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Giants
slam
Cards
9-0 for
NL
championship
, now
face
Tigers
in World
Series
SAN
FRANCISCO
- After
all the
Giants
had
overcome
to get
back to
the
World
Series,
a late
shower
wasn't
about to
dampen
their
celebration.
All
right,
it was a
driving
downpour.
So
reliever
Sergio
Romo
danced
through
the
raindrops,
Tim
Lincecum
helped
lead a
soaked
victory
lap
around
the
ballpark
and
Angel
Pagan
stayed
on the
field
with his
daughter
long
after
his
teammates
took the
party
indoors.
Hunter
Pence
got the
Giants
going
with a
weird
double,
Matt
Cain
pitched
his
second
clincher
of
October
and San
Francisco
closed
out Game
7 of the
NL
championship
series
in a
rainstorm,
routing
the St.
Louis
Cardinals
9-0 on
Monday
night.
"The
rain
never
felt so
good,"
series
MVP
Marco
Scutaro
said.
"We're
going to
the
World
Series,
this is
unbelievable."
San
Francisco
won its
record-tying
sixth
elimination
game of
the
postseason,
completing
a
lopsided
rally
from a
3-1
deficit.
The
Giants,
who won
it all
in 2010,
will
host
reigning
AL MVP
and Cy
Young
winner
Justin
Verlander
, Triple
Crown
slugger
Miguel
Cabrera
and the
Detroit
Tigers
in Game
1 on
Wednesday
night.
Verlander
is set
to pitch
Wednesday's
opener
at AT&T
Park.
Giants
manager
Bruce
Bochy
insisted
before
Monday's
game he
had not
planned
any
further
in
advance.
Scutaro
produced
his
sixth
multihit
game of
the
series
and
matched
an LCS
record
with 14
hits and
Pablo
Sandoval
drove in
a run
for his
fifth
straight
game.
"These
guys
never
quit,"
Bochy
said.
"They
just
kept
believing
and they
got it
done."
After
falling
behind
3-1 in
the
series
at Busch
Stadium,
the
Giants
outscored
the
wild-card
Cardinals
20-1
over the
final
three
games
behind
stellar
starting
pitching
from
Barry
Zito ,
Ryan
Vogelsong
and
Cain.
They
also
benefited
from
some
strange
bounces.
On
Pence's
double
that
highlighted
a
five-run
third,
his bat
broke at
the
label on
impact,
then the
broken
barrel
hit the
ball
twice
more.
That put
a
rolling,
slicing
spin on
the ball
and
caused
it to
change
directions
-
leaving
shortstop
Pete
Kozma
little
chance
to make
the
play.
Kozma
broke to
his
right,
figuring
that's
where
the ball
would
go, but
it
instead
curved
to
left-center.
"It was
going to
go in
the hole
and it
ended up
going up
the
middle,"
Kozma
said.
Injured
closer
Brian
Wilson ,
with
that
out-of-control
bushy
black
beard,
danced
in the
dugout
and fans
in the
sellout
crowd of
43,056
kept
twirling
their
orange
rally
towels
even
through
rain in
the late
innings
- a
downright
downpour
when
Romo
retired
Matt
Holliday
on a
popup to
Scutaro
to end
it.
Romo
embraced
catcher
Buster
Posey as
fireworks
went off
over
McCovey
Cove
beyond
right
field.
"It's
just
very
fitting
the way
everything
has gone
for us
this
season,"
Romo
said of
ending
in the
rain.
"The ups
and
downs,
the
injuries,
the
personal
issues,
whatever.
What a
ride for
us all.
It's
very,
very
fitting
that it
rained
right
there."
The NL
West
champion
Giants
won
their
first
postseason
clincher
at home
since
the 2002
NLCS,
also
against
the
Cardinals.
These
2012
Giants
have a
couple
of
pretty
talented
castoffs
of their
own not
so
different
from
that
winning
combination
of 2010
"castoffs
and
misfits"
as Bochy
referred
to his
bunch -
with
Scutaro
right
there at
the top
of the
list
this
time
around.
Acquired
July 27
from the
division
rival
Colorado
Rockies
,
Scutaro
hit .500
(14 for
28) with
four
RBIs in
the NLCS.
The
36-year-old
journeyman
infielder,
playing
in his
second
postseason
and
first
since
2006
with
Oakland,
became
the
first
player
in major
league
history
with six
multihit
games in
an LCS.
Now,
he's
headed
to his
first
World
Series.
The
Giants
have
All-Star
game MVP
Melky
Cabrera
to thank
for
helping
his
teammates
secure
home-field
advantage
in the
postseason
- while
Cain was
the
winning
pitcher
the
National
League's
8-0
victory
in July.
Cabrera
was
suspended
50 games
Aug. 15
for a
positive
testosterone
test,
then
wasn't
added to
the
roster
by the
Giants
after
his
suspension
ended.
After
rain
fell on
the
Cardinals
during
batting
practice,
the
skies
turned
blue and
the
weather
cooperated.
Anxious
players
on both
sides
hung
over the
dugout
rails as
the game
began.
Cain
joined
St.
Louis'
Chris
Carpenter
as the
only
pitchers
with
victories
in two
winner-take-all
games in
the same
postseason.
Carpenter,
who lost
Games 2
and 6 in
this
series,
did it
last
year.
Cain
also
pitched
the
Giants'
Game 5
division
series
clincher
at
Cincinnati,
when San
Francisco
became
the
first
team in
major
league
history
to come
back
from an
0-2
deficit
in a
five-game
series
by
winning
three
consecutive
road
games.
"I think
to do
it, the
guys
actually
have to
believe
it can
happen,"
Posey
said.
He
delivered
on an
even
bigger
stage
Monday
as San
Francisco
saved
its
season
once
again.
The
Giants
won
their
20th NL
pennant
and
reached
their
19th
World
Series.
Cain
walked
off the
mound to
a
standing
ovation
when
Jeremy
Affeldt
entered
with two
outs in
the
sixth.
Affeldt
then got
Daniel
Descalso
to pop
out with
two
runners
on.
Yadier
Molina
had four
hits but
got
little
help
from the
rest of
the
Cardinals,
who went
1 for 21
with
runners
in
scoring
position
over
their
final
three
games.
"It's
about
the team
that's
hot, and
we went
on a
cold
streak,"
Cardinals
manager
Mike
Matheny
said.
"We got
to this
point by
being
that
team
that was
hot and
taking
advantage
of
opportunities.
But we
just
couldn't
make it
happen
these
last two
games."
Cain
added an
RBI
single
to his
cause
and got
some
sparkling
defense
behind
him.
The play
of the
game
went to
shortstop
Brandon
Crawford
, who
made a
leaping
catch of
Kyle
Lohse 's
liner to
end the
second
inning
with
runners
on
second
and
third
that
would
have
been a
run-scoring
hit.
In the
third,
Scutaro,
the
second
baseman,
made a
tough
stop on
a short
hop by
Carlos
Beltran
, and
left
fielder
Gregor
Blanco
ran down
a
hard-hit
ball by
Allen
Craig in
left-center
to end
the
inning.
Cain's
second-inning
single
made San
Francisco
the
first
team in
major
league
postseason
history
to have
a
starting
pitcher
drive in
a run in
three
straight
elimination
games.
Brandon
Belt hit
a solo
homer in
the
eighth
for his
first
clout of
the
postseason.
It took
production
from
everybody,
even the
pitchers,
for
these
scrappy
Giants
to rally
back
from the
brink
one more
time.
Cain
certainly
did his
part to
keep the
staff
rolling.
The
16-game
winner,
who
didn't
surrender
an
earned
run
during
his
team's
title
run two
years
ago,
reached
46
pitches
through
two
innings
but
settled
in
nicely
the rest
of the
way to
avenge a
loss to
Lohse in
Game 3.
Cain
even got
to repay
Holliday
for his
hard
slide
into
Scutaro
at
second
base in
Game 2
here a
week
earlier.
Cain
plunked
Holliday
in the
upper
left arm
leading
off the
sixth,
drawing
cheers
from the
crowd.
The
right-hander
escaped
trouble
in the
second
with
runners
on
second
and
third
when
Crawford
made his
catch.
Holliday
returned
to the
lineup
after
missing
Game 6 a
night
earlier
with
tightness
in his
lower
back. He
received
loud
boos
when he
stepped
in to
hit in
the
first
from a
fan base
still
angry
about
his
slide
that
injured
Scutaro's
hip.
Beltran
is still
left
0-fer
the
World
Series,
winless
in three
Game 7s
during
his
15-year
career.
And to
think
just
last
fall he
was on
the
other
side
with the
Giants
as they
missed
the
playoffs
a year
after
winning
the
club's
first
World
Series
since
moving
West in
1958.
"If you
look at
the
games we
made a
lot of
mistakes
and they
didn't
make
any,"
Beltran
said.
"They
took
advantage
of
those.
They
were
able to
put
things
together,
offense,
pitching,
defense,
and we
couldn't
do
that."
The
Cardinals
went an
NL-best
12-4
from
Sept. 16
to the
end of
the
season
to earn
the NL's
second
wild
card on
the
second-to-last
day of
the
season,
then won
6-3 in a
winner-take-all
playoff
at
Atlanta
to reach
the
division
series.
The
Cardinals
then
rallied
from a
6-0
deficit
with a
four-run
ninth
inning
to stun
the
Washington
Nationals
9-7 in
Game 5.
Sandoval's
run-scoring
groundout
in the
first
that put
his team
ahead
gave him
at least
one RBI
in five
straight
postseason
games,
matching
home run
king
Barry
Bonds '
franchise
record
set in
2002.
Now,
Sandoval
and the
Giants
get to
play on.
"It's
just
surreal.
The
victory
lap
right
there
was the
greatest
thing,"
said
Zito,
left off
the 2010
postseason
roster
for all
three
rounds
but now
a
candidate
to pitch
Game 1.
"We play
best
when our
backs
are
against
the
wall."
NOTES:
The
Giants
snapped
an 0-5
skid in
deciding
Game 7s.
... The
Tigers
and
Giants
will
meet for
the
first
time in
the
postseason.
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