Rangers Obliterate Angels in a 13-1 Offensive Breakout

Rangers Obliterate Angels in a 13-1 Offensive Breakout

Rangers Obliterate Angels in a 13-1 Offensive Breakout

What a night in Anaheim — the Texas Rangers absolutely exploded offensively and steamrolled the Los Angeles Angels 13-1 in what might be their most complete performance of the season. I mean, we’re talking about a game that started slow, looked a little uncertain, and then suddenly turned into a complete offensive avalanche.

The first three innings? Nothing. No hits. José Soriano, the Angels’ starter, was looking sharp early, and it felt like Texas might be in for another quiet night. But in the fourth inning, something shifted — a flicker turned into a flame, and then an uncontrollable blaze. Wyatt Langford, fresh off the injured list and struggling to find his rhythm, came up with the bases loaded and delivered a clutch double down the line. That was it. The lid came off. Two runs scored. Confidence surged. From that moment on, it was all Rangers.

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Manager Bruce Bochy said it perfectly: a big hit can spark everything — and boy, did it ever. The Rangers sent all nine batters to the plate in both the fourth and fifth innings, blowing the game wide open and forcing the Angels to bring in infielder Kevin Newman to pitch by the seventh. That’s a sign a team has waved the white flag.

Jake Burger racked up four RBIs, Evan Carter drew a bases-loaded walk against a lefty — something he’s struggled with — and Corey Seager, well, he continued doing what he always does against the Angels: rake. Seager launched a solo homer in the sixth, his second of the series and part of a ridiculous .643 average against the Halos this season.

And here's the kicker: even the Rangers had a position player, Ezequiel Duran, close things out on the mound to give their bullpen some well-earned rest. You know it’s a blowout when both sides resort to that.

This wasn’t just a win — it was a statement. After a season filled with offensive inconsistency, the Rangers looked like the powerful, dangerous team they were expected to be. They didn’t just beat the Angels. They overwhelmed them. This could be the turning point Texas needed heading into the All-Star break. Let’s see if the fire stays lit.

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