Texas
3 Texas Rangers observations: What to make of scoreless tie vs. Giants, Evan Carter’s exit
SURPRISE, Ariz. – Clearly, the voters in the Surprise Recreation Campus Hall of Fame balloting are not small Hall folks. And, yes, there is such a thing.
On Sunday, five individual members of the 2023 Rangers were inducted into the Hall. Then, for good measure, the entire Rangers roster was inducted, too. Oh, and Bruce Bochy was inducted into the Cactus League Hall of Fame.
The emotions of the ceremonies apparently took a toll since the Rangers and Giants then played to a scoreless tie. It was the Rangers’ first scoreless tie in Arizona since March 2, 2019. Also against the Giants.
But just because there were no runs doesn’t mean there weren’t observations. Here are three VERY IMPORTANT observations from Sunday’s game:
Scariest moment: If there is a concern about Evan Carter against left-handed pitchers, it’s not his ability to get on base, but rather how often he gets hit by pitches. He left Sunday’s game after getting hit by a fastball in the left forearm from lefty Kyle Harrison in the first inning. Exhale, X-rays showed no fracture.
But Carter has been hit by lefties eight times in 281 professional regular-season at-bats. It’s a lot of plunking. He took a pitch off his wrist in the minors last year and later missed some time after getting hit on the left wrist last year by a pitch and then by an errant pickoff throw.
Best reunion: As currently constructed, the Rangers are a little thin on multi-inning relievers. Adrian Sampson, who pitched for the club in 2018-19, might be worth a look. Sampson, 32, spent the last two seasons with the Chicago Cubs organization after a 2020 season in Korea. He put together a 3.03 ERA over 2021-22 in 139.2 innings in the majors but missed most of last year with a knee injury.
In his first outing back with the Rangers, he worked two crisp innings against the Giants, allowing only a walk to the first batter he faced, then retiring the next hitters. He struck out two. Sampson doesn’t have overpowering stuff, but he throws strikes and pitches with conviction. There’s a bit of Rick Helling, an oft-overlooked, but fearless and valuable Rangers pitcher of the past, to him. Sampson’s on a non-roster deal.
Worst flashback: The Rangers had the potential winning run thrown out at home to end the bottom of the eighth. Davis Wendzel was called out on a tag play, trying to score from second on a single by Elier Hernandez. If they had replay at Surprise Stadium, it might have gotten overturned.
Instead, it was just a reminder the Rangers had too many guys thrown out at home last year: 16. It was tied for the seventh-most in the majors. There were times when third base coach Tony Beasley may have been too aggressive, but this was not one of those times. First of all, it’s just the third game of spring training. Second, the game situation suggested going for the winning run. If anything, it was just a reminder that speed/baserunning is not one of Wendzel’s tools. The No. 41 overall pick in 2019 has just eight steals as a pro and has been caught seven times. If Wendzel is going to make it to the big leagues, it will be on the strength of his bat.
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Texas
We recommend in the Republican primary for Texas House District 106
In a three-way Republican primary race to represent parts of Denton County, state Rep. Jared Patterson gets our recommendation.
Patterson is now a well-established legislator, and he’s attuned to the concerns of his constituents in a district that has become symbolic of the economic boom in North Texas and the growing pains that come with it.
Texas House District 106 in eastern Denton County includes parts of Frisco and Denton as well as Aubrey, Celina and Little Elm. It is still growing fast, and the infrastructure can barely keep up with this fast change.
Patterson led the Legislature’s efforts to hold Big Tech accountable in 2025. He championed a bill that would have prohibited children from creating social media accounts and required tech companies to verify the age of new users. This editorial page supported the effort.
House Bill 186 passed with bipartisan support but stalled in the Senate. Patterson, 42, wants to bring this legislation back if he gets reelected. Political momentum may be on his side as evidence grows about the real harm that social media inflicts on children.
We have disagreed with Patterson over the years and found that some of his legislation sowed divisiveness. Still, his advocacy for children’s online safety is undeniable, and through this important cause, he has used his voice to unite people. As he puts it, this isn’t a red vs. blue bill.
While many candidates in the GOP are talking about getting rid of property taxes, Patterson took a more measured view and insisted on lowering taxes by looking at compression in school district tax rates as one approach to ease the tax burden.
Patterson voted against Senate Bill 840, a piece of legislation that this editorial page backed as an imperfect but necessary policy tool. The law allows residential construction in commercially zoned districts by right in large cities. Patterson told us that the legislation was not the right choice for cities like Frisco.
Another major issue in House District 106 is infrastructure. As massive construction work continues on U.S. Highway 380, Patterson, who serves on a committee on transportation funding, told us he wants to secure financing for farm-to-market roads that urgently need expansion.
Also running are Rick Abraham, a retired systems engineer, and Larry Brock, a retired Air Force officer who was convicted on charges related to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.
Abraham, 57, also shares Patterson’s concerns with rising property taxes and other challenges in his district. However, he was thin on specific policy ideas.
Texas
Sen. Ted Cruz pitches 2026 Texas Senate race while steering most donations to his campaign
WASHINGTON – It starts as an urgent warning.
Texas’ primary is speeding closer, Sen. Ted Cruz says, the nation is watching and Republicans need to get off the sidelines to win in 2026.
Later come buttons to make a donation, a familiar step in fundraising emails. The pitch reassures your money will help both Cruz and the future Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate in Texas, a two-for-one play to counter Democrats.
If you stop to click on a small-type link for additional details, the math appears. With a $100 donation, $1 is dedicated to a new fund for whoever wins the GOP nomination.
The rest, $99, goes to Cruz’s campaign account, unless donors change the allocation.
Cruz’s recent appeal to conservative donors is a staple of modern campaign fundraising emails, with preset donation amounts, flashing buttons and fine print dividing contributions.
The approach is legal and reflects the growing prevalence of aggressive political email appeals that critics say are often manipulative.
Cruz’s effort has stirred questions in Washington, with early donations meant to fully help the nominee largely being steered to Cruz.
Some election law experts called it deceptive, trading on concerns about the Texas Senate race to benefit Cruz, who is not on the 2026 ballot but has been mentioned as a presidential contender in two years.
Attention over campaign money is even sharper this cycle because of the high-profile, high-spending Republican primary among Sen. John Cornyn, Attorney General Ken Paxton and U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt of Houston.
“Cruz is basically diverting money away from the Cornyn-Paxton race for his own personal ambition,” said campaign finance lawyer Brett Kappel, a former legal counsel to three presidential campaigns.
Cruz spokesperson Macarena Martinez dismissed that, saying his outreach is aimed at keeping Texas Republican and ensuring a GOP victory in November.
“No Republican in the country has devoted more time and spent more money to elect Republican senators and House members than Sen. Cruz,” she said.
She said any criticism of Cruz’s appeal “conveniently ignores the well-known fact that this standard split is routinely used by both Democrats and Republicans when a campaign pays the cost of a digital solicitation.”
The Cornyn, Paxton and Hunt campaigns declined to comment on Cruz’s fundraising approach.
U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, is seeking reelection to a fifth six-year term. He faces primary challenges from U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt, R-Houston, and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. The Associated Press
GOP cash concerns
Cruz’s pitch doesn’t mention Cornyn, seeking a fifth six-year term, or his two prominent challengers in the March 3 matchup.
It does single out U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett of Dallas, who is competing with state Rep. James Talarico of Austin for the Democratic Senate nomination.
Cruz compares Crockett, known for her confrontational political style, to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, a frequent conservative target often referred to by her initials.
“In fact, Jasmine Crockett — the Democrats’ AOC of Texas — has ALREADY crossed the 50% threshold for the Texas Democrat Senate Primary in a new poll just released,” Cruz says in the pitch. ”We desperately need to boost our numbers.”
The Lone Star State is critical, Cruz tells prospective donors, because it is among the earliest in the country and Democrats are fired up.
“The nation will be watching to see if the Democrats CRUSH us in voter turnout like they did in every special election of 2025 – OR if Republicans finally got off the sidelines and came out on top on DAY ONE,” Cruz warns.
His pitch includes a survey asking about voting history, feelings toward the Trump administration and various policy positions.
Its final query is: “Given Texas’ first-in-the-nation primary standing for 2026, will you make a contribution to the NEWLY ESTABLISHED Texas Nominee Fund to fight for victory earlier than ever before?”
Recipients are presented with amounts ranging from $23 to $7,000, which is the combined primary-and-general maximum contribution allowed per election cycle from one individual to a campaign.
For each, Cruz gets 99%, and the eventual Senate nominee gets 1%, unless the donor manually changes the automatic split.
The appeals are legal and Cruz could share donor contact information with the GOP nominee. Early cash is seen as important for advertising and organizing ahead of the general election.
Polling points to a likely May runoff, a prolonged fight that could leave the Republican winner short on funds and give Democrats a head start.
Cruz’s 99-1 split, though not unprecedented among fundraisers, has drawn notice in political circles. Every GOP dollar the national party puts into Texas for the general election is one that isn’t being spent in battleground states.
Other Cruz fundraising pleas have used different breakdowns. In one he sent on behalf of Alaska Sen. Dan Sullivan, a Republican, the default split is 50-50.
Federal Election Commission records show the Texas nominee-to-be-named-later fund was created in mid-December and had collected $190.17 by the end of the year.
Fund scrutiny
Kappel, the campaign finance lawyer, said both parties commonly use such funds to raise general election money during primaries, but called Cruz’s pitch misleading.
”Potential donors will think that they are giving to the currently unknown eventual Republican Senate candidate when, in fact, almost all of the funds will go to Cruz,” he said.
Some of the money Cruz is collecting with his current fundraising appeals could be used for a presidential campaign, subject to other federal fundraising limitations.
Cruz, who ran for president in 2016 and lost the primary to Donald Trump, has not said whether he plans another bid, though some Republicans see him as a possible 2028 contender.
Nancy Bocskor, a former GOP fundraiser and former director of what is now the Center for Women in Government at Texas Woman’s University, said manipulative fundraising pitches have become common.
Bocskor, who now teaches at George Washington University’s Graduate School of Political Management, said many donors will be motivated to help Republicans keep the Senate seat in Texas, without realizing 99% of their contribution is going to Cruz and not the 2026 nominee, she said.
She described Cruz’s pitch as legal – and distasteful.
“It’s a lack of transparency that preys upon primarily older donors,” she said.
Common tactics
Supporters of both parties now regularly receive urgent fundraising emails designed to draw in small-dollar donations, a significant part of how political candidates and parties pay for campaign operations and political advertising blitzes.
A Princeton University study analyzing more than 300,000 political emails from Democrats and Republicans during the 2020 election identified subtle ways senders get recipients to open and engage.
“Manipulative tactics – techniques using some level of deception or clickbait – are the norm, not the exception,” researchers found.
Cruz is not the only one to use a model with a default 99-1 split.
An appeal by Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., shares proceeds with Cruz but directs 99% to Scott.
The National Republican Senatorial Committee has sent appeals that share proceeds with individual candidates, such as Cornyn, with default settings that give 99% to the NRSC.
The committee is supporting Cornyn and money from the joint appeal could be spent on his behalf.
With the primary just weeks away, Texans can expect no letup in fundraising appeals from all sides in a race projected to top $300 million in spending by its end in November.
Fundraising fine print
HOW IT WORKS: Texas Sen. Ted Cruz’s fundraising appeal highlights the 2026 Senate race on behalf of the eventual GOP nominee but defaults donations so 99% goes to his campaign unless donors click through fine print.
HIGH STAKES: Campaign finance experts say early money that could help the Senate nominee mostly is being diverted to Cruz.
THE PUSHBACK: Critics call the setup deceptive, saying preset amounts, fine print and urgency push quick donations that mask the uneven split.
Texas
‘Heated Rivalry’ hits the party scene in North Texas
Heated Rivalry has been heating up TV screens on HBO Max. And now it’s going to be heating up North Texas dance floors, with several themed raves and parties planned in the coming weeks.
The drama stars Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie as rival professional hockey players who compete fiercely on the ice while engaging in a passionate clandestine romance.
The Canadian series, which had a preview screening in November at the Image+Nation LGBTQ+ film festival in Montreal, has become a global sensation and a critically acclaimed hit. In December, it was renewed for a second season.
Here’s a look at some upcoming Heated Rivalry-themed events in Dallas-Fort Worth.
Hudson Williams (left) and Connor Storrie star in “Heated Rivalry.”
sabrina lantos / HBO Max/Tribune News Service
CLUB 90S PRESENTS HEATED RIVALRAVE
Club 90s is bringing its themed Heated RivalRave dance party to cities across the United States, with upcoming stops in North Texas. Many of the 18-and-up shows have been selling out early, so snag your tickets ASAP if you’re interested in going.
•Jan. 31 at 5:30 and 10:15 p.m. at Echo Lounge and Music Hall in Dallas. Verified resale tickets start at $44.12. ticketmaster.com.
•Feb. 13 at 9 p.m. at Tannahill’s Tavern and Music Hall in Fort Worth. $35.25-$120.35. ticketmaster.com.
•Feb. 15 at 9 p.m. at House of Blues Dallas. $42-$48.25. ticketmaster.com.

Attendees dance at one of Club 90s’ “Heated Rivalry”-themed events in Santa Ana, California.
Heather Koepp
HEATED RIVALRY: JOCKSTAR RAVE
DJs Michael Medrano and Gregory Dillon will spin tunes at this all-ages event, which is described as “a night of party boy anthems.”
Feb. 13 at 9 p.m. at The Studio at The Bomb Factory in Deep Ellum. $34.06-$42.04. axs.com.
COTTAGE CHEMISTRY: A HEATED RIVALRY DANCE PARTY
What the Dance is presenting this high-energy night of dancing to the Heated Rivalry soundtrack, queer pop anthems and nostalgic hits. The 18-and-up event is hitting cities across the U.S.
Feb. 14 at 8:30 p.m. at Tulips in Fort Worth. $26.34-$75.92. eventim.us.
HEATED RIVALRY DANCE PARTY
Costumes and jerseys are encouraged at this 21-and-up event, which will have DJs, live edits, vendors and themed drinks.
March 7 at 9 p.m. at RBC Deep Ellum. $14.15. etix.com.
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