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Rangers Fill Voids With New Pitcher & Catcher

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ARLINGTON (AP) - After filling a big void in their rotation with a hometown starter, the Rangers have added one of the catchers who will be behind the plate for Yovani Gallardo.

Texas completed its second trade in three days Wednesday, acquiring switch-hitting catcher Carlos Corporan from the AL West rival Houston Astros.

"That was our primary goal going into this offseason; we wanted to address our starting pitching and ideally our catching," assistant general manager Thad Levine said.

The Rangers were already working on the Corporan deal when they got Gallardo in a trade with Milwaukee on Monday.

Houston designated Corporan for assignment Tuesday, setting up the trade for 19-year-old minor-league pitcher Akeem Bostick. The Rangers selected the right-hander in the second round of the 2013 amateur draft.

"We got to a point in the offseason where we knew we had to give up something to get a catcher, which is an important piece for the 2015 puzzle," Levine said. "No different than the Gallardo deal, gave up a lot of quality players, but we filled some huge holes we had on our team, and much-needed players came back in our direction."

Texas sent infielder Luis Sardinas and right-handers Corey Knebel and Marcos Diplan to Milwaukee for Gallardo and $4 million of the pitcher's $14 million salary.

Corporan, the Astros' backup catcher the past four seasons, is expected to have that same role in Texas behind Robinson Chirinos. Levine said the Rangers wanted a "backup capable of handling more than a backup load."

Gallardo, who grew up in North Texas and still lives there, is expected to fit in the Rangers rotation behind Yu Darvish and left-hander Derek Holland.

The right-hander was 89-64 with a 3.69 ERA in his eight seasons with Milwaukee, where his pitching coach during his rookie season in 2007 was Mike Maddux, now with the Rangers.

Gallardo took part in the team's winter camp Wednesday, throwing at the Rangers' ballpark where he has never pitched a game. He is eligible for free agency after this season, and has already made it clear that he would like to stay at home after that.

"This is a new chapter in my career, and I'm looking forward to getting started," Gallardo said. "I think it's been 10 years since I stepped on the field. I had a tryout here actually before I got drafted, and here I am again."

That actually would have been almost 11 years ago, before Gallardo was picked in the second round of the 2004 draft by Milwaukee out of Trimble Tech High School in Fort Worth, less than 20 miles from the ballpark.

(© Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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