Score and
situation: They may have used the most painful (and wet) route to
get there, but the torture-minded San Francisco Giants are headed back to the
World Series. A 9-0
romp over the defending champion St. Louis Cardinals in Game 7 of the NLCS
on Monday night earned the Giants a Fall Classic date with the Detroit Tigers
and ran the team's record in elimination games to 6-0 this postseason. The
final out came as rain poured down on AT&T Park and
ended in an appropriate fashion as Matt Holliday popped out to Game 2 run-in
mate Marco Scutaro.
The
Giants
are the 11th team in postseason history to overcome a 3-1 deficit in a
seven-game series and the first since the 2007 Boston Red Sox came back to beat
the Cleveland Indians in the ALCS. (St.
Louis fans should be familiar with such heartbreak. The
1996, '85 and '68 Cardinals also blew 3-1 leads while going on to lose the
series.)
Leading
lads: Scutaro capped off his series MVP performance with
a 3-for-4 night and led a Giants lineup that saw every starter notch at least
one hit. Brandon Belt put an exclamation point on the whole affair, launching a
moonshot home run to right field in the bottom of the eighth inning.
[Related:
The 2012 World Series schedule is set]
The
numbers of Giants starter Matt Cain were not eye-popping, but the right-hander
did exactly what he needed to do, striking out four and spreading five hits and
a walk over 5 2/3 innings of scoreless baseball. Four relievers — Jeremy
Affeldt, Santiago Casilla, Javier Lopez and Sergio Romo — then took the team
the rest of the way home.
(Getty Images)Head
hangers: Kyle Lohse answered a lot of questions for the Cardinals
this season, but the free agent-to-be bombed in what might be his last start
for St. Louis. The
34-year-old right-hander gave up five earned run and failed to record an out in
the third inning before getting yanked. The six relievers behind him hardly
faired any better, though it didn't make a difference with the offense the
Cardinals had been sending to the plate. St.
Louis was shut out for the second time in three games and
managed only one run in its Game 6 defeat.
St.
Louis rookie shortstop Pete Kozma had a particularly bad
night, breaking the wrong way on a key play, making a bad throw home on another
and going 0 for 3 with two strikeouts at the plate.
Key play: Hunter
Pence's awkwardly hit double faked out Kozma and brought home a total of three
runs to start the five-run third inning.
Interesting
stat: Though the NLCS went seven games, it featured only one
lead change and that was when Matt Carpenter hit a two-run homer in the bottom
of the third in Game 3. San Francisco outscored
St. Louis 27-2 in
its four wins while St. Louis
outscored San Francisco 17-8 in
its three victories.
[Y! Sports Fan Shop: Buy San Francisco Giants championship merchandise]
What
they'll be talking about: How do the Giants keep on doing
this? They overcame a 2-0 deficit in the NLDS to beat the Cincinnati Reds and
have now staged a 3-1 comeback against the St. Louis Cardinals. It was the
first Game 7 victory in Giants postseason history. The collapse has to sting
for Cardinals fans, though the bitter feelings will eventually be softened with
more viewing of that 2011 World Series title DVD and a
great organization that produces postseason trips on a frequent basis.
What's
next: The Giants will welcome the Detroit Tigers to AT&T Park for Game
1 of the World Series on Wednesday night. It's the second time in three years
that the Fall Classic will begin in San
Francisco.
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