Before Friday night’s first pitch in Houston, the Texas Rangers and Houston Astros will do something you don’t often see from division rivals: stand on the same side.
Wearing matching “Together For Texas” shirts during batting practice — a navy-and-white design featuring both team logos over the outline of the Lone Star State — players and staff from both clubs will take the field in solidarity with the Central Texas communities devastated by recent floods.
It’s more than a gesture. It’s a message.
Back in Central Texas, the skies have finally cleared. But the wreckage from the floods remains — streets ripped apart, homes submerged, families mourning. It’s been a brutal stretch for the communities that sit between these two cities. And now, two teams that have spent seasons battling for Lone Star bragging rights are putting that aside, according to a press release. Because when the waters rise in Texas, Texans rise higher.
“When a disaster hits anywhere in our state, the Texas Rangers organization stands ready to respond,” says Karin Morris, executive director of the Texas Rangers Baseball Foundation. “This particular disaster is so tragic and impacts every corner of the state. We are here to help cover immediate needs today, as well as in the days, months, and years to come. We thank our first responders and volunteers for their tireless work. Our prayers and thoughts are with the families impacted.”
The Rangers aren’t just talking — they’ve already pledged $1 million toward relief and recovery. That money is moving now, flowing into the places that need it most: the Central Texas Flood Recovery Fund, the Kerrville Chamber of Commerce, local churches like Southern Oaks and Ark of Highland Lakes, and organizations like the Ingram Fire Department and Kerrville ISD. There’s even been help extended to Grimes Funeral Chapels, to ease the burden of families forced to say goodbye far too soon.
It’s been that kind of week for the Rangers — ten games, ten days, miles away from home. A road trip that’s worn heavy, emotionally and physically. And yet, as they prepare to wrap the stretch with three games in Houston before the All-Star break, they’re still looking beyond the field. Still finding a way to remind everyone watching baseball — like Texas — is bigger than a scoreboard.
Because sometimes the game isn’t just about runs and records. Sometimes it’s about showing up for the people who can’t. Sometimes, it’s about wearing your heart on your sleeve — and the shape of your state across your chest.
Tonight, there will be two teams on the field. But only one cause.
Together. For Texas.