Los Angeles Times

Tex. messages: Astros-Rangers rivalry is bitter for players, coaches, even fans.

When the American League West rivals Astros and Rangers meet, their bad blood quickly boils over.

- MIKE DIGIOVANNA ON BASEBALL mike.digiovanna@latimes.com Twitter: @MikeDiGiov­anna

The Houston Astros and Texas Rangers will gather at the Ballpark in Arlington, Texas, on Friday for the first of six games in 13 days between the American League West rivals.

Pleasantri­es will not be exchanged.

The last time the teams met, in early May, Astros right-hander Lance McCullers zipped a fastball behind the back of slugger Mike Napoli, who had homered in his previous at-bat. McCullers was peeved that teammates Jose Altuve and Yuli Gurriel were hit by pitches earlier in the game.

Napoli and McCullers exchanged icy glares and took a few steps toward each other. Both benches emptied, and there was some spirited pushing, shoving and jersey grabbing, but no real punches were thrown.

There was more action outside Minute Maid Park, where several vicious blows were exchanged in a fistfight — captured on a phone and posted online, of course — between five or six Astros and Rangers fans.

A July 2015 benches-clearing incident between the clubs began with then-Houston catcher Hank Conger jawing at second baseman Rougned Odor and ended with Rangers manager Jeff Banister sticking his finger in the chest of Astros manager A.J. Hinch.

“The coaches have gotten after it, the players have gotten after it, the fans have gotten after it … there’s something that’s going to be entertaini­ng, to say the least, when we get together,” Houston ace Dallas Keuchel said. “So you’ve got to keep your head on a swivel and pay attention to each and every pitch.”

The Lone Star State rivalry does not run as deep as New York Yankees-Boston Red Sox, Dodgers-San Francisco Giants and Chicago Cubs-St. Louis Cardinals, teams whose players, coaches and fans were mixing it up for a good half a century before the Astros (1962) and Rangers (1972) came into existence.

Texas-Houston began to percolate in 1997, when interleagu­e play brought the teams together, and simmer in 2013, when the Astros moved to the AL West after spending their first 51 years in the National League.

The rivalry moved to rolling boil when the Astros went from threeyear tank artists — they lost 106 games or more from 2011 to 2013 — to World Series contenders in 2015, while the Rangers continued an extended run as one of the AL’s elite teams.

“Things have gotten a bit salty between us, there’s definitely a little edge to it,” Hinch said. “We’ve been on the field to say hello a couple of times. But it’s good for baseball, and it’s good for the state of Texas. I think it’s one of the more underrated rivalries in baseball.”

For a year and a half, the rivalry was as one-sided as an early Mike Tyson fight. The Rangers were 24-7 against the Astros from July 2015 through 2016, their dominance helping them overcome a nine-game late-July deficit to edge out Houston for the AL West title in 2015 and repeat as division champions in 2016.

“That’s been our Achilles heel the last few years,” Keuchel said. “If we even sniff .500 ball against them, we’re right in the thick of things last season.”

The Astros took a step toward reversing the trend when they won three of four games against the Rangers in early May, with super utility man Marwin Gonzalez striking the most memorable blow of the series, an eighth-inning grand slam that gave Houston an 8-7 comefrom-behind victory May 2.

Texas lost three of four games after the Astros series to fall to 13-20 on May 8. Speculatio­n began to swirl that the Rangers, with valuable pitching assets such as Cole Hamels and Yu Darvish, would be huge sellers at the July 31 trade deadline.

A 10-game winning streak, the fourth-longest in club history, on May 9-19 snuffed out that talk. Napoli and Joey Gallo combined for seven homers and 17 RBIs during the run to help keep Texas relevant in the West.

But the Astros appear wellequipp­ed to fend off the Rangers and put themselves in a position to fulfill the vision Sports Illustrate­d had for them in 2014, when the magazine, in a nod to their youth movement, proclaimed them on its cover as “Your 2017 World Series Champs.”

The pitching staff, behind a resurgent Keuchel and McCullers and relief revelation Chris Devenski, has given up the fewest runs in the AL (182) and leads the league in ERA (3.39), strikeouts (490) and opponents batting average (.228).

Keuchel, the sinkerball specialist who was slowed by a shoulder injury last season, has regained his 2014 Cy Young Award-winning form, going 8-0 with a 1.81 ERA, second-lowest in the AL.

The hard-throwing McCullers, slowed by a sore elbow in 2016, is 5-1 with a 2.43 ERA in 10 starts, striking out 65 batters and walking 17 in 591⁄3 innings. He takes a 22-inning scoreless streak into Sunday’s start against Baltimore.

Devenski, a 25th-round pick out of Cal State Fullerton in 2011, has used his lethal fastball-changeup combinatio­n to go 3-3 with a 3.10 ERA in 17 appearance­s, striking out 47 and walking eight in 29 innings.

The Astros bolstered a strong young position-playing core — a group headed by shortstop Carlos Correa, second baseman Altuve, outfielder George Springer and Gonzalez — with veterans Carlos Beltran, Brian McCann and Josh Reddick, who added much-needed power from the left side and some clubhouse wisdom.

“We don’t quit, there’s that never-say-die mentality, we’ve been down in a lot of games and come back to win,” Springer said, noting Houston’s 17 comeback victories. “We understand we’re never truly out of a game.

“With Beltran and McCann, those guys have some big-game experience. They’ve kind of shown us the ropes on how to not quit, to not back down from anything.”

The Astros, who have a major league-best 34-16 record, don’t dwell on their shortcomin­gs against Texas. Beltran, McCann, Reddick and outfielder Nori Aoki did not play for Houston last year.

And third baseman Alex Bregman, 23, and Gurriel, the Cuban first baseman, weren’t called up until late July and late August last season, so they weren’t around for the Astros’ season-opening 7-17 faceplant.

“It was easy for me to cast that stuff aside, mostly because I don’t want to talk about it,” Hinch said. “And half of the position-playing group wasn’t here, so they don’t know what it was like to go through the last couple of seasons.

“I didn’t want to drag that into this season. That was easy because half my players didn’t know about it and the other half didn’t want to talk about it.”

 ?? David J. Phillip Associated Press ?? MIKE NAPOLI, left, of the Texas Rangers and Brian McCann of the Houston Astros exchange words after Lance McCullers threw a fastball behind Napoli in during a game in early May.
David J. Phillip Associated Press MIKE NAPOLI, left, of the Texas Rangers and Brian McCann of the Houston Astros exchange words after Lance McCullers threw a fastball behind Napoli in during a game in early May.

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