November 22, 2024

Texas Rangers' Josh Jung breaks his bat on a line drive against the San Diego Padres in the fifth inning of a baseball game Sunday, July 30, 2023, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Derrick Tuskan)

Each week at MLBTR, it seems we’re covering a development that further tanks the Astros’ chances of competing for a playoff spot. We’ve devoted less attention to their in-state rivals, but the Rangers are in no better a situation. Texas and Houston have identical 33-40 records after the Rangers’ five-game losing streak. They’re only four games clear of the Angels for fourth place in the AL West.

Texas starting the season slowly isn’t a huge surprise in itself (even if the extent of their struggles is). The eye-opener is in the way the team has underperformed. The Rangers opened the season without Jacob deGromMax Scherzer and Tyler Mahle. They were largely trying to stay afloat for the first couple months before welcoming that trio of starters back throughout the summer. The early-season rotation was the big question — the main reason the Rangers might find themselves closer to the bottom of the AL West than the top more than halfway into June.

Starting pitching has not been the problem. Texas is middle-of-the-pack in that regard, solid work from a staff without three of its most talented arms. The collapse has been on the other side of the ball. The Ranger offense hasn’t performed. An outfield that looked like one of the game’s most talented groups has been a disaster. It’s not the easiest problem for GM Chris Young to address at the deadline — if the Rangers find themselves in position to add at all next month.

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