ARLINGTON, Texas -- Buck Showalter and the Baltimore Orioles will get another chance to overtake the New York Yankees.

The surprising O's have already beaten some big odds, getting past the two-time defending American League champion Texas Rangers and their ace, Yu Darvish, in the win-or-go-home wild-card playoff.

The Orioles celebrate their wild-card win against two-time defending AL champion Texas on Friday night. Up next? A division series matchup with the Yankees. Tim Heitman/US Presswire

Joe Saunders pitched effectively into the sixth inning at a place where he had never won, Adam Jones delivered the tiebreaking sacrifice fly and the Orioles, in the playoffs for the first time in 15 years, eliminated the Rangers 5-1 on Friday night.

"With our team, it's just a bunch of guys that raised the bar and wouldn't give in and still haven't. Now they get a chance to win to roll the dice, and there's a lot of good card players in there," said Showalter, their manager.

The Orioles advanced to play the East champion Yankees, the AL's top seed -- the teams split 18 games this season. The best-of-five division series starts Sunday at Camden Yards.

The upstart Orioles spent the whole second half of the regular season chasing New York, never passing the Yankees and falling just short in a neck-and-neck race for the division title.

Turns out, the Yankees haven't brushed off these Birds just yet.

"Real proud of everybody. Tacking on runs were big, knew they were going to run at you," Showalter said. "But just a real proud moment for us.

"Our guys approached it and we talked about it being sudden life instead of sudden death, and we played that way. You've got to seize the opportunity. We don't get many."

After twice coming within a strike of winning last year's World Series, this season is over that quickly for the Rangers, who were in first place for a majors-high 178 days this season. Texas loaded the bases with two outs in the ninth before David Murphy flied out to end it.

"We just didn't get it done," manager Ron Washington said.