– WEDNESDAY’S GAME
WHO: Red Sox (Beckett 5-9) vs. Texas Rangers (Harrison 13-6)
WHEN: 1:35 p.m.
WHERE: Fenway Park
TELEVISION: NESNThe Associated Press
BOSTON – That’s the Ryan Dempster the Texas Rangers hoped they got at the trade deadline.
Dempster rebounded from a rough debut with Texas by pitching shutout ball into the seventh inning Tuesday night, Ian Kinsler had a pair of RBI singles and the Rangers snapped a two-game losing streak with a 6-3 victory against the Boston Red Sox.
“Anytime you have a rough one you want to get out there the next day,” Dempster said. “Those five days take a long time. I was able to use the fastball and had a good split.”
Dempster (1-0) allowed three unearned runs, six hits, struck out six and walked one in 62/3 innings.
Acquired from the Chicago Cubs minutes before last week’s non-waiver trade deadline, he was tagged for eight runs in 42/3 innings by the Angels in his first Rangers start Thursday.
On Tuesday, he showed why he was the one of the top prizes at the deadline.
“Even though he gave up all those runs against Anaheim, he kept us in that ballgame and we won that ballgame,” Rangers Manager Ron Washington said. “He had a two-point-something ERA, leading the National League in ERA, leading the National League in (batting average) against. We know he’s capable of getting outs and he proved that tonight, without a shadow of a doubt. We’re very happy to have him. We certainly need his leadership in the front part of our rotation.”
Rangers outfielder David Murphy knew how Dempster felt, having been dealt by Boston to the Rangers at the deadline in 2007.
“He’s a veteran and he’s an easygoing guy to begin with, but I think as a man you want to earn your keep,” he said.
“Obviously after not having his best stuff his first outing, he wanted to turn that around as quickly as possible. I think he did that tonight.”
Josh Hamilton and Nelson Cruz each had two hits and drove in a run for Texas.
Will Middlebrooks had a pinch-hit three-run homer for the Red Sox, who have lost 5 of 7.
The Rangers have lost three straight only three times this season.
Jon Lester (5-10) gave up four runs on six hits in 62/3 innings. He’s 0-5 in his last six starts.
“It’s another heck of a performance. We didn’t score the runs and he didn’t get the breaks,” Red Sox Manager Bobby Valentine said.
“Couple of curveballs to a couple of left-handers wound up hurting him.”
Lester, expected to be one of the club’s top starters, hasn’t won since June 27.
“I can’t keep talking about being frustrated and all this stuff,” he said. “Everybody obviously knows here that we’re frustrated and we don’t like losing. But there’s positives for me personally in this game that I’m going to take and go forward to the next one.”
Dustin Pedroia of Boston was called out on an attempted check swing by first base umpire Paul Nauert in the eighth and ejected in the top of the ninth.
“It looked like he checked his swing from our vantage point,” said Valentine, who came out after Pedroia was tossed.
DESIGNATED HITTER David Ortiz took batting practice on the field and thinks his return to Boston’s lineup is close.
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