7-1-26
The Rangers were playing a day game to start the month, but my El Paso station declined to broadcast it. Not a great start to the month. The Chihuahuas continued their series at home against the Sacramento Rivercats. The team welcomed a new MLB player, Luis Rengifo. Rengifo debuted going 2 for 3 with 2 RBI’s and a home run (and a fielding error) in the 6-3 Chihuahuas win.
7-2-26
My neighbor, Monty, invited me to next door Buffalo Wild Wings on a weekday afternoon for a Brewers game against the Reds with Jacob Misorowski starting. I didn’t think I could get in the whole game before needing to go to work, but it was hard to resist. The food there was not that great frankly, which was another reason not to go, but Monty caught me before I’d had lunch. Still, it was a nice little outing.
The Miz wasn’t sharp and gave up 5 runs in 5 innings, though only 1 was earned. He did have 10 strikeouts. Chase Burns started for the Reds and went 6 innings and gave up 2 runs. Aggie great, Joey Ortiz, didn’t start for the Brewers, but did come in on defense on the seventh and immediately made two great plays (as shown above). The Reds won, 7-2. Monty, a big Brewers fan, was bitterly disappointed.
7-3-26
I’m at work today. If Independence Day falls on a Sunday, we get a day off, but not Saturday. I’m not bitter or anything. I wore my Captain America t-shirt, even though they didn’t say to wear anything patriotic to work.
I did get some baseball. The Chihuahuas had the long ball working against the Rivercats. Nick Solak had a 2-run homer in the first. Blake Hunt homered in the sixth to break a tie score. In the seventh, Luis Rengifo hit a monster shot that even Statcast couldn’t track. (Well, it actually went out of bounds of the scanner.)
The seventh inning stretch had a delay for the singing of God Bless America and then Chico dancing on field. The umps abided for the display. Broadcaster Tim Hagerty mentioned that a Rivercat player had been grilling in front of the dugout before the each game. In the eighth, Nick Pratto laid out for a great play at first. He got a big cheer from the huge crowd of 8,700 and another after the video replay. In the ninth, with the tying runs on and 2 out, Pratto fielded a grounder and fed pitcher, Ethan Routzahn, for the final out and a 4-2 crowd-pleasing win.
7-4-26
Happy 250-th Birthday, America! I was around for the Bi-Centennial. It was a big deal then and now.
There was no ESPN day game on the radio. The Rangers day game was also not on. I found out the next day that I’d missed a Diamondbacks game that was on TV at night. I tried listening to a close Rockies/Giants game on the radio and the reception faded out right at a dramatic moment in the ninth and then came back in time for the commercial. I could guess that the Rockies lost, 6-4.
However, I wasn’t entirely cheated. I went over to dad’s apartment to watch an O’Reilly Series NASCAR race. His friend Donna was there and we went to a delicious lunch at Dion’s and had sandwiches. A server there complimented me on my World Series Ranger hat and updated me on the team’s many injuries. After we got back, I ended up leaving before the race came on. That was just as well because it was pouring in Chicago. Amazingly, they did get the race in after waiting until the evening to start it and racing through a fog. It was the first time in 7 years they’ve raced at the Chicagoland track and it was great race. Brandon Jones edged out Chase Elliot in the first Overtime race of the season.
The Chihuahuas had their biggest crowd of the year (9,200+) for an 8-6 win and fireworks. Broadcaster Tim Hagerty reported during the game that a guy in the upper deck lost his hat into the lower deck. He was trying to figure out how to get it back, but we didn’t get a resolution on that story.
7-5-26
NBC was going all out with baseball coverage today. They were going to be showing the Mets at the Braves at 10:00am and the Padres at the Dodgers in the evening. Or at least they would have shown the game in Atlanta, but it was raining. This wasn’t the worst thing in the world. I’d sort of expected it somehow when I went down to dad’s apartment to watch the game. I had brought my iPad and we watched a show instead.
The NBC replacement programming wasn’t bad, either. I hadn’t seen the beautiful host before, Ashley Shahahmadi, with her dazzling, bright eyes. There was a brief look-in with the Pirates at Washington. I saw Aggie great, Nick Gonzales, get a hit and score. He’s hitting .307 and the announcers gave a shout out to NMSU. There was also a look-in on the Twins at the Yankees.
Meanwhile, the Rangers game again wasn’t being broadcast on the radio. I guess the station gave their crew the entire weekend off. The Braves and Mets did eventually start. It was 5-3 Mets after the first two innings, but scoreless for the next 6 innings. Braves’ pitcher, Martin Perez, was injured on a comebacker in the fifth and a reliever had to come in. Outfielder Michael Harris II sat in the bullpen while the new pitcher warmed up. I was getting a headache, which told me that the humidity was up. Dad had said that it was supposed to rain at 3:00pm. I went ahead and left.
Back at home, in the ninth, things got crazy. The Mets had a solo home run to start. A lady that got the ball gave it to a Mets fan behind her. But this led to a 9-batter frame and the score was 10-3. I started nodding off. I was suddenly jolted awake by the call of a grand slam home run by Brave Drake Baldwin as part of a 6-run bottom of the ninth inning. The Mets’ closer had to come in. In the 11-batter inning, the Braves got the tying run to third and the winning run to second with 2 outs before it finally ended, 10-9 Mets. The previous Mets reliever, who gave up most of the runs, was agonizing in the dugout during the inning. The Braves player, who struck out to end the game, was inconsolable in the dugout.
It was a lousy-looking crowd at Dodger Stadium for a rivalry game against the Padres. I guess they really are a late-arriving crowed there. Oh, Mexico was playing England in the World Cup at the same time. That might explain it. (Mexico lost. I’ve probably lost a co-worker, whose girlfriend is crazy for Mexican soccer. Almost certainly, she has took it out on him.) The TV coverage did spend some time showing the happy crowd that was there for baseball. Three pitches into the game, a Padres coach and their manager were tossed for arguing a check swing. It was a great start for a team on an 8-game losing streak.
Field reporter, Ahmed Fareed, wearing a violet suit, was sitting in the stands to do a report on Dodger dogs. The original owner from Brooklyn (Walter O’Malley) wanted a foot-long dog like they had in New York. It was supposed to be a foot-long, but the hot dogs delivered were 2” short. The fans revolted. Management quickly rebranded it as a “Dodger Dog,” and the trendy and dumb LA fans now loved it. (“Trendy and dumb” is my editorial insert.) It was like a five-minute report. The guys in the booth asked Fareed, “Did you write a thesis on this?” On field meanwhile, Manny Machado hit a 3-run homer in seventh and the Padres won, 5-2. The Dodgers still have a 14-game lead in the NL West.
The Chihuahuas’ game surprisingly started on time. Somehow the massive rain storm that we got in the afternoon, totally missed the stadium in El Paso. It was cloudy and damp there. In the fourth, Marcus Castanon hit 3-run homer to make it 3-1 over the Rivercats. Ian Napetian gave the game call, “The fireworks continue in July!” In the fifth, there was a pickle play on an RBI single by Nick Solak. “Standby for the scoring,” said Ian. It was 5-4-6-4-7 and 4-2 Chihuahuas.
The Chihuahuas piled on in the sixth and would end up winning, 11-2. The big news was that regular broadcaster, Tim Hagerty, finally tried a hot dog last night. It’s a little trifle odd that a guy that works in a ballpark had never had a hot dog. He said, “It was alright. I survived.” That was a ringing endorsement. What was weirder was Ian saying that he liked mayo on his hot dogs. “People say I’m eating them wrong.” The people are right there.
7-7-26
It was a nice start to the Chihuahuas’ road trip to OKC with a 13-batter second inning, which scored 7 runs on 7 hits with 5 stolen bases. (I don’t know where those happy feet came from.) The pups were up 8-0, but in the eighth, the Comets struck back with 4 runs to make it close. The crowd there got loud and rowdy. It was an 8-5 Chihuahuas’ win for their fourth win in a row.
In the MLB, the Pirates’, Ryan O’Hearn, had a 10-RBI game in a 12-4 win over Braves. That was a grand slam in the first, a 3-run homer in the third, and another 3-run homer in the sixth. He was seeing the ball well.
7-9-26
In the second inning in OKC, two wild pitches and a passed ball by the Chihuahuas brought in 2 runs for the Comets. A scoring correction even erased the questionable single hit in the inning on a batted ball that clanked off two Chihuahuas’ mitts. It was that kind of game for the pups. Broadcaster Tim Hagerty mentioned there were some angry looks from the dugout after the initial scoring, but there are no longer any postgame appeals allowed to protest such mis-scores. The Chihuahuas went down, 6-0, in the fourth. They made good comeback effort, but ultimately lost, 6-3.
Looking at the Gameday view of the game, I noticed the ticker listed a “Free Game.” Oh, like I used to get on MLB.TV? It was and was even a couple teams I was familiar with Rainiers versus the Aviators in Las Vegas. Our old friend and radio voice of the Aggies, Russ Langer, was calling the game. It looked overcast, but the Rainiers were making it rain in an 18-4 wipeout. The barrage was punctuated by a 410’ 2-run blast by Patrick Wisdom into the pool area. I’ll try to keep an eye out for future MiLB Free Games.








































