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Game Three Photos
of the 2010 MLB World Series

ARLINGTON, TX - OCTOBER 30: A general view of Jets while they perform a fly over as giant American Flag stretched across the ouitfield during pregame festivities between the Texas Rangers and the San Francisco Giants in Game Three of the 2010 MLB World Series at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington on October 30, 2010 in Arlington, Texas...
Fly over as giant American Flag stretched across the ouitfield..
ARLINGTON, TX - OCTOBER 30: A general view of rightfield as the Texas Rangers play against the San Francisco Giants in Game Three of the 2010 MLB World Series at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington on October 30, 2010 in Arlington, Texas...
ARLINGTON, TX - OCTOBER 30th, 2010
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Texas Rangers Fans
Ian Kinsler #5 of the Texas Rangers breaks his bat on a single against the San Francisco Giants in Game Three of the 2010. Click Here

Lewis shuts down SF, Texas trims WS deficit to 2-1
By BEN WALKER, AP Baseball Writer

The Rangers, behind emerging October ace Colby Lewis(notes), came home and threw themselves the biggest tailgate party of them all, beating San Francisco 4-2 on Saturday night and cutting the Giants’ Series edge to 2-1.

Longhorns, Aggies, Horned Frogs—sorry. This was a night to celebrate baseball.

“We wanted to get back home. We felt comfortable here,” Texas manager Ron Washington said. “We knew we could finally put a good game together, and we did.”

Psyched by pep talks from former President George W. Bush and spurred by a heater from Nolan Ryan, the Rangers became the first team from Texas to win a Series game.

Rookie Mitch Moreland(notes) hit an early three-run homer, Josh Hamilton(notes) later launched a 426-foot shot and the Rangers posted a Series win that took the franchise 50 years to achieve.

Just in time, in fact, coming off two thumpings in San Francisco.

“We’re still down one game, but it’s shifted,” Hamilton said.

Game 3 marked the first time the Series visited the Metroplex. On a college football weekend, the parking lots filled up early with flying pigskins, fine BBQ smoke and fans checking the scores of their alma maters.

But Lewis and the Rangers showed there was still a place in the Lone Star State for another sport, too. And they certainly brought more joy than the NFL’s 1-5 Cowboys, whose gleaming stadium is just a few Hamilton-sized drives away.

“I was just really excited to come back home. I knew with these fans out here we had a definite advantage,” Lewis said. “It was just a thing of comfortability.”

Bush toured the Texas clubhouse before the game—previously a Rangers part-owner, he visited with individual players.

Then Big Tex himself jazzed the largest crowd in the history of Rangers Ballpark by cranking up for the ceremonial first toss. The Rangers’ part-owner flung a 68 mph fastball—pretty swift for a 63-year-old guy wearing dress pants and a tie.

Lewis took over after that. He worked around solo home runs by Cody Ross(notes)— the fifth of the postseason for the NL championship series MVP—in the seventh inning and Andres Torres(notes) in the eighth. The Giants eventually brought the tying run to the plate, but reliever Darren O’Day(notes) retired Buster Posey(notes) to end the eighth.

Washington finally brought in Neftali Feliz(notes), and the rocket-armed closer pitched a perfect ninth for his first save of the postseason. Washington was criticized in the first two games at San Francisco for leaving Feliz in the bullpen while the Giants broke away.

Feliz struck out two, cheered on by Ryan, Bush and their wives in the front row next to the Texas dugout. As fireworks exploded overhead and Texas swing music blared, Bush leaned over and kissed Ryan’s wife, Ruth.

The Rangers looked more like themselves with Vladimir Guerrero(notes) back in the DH spot. The other Texas big bats chimed in, with Hamilton hitting his fifth home run of the postseason.

Moreland homered from the ninth spot in the lineup, connecting in the second for a 3-0 lead.

“It’s a different league, and that’s the American League,” Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. “Their guy got a big hit.”

No team in World Series history has overcome a 3-0 deficit and now Texas won’t have to try, either. Rangers starter Tommy Hunter(notes), especially good at home, faces rookie Madison Bumgarner(notes) in Game 4 on Sunday night.

Lewis picked up where he left off in the AL championship series, where he finished off the defending champion Yankees in Game 6. He’s 3-0 this postseason, all of his wins coming after a Texas loss.

Lewis allowed five hits in 7 2-3 innings and struck out six. He stopped a Giants team that had become the first NL team to score at least nine runs in back-to-back Series game.

“We needed a well-pitched job,” Washington said.

Moreland, promoted to the majors in late July, won a tough at-bat against Jonathan Sanchez(notes) and homered on the ninth pitch.

“I knew I had a runner in scoring position, so he was going to try to pitch me tough and I fouled off some off speed stuff and just tried to battle back, and I got the fastball,” Moreland said.

At a burly 6-foot-4, Lewis is built something like a fullback. Backed by Moreland’s homer, he plowed through the Giants until the late innings.

“It obviously takes some wind out of your sails, but the game’s still early right there. We have to keep battling and keep fighting. Colby wouldn’t let us do that. He was pitching great,” Ross said.

Lewis is a below-.500 pitcher for his career, not including the two seasons he recently spent pitching for Hiroshima in the Japan league. Despite a shaky record, he’s known for this trait: He gets tougher in tight situations.

Lewis escaped a two-on jam in the first by getting Pat Burrell(notes) to fish for a breaking ball, and worked around a leadoff walk to Ross in the second.

The next time he got on the mound, he already had a nice cushion.

Nelson Cruz(notes) opened the Texas second with a double off the center-field wall and eighth-place hitter Bengie Molina(notes) drew a walk. It was trouble time for Sanchez—he owned the best hits-to-innings ratio in the NL this year, yet also led the league in walks and can unravel quickly.

Moreland hung in, fouling off four straight 2-2 pitches and barely getting a piece on a couple of them. He then took a smooth swing sent a liner far into the right-field seats for his first career home run against a left-hander.

It was the big hit the Rangers needed to get back into the Series. The crowd roared and Ryan stood up, thrust his right arm in the air and hollered.

Hamilton gave his boss another thrill in the fifth. A bit jumpy at the plate early in the game, the probable AL MVP patiently waited for his pitch and launched a drive deep into the lower deck in right-center field.

“I felt like tonight I just stayed square and covered the ball,” he said.

Sanchez, who got just six outs against Philadelphia in his previous start, gave up four runs, six hits and three walks in 4 2-3 innings, raising his ERA to 4.05 in four postseason starts. He was replaced by Guillermo Mota(notes), who had started warming up in the third.

Notes: Feliz, at 22, is the second-youngest pitcher to post a save in the World Series. The youngest was Bob Welch of the Dodgers at 21 in 1978. The previous second-youngest was Nolan Ryan with the Mets in 1969. … The Rangers had lost 13 of their previous 14 games against the Giants. … Texas teams were 0-6 in the Series until this game. The Houston Astros were swept by the Chicago White Sox in 2005.


Teams workout October 29th, 2010 for the 2010 World Series Game 3 at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington, Texas on October 30th, 2010.

The San Francisco Giants
ARLINGTON, TX - OCTOBER 29: The San Francisco Giants during a team workout for the 2010 World Series at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington on October 29, 2010 in Arlington, Texas...
The San Francisco Giants during a team workout.
The San Francisco Giants during a team workout for the 2010 World Series at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington on October 29, 2010 in Arlington, Texas...
Giants during a team workout.
Texas Rangers

By BRUCE NEWMAN | Mercury News, Bay Area News Group

PUBLISHED: October 29, 2010 at 12:41 p.m. | UPDATED: August 13, 2016 at 6:57 p.m.

In most ways, the Texas Rangers’ home in Arlington, in the buckle of the Bible Belt, could not be more different from the town conservatives love to hate — derided in red states as “the People’s Republic of San Francisco.”

Today, the Giants and Rangers take the field for Game 3 of the World Series in a ballpark where Rangers star slugger Josh Hamilton strides to the plate to songs that “praise the name of Jesus.” At AT&T Park, the Giants played “Riders on the Storm” by The Doors as the American flag was carried onto the field before Game 1.

With three days to go until the election, the Giants appear ready to do for blue state America what the Democrats seem incapable of doing: win big.

The 2-0 team from the land of the merlot-sipping, Prius-driving liberal elite faces a pivotal test today deep in the heart of 10-gallon-hat-wearin’, line dancin’, g-droppin’ Texas. If the Giants can take a 3-0 Series lead against the American League champion Rangers, on Election Day, the map of Texas may need to be adjusted to blood red.

The Giants find themselves pitted against a team once owned by George W. Bush — still a regular at the ballpark — while representing Nancy Pelosi’s district in the final days before an election in which Republicans have cast her as Wicked Witch of the West. This red/blue divide has drawn a sharper contrast between two teams that do not lack for many on the field.

The one discernible similarity between the two places is due to a booming tech enclave taking shape in north Dallas, often referred to as “Silicon Prairie.” However, unlike the Giants (who ranked ninth in regular season attendance), the Rangers (ranked 14th) only began to have consistent sellout crowds when they reached the playoffs.

“This is a football state,” says fourth-generation Texan Ross Ramsey, managing editor of the Texas Tribune, a political newsletter in Austin. “The Cowboys can go 1-4 and get more attention than the Rangers do for beating the Yankees. But people here are coming around.”

Of course, that could change if the Rangers don’t climb back into the series quickly. Silicon Valley’s team scored 20 runs in the first two games, and suddenly looks like the Wonks’ Bombers.

Even with the growing nerd herd in Texas, Bay Area fans are much more likely to use social media to support their team during games. There was a huge spike in online mentions of Juan Uribe’s name in the minute following his dramatic homer Wednesday night. Because of the auto-correct typing feature built into the iPhone, after Uribe’s blast, many bewildered Twitter followers received tweets that read simply, “Urine!!!!”

During the Rangers’ visit to San Francisco, they saw — and apparently smelled — many strange things. Hamilton, who is himself a recovering drug addict, told reporters after Game 1, “I could smell weed in the outfield. It was crazy.” A Dallas TV reporter whose name is actually Newy Scruggs visited McCovey Cove and told viewers, “I can tell you, right over there are some people smokin’ weed.” The anchorman asked if it was legal here, and the anchorwoman asked, “A little more liberal, maybe?”

Well, yes. With its free-range, farm-fresh, hydroponic, biodynamic cuisine, California could hardly hope to keep pace with the many variations available of the Lone Star state’s ubiquitous chicken-fried steak. Texas is the birthplace of the deep-fried delicacy, and the deathplace of its many admirers. According to census data, 14 more Texans per 100,000 of population drop dead of heart attacks than Californians.

And that’s not the only way Texas has surpassed the Giants’ home state. Since the U.S. Supreme Court restored capital punishment in 1976, Texas has executed 447 prisoners. The 17 executions this year alone exceed the 13 California has carried out during the entire 34-year period.

The Rangers’ former managing general partner was governor of Texas when the state’s death chamber was most active. After an interlude in the White House, George W. Bush recently began appearing again at home games.

“It was probably a good idea for him to keep his head down for a couple of years,” Ramsey says. But during the team’s shock and awe campaign through the playoffs, Bush has often been seen seated next to team president and living legend Nolan Ryan, the all-time major league leader in no-hitters and strikeouts. When the franchise built its current ballpark in 1994 — using public funds secured when Bush and his partners threatened to move the team — a spur next to the stadium was named the Nolan Ryan Expressway.

California is often described as a state of mind, but if that’s true, Texas is an altered state of consciousness, or would probably seem so to most Californians. Marlene Saritzky, who now lives in Marin County, moved there during the ’90s to serve as Texas Film Commissioner under Gov. Ann Richards.

“I’d never seen people take that kind of pride in a place before,” she says. “If you want tortilla chips in the shape of the state, you can find them. I knew people who wore glasses shaped like Texas. That’s state pride.”

They’ve got it. And, starting today, they’ve also got the whole World Series in their hands. Click Here for more.


Ron Washington throws batting practice for Game 3 of baseball's World Series Friday, Oct. 29, 2010, against the San Francisco Giants in Arlington, Texas...
Nelson Cruz #17 of the Texas Rangers during a team workout for the 2010 World Series at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington on October 29, 2010 in Arlington, Texas...
Game Photos
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