Texas
Rangers welcome Rocker as 2 past top picks debut
ARLINGTON, Texas — Kumar Rocker will spend a number of extra days across the Texas Rangers earlier than going to Arizona, the place he’s anticipated to make his organizational debut within the fall tutorial league.
Rocker, the No. 3 general decide in final month’s draft, was formally launched by the Rangers on Thursday, greater than every week after signing a contract with a $5.2 million bonus.
“Getting by means of this course of is the beginning line,” Rocker stated. “So, pitching on the market, getting free and being myself, it is an awesome step in the proper course.”
Hours after Rocker’s introduction on the stadium, two of the the Rangers’ former No. 1 picks made their main league debuts.
Left-hander Cole Ragans, Texas’ prime decide in 2016, was the beginning pitcher for the collection opener in opposition to the Chicago White Sox. Since being chosen, Ragans has had Tommy John surgical procedure twice. Bubba Thompson, chosen by the Rangers within the first spherical in 2017, was known as up from Triple-A and was within the lineup batting ninth and enjoying left subject. Thompson was hitting .303 with 13 homers, 48 RBIs and 49 stolen bases in 80 video games at Spherical Rock.
It was the primary time since 1986 that two former first-round picks drafted by the identical membership made their MLB debuts in the identical recreation. First baseman Will Clark and second baseman Robby Thompson made their debuts collectively for the San Francisco Giants at Houston on April 8, 1986.
Rocker, a right-handed pitcher, was drafted once more final month one 12 months after the New York Mets had issues over a bodily and did not signal him after choosing him with the tenth general decide. Rocker was the one first-round decide within the 2021 draft who went unsigned. After an August deadline, Rocker’s agent, Scott Boras, stated Rocker had a “non-pitching-related minor surgical procedure” on his proper arm.
Boras nonetheless did not get into the specifics of that process Thursday, however stated it turned out to be a means of answering any form of questions any workforce would have whereas additionally offering some readability for Rocker.
“I feel the purpose of it’s, Kumar did not have a pitching-necessary scope,” Boras stated. “No doctor advised us he wanted one thing. It was actually simply an analysis of what was there. I am actually glad we did it as a result of it revealed every thing that we hoped for, that he was pitching succesful, and that he has a really wholesome outlook.”
The Rangers don’t have any questions concerning the well being of Rocker’s arm. The plan to play him in Arizona this fall, as a substitute of going to a minor league workforce for the remainder of the summer season, is what the Rangers are doing with all of their draft picks.
“With our foremost draft class this 12 months, we’re taking this process. I feel that tutorial league is a very reasonable expectation,” Rangers basic supervisor Chris Younger stated. “The 2023 season is a very powerful shifting ahead. And that is what we’re geared in direction of when it comes to getting all of our gamers prepared.”
Texas had scouted Rocker by means of highschool, his time at Vanderbilt College after which earlier this summer season. With the Tri-Metropolis ValleyCats within the unbiased Frontier League, he was 1-0 and had a 1.35 ERA in 5 begins with 32 strikeouts and 4 walks over 20 innings.
The 6-foot-5, 245-pound Rocker was 28-10 with a 2.89 ERA over 42 video games from 2019-21 at Vanderbilt, the place he was teammates with right-hander Jack Leiter. The Rangers drafted Leiter with the second general decide final summer season, and he’s pitching at Double-A Frisco.
Leiter additionally did not pitch within the minors final summer season, or in Arizona within the fall. He went by means of the organizational draftee orientation final August on the membership’s complicated in Shock, Arizona. Rocker spent the autumn in Nashville, understanding on the Vanderbilt baseball amenities whereas taking courses as he works to complete his diploma.
Rocker stated Leiter has been an unbelievable useful resource with nothing however good issues to say concerning the Rangers group.
When requested if there was extra stress being the third general decide or what he went by means of final 12 months, Rocker responded, “Positively the second factor. … All of the stress is gone proper. Blissful to be No. 3 and completely happy to maneuver ahead too.”
Texas
What were the 5 coldest days in North Texas?
North Texas is known for its generally mild winters, but the area has nonetheless experienced some exceptionally frigid days.
These cold spells can include challenges such as icy roads and heightened energy demands, and some terrible accidents that have included fatalities.
According to the National Weather Service, here are the five coldest days in North Texas.
1. Feb. 12, 1899: minus 8 degrees
A severe arctic blast affected much of the country during the first half of February in 1899. Temperatures fell below zero in every state. A century later, records from that coldest day remain unchallenged.
Between Feb. 4-13, only eight hours with temperatures at or above freezing were reported, according to the National Weather Service’s office in Fort Worth.
With winds blowing at over 30 mph, the thermometer marked a low of minus 8 degrees the morning of Feb. 12.
Dallas went down to minus 10 degrees and Grapevine fell to minus 12 degrees.
2. Feb. 16 2021: minus 2 degrees
A historic winter storm and arctic outbreak hit North Texas. It affected most of the state and many parts of the country. Records were broken across Texas, and winter storm warnings were issued across the entire state.
A freezing drizzle created a thin coating of ice on many roadways that led to numerous cars sliding off the road, including a pileup of over 100 vehicles that resulted in several fatalities on Interstate 35W in Fort Worth.
According to the weather service, 5 inches of snow was reported at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport. The area spent 93 consecutive hours at or below freezing, from 5 p.m. Feb. 9 to 2 p.m. Feb 13.
3. Dec. 23, 1989: minus 1 degree
A cold wave brought several surges of arctic air into the central and eastern United States, beginning in mid-December and lasting until Christmas.
The city of Dallas suffered $25 million in damage caused by broken pipes, along with losses at manufacturing plants. Other areas in the southeast U.S. had similar damage from frozen pipes.
The cold wave brought snow to some areas of Florida, giving many parts of the state their first White Christmas on record.
4. Jan. 12, 1912: 1 degree
North Texas was gripped by two cold waves, one on Jan. 6 and the other on Jan. 12.
Temperatures plummeted across the state with each cold wave, leaving little time for preparation. Unprotected vegetation died, and the weather was linked to widespread agricultural losses.
According to The Dallas Morning News archives, local temperature dropped at 11 a.m. from 55 degrees to 24 degrees in the afternoon. By 7 p.m., temperature had dropped to 14 degrees. After 7 p.m., when the cold wave really hit North Texas, pushing the temperature to just 1 degree.
5. Feb. 8, 1933: 2 degrees
According to The News archives, a winter blast hit North Texas and part of Oklahoma, dropping temperatures to 7 degrees by 6 p.m. Heavy snow blanketed the city. Snow continued through the night for several hours.
At 11:30 p.m., the thermometer at Dallas Love Field dropped to 4 degrees, before dipping overnight to 2 degrees.
Two Texans died as a result of the winter storm, which was blamed for heavy damage to fruit, and other crops.
An 18-year-old boy and a 62-year-old doctor died during the cold wave, and according to the coroners office, their deaths were caused by exposure.
Texas
North Texas school finds success in cellphone ban
Texas
Gov. Greg Abbott issues executive order targeting Chinese government operatives in Texas
Gov. Greg Abbott issued an executive order on Monday, directing the Texas Department of Public Safety to target and arrest people trying to execute influence operations on behalf of the Chinese government to return dissidents to China.
Abbott’s action is in response to “Operation Fox Hunt,” a Chinese government initiative that is intended to root out corruption in that country but in practice has also been used to intimidate Chinese citizens living abroad, harass Chinese pro-democracy activists and even forcibly repatriate dissidents and government officials in some cases. The U.S. justice department has successfully prosecuted individuals in connection to the Chinese initiative.
“The Chinese Communist Party has engaged in a worldwide harassment campaign against Chinese dissidents in attempts to forcibly return them to China,” Abbott said in a news release. “Texas will not tolerate the harassment or coercion of the more than 250,000 individuals of Chinese descent who legally call Texas home by the Chinese Communist Party or its heinous proxies.”
Abbott’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Conor Hagan, a spokesperson for the FBI office in Houston, said the agency has pushed a public campaign since January to stop the harassment, intimidation and assault of people in the United States by foreign governments. The FBI is looking for potential victims in the Houston area who have been harassed by agents of the Chinese government.
Hagan said the Chinese government has targeted its own citizens living within the United States as well as naturalized and U.S.-born citizens who have family overseas.
“Their actions violate U.S. law and our treasured American individual rights and freedoms,” Hagan wrote in an email.
The FBI office in Houston has set up a hotline for people who believe they are victims of these types of actions by the Chinese Communist Party: (713) 693-5000..
State Rep. Gene Wu, D-Houston, who was born in China and immigrated to the United States applauded Abbott’s move Tuesday.
“The ability to speak your mind and live freely are the core promises of the American Dream; and any who seek to take that away stand against Texas values,” Wu said.
Last year, Wu criticized Texas Republicans for pushing legislation that would ban citizens and foreign entities from countries including China from buying land in Texas. He urged Abbott to also support Chinese immigrants by opposing such legislation.
The Chinese government has set up “police service stations” across the world, according to Abbott’s executive order, and one such station was rumored to be in Houston.
“We will continue to do everything we can to protect Texans from the unlawful and repressive actions of the Chinese Communist Party,” Abbott said.
Abbott charged DPS with identifying and charging people suspected of crimes related to Operation Fox Hunt; work with local and federal authorities to assess incidents where foreign governments are harassing Texans; provide policy recommendations on how to counter these threats and set up a hotline to reported suspected acts of coercion related to “Operation Fox Hunt.”
On Thursday, Abbott issued a second executive order aimed at hardening the systems of state agencies and public higher education institutions from being accessed by hostile foreign nations.
___
This story was originally published by The Texas Tribune and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.
For copyright information, check with the distributor of this item, The Texas Tribune.
-
News1 week ago
Herbert Smith Freehills to merge with US-based law firm Kramer Levin
-
Technology1 week ago
The next Nintendo Direct is all about Super Nintendo World’s Donkey Kong Country
-
Business7 days ago
Column: OpenAI just scored a huge victory in a copyright case … or did it?
-
Health7 days ago
Bird flu leaves teen in critical condition after country's first reported case
-
Business3 days ago
Column: Molly White's message for journalists going freelance — be ready for the pitfalls
-
Politics1 week ago
Editorial: Abortion was on ballots across the country in this election. The results are encouraging
-
World1 week ago
Sarah Palin, NY Times Have Explored Settlement, as Judge Sets Defamation Retrial
-
Politics2 days ago
Trump taps FCC member Brendan Carr to lead agency: 'Warrior for Free Speech'