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ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) -When
Sidney Ponson
got released by Minnesota last May, the big right-hander knew he wasn't physically or mentally ready to keep pitching. So
he went home and was out of the major leagues until last week.
Now his pitches are sinking again, and his confidence is soaring.
Ponson went eight innings to earn his first victory in exactly a year and the
Texas Rangers
finished off a successful homestand with
Ron Washington
still their manager, beating the
Kansas City Royals
2-1 on Thursday.
''My changeup and my slider helped me throw more strikes. I was lucky enough to have two extra pitches besides my slider,''
Ponson said. ''I'm just happy Texas gave me a chance to pitch back in the big leagues, and I'm going to get the most out of
it.''
The Rangers took two-of-three from both Minnesota and Kansas City during the homestand, which began after a miserable road
trip and a meeting of owner Tom Hicks, president
Nolan Ryan
and general manager Jon Daniels about the team's direction. Texas (11-18) set a team record with 18 losses in April, and still
has the worst record in the majors.
''I'm judged on wins and losses. We haven't been getting a whole lot of wins, so it falls on me. I can handle that,'' Washington
said. ''I'm still here, and we're going to still fight. I can't say it doesn't bother me. ... I just know just as bad as we
were, things can turn around. The guys in that clubhouse believe it. I believe it.''
Washington has an 86-105 record in his second season, his first managerial job after 11 seasons as a coach in Oakland, where
Texas begins a three-game series Friday night. Since sweeping a doubleheader at home on April 10 to go to 5-4, the only time
the Rangers have had a winning record under Washington, Texas has lost 14 of 20 games.
Ian Kinsler
hit a leadoff homer in the first and
Ramon Vazquez
hit a tiebreaking drive in the sixth off
Zack Greinke
(3-1).
Ponson's previous victory was on May 1, 2007, for Minnesota against Tampa Bay. He made only two more starts for the Twins
before getting released.
''Mentally and physically I wasn't there,'' said Ponson, who battled injuries when he pitched for St. Louis and the
New York Yankees
in 2006. ''I told my agent, I ain't playing. I'm going to go home, chill and relax, get everything out of my mind.''
The 31-year-old Ponson (1-0) signed a minor league deal this spring, and was recalled Saturday for his first start with the
Rangers. He allowed five runs, only one earned, over 5 1-3 innings vs. the Twins.
Against the Royals, Ponson benefited from two double plays and picked off a runner to face the minimum three batters in the
fourth through seventh innings. He struck out five and walked two while throwing 76 of his 108 pitches for strikes.
C.J. Wilson worked a perfect ninth for his sixth save in seven chances.
Greinke scattered four hits without any walks and struck out nine, fanning All-Star shortstop
Michael Young
three times. Greinke's ERA actually rose, from 1.25 to 1.47, still second-best in the American League.
''First at-bat to Kinsler, it was over the middle, shouldn't have, and he hit it,'' Greinke said. ''I settled down from there.
Ponson was great. His sinker was really moving. The wind was blowing straight out, it helped his sinker and helped my curveball.
It might have been an advantage to him.''
Kinsler lined a 1-1 pitch into the left-field seats for his second leadoff homer of the season. Vazquez followed with a single
before Greinke retired 12 straight - half of those on strikeouts. Rookie
Brandon Boggs
singled leading off the fifth and the only other to reach base was Vazquez, on his one-out homer in the sixth.
''Zack was really good,'' manager Trey Hillman said. ''We got the pitching back but couldn't put the offense with it. ...
They were good enough against Zach on two swings to get the ball out of the ballpark.''
Notes: Young's 14-game hitting streak ended. It was the longest active streak and matched Boston's
Dustin Pedroia
for the longest in the AL this season. ... The getaway day game lasted 2 hours, 10 minutes, following games of 3:41 and 3:28
in the first two games of the series. ... The Rangers had planned to use
Milton Bradley
in RF on Thursday, which would have been the first time since knee surgery last year that he would have played consecutive
games in the field. But he came out of Wednesday night's game with a hamstring cramp, and didn't play Thursday. Washington
said Bradley was fine and would play Friday.
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