in Kellen Strahm in the 8th to complete the scoring.

The Wichita Wind Surge (MIN) swept the Tulsa Drillers (LAD) by scored of 17-11 and 11-1. Hopefully the Surge are done with that nonsense. Wichita had the league’s best second-half record (43-26) and overall record (78-59).

Frisco is off until Sunday. The Riders will host one and only one game of the best-of-three championship. Tickets are five bucks. You should go.

Today’s Starters
AAA: Howard
AA: off

Rangers Farm Report: Games of Wednesday 21 September

Box Scores

AAA: Round Rock 6, at Tacoma (SEA) 7
Round Rock: 10 hits, 2 walks, 7 strikeouts
Opponent: 9 hits, 3 walks, 8 strikeouts
Record: 76-67, eliminated

SP Kolby Allard: 6.2 IP, 5 H (2 HR), 2 R, 1 BB, 7 SO, 102 P / 63 S, 4.82 ERA
LF Ezequiel Duran: 5-5, 2B, 2 HR, (8), .285/.318/.545

Tacoma scored five in the 9th. Up 6-2, Jake Latz allowed a solo homer, two singles and a walk. Nick Snyder replaced Latz, and his third pitch, an 82 MPH curve that clipped the bottom of the zone, was hit into Puget Sound.

Ezequiel Duran hit homers of 400 and 420 feet.

The Express themselves say they’re eliminated from the title race. They’re five back of El Paso with seven to play, but they’re also four back of OKC. Since those two teams are playing each other this week, Round Rock can only gain ground on one team on a given night, so the math just doesn’t work. The Express have secured a winning record.

AA: off

Frisco and San Antonio resume the best-of-three tonight at the Wolff. Frisco has the best man for the job on the mound in the form of Cody Bradford. San Antonio is hoping Nolan Watson (5.84 ERA with peripherals to match) can force a third game.

Today’s Starters
AAA: TBD
AA: Bradford

Rangers Farm Report: Games of Tuesday 20 September

Box Scores

AAA: Round Rock 3, at Tacoma (SEA) 2 (11)
Round Rock: 5 hits, 2 walks, 10 strikeouts
Opponent: 7 hits, 7 walks, 13 strikeouts
Record: 76-66, 4 GB, elimination number 5

SP Zak Kent: 5.1 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 3 BB, 5 SO, 91 P / 56 S, 0.39 ERA
RP Lucas Jacobsen: 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 SO, 3.00 ERA
RP Chase Lee: 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 1 SO, 5.90 ERA
LF Elier Hernandez: 2-4, 2 2B, .291/.351/.517
CF JP Martinez: 1-4, HR (6), .205/.340/.426

For a fourth straight start, Zak Kent calmly dispatched of his opponents. Yet again, he didn’t overpower anyone, but hitters sure aren’t having much luck on contact. Kent’s fastball topped at 93.1, a little lower than usual.

Unfortunately for the Express, El Paso and OKC are meeting this week. Both are ahead of Round Rock (and tied as well), so the Express can’t gain ground on both teams the same day.

Tieran Alexander of Prospects Live has a deep dive into Cole Winn’s troublesome 2022. Worth yur times if you’re into a serious breakdown of his pitches, what’s working, and what isn’t. The short version, which jibes with my assessment: The stuff is still fine, the control and command are sorely lacking.

Ex-Ranger Ronny Henriquez made his MLB debut on the 19th, allowing three runs in four innings. Texas had traded him and IKF to the Twins for Mitch Garver. Per Statcast, Henriquez threw sliders for more than half his pitches. In AAA, Henriquez has a 5.66 ERA with (per usual) good control, plenty of strikeouts, and a lot of homers.

AA: Frisco 7, San Antonio (SDG) 3
Frisco: 12 hits, 4 walks, 3 strikeouts
Opponent: 6 hits, 8 walks, 11 strikeouts
Frisco leads best-of-three semifinal 1-0

SP Jack Leiter: 3.1 IP, 2 H, 3 R, 6 BB, 4 SO, 79 P / 43 S
RP Seth Nordlin: 2 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 2 SO
RP Josh Smith: 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 SO
RP Nick Starr: 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 SO
RF Aaron Zavala: 1-4, HR
2B Luisangel Acuna: 2-4, 2B, SB
LF Kellen Strahm: 2-2, 2 2B, 2 BB
1B Frainyer Chavez: 2-4

Frisco won last night’s playoff opener with typically superior hitting and a surprising 5.2 innings of scoreless relief. The bullpen wasn’t totally blameless, as Seth Nordlin could only strand one of three runners bequeathed by Jack Leiter with one out in the 4th. In his defense, that’s a bear of a situation with an expectation of about 1.6 runs. In any case, he kept the game from getting out of hand, and aided by a clean inning from rehabbing Joe Barlow, the relievers blanked the Missions as Frisco mounted its comeback.

The Riders didn’t mount much of an attack against soft-tossing Thomas Eshelman in the early innings but eliminated a 3-0 deficit in the 5th on doubles by Luisangel Acuna and Kellen Strahm plus singles from Scott Kapers and Evan Carter. Unwilling to settle for a single crooked inning, Frisco plated four in the 8th. Aaron Zavala began by blasting a pitch from Fred Schlichtholz, one of San Antonio’s best relievers. Hits from Thomas Saggese, Strahm, and Jonathan Ornelas provided ample insurance.

Frisco won in front of a surprisingly large and engaged crowd. I mean no offense to the good folks up there, just that playoff ball is often a miss with fans. I’ve attended some AA and AAA playoff games in which the number of actual bodies in attendance was in the low hundreds. The games aren’t scheduled far in advance, school is back, until recently the season ended on Labor Day.  Last night was great to see.

As for Leiter, well, he was bad. He walked the leadoff hitter on five pitches, another on four, and then surrendered a two-out RBI single in a 26-pitch 1st. His last three batters consumed 19 pitches. All walked. The strike zone was on the tight side, but Leiter just didn’t have any control. He’s walked 12 of 42 batters (29%) in his last two starts. I expect he’ll pitch again if Frisco reaches the finals.

Today’s Starters
AAA: TBD
AA: off

Texas League Playoff Preview



Texas League Division Series

Frisco RoughRiders (74-63) vs. San Diego-affiliated San Antonio Missions (68-68)
Season Run Differential: Frisco +80, San Antonio +15
Last 20 Games: Frisco 11-9, San Antonio 6-14
Season Series: Frisco 15-9

How They Got Here
In the season’s first half, Frisco raced to a 9-1 start (including a six-game sweep of the Missions) and led the division for most of the way before fading down the stretch. In the second half, Frisco and Midland were tied with 17 to play, after which the Riders went 10-7 while the RockHounds did the opposite.

The Missions stumbled to a 2-11 record but were 36-20 the rest of the first half to overtake the Riders and claim the first-half division crown. The Missions had the division’s worst second half record (30-39), capped by a 9-18 finish.

History  
Frisco is in the postseason for the first time since 2014. The Riders won their only title in 2004, aided by Ian Kinsler, Jason Botts, Chris Young, and Kam Loe, among others. Six additional visits since then have fallen short. Frisco lost the championship in 2008 to an under-.500 Arkansas squad despite Derek Holland and Neftali Feliz starting four of the five games.

San Antonio’s much longer history includes five league titles during the 2000s but none since 2013. The Mission briefly switched to the AAA Pacific Coast League as a Milwaukee affiliate before returning to AA in 2021 after the Great Purge.

The teams haven’t met in the postseason since 2011. An outstanding San Antonio squad (94-46) won that series 3-1 and the championship. I saw ex-Ranger Joe Wieland duel Robby Ross in the opener.

Top 30 Prospects on Active Roster per MLB.com / Baseball America
Frisco:
2 / 4.  RHP Jack Leiter
3 / 1.  OF Evan Carter
5 / 9.  IF Justin Foscue
7 / 6.  IF Luisangel Acuna
11 / 12. OF Aaron Zavala
14 / 14. LHP Antoine Kelly
17 / nr.  RHP Ricky Vanasco
20 / nr.  IF Thomas Saggese
22 / nr.  IF Jonathan Ornelas
24 / nr.  LHP Avery Weems
29 / 29. RHP Marc Church (on development list)
30 / nr. RHP Mason Englert

San Antonio:
11 / 14. LHP Noel Vela
13 / 23. LHP Jackson Wolf
14 / 18. OF Joshua Mears
18 / 24. OF Tirso Ornelas
23 / 28. RHP Kevin Kopps
24 / 20. RHP Alek Jacob

An embarrassment of riches for Frisco. I don’t know if I’ve ever seen that many ranked prospects on one playoff roster.

Offense / Position Players
Frisco Offense: +4% runs scored, .265/.350/.439, 107 OPS+, 102 wRC+
San Antonio Offense: +4% runs scored, .266/.356/.397, 103 OPS+, 103 wRC+

Frisco:
C Scott Kapers / David Garcia
1B Trevor Hauver
2B Justin Foscue
3B Jonathan Ornelas
SS Luisangel Acuna
LF Kellen Strahm
CF Evan Carter
RF Aaron Zavala
Also IF Thomas Saggese, OF Josh Stowers, IF Frainyer Chavez

Several of Frisco’s best hitters have departed (Duran, Crim, Harris, Martinez), but Frisco’s offense is perhaps in its best shape all season. The Riders bashed their way to a division title by averaging 8.6 runs per game in the final three weeks. For the season, Frisco rated well above average in power but didn’t walk much. The current bunch has improved patience (mainly in the form of Zavala and Hauver) and slightly diminished power.

Catcher is the only weak spot, but Kapers can get a hold of a pitch, too. Other than that position and Luisangel Acuna (.224/.302/.349), who’s quieted since advancing from Hickory, the “worst” hitter statistically is Jonathan Ornelas at .299/.360/.425. That’s mighty impressive. One might have expected newcomers Evan Carter and Thomas Saggese to struggle, but they both had tremendous debut weeks.

Hauver didn’t start playing first until very recently, but I’d be inclined to keep him there under these circumstances. He’s the weakest defender, and Frisco lacks a natural 1B after Crim’s promotion.

San Antonio:
C Webster Rivas
1B Yorman Rodriguez (also C)
2B Domingo Leyba
3B Kelvin Melean
SS Connor Hollis
LF Tirso Ornelas
CF Josh Mears
RF Ripken Reyes
Also C/IF Juan Fernandez, C Tyler Malone, OF Jorge Ona, UT Ethan Skendler

San Antonio hit 23 fewer homers than any other team and was the league’s weakest power source, even after adjusting for its difficult park. The Missions were best in OBP relative to park, however. Singles, walks, steals, and even sacrifices feature in the attack.

27-year-old Connor Hollis is an on-base machine (.432 this season, career .406) and best base-stealing threat. Others above .350 are Ornelas, Reyes, Leyba (26, ex-Ranger, some MLB experience), and Rivas (a grizzled 31 and another MLB vet). None of these guys strike out much, either. The Missions will put the ball in play, so Frisco will rely on its defense and luck more than usual. Above-average power comes from 2019 2nd-rounder Joshua Mears, OF/DH Jorge Ona, and 1B Yorman Rodriguez.

Pitching / Possible Rotation
Frisco: 6% better than avg. in runs allowed, .247/.337/.400 oppo line, 93 OPS+, 12% BB/HBP, 24% SO)
San Antonio: 2% below avg. in runs allowed, .259/.351/.405, 103 OPS+, 13% BB/HBP, 22% SO)

Frisco:
1: Jack Leiter (5.54 ERA, .247/.359/.381 opposing line, 13% BB/HBP rate, 26% SO rate)
2: Cody Bradford (5.01 ERA, .248/.304/.427, 7% BB/HBP, 25% SO)
3: Mason Englert (4.11 ERA, .237/.308/.356, 8% BB/HBP, 31% SO)

For the season, Frisco’s pitching and defense graded out slightly higher than the offense, but the current situation is reversed. How offense-dependent were the Riders? In their 10-7 stretch to clinch the division, they allowed an average of 6.6 runs per game overall and 5.0 when they won.

Jack Leiter’s a great prospect, but he wasn’t a great pitcher in 2022. Odds of him running into a bad inning are high; the key will be stranding those excess baserunners. Bradford pitched much better down the stretch and is the ideal choice for what will be an elimination game for either Frisco or San Antonio. Englert has only three AA starts but acquitted himself nicely and seems up to the task.

The bullpen… ah, the bullpen. Gone are Grant Anderson, Lucas Jacobsen, Chase Lee, and Fern Ozuna (plus Tim Brennan, a potentially crucial absence, Zak Kent, Cole Ragans, and Owen White). Closer Nick Starr has a modest 20% K rate but has pitched comfortably and successfully in the role. Likewise, Nordlin has been competent as a swingman, and since he’s not starting, I’m hopeful he can pitch in Games 1 and 3 (if needed). Avery Weems can be as good as anyone (and might draw an early start if Frisco advances), but he’s worryingly homer-prone. The rest have a combined 5.96 ERA and 15% BB/HBP rate. Everybody has an issue, be it walks, homers, or not many strikeouts.
San Antonio:
1: Thomas Eshelman (4.58 ERA, .306/.329/.442, 3% BB/HBP, 13% SO)
2: Nolan Watson (5.84 ERA,  .276/.378/.416, 11% BB/HBP, 22% SO)
3: Henry Henry (5.20 ERA, .276/.390/.381, 15% BB/HBP, 22% SO)

San Antonio’s rotation after Game 1 is a guess based on schedule, including Watson being held out on Sunday. Frankly, it’s not much to speak of, and alternatives who might be ready for Games 2 and 3 aren’t any better. Watson was 2015’s 33rd-overall pick by the Royals but hasn’t surpassed AA. Henry Henry seems to be able to suppress power when he’s not walking people. Eshelman has acquired 98 MLB innings with superior command of soft stuff.

The bullpen is a mixed bag. Alek Jacob (1.83 ERA, 30% SO) Fred Schlichtholz (2.04 ERA, 28% SO), and Jordan Guerrero (few innings in 2022 but a decent track record) are the best relievers. Closer Lake Bachar has been okay more often than not, but he’s prone to homers.

Defense
Frisco was a little easier to run on but bested the Missions in terms of expected double plays, outs on balls in play, and errors.

Park Factors
Frisco – 1.00
San Antonio – 0.93

The Wolff is tough on power. The Missions and their opponents combined for 79 homers in San Antonio and 153 in other parks.

Advantages / Outlook
Offense – Frisco
Pitching – Even
Defense – Frisco

It doesn’t always work out as such, but on paper we appear to be in for a high-scoring series. Both sides have solid offenses and problems in their rotations and pens. I do think the Riders are the better team, but not by a huge amount, and in a best-of-three, it’s hard to see them as more than a 55/45 favorite. Don’t bet your retirement on either side, even if you’re getting odds.

Most Recent Texas-Affiliated Championship Teams
AAA: 1996 Oklahoma City 89ers
AA: 2004 Frisco RoughRiders
Hi-A: 2017 Down East Wood Ducks (co-champion)
Lo-A: 2015 Hickory Crawdads
Short-A: 2008 Spokane Indians
Rookie: 2019 Rangers
DSL: 2014 Rangers

Rangers Farm Report: Games of Sunday 18 September

Welcome to an evening edition of the Farm Report. Today was long. I’ll have a preview of Frisco’s series against San Antonio tomorrow. I hope.

As you’ve probably seen, Texas placed a successful waiver claim on RHP Drew Strotman, whose name anagrams to Tend Worst Arm, but don’t hold it against him. Drafted in 2017’s 4th round out of St. Mary’s, Strotman was added to Tampa Bay’s 40-man roster after 2020 but traded the next July with RHP Joe Ryan for Nelson Cruz. He’s on his second option. Strotman offers a mid-90s fastball, cutter, slider, and change, although since he’s moved to relief this season I’m not sure if all of those secondaries remain in play. He fans batters at an acceptable rate but his control is poor. The 26-year-old strikes me as the kind of guy the Rangers will try to run through waivers themselves at the opportune moment and hope that he didn’t get re-claimed.

Texas placed Brad Miller on the 60-day IL to make room. Miller’s season is over, and perhaps his time in Texas even though he’s owed $4 million next year. Miller was a potentially clever partial solution to Texas’s problems in third or left, but his power and walks dwindled as a Ranger.

The Giants designated OF Willie Calhoun for assignment after claiming another ex-Ranger, RHP Jharel Cotton. Calhoun had a single and walk in nine trips to the plate. A claim on him by the Rangers would be, shall we say, unlikely.

Box Scores

AAA: Round Rock 5, at El Paso (SDG) 6 (10)
Round Rock: 8 hits, 3 walks, 7 strikeouts
Opponent: 11 hits, 5 walks, 3 strikeouts
Record: 75-66, 5 GB, elimination number 5

SP Tyson Miller: 5 IP, 4 H (1 HR), 1 R, 0 BB, 3 SO, 70 P / 49 S, 4.52 ERA
RF Josh Sale: 2-3, HR (11), BB, .237/.353/.443
LF Elier Hernandez: 3-5, 3B, HR (12), .288/.347/.510

The Express lost five of six to division-leading El Paso, placing them five back with nine to play. Elier Hernandez missed the cycle by a double.

AA: Frisco 10, at NW Arkansas (KAN) 9 (10)
Frisco: 12 hits, 5 walks, 10 strikeouts
Opponent: 11 hits, 7 walks, 5 strikeouts
Record: 38-30, tied for first, 74-63 overall, division champion, regular season over

SP Tai Tiedemann: 2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 0 SO, 27 P / 19 S, 6.20 ERA
RP Avery Weems: 2 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 0 BB, 2 SO, 5.14 ERA
RP John Matthews: 1.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 SO, 5.40 ERA
RF Evan Carter: 2-5, 2B, HR (1), BB, .429/.536/.714
LF Kellen Strahm: 2-4, BB, .277/.392/.407
3B Thomas Saggese: 2-4, 2B, HR (1), BB, .381/.409/.857

Saggese’s homer was a grand slam. For that and other heroics, he was named Texas League Player of the Week. Not bad for someone who made his AA debut five days ago. Fellow newcomer Evan Carter, who batted .429/.536/.714, gets a pat on the back.

Rangers Farm Report: Games of Saturday 17 September

Box Scores


AAA: Round Rock 0, at El Paso (SDG) 13
Round Rock: 7 hits, 1 walk, 9 strikeouts
Opponent: 11 hits, 7 walks, 7 strikeouts
Record: 75-65, 4 GB, elimination number 7

SP Spencer Howard: 3 IP, 4 H, 6 R, 3 BB, 1 SO, 68 P / 41 S, 4.05 ERA
1B Blaine Crim: 2-4, .476/.476/.526

El Paso led 11-0 after the 4th. The Chihuahuas scored five in an inning off Fernery Ozuna, who has an engaging repertoire (exceptional run on a mid-90s fastball and upper-80s change, an occasional slurve) but has struggled with his control in AAA. He’s issued at least two walks on five occasions in 2022, four of them during his limited time with the Express.

Rehabbing Joe Barlow fanned two in a perfect 5th.

OF Eli White is out for the year with a knee issue, per local media. I was at his first rehab game, in which he was pulled early, and he departed early again on Tuesday. In terms of replacing the injured Nick Solak, Texas’s minor league hitters on the 40 are Ezequiel Duran, Andy Ibanez, and catcher Meibrys Viloria. Viloria would give Texas a third catcher. Ibanez hasn’t been anything special, but I could see him getting the nod over Duran because Zeke needs regular at-bats that won’t be forthcoming in Arlington. Nobody off the 40 especially jumps out to me, at least not without reservations. Yohel Pozo is hitting well per usual, but he’d be limited to DH.

Round Rock has lost eight of 12 since pulling to one game behind Oklahoma City.


AA: Frisco 5, at NW Arkansas (KAN) 7
Frisco: 9 hits, 3 walks, 7 strikeouts
Opponent: 9 hits, 7 walks, 6 strikeouts
Record: 37-30, 2 G up, 73-63 overall, division champion

SP Ricky Vanasco: 4.2 IP, 6 H (1 HR), 5 R, 3 BB, 1 HBP, 2 SO, 91 P / 55 S, 6.75 ERA
RP Antoine Kelly: 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 3 BB, 3 SO, 7.23 ERA
CF Evan Carter: 1-3, 2 BB, .438/.545/.563
1B Frainyer Chavez: 3-4, SB (1), .300/.357/.360

Ricky Vanasco’s regular season concludes with a 4.68 ERA, an opposing line of .252/.350/.428, a 13% BB/HBP rate and a 29% strikeout rate. Vanasco was as certain a 40-man addition as anyone last winter, getting a spot that wasn’t afforded to either Bubba Thompson or Cole Ragans. His 2022 was erratic, not unexpectedly, but also marked by wildly varying reports on his velocity and reviews that didn’t jibe with the offseason hype. Perhaps expectations were too high given his two-year absence (covid, TJ). Vanasco would be an interesting 40 decision if he weren’t already on the roster.

The regular season ends today. Frisco will finish with the second-best record in the league and best in the division.

Today’s Starters
AAA: Miller
AA: TBD

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Rangers Farm Report: Games of Saturday 17 September
Box Scores


AAA: Round Rock 0, at El Paso (SDG) 13
Round Rock: 7 hits, 1 walk, 9 strikeouts
Opponent: 11 hits, 7 walks, 7 strikeouts
Record: 75-65, 4 GB, elimination number 7

SP Spencer Howard: 3 IP, 4 H, 6 R, 3 BB, 1 SO, 68 P / 41 S, 4.05 ERA
1B Blaine Crim: 2-4, .476/.476/.526

El Paso led 11-0 after the 4th. The Chihuahuas scored five in an inning off Fernery Ozuna, who has an engaging repertoire (exceptional run on a mid-90s fastball and upper-80s change, an occasional slurve) but has struggled with his control in AAA. He’s issued at least two walks on five occasions in 2022, four of them during his limited time with the Express.

Rehabbing Joe Barlow fanned two in a perfect 5th.

OF Eli White is out for the year with a knee issue, per local media. I was at his first rehab game, in which he was pulled early, and he departed early again on Tuesday. In terms of replacing the injured Nick Solak, Texas’s minor league hitters on the 40 are Ezequiel Duran, Andy Ibanez, and catcher Meibrys Viloria. Viloria would give Texas a third catcher. Ibanez hasn’t been anything special, but I could see him getting the nod over Duran because Zeke needs regular at-bats that won’t be forthcoming in Arlington. Nobody off the 40 especially jumps out to me, at least not without reservations. Yohel Pozo is hitting well per usual, but he’d be limited to DH.

Round Rock has lost eight of 12 since pulling to one game behind Oklahoma City.


AA: Frisco 5, at NW Arkansas (KAN) 7
Frisco: 9 hits, 3 walks, 7 strikeouts
Opponent: 9 hits, 7 walks, 6 strikeouts
Record: 37-30, 2 G up, 73-63 overall, division champion

SP Ricky Vanasco: 4.2 IP, 6 H (1 HR), 5 R, 3 BB, 1 HBP, 2 SO, 91 P / 55 S, 6.75 ERA
RP Antoine Kelly: 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 3 BB, 3 SO, 7.23 ERA
CF Evan Carter: 1-3, 2 BB, .438/.545/.563
1B Frainyer Chavez: 3-4, SB (1), .300/.357/.360

Ricky Vanasco’s regular season concludes with a 4.68 ERA, an opposing line of .252/.350/.428, a 13% BB/HBP rate and a 29% strikeout rate. Vanasco was as certain a 40-man addition as anyone last winter, getting a spot that wasn’t afforded to either Bubba Thompson or Cole Ragans. His 2022 was erratic, not unexpectedly, but also marked by wildly varying reports on his velocity and reviews that didn’t jibe with the offseason hype. Perhaps expectations were too high given his two-year absence (covid, TJ). Vanasco would be an interesting 40 decision if he weren’t already on the roster.

The regular season ends today. Frisco will finish with the second-best record in the league and best in the division.

Today’s Starters
AAA: Miller
AA: TBD

Rangers Farm Report: Games of Friday 16 September

Texas announced its Arizona Fall League contingent: Pitchers Kumar Rocker, Jake Latz, Nick Starr, and Grant Wolfram, catcher Cody Freeman, infielder Luisangel Acuna, outfielders Jayce Easley, Trevor Hauver, and Aaron Zavala. An impressive bunch on the whole. Rocker will be making his his debut in MiLB, having already pitched professionally in the indy Frontier League for a handful of starts.

Box Scores

AAA: Round Rock 3, at El Paso (SDG) 9
Round Rock: 8 hits, 3 walks, 7 strikeouts
Opponent: 13 hits, 3 walks, 7 strikeouts
Record: 75-64, 3 GB

SP Cole Winn: 5.1 IP, 10 H (2 HR), 8 R, 2 BB, 6 SO, 92 P / 61 S, 6.31 ERA

That’s not a pretty line, but if Winn had been having a decent season and surrendered all these runs, I’d just say “forget it, Cole, it’s El Paso.” And he’d say “who are you, and why are you making 1970s movies references to a 22-year-old.” Winn is unfortunately not having a decent season at all, but despite the runs, I’m just happy he that threw strikes. Only two walks to 28 batters, the second one (annoyingly) to the final batter faced, and a 66% strike rate. All I’m hoping for in his last one or two starts is acceptable control, something to build on for next year.

Eight batters had exactly one hit. Ezequiel Duran doubled and walked, and Blaine Crim singled and walked.

AA: Frisco 11, at NW Arkansas (KAN) 6
Frisco: 13 hits, 5 walks, 9 strikeouts
Opponent: 12 hits, 6 walks, 9 strikeouts
Record: 37-29, 2 G up, 73-62 overall, division champions

SP Mason Englert: 4.2 IP, 4 H (1 HR), 3 R, 4 BB, 5 SO, 85 P / 54 S, 4.11 ERA
3B Jonathan Ornelas: 2-4, 2 BB, SB (14), .299/.361/.425
RF Evan Carter: 3-4, 2B, BB, .462/.529/.615
2B Justin Foscue: 2-4, 2B, HR (15), .289/.369/.486
LF Kellen Strahm: 2-4, HR (10), BB, .274/.390/.406

Frisco is in the postseason for the first time since 2014. The intervening years weren’t pretty: five straight losing seasons with an average record of 62-77, then covid, then a better 2021 (64-55) that concluded with an agonizing, extra-inning, playoff-missing loss on the season’s final day.

Frisco has been busy trailing and overtaking Midland during the past several weeks. Midland officially dropped from contention by losing earlier in the evening, but Amarillo presented another unexpected obstacle due its recent hot streak. Amarillo won its sixth straight to keep pace, but the Riders, as they’ve done so often lately, put more than one crooked number on the board and won with relative ease. Frisco has scored seven runs or more in ten of the last 16 games. They and the Sod Poodles could finished tied, but Frisco won the season series 11-7 for the tiebreaker.

Mason Englert walked four for only the second time all season but was able to wriggle out of excessive trouble. A two-run homer ended his night and regular season. Between Hickory and Frisco, Englert held the opposition to a .199/.261/.356 line and posted a 3.64 ERA in 118.2 innings with 31 walks. Barring some outrageous happenings in AAA, Englert’s 136 strikeouts will lead the organization.

Six regulars have an OPS over .900 in September (Hauver, Stowers, Foscue, Kapers, Strahm, the departed Crim), and Evan Carter and Thomas Saggese are in the same lofty range with four and three games played, respectively.

Today’s Starters
AAA: Spencer Howard
AA: Ricky Vanasco

Rangers Farm Report: Games of Thursday 15 September

Box Scores

AAA: Round Rock 10, at El Paso (SDG) 4
Round Rock: 16 hits, 1 walk, 9 strikeouts
Opponent: 6 hits, 5 walks, 14 strikeouts
Record: 75-63, 2 GB

SP Kolby Allard: 5 IP, 6 H (1 HR), 4 R, 4 BB, 9 SO, 99 P / 61 S, 5.00 ERA
RP Grant Anderson: 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 2 SO, 6.75 ERA
2B Ezequiel Duran: 2-5, 2B, .264/.298/.491
1B Yohel Pozo: 3-5, 2B, .344/.379/.507
DH Blaine Crim: 5-5, 2B
SS Ryan Dorow: 1-5, HR (5), .241/.327/.355

Blaine Crim went 5-5. Only two balls were hit in excess of 74 MPH, but they all count. (Sometimes Statcast is a spoilsport.) In any case, the performance serves to remind that Crim is actually a fairly well-rounded hitter, not an all-or-nothing type. His career professional batting average is .308.

Kolby Allard made what I consider a quality start for the Mountain Time Zone.

AA: Frisco 3, at NW Arkansas (KAN) 6
Frisco: 5 hits, 9 walks, 6 strikeouts
Opponent: 14 hits, 4 walks, 8 strikeouts
Record: 36-29, 2.5 G up, 72-62 overall, magic number 1

SP Seth Nordlin: 4 IP, 7 H (1 HR), 3 R, 1 BB, 1 HBP, 3 SO, 63 P / 41 S, 3.44 ERA
CF Evan Carter: 2-3, SB (2)

Down 3-0 in the 6th, Frisco tied the game on just two singles plus three walks. Northwest Arkansas quickly responded with three off Marc Church, and the Riders were quiet afterwards. Church maintained his previous dominance in his first four appearances upon promotion to AA, but since then: 9.2 innings, nine runs, four homers, a .333/.417/.643 opposing line. In terms of the upcoming postseason, the Riders could use another reliable arm. Four of the top five in both games finished and saves (Ozuna, Anderson, Lee, Jacobsen) have moved on to Round Rock.

Only newcomer Evan Carter had two hits. Jonathan Ornelas, Aaron Zavala and Trevor Hauver drew two walks apiece.

Midland also lost. One Frisco win or one Midland loss in the next three days will secure the second-half division title. The Riders last reached the postseason in 2014.

Today’s Starters
AAA: Winn
AA: Englert

Rangers Farm Report: Games of Wednesday 14 September

Box Score

AAA: Round Rock 2, at El Paso (SDG) 3
Round Rock: 9 hits, 2 walks, 9 strikeouts
Opponent: 7 hits, 5 walks, 7 strikeouts
Record: 74-63, 3 GB

SP Zak Kent: 5.1 IP, 5 H (1 HR), 2 R, 2 BB, 4 SO, 93 P / 65 S, 0.51 ERA
3B Davis Wendzel: 1-4, HR (16), .211/.290/.415
CF JP Martinez: 2-3, 2B, BB, .198/.341/.396

Zak Kent has excelled in three AAA starts. He’s been a little lucky, with a .213 average in balls in play and some very hard and well-angled hits that ended up as deep outs instead of homers, but just about any pitcher with an 0.51 ERA is lucky. Kent isn’t blowing anyone away, he’s just spotting a large repertoire well.

Davis Wendzel has ten homers in 30 games since returning from injury, contrasted to six in 44 games before. Strangely, his batted ball data isn’t that much different between the two periods. He’s hit a bunch of balls that have had a decent but not extremely high chance of leaving the park, and in his case they’re all leaving.

Ex-Rangers RHP Collin Wiles made his MLB debut in Oakland against the Rangers last night. Wiles was selected 53rd overall in 2012 and spent ten seasons in the Texas organization.

AA: Frisco 9, at NW Arkansas (KAN) 2
Frisco: 13 hits, 2 walks, 8 strikeouts
Opponent: 6 hits, 3 walks, 8 strikeouts
Record: 36-28, 2.5 G up, 72-61 overall, magic number 2

SP Cody Bradford: 6.2 IP, 5 H, 1 R, 1 BB, 6 SO, 97 P / 67 S, 5.01 ERA
3B Jonathan Ornelas: 3-5, .299/.357/.425
2B Thomas Saggese: 3-4, 2 2B, 3B

Me, six weeks ago: “Cody Bradford probably has six starts remaining, and barring something amazing, the first digit of his ERA is going to be a five.” Bradford didn’t quite pull his ERA below five, but he was still pretty amazing: 2.50 ERA, five walks, 42 strikeouts in 36 innings.

Thomas Saggese doubled twice and tripled in his AAA debut. RF Evan Carter was 1-4 with a two-run double.

Midland was rained out and will play a doubleheader Saturday.

Today’s Starters
AAA: Allard
AA: Nordlin