On Friday, things went just a little bit better.

The Rangers stormed back from a 2-0 deficit against the Guardians to win their fifth game out of their last six, and by the time they finished off their 3-2 victory over Cleveland there were nearly two sections worth of rowdy, shirt-waving fans celebrating the come-from-behind win in the right field corner of the upper deck.

The group provided a noticeably different vibe throughout the last four innings of the matchup, one that Skip Schumaker said the Rangers took note of in the dugout.

“We definitely looked up a few times, they got louder and louder,” the Rangers manager said postgame. “That part of the crowd got bigger and bigger, more and more shirts were coming off as the game got longer.”

It didn’t start that way. For the first few innings there wasn’t exactly much for Rangers fans to cheer about, Texas held hitless through the third and presenting a nightmare scenario of a second no-hitter in their home park in less than two weeks. That was before Josh Jung singled in the fourth to break things up and give the crowd a little life.

It wasn’t until the sixth inning, though, that the “tarps off” section really started to swell. A home run from Kyle Higashioka cut the deficit to 2-1, and a Corey Seager homer gave the Rangers the lead three batters later.

From that moment, the “tarps off” section swelled to two rows, then the full section, and then flooded into the two sections on either side as the raucous group of fans chanted, sang and screamed their heads off every time they were shown on Globe Life Field’s video board — which was frequently.

“It’s great when fans are bought into the game,” said Jack Leiter, Saturday’s starter against the Guardians. “Some of those chants that they were doing were funny to hear, and I don’t know if it kind of got the rest of the crowd more involved, but it felt like the energy was great tonight.”

“That top deck, it felt like it took over,” Schumaker said. “It was loud, and all the other fans were really into it as well.”

It’s much easier when they have something to be loud about.