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Rangers ride out storm to pour more misery on Angels

(Reuters) – Free-swinging Josh Hamilton provided the fireworks and

pitcher Yu Darvish lit up the mound on a stormy evening in Texas as the Rangers thumped the Anaheim

Angels 10-3 on Friday.

Texas Rangers' Josh Hamilton is 

congratulated by teammate Mike Napoli (R) after hitting a home run against Los Angeles Angels pitcher 

Jerome Williams (L) in the first inning of their MLB American League baseball game in Arlington, Texas 

May 11, 2012. REUTERS/Mike Stone

While thunder echoed

above the Rangers Ballpark, Hamilton’s booming bat made the most noise in the arena as the Texas

slugger cracked a pair of home runs to give him eight big blasts in five games.

Hamilton’s

explosive night overshadowed a gritty display by expensive acquisition Darvish with the Japanese rookie

sensation improving his record to 5-1.

Despite another extraordinary night at the plate,

Hamilton was more interested in talking about his pitcher, who waited out a long rain delay to return

to the mound and secure the win.

“I was proud of him (Darvish) coming back out there and just

sticking it out and doing what you got to do,” Hamilton told reporters. “It says a lot to his team

mates about him as player and a competitor.”

The first of 19 meetings this season between the

American League West rivals expected to battle for the division crown promised a fascinating clash

packed with intriguing sub-plots.

The game offered up something for every baseball taste,

including a showdown between sluggers Hamilton and Albert Pujols, and a pitching duel between C.J.

Wilson, who led the Texans to two World Series appearances before signing for Anaheim, and the man who

replaced him in the Rangers rotation.

“The outside perception is (that this series is bigger

than normal),” Rangers manager Ron Washington said. “But it’s just a day on the schedule and it

happens to be the Angels.

“It’s not going to make us feel any different about the team we think

we have if we lose the series.”

While Washington downplayed the evening’s significance, it is

not hard to understand why the three-game series is completely sold out and has attracted national

attention.

For nearly a decade, the rivals have dominated the division and both conducted

off-season shopping sprees in an effort to maintain their supremacy.

Texas went “all in” and

out-bid several teams for Darvish’s services while Anaheim opened up their wallet to sign Pujols,

snaring the biggest free agent on the market with a staggering 10-year, $240 million

deal.

PUJOLS SLUMP

The Rangers (22-11) have lived up to expectations, settling in at the

top of the division with the best record in the league but the big-spending Angels have received

precious little bang for their buck, anchored at the bottom of the West standings.

Hamilton, who

has battled drug and alcohol addiction throughout his career and suffered a relapse just prior to the

start of Spring Training, has put the spotlight back on his play with a jaw-dropping display of

power.

With the help of a record-tying four home runs in a single game against the Baltimore

Orioles on Tuesday, Hamilton leads the major leagues with 17 homers and 40 RBI.

While Hamilton

has climbed back on the wagon with devastating results, Pujols has fallen into a horrendous

slump.

One home run is not the production the Angels (14-19) were expecting from a three-time

National League MVP, who has 446 career homers (445 of them with the St Louis Cardinals) and never

fewer than 32 in a single major league season.

Washington, however, said he would do his best

not to disturb Pujols from his early season slumber.

“I’m not buying it,” said Washington, who

watched Pujols slug three home runs in Game Three of last year’s World Series against the St Louis

Cardinals. “You don’t shut down Pujols.

“As a baseball player, all it takes is for you to step

into the box and one guy toeing the rubber to give you your stuff back and I certainly don’t want to

be the team that gives it to him.”

Pujols endured another unproductive night, going hitless in

four at-bats while the anticipated pitching duel between Darvish and Wilson fizzled out

early.

When the action resumed after a nearly two-hour rain delay, Wilson was out of the game,

the Angels opting not to risk the arm of their ace and ending the showdown after less than one inning,

leaving Texans fans to vent their anger elsewhere.

Wilson’s work lasted just one third of an

inning but it was long enough to be saddled with the loss as he surrendered four runs on three

hits.

(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto; Editing by John O’Brien)

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Rangers ride out storm to pour more misery on Angels

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