| |
Halfway
to
title:
Giants
with 2-0
lead,
Tigers
in World
of hurt
By
RONALD
BLUM
AP
Sports
Writer
SAN
FRANCISCO
- The
Giants'
extended
family
lingered
on the
field
long
after
the
final
out,
posing
for
pictures
and
savoring
the win.
Cars
honked
in the
streets
outside
AT&T
Park and
fans
celebrated
in the
bars.
San
Francisco
is
halfway
to the
World
Series
title,
not all
the way
there.
Yet,
after
two days
of
beneficial
bounces
and
pivotal
plays
that
went
their
way, the
Giants
and
their
supporters
seem to
think
the
team's
second
championship
in three
years is
only a
couple
of days
away.
"When
things
are
going
well,"
Marco
Scutaro
said,
"things
are
bouncing
your
way."
Madison
Bumgarner
pitched
two-hit
ball
over
seven
innings,
the
Giants
threw
out a
runner
at the
plate
and then
took
advantage
of a
bunt
that
stayed
fair to
push
across
the
go-ahead
run in a
2-0 win
over the
Detroit
Tigers
on
Thursday
night
that
gave
them a
World
Series
edge.
"It's a
lot less
stressful
for
sure,"
Bumgarner
said,
"but at
the same
time I
don't
think we
can stop
pushing
or we're
going to
find
ourselves
in the
same
spot
we've
been in
in the
last two
series."
And that
would be
on the
brink of
elimination.
San
Francisco
lost its
first
two
games
against
Cincinnati,
then
became
the
first
baseball
team to
overcome
an 0-2
deficit
in a
best-of-five
series
by
winning
three
straight
on the
road.
Then the
Giants
fell
into 1-3
hole
against
St.
Louis
before
rallying
to reach
the
World
Series.
"It's
great to
get off
to a
good
start,"
Giants
manager
Bruce
Bochy
said.
"We
don't,
believe
me, take
anything
for
granted."
As in,
Gregor
Blanco's
bunt
trickling
to a
stop
inches
fair on
the
infield
dirt for
a
bases-loading,
45-foot
single
that set
up
Brandon
Crawford's
run-scoring
double-play
grounder
in the
seventh.
"I was
joking
with
Roberto
Kelly
when I
got to
first
base,
`We
practiced
that
today,'"
Blanco
said,
referring
to the
Giants'
coach.
"That
was a
perfect
bunt. I
wasn't
really
trying
to do
that. I
think it
was just
meant to
be."
Hunter
Pence,
in a
1-for-7
Series
slide,
added a
sacrifice
fly in
the
eighth.
That was
enough
for the
Giants,
given
that San
Francisco
starters
have
allowed
two runs
in 33
innings
over the
last
five
games, a
0.55
ERA,
with 30
strikeouts
and six
walks.
"It
definitely
feels a
whole
lot
better
than
having
our
backs
against
the
wall,"
Bumgarner
said.
"But you
can't
relax.
We've
got to
keep
pushing."
Game 3
will be
Saturday
night in
Detroit,
which
can't
win the
title at
home.
Midseason
acquisition
Anibal
Sanchez
starts
for the
Tigers
and Ryan
Vogelsong
for San
Francisco
on a
night
when the
temperature
in the
Motor
City is
expected
to be in
the
low-to-mid
40s.
"We
can't
try to
win
three in
one
day,"
Prince
Fielder
said.
"Or two
for that
matter."
Fielder
was
thrown
out at
the
plate in
the
second
inning,
and in
the
bottom
half
pitcher
Doug
Fister
was
struck
on the
right
side of
his head
by
Blanco's
line
drive, a
ball hit
so hard
that it
caromed
into
shallow
center
field.
"They
asked me
the
typical
concussion
questions,"
Fister
said.
"I'm not
concerned.
I have a
minor
bump.
According
to my
dad, my
whole
life his
saying
has
always
been if
I got
hit in
the head
I'd be
OK.
That's
how I
take
it."
The
6-foot-8
Fister
managed
to stay
on the
mound.
Bumgarner
more
than
matched
him.
Santiago
Casilla
pitched
a
perfect
eighth
and
Sergio
Romo
worked a
1-2-3
ninth
for a
save.
"I don't
know
about
baseball
gods,
but I'll
tell you
one
thing: I
hope the
ball
keeps
bouncing
our
way,"
Giants
pitcher
Jeremy
Affeldt
said.
Fielder
was hit
by a
pitch
starting
the
second,
Delmon
Young
followed
with a
double
and when
the ball
rattled
around
in left
field,
third-base
coach
Gene
Lamont
waved
the
beefy
slugger
home.
Scutaro,
in the
middle
of every
big play
for the
Giants
this
month,
dashed
across
the
diamond,
caught
Blanco's
relay
and sent
a strong
throw to
the
plate.
All-Star
catcher
Buster
Posey
made a
swipe
tag to
Fielder's
backside.
"Any
time
those
kind of
freak
plays
happen
that
don't go
your
way,"
Fielder
said.
"It
takes
away a
little
momentum
but
you've
got to
be
aggressive.
They
made a
perfect
play."
Bumped
from the
NLCS
rotation
after
two poor
postseason
starts,
Bumgarner
struck
out
eight
and
looked
as sharp
as he
did in
the 2010
World
Series
when as
a
21-year-old
rookie
he beat
Texas in
Game 4
with
eight
shutout
innings.
"Just
able to
make
pitches,"
Bumgarner
said. "I
hadn't
done a
very
good job
of
making
pitches
this
postseason
so far
and this
is a
team
that
you're
not
going to
be able
to
afford
to miss
with.
"They
hit some
balls
hard,
but
luckily
we were
in the
right
spot,"
he said.
The game
remained
scoreless
until
the
seventh,
when
Pence
led off
with a
single,
rookie
reliever
Drew
Smyly
walked
Brandon
Belt on
a
full-count
pitch
and
Blanco's
bunt
loaded
the
bases
with no
outs
Detroit
kept its
infield
back up
the
middle,
and had
no play
at the
plate on
Crawford's
bouncer
to
second.
"We felt
like we
played
double-play
depth
because
we felt
like we
couldn't
give
them two
runs.
That's
why we
did
that,
and we
got the
double
play,"
Leyland
said.
"To be
honest
with
you, we
were
absolutely
thrilled
to come
out of
that
inning
with one
run.
Absolutely
thrilled.
I mean,
we had
to score
anyway."
Of the
52 teams
to take
a 2-0
lead in
the
World
Series,
41 have
gone on
to win
the
title.
That
includes
14 of
the last
15 teams
with
that
advantage.
"I
haven't
done any
studies
on it,"
Affeldt
said,
"but
statisically
it's
always
better
to be
2-0 than
1-1 or
0-2. I'm
just
guessing."
NOTES:
Bumgarner
struck
out
Austin
Jackson
and Omar
Infante
to start
the
game.
Two
other
Giants
fanned
the
first
two
batters
in a
Series
game:
Christy
Mathewson
(1905)
and Carl
Hubbell
(1933).
...
Posey
has a
hit in
all
seven
World
Series
games in
his
career. |