The Texas Rangers should be the defending World Series champions. They had St. Louis down to a final strike twice in what could have been a decisive Game 6, then coughed it up in 11 innings. They lost again the next night and went home feeling empty.
A year earlier, the Rangers had been shut down by San Francisco's pitching, but this time ... if right fielder Nelson Cruz had made a catch, if manager Ron Washington had sent Neftali Feliz back out for the 10th inning of Game 6, and a couple more ifs and this was the team that would have brought a first World Series title to Texas last fall.
Ballclubs other than Yankees don't have a clear shot at these trophies that often, and it will be a long, hard push to a third Series in a row for the Rangers in an American League that appears more loaded with solid teams than at any time in recent memory.
Obviously, there are no conclusions nine games in and with 153 to go, but there is an inclination that the team making a visit to the Target Field is the best that baseball has to offer.
The Rangers made it two in a row over the Twins, 6-2, on Saturday at Target Field. Losing manager Ron Gardenhire was left to lament 15 runners left on base and the complete absence of a clutch hit.
"We should've gotten those guys today," Gardenhire said. "And when you have the chance, you better take it, because that's a great ballclub."
This was not an attempt at pandering by a rival manager. The Rangers were looking at crowds of Twins on the bases all afternoon, and yet there was no doubt where the advantage rested in most every matchup.
Twins starter Nick Blackburn mixed pitches and was down 2-1 when he left with a shoulder strain in the sixth. And, still, you never liked his chance when Josh Hamilton stepped into the left-handed batter's box.