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Monday, March 31, 2003

A-Rod, Texas upstage Anaheim


Rangers 6, Angels 3; Lackey hit hard in ML season opener

The Associated Press

ANAHEIM, Calif. - The ThunderStix and rally monkeys were out in force and Game 7 winner John Lackey was on the mound.

The World Series champion Anaheim Angels and their crowd were all set for a fun night. Too bad for them, the Texas Rangers had other ideas.

"It was a great feeling to see the fans and get that feeling again. I just wish we could have rewarded them with a little better game on the field," Anaheim manager Mike Scioscia said after Texas won 6-3 Sunday in the major league opener.

The Angels began this season the same way they've started all four under Scioscia - with a thud.

"One more ceremony and I think we'll be ready to go," Anaheim's David Eckstein said. "We get our rings on Tuesday, and we'd better be ready to play."

Alex Rodriguez, Juan Gonzalez and Michael Young homered, making manager Buck Showalter a winner in his debut with the Rangers.

"It was a special night in a lot of ways," said Showalter, who was particularly moved by the pregame ceremonies honoring American military personnel.

"It was a pretty emotional night for me and the team. It took me about an inning or two to get the emotions out," he said.

The Rangers finished last in the AL West with a 72-90 record last year, but Rodriguez said the team was inspired by what the Angels accomplished.

"It kind of gives everyone a chip for optimism," said Rodriguez, who admitted he's been frustrated by the Rangers' poor records his two years with the club. "We have a great bunch of guys. I think we're a lot more united here than we have been in the last few years.

"I think our appetite is great for winning."

Lackey was hit hard as the Angels stumbled out of the gate again. Last year, they started with a 6-0 loss to Cleveland and fell to a franchise-worst 6-14 before coming back to win a club-record 99 games.

After rousing pregame ceremonies that included the raising of the Angels' first World Series championship flag in their 42-year history, Young quieted the crowd with a three-run shot over the center-field wall off Lackey to give Texas a 4-2 lead in the fourth inning.

"That was definitely the blueprint coming into the year, that we could score early and lock it down with our bullpen and some defense," Young said.

The Rangers rocked Lackey for five runs on eight hits in five innings. In his last outing, the 24-year-old right-hander became the first rookie to win the seventh game of a World Series in 93 years when he gave up one run in five innings of the Angels' 4-1 victory over San Francisco on Oct. 27.

Ismael Valdes made his first start in an opener and got the win against his former teammates, allowing three runs on seven hits in five innings.

Ugueth Urbina, signed as a free agent over the winter, pitched the ninth for the save. He had 40 for Boston last year.

Texas relievers combined for one-hit ball over four innings.

The Angels' runs came on an RBI single by Brad Fullmer in the first inning, another run-scoring single by Garret Anderson in the third, and Darin Erstad's RBI groundout in the fifth.

Rodriguez, hampered by a herniated disk in his neck this spring, made it 5-2 with a solo homer in the fifth. He began trotting almost as soon as the ball left his bat, and the ball landed deep in the left-field seats.

The homer was the 299th for the 27-year-old A-Rod, beginning his eighth full big league season. He went 1-for-5 and is 5-for-34 in season openers.

Gonzalez, coming back from an injury-plagued year, had a home run, double and single.

Besides the sea of red-clad fans in the sellout crowd of 43,525, there also was a strong red, white and blue theme. A huge "USA" was mowed into the outfield grass, there was a moment of silence for U.S. servicemen and a flyover by Navy fighter jets. The national anthem was played by the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force Band.

Tim Salmon, the Angels' senior member, helped raise the World Series flag near the left-field seats. Jackie Autry, widow of former team owner Gene Autry, also participated in the flag-raising ceremony.

Notes: Only nine players on Texas' opening day roster were on the 25-man roster last year. The Angels kept their same lineup and starting rotation. ... Showalter is 6-2 in openers, going 4-0 in 1992-95 with the New York Yankees, and 1-2 with Arizona in 1998-2000. ... LHP Jarrod Washburn, who went 18-6 last year and would have been the opening day starter against the Rangers, instead pitched in a minor league game in Arizona on Sunday as he worked his way back from a shoulder injury. He's scheduled to start Saturday when the Angels are at Oakland.

Firsts From Opening Day

Pitch - Ball from Anaheim's John Lackey to Texas' Doug Glanville at 8:16 p.m. EST.

Hit - Texas' Carl Everett in the first inning, an infield single.

Home run - Texas' Michael Young, a three-run shot in the fourth.

Run - Texas' Carl Everett in the first.

Run batted in - Texas' Juan Gonzalez, with a single that drove in Everett.

Double - Texas' Einar Diaz.

Out - Glanville, who was forced out at third base when Alex Rodriguez grounded into a double play.

Strikeout - Texas' Ruben Sierra struck out swinging against Lackey.

Steal - Anaheim's David Eckstein, who stole second base in the third.

TexasABRHBIBBSOAvg.
Glanville cf401011.250
CEverett lf412010.500
ARodriguez ss511100.200
JGonzalez rf513200.600
RPalmeiro 1b400010.000
Sierra dh511002.200
Blalock 3b512000.400
MYoung 2b411300.250
EDiaz c301010.333
Totals39612643
AnaheimABRHBIBBSOAvg.
Eckstein ss211010.500
Erstad cf410100.000
Salmon rf302001.667
GAnderson lf401100.250
Fullmer dh301110.333
Glaus 3b402001.500
Spiezio 1b400002.000
BMolina c400000.000
AKennedy 2b411000.250
Totals3238324
Texas100310100-6120
Anaheim101010000-382

E-Glaus (1), Lackey (1). LOB-Texas 10, Anaheim 6. 2B-JGonzalez (1), EDiaz (1), AKennedy (1). HR-JGonzalez (1) off Weber; ARodriguez (1) off Lackey; MYoung (1) off Lackey. RBIs-ARodriguez (1), JGonzalez 2 (2), MYoung 3 (3), Erstad (1), GAnderson (1), Fullmer (1). SB-Eckstein (1). S-Eckstein. GIDP-ARodriguez, Fullmer, BMolina.

DP-Texas 2; Anaheim 1.

TexasIPHRERBBSONPERA
Valdes W, 1-0573311635.40
Fultz210000220.00
FCordero100012170.00
Urbina S, 1100001110.00
AnaheimIPHRERBBSONPERA
Lackey L, 0-1585522909.00
Weber131110249.00
Schoeneweis10000050.00
Donnelly210011310.00
Weber pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.

HBP-by Valdes (Salmon). Balk-Fultz.

T-2:54. A-43,525 (45,030).




OPENING DAY IN CINCINNATI
10-1 loss spoils Opening Day
Game PhotosParade photos
Poll: Grade the stadium
New ballpark adds to thrill
Opening Day warms our soul
Parade map and street closings
Going to the game? Get there early
Answers to other fan questions
Public art project swings into action

ABOUT THE REDS
Fans unwrap new park, team
In new ballparks, Casey's a big hit
Reds in slump as they open new park
Rose has lost little support from public

GREAT AMERICAN BALL PARK
Photo gallery
Fan verdicts mostly raves
A clubhouse to call his own
Ballpark ready to go after smooth test runs
Reds ticket sales off to sluggish start
Reds fans welcomed by hotels
Small, minority, women-owned contractors got share of ballpark
Luxury seats steal home from telecasts
Banner flyers grounded and grumbling

OTHER BASEBALL
A-Rod, Texas upstage Anaheim
Games with backdrop of war
Cone wins spot in Mets' rotation
Baseball notebook

HEART MINI-MARATHON
Lentz cruises to his first Mini-Marathon victory
Tranter takes fourth straight women's title
Senator addresses walk participants
Heart Mini-Marathon top results

COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Syracuse crushes Oklahoma for spot in Final Four
Horns only No. 1 to advance
Estill's return would solidify veteran UK lineup
Somebody's time to shine has come
Orangemen's Boeheim has chance to avenge smarting loss
One No. 1 seed, one repeater in Final Four
Has deciding NCAA game already been played?
Marquette has inspiration on the bench
NCAA tournament notebook
NKU's effort leaves coach with tears of pride
Women: UConn, Purdue advance in East

GOLF
Love roars to TPC win with closing 8-under 64
Meunier-Lebouc denies Sorenstam bid

HOCKEY
Cyclones open ECHL playoffs at Peoria

NASCAR
Newman gambles for lead, beats Little E

NBA
Carter sticks it to Knicks with 28

TENNIS
Agassi wins sixth Key Biscayne title

PREP SPORTS
Monday's prep sports schedule

PLAN YOUR DAY
Monday's sports on TV, radio

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