Another Rangers Romp: Texas Beats Detroit 12-4

If the rest of the Texas Rangers keep hitting like this, Prince Fielder's injury may not be so hard to overcome.

 
Alex Rios tripled and drove in three runs, and the Rangers rolled to another rout of Detroit, beating Justin Verlander and the Tigers 12-4 on Sunday.
 
Texas took three of four in the series, scoring 35 runs in the process.
 
The question now is whether the Rangers can possibly keep this up after learning Thursday that Fielder would likely miss the rest of the season because of a neck problem.
 
"We've got to continue to play baseball," manager Ron Washington said. "We miss Prince, and we're not going to even dream that we don't need him in our lineup. We certainly would like to have him in our lineup, but we don't, so we've got to go with what we've got."
 
The Tigers have lost six of seven, and even Verlander (5-4) couldn't come close to stopping the slide. The Detroit right-hander allowed nine runs -- six earned -- in 5 1-3 innings in one of the worst starts of his career.
 
"Right now, I'm not in a place where I can repeat my delivery every time, and that's what I need to fix. But I'll get it straightened out. I'm not worried about that," Verlander said. "It's a rough patch, but this is a great baseball team. That hasn't changed."
 
Michael Choice homered for the Rangers in the second, and Texas broke the game open with five runs in the fifth.
 
Colby Lewis (4-3) allowed two runs and five hits in 5 2-3 innings.
 
Mitch Moreland had three hits and three RBIs for the Rangers, and Adrian Beltre and Robinson Chirinos had three hits apiece as well.
 
"Everybody on this team has contributed so far, has stepped up in one way or another," Moreland said. "I think this was just a big series for us overall, to kind of right the ship, get it going."
 
Detroit slugger Miguel Cabrera left the game in the seventh with a right hamstring cramp.
 
Verlander has allowed 16 earned runs in his past three starts, and although the Tigers still have the best record in the American League, they have to wonder when this alarming stretch of poor pitching will end.
 
Other starters have struggled too. In its past seven games, Detroit has allowed 57 runs.
 
The nine runs allowed by Verlander equaled a career worst, and he gave up 11 hits. Verlander finished with only one strikeout, his fewest in a regular-season game since May 31, 2008, when he also struck out one at Seattle.
 
"It's good to get him early," Rios said. "The earlier you get him, the better shape you're going to be in at the end of the game."
 
Choice broke a 1-all tie with a second-inning homer off Verlander, and after a double by Chirinos, Rougned Odor dropped a bunt that Verlander threw away for an error, allowing a run to score.
 
Texas led 3-2 in the fifth when Shin-Soo Choo led off with a walk and went to third when Elvis Andrus' grounder went past shortstop Andrew Romine for another Detroit error. Moreland and Beltre followed with consecutive RBI singles, and a two-run triple by Rios made it 7-2.
 
Chirinos singled home Rios two outs later.
 
The Rangers tacked on three runs in the seventh to make it 12-2 on RBI singles by Andrus, Moreland and Beltre. Cabrera came out of the game after singling in the bottom of that inning, and to make matters worse for Detroit, reliever Joba Chamberlain left in the eighth with a right ankle contusion.
 
The Rangers finished with 17 hits, bringing their total for the last two games of the series to 36 -- with 14 for extra bases.
Copyright AP - Associated Press
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