ARLINGTON, Texas — Three-time Cy Young Award winner Max Scherzer retired 15 of the 16 batters he faced over five scoreless innings in his season debut, rookie Wyatt Langford extended his RBI streak to five games and the Texas Rangers beat the Kansas City Royals 4-0 on Sunday to complete a three-game series sweep.
''It was just fun to get back out there and compete,'' said Scherzer, who retired the first 13 Royals in his first start for Texas since Game 3 of last fall's World Series.
José Ureña went the final four innings for his first save and extended the Rangers' consecutive scoreless innings pitched streak to a season-high 22, their longest since 23 in September 2016. Ureña and and Scherzer combined to throw 99 pitches in the team's seventh shutout this season, and second time in back-to-back games.
Josh Smith homered for the Rangers (37-40), who matched their season high by winning their fourth game in a row. It was the first three-game sweep of the season for the reigning World Series champions.
The Royals ended a 2-7 road trip, though at 42-37 overall, they have 20 wins more than at the same point last season. They were shut out for the fourth time this season, three on the trip that ended with being held scoreless the last two games in Texas.
Kansas City manager Matt Quatraro missed the series finale to tend to a personal manner, so bench coach Paul Hoover managed the game.
Texas went ahead for good on Langford's RBI double in the fourth off Alec Marsh (5-5). Langford had a grand slam in Saturday's 6-0 win and has 10 RBIs in the last five games. Leody Taveras was 5 for 58 in June before his bloop two-run single later in the fourth, and Smith homered leading off the seventh.
Scherzer (1-0) struck out four while allowing only one hit and no walks. The right-hander threw 39 of his 57 pitches for strikes in his first start since exiting that World Series game on Oct. 30 after three innings because of back tightness. He left after five innings Sunday following a dugout conversation with manager Bruce Bochy and pitching coach Mike Maddux.