What the Texas Rangers put forth in 2014 was less a baseball season than a ghastly hour-to-hour slog that sometimes resembled baseball and mostly served as a reminder to the children there’s no reasoning with the game. At all. Ever. So, good luck. (And we need to have a talk about Santa.)

View photos Prince Fielder missed 120 games last season. (Getty Images) More

No sense rehashing the details, so let’s just say everybody got hurt, so many that if you didn’t personally pitch for the Rangers last season you were hardly trying, and the manager resigned in disgrace for decisions not even related to the worst Rangers team in three decades, and Ian Kinsler somehow came within 67 wins of getting his wish.

Yeah, there’s bad and then there’s finishing second-best in Texas, which the Rangers pulled off comfortably. That happens when all the previously mentioned stuff means you’ve become among the worst in the league at hitting, pitching, defending and maneuvering around your own dog. (And we need to have a talk about Derek Holland.)

They got beat by a tarp in New York. Granted, it was a very aggressive tarp. Still, it’s a reasonable sign a team can start packing the bat bags on its season.

So, anyway, that was how the Texas Rangers landed in the cellar or, more accurately, how the cellar landed on them, and how the Los Angeles Angels gained 43½ games and the Houston Astros 42½ games on them in the standings over a single calendar year. That’s a lot of games. But the Rangers were a lot of mess.

Now what?

Maybe they can’t fix everything. But, had general manager Jon Daniels gone off four months ago to find himself on the Pacific Coast Trail and only just now emerged from the woods, the Rangers would still be relevant again. They’d need some pitching, sure. They’d need some luck, the good kind this time. But what the Rangers needed more than anything else was time.

Last we saw Prince Fielder he was covered in oil and tattoos and that was about it.

First he had shimmied into a Rangers uniform, played 42 games and hit three home runs and then was laid bare, literally by a magazine and figuratively by the degeneration of two disks in his neck. He last swung a bat on May 16, by which point the pain and weakness rolling down his arm had turned him into a ground-balling, .247-hitting, .360-slugging, beast-formerly-known-as-Prince wreck.

The man had missed one baseball game since 2008. He missed 120 in a single season as a Ranger.

He had company. Holland, Jurickson Profar, Shin-Soo Choo, Matt Harrison, Martin Perez, Alexi Ogando, Tanner Scheppers, Mitch Moreland, Yu Darvish, and many more, they all succumbed to the mystical sniper perched on Greene’s Hill, too.

View photos Before last season, Prince Fielder had missed one game since 2008. (AP) More

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