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ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) -
Texas Rangers
pitchers keep posting zeros - 31 in a row, to be exact.
''It's a contagious thing,'' reliever
Jamey Wright
said. ''You want to come in and keep the momentum going. You really want to be in there right now.''
The surging Rangers got their third consecutive shutout, and extended the second-longest scoreless streak in team history
to 31 straight innings, when
Scott Feldman
, Wright and two other relievers combined on a four-hitter in a 4-0 victory over the
Oakland Athletics
on Friday night.
''You're not worried about breaking the streak, but it is contagious,'' said Feldman (1-1), who pitched six innings. ''You
see other guys going out there, how they pitch, how they attack the hitters, and try and do the same thing.''
Wright took over from Feldman and tossed a perfect seventh for 29 scoreless innings in a row, and making it the second-longest
streak.
Joaquin Benoit
and C.J. Wilson - the normal eighth- and ninth-inning guys - finished it off for 31.
Brandon Boggs
, playing only his 11th major league game, recovered from an early hard crash into a wall to go 3-for-4 with a homer and three
RBIs as Texas ended the A's four-game winning streak.
Texas has won four straight games and 10 of 14 to escape last place in the AL West since owner Tom Hicks met with president
Nolan Ryan
and general manager Jon Daniels two weeks ago to discuss the team's direction.
''If we pitch and catch the ball the way we are now, our offense will put enough up there for us to be successful,'' said
manager
Ron Washington
, whose job no longer appears to be in imminent jeopardy.
Florida was the last major league with three consecutive shutouts, in August 2005. The last American League team to accomplish
that feat was Minnesota in July 2004.
The only time Texas pitchers have had a longer scoreless streak was in April 1981, when they had a record 39 in a row during
a span of four consecutive shutouts. That is also the only other time the Rangers had had more than two shutouts in a row
until now.
On Thursday night in Seattle, Wright was among five pitchers who combined for the shutout. Starter
Kason Gabbard
left in the fourth inning of that game a few pitches after
Richie Sexson
charged the mound to tackle the pitcher and spark a bench-clearing brawl. A trio of Rangers held the Mariners scoreless on
Wednesday night.
For rookie left-hander
Greg Smith
(2-2), it was the third straight start in which the Athletics failed to score any runs behind him.
''I put the team in a hole early,'' said Smith, who allowed four runs and six hits over six innings. ''I kind of don't pay
attention to the opposing pitcher because I've got my hands full with what I have to do. But (Feldman) threw the ball well.''
Feldman limited the A's to two singles, the first not coming until one out in the fifth. The right-hander walked four and
struck out one before leaving after 87 pitches.
After
Jack Cust
's leadoff single in the sixth, the A's didn't have another baserunner until Cust and
Frank Thomas
had consecutive singles off Wilson to start the ninth.
Emil Brown
then grounded into a double play before
Bobby Crosby
struck out to end the game.
Feldman took a three-hit shutout into the seventh inning in Oakland on Sunday before Thomas doubled on a ball lost in the
sun and Cust homered, leading the A's to a 3-1 victory.
Boggs was lunging for a foul ball near the left-field corner in the first inning when he stumbled and slid on the ground.
His right knee slammed into an unpadded part of the concrete side wall and a small pipe running along it. He remained down
for several minutes before finally getting up, wiping off his torn pants after what he later described as ''probably one of
the hardest crashes I've had.''
The Rangers led 2-0 after Boggs hit a one-out solo homer in the second.
''Definitely, it's a great pain reliever,'' Boggs said of his three-hit night.
Josh Hamilton
had a double in the sixth, on a ball that skimmed off the heel of leaping right fielder Brown's glove at the wall, and
Milton Bradley
walked before Boggs' two-run double made it 4-0. Boggs is hitting .385 (15-for-39) with two homers and eight RBIs through
his first 11 major league games.
Ian Kinsler
led off the Rangers first with a double and came home on a grounder by Hamilton, who got his majors-best 37th RBI.
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