Rangers deal Santana rare loss in win over Twins

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) -- All-Star left-hander Johan Santana was

making quick work of the Texas Rangers, striking out five of the

first six batters he faced.

"Things didn't look particularly promising," manager Buck

Showalter said.

Until the Rangers finally got a bloop and then a couple of late

blasts, two-run homers by Mark Teixeira and All-Star center fielder

Gary Matthews, to beat the Minnesota Twins and Santana 5-2 on

Sunday in the teams' last game before the break.

"That was a big win for us, to be able to beat him on top of

his game," Showalter said. "We have some good positive vibes

about what we can be. We'll see. ... But games like today make you

feel good about our ability to respond to challenges."

The Rangers (45-43) are tied with Oakland for the AL West lead

after reaching the All-Star break with a winning record for the

third straight year. Texas finished third the last two seasons.

The Los Angeles Angels are only two games back, and Seattle 2.5

back.

Santana (9-5) had five strikeouts before Kevin Mench led off the

third with a single. Jason Botts, the next batter, hit a grounder

and tripped at first base after stepping on Santana's foot as the

pitcher covered the bag.

"I was fine. It's part of the game," Santana said. "I thought

I threw pretty good. I was aggressive early, but they're a good

hitting club."

The Rangers got three singles off Santana the following inning,

and finally scored. They got within 2-1 on a run-scoring hit by

left-hander Hank Blalock, batting sixth in the order for only the

second time this season.

"That took away some of the invincibility that (Santana) seemed

to be carrying at that time," Showalter said.

"It definitely brought us back to believing we could get to

Johan and score some runs," Rod Barajas said. "He was making us

look pretty bad."

Santana struck out seven and walked one over seven innings,

losing his first decision in 10 starts (five victories) since May

17.

Rick Bauer (3-1), the second of five Texas pitchers, struck out

two in a perfect inning. Akinori Otsuka pitched the ninth for his

17th save in 19 chances.

Teixeira's first homer in 13 games put the Rangers up 3-2 in the

sixth. Matthews, an All-Star for the first time this season,

connected an inning later on a ball that barely cleared the wall

and the glove of jumping right fielder Michael Cuddyer.

It was the first time in 40 starts -- since June 2, 2005, against

Cleveland -- that Santana allowed more than one homer in a game.

"It was a high changeup to Teixeira and he hit it out. Matthews

hit a good pitch," Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said.

Lew Ford had a run-scoring single and All-Star catcher Joe

Mauer an RBI groundout for the Twins (47-39), who have lost four of

five games -- but are still 22-6 since June 8.

"Three weeks ago we were dead in the water. Now we have a

chance," Gardenhire said. "Let's see what we can do with it."

Teixeira struck out twice against Santana before his homer to

left, only his ninth of the season. The switch-hitting slugger has

only three homers in 37 games, the others coming in consecutive

games at Colorado, after hitting 43 last season (along with 144

RBI, the most ever by a switch-hitter) when the first baseman was

an All-Star starter. He's not in the game this year.

"I know I can be better, but I'm not laying in bed at night

wondering if I'm going to hit more home runs," said Teixeira,

hitting .275 with 31 doubles and 49 RBI.

"Tex has spoiled us at a level that not many people have

attained," said Showalter, who met briefly with Teixeira before

the game. "He's got a good mind-set about it. I think he

understands what the reality of things are, that he can't do it by

himself."

Rookie second baseman Ian Kinsler had a leadoff single before

Teixeira's homer. Barajas drew a two-out walk, the only one allowed

by Santana, before Matthews' 10th homer.

Cuddyer led off the second with a single off John Koronka and

scored on Ford's single. Luis Castillo had a leadoff single in the

third before Mauer's grounder.Game notes
Justin Morneau, the Twins' 25-year-old first baseman left

off the All-Star team despite hitting .300 with 23 homers and 73

RBI, extended his hitting streak to 16 games with a single in the

second inning. He has hits in 27 of the last 28 games. ... Mauer

finished the first half in an 0-for-10 slump, and with three hits

in 18 at-bats, but still leads the majors with a .378 batting

average. ... Texas plays its first 11 games, and 21 of 27, on the

road after the All-Star break.