A good season can tame Texas Rangers’ ballpark beast
In response to the question of how do you kill a vampire, one online advice column suggests pointing a cross soaked with holy water at the beast, driving a stake through its heart, cutting off its head and stuffing it with garlic
Reliable sources say that at no time during the Rangers’ 81 home games this season did they see Ron Washington walking around the ballpark with a wooden cross, holy water, a stake, a knife or garlic.
Despite that, for the first time in several years, the season will end with the ballpark not being accused of sucking the life out of Rangers teams.
The Rangers had an absolutely wonderful run, and it will end Sunday in Seattle. There have been challenges caused by injuries that forced Josh Hamilton, Michael Young and Ian Kinsler to miss more than 100 games total, yet Texas was in the playoff race until the last week of the season.
It was a tribute to the team, but it also was refreshing to not hear any excuses — about injuries or the ballpark.
If someone called the park a launching pad, it was in passing. The nasty wind currents that made home runs cheap miraculously disappeared or were ignored. No one campaigned for jack-hammering the Cuervo Club, which supposedly boomeranged winds behind home plate toward the outfield, carrying balls over the fence.
(A quick aside: With the Rangers financial problems, perhaps critics now understand that adding revenue sources such as the club are vital to the economic health of a sports franchise.)
This season was the first in many years that did not include multiple obscenities tossed at the ballpark
Click here to read the full article – By JAN HUBBARD of Star-Telegram.com
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