Tag: 2010 World Series

World Series Game 2: Have The Texas Rangers Finally Run Out Of Magic?

As I write this sentence, the Texas Rangers are down to their final strike in Game 2.  One strike away from being down 2-0 in the World Series.

The game was completely within reach for Texas as late as the 7th inning, when they were only trailing by the score of 1-0, with C.J. Wilson hanging in there for the most part against Giants starter Matt Cain.

Then the Texas bullpen came in, and failed to keep it within distance for the Rangers offense. In fact, they took what was a pitching duel and turned it into a laugher pretty damn quickly.

Darren O’Day allowed a run.  Derek Holland let three score without recording a single out.  Mark Lowe let two more score, again not getting one batter out.  Michael Kirkman finally ended the carnage, but even he let a run score.

Seven of the nine runs San Francisco scored came in the eighth inning.  Had Texas been able to escape that bottom frame, they would have gone up against Giants closer Brian Wilson, who’s known for making every outing extremely difficult (see the Giants slogan: Torture.) only two runs down.

Somewhere between that first paragraph and this one, Jeff Francoeur flew out to right field to end the game.  Now, it’s official: The Rangers are currently in a hole.   A big one.

Where’s the team that bounced back from their ALCS Game 1 collapse against the Yankees?

Where’s the team that felt no heat when the Tampa Bay Rays came back from a 2-0 series deficit and forced a Game 5?

They’re still there.  In body, and according to many experts who’ve been witnessing the World Series first-hand, in spirit

But this time, they don’t have Cliff Lee up their sleeve.  When the Yankees shocked the Rangers in the last round, the Rangers didn’t panic.  They had Cliff Lee looming in Game 3.

When the Rays won two straight in Arlington to push the ALDS to a Game 5, the Rangers didn’t panic.  They had Cliff Lee ready to go.

Now, they don’t have that.  Cliff Lee’s next scheduled start is Game 5, or maybe even Game 4 depending on how much Texas manager Ron Washington is panicking right now.

The Rangers can’t even fully depend on Lee now though.  He got rocked for six earned runs in Game 1 and didn’t make it out of the fifth inning, against a rather intimidating Giants offense.

What can the Rangers do now? 

Well, they need to hope Colby Lewis and Tommy Hunter can pitch the Rangers into a 2-2 series tie (while avoiding the bullpen as much as possible) going into Game 5, where they can put Cliff Lee on the table, knowing full well no matter what they’ll be going back to San Francisco.

They also need to prove something to the baseball world.  Because for the first time this postseason, they’re going to have to win knowing that Cliff Lee isn’t there to bail them out.  The Rangers might not make it to Lee.

The Rangers were sure loose before the World Series, but once the players are between the lines for real, the Fall Classic can do some weird things to people.

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World Series Game 2: Matt Cain Able To Lead Giants To Victory

Much has been made of the Giants’ Tim Lincecum and the Rangers’ Cliff Lee, and with good reason.

But after that matchup failed to produce the expected pitching duel, the Giants’ Matt Cain more than filled the ace role for San Francisco as they took a two games to none lead in the World Series, winning 9-0.

It’s about time we recognized Cain for the stud pitcher he is. After finishing the 2010 season with a 3.14 ERA and 177 K’s with 61 walks in over 223 innings, the Giants’ number two starter has been number one in the postseason.

Cain has now gone more than 22 innings without giving up an earned run.

But the game two victory took more than just the pitching of Matt Cain.

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2010 World Series: Giants vs. Rangers Game 2 Live Blog

The Texas Rangers were embarrassed by the San Francisco Giants in Game One of the 2010 World Series, losing 11-7.

The “unbeatable” Cliff Lee gave up six runs in a game where the Rangers lost by four.

Freddy Sanchez was the man of the night for San Fran, hitting four doubles and driving in three.

C.J Wilson will take the mound for Texas and try to give the Rangers a chance to head home with a split series.

Matt Cain will oppose him for the Giants.

Can the Giants be the first NL team to win Game Two of the World Series since the Diamondbacks in 2001?

Stay right here to find out.

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World Series 2010: Texas Rangers Look to Rebound from Game 1 Loss

Cliff Lee was thought to be invincible, and his postseason record proved that he just might be. He had never lost in the postseason, that is until Game 1 of the World Series.

Game 1 was a disaster for the Rangers. They allowed 14 hits and 11 runs, with Cliff Lee allowing a postseason-high of six. They made four errors, which was uncharacteristic for a normally solid Rangers team. Cliff Lee was pounded around for 4 2/3 innings.

When the dust settled in the fifth inning, the Rangers were down 5-2, and Cliff Lee was taken out of the game. By the time the inning was over, the Rangers were down 8-2, and Game 1 might as well have been over.

So much for the unbeatable Cliff Lee, so much for the Clee Facts, so much for the “I heart Clee shirts, the absurdity that was “Cliff Lee’s wife doesn’t flirt with him because no one hits on Cliff Lee” turned into anyone and everyone can hit on Cliff Lee.

Lee was unable to locate his breaking pitches and was forced to abandon those altogether. He was forced into being a strictly fastball/cutter pitcher, and that was not working either. Countless times his cutter drifted over the middle of the plate, allowing the Giants to tee-off on Lee.

If you would have told me before the game that Cliff Lee would have more hits than Josh Hamilton, I would have laughed at you, even though Cliff Lee was put up on this high pedestal. Hamilton could not produce a hit, while Lee produced a double in the second inning.

Freddy Sanchez had three doubles in his first three at bats off of Cliff Lee, and everyone was pounding the ball.

The matchup of aces Cliff Lee and Tim Lincecum quickly turned into an afterthought, as both made early exits. The Rangers, rookies in the World Series, played just like you would expect any rookie. They were jittery and nervous, and it showed in their play. Even the great Cliff Lee showed his nervousness throughout the game.

“I think it’s just baseball. That’s the only thing you can say,” Sanchez said. “This is a crazy game.”

“I was trying to make adjustments,” Lee said. “I was up. I was down. I was in. I was out. I was trying to find it, and I was never really consistent with what I was doing.”

This has been the “year of the pitcher”, but if Game 1 was any indication, it will be the World Series of the hitter.

The Giants won 11-7 in a game that was never really that close.

What does this mean for the Rangers?

The Rangers desperately need a win tonight, and they will give the ball to left-hander, C.J. Wilson. Wilson has been the Rangers most consistent pitcher this year, and has snapped Texas’ losing streaks time and time again this season. The Rangers will need him to do just that tonight.

He will be facing Matt Cain tonight, who could be difficult for the Rangers to rebound against.  Cain has allowed one run, nine hits and struck out 11 over 13 2/3 innings while going 1-0 in two starts this postseason. These are impressive stats, and the Rangers will need to produce runs if they want to go back to Texas with the series tied.

A 2-0 deficit is not insurmountable, but it will put the Rangers in a hole that I am not sure they could dig out of.

The Rangers look to rebound tonight against the Giants, and they will need a solid effort from C.J. Wilson to do so.

B/R Prediction: Texas Rangers 5, San Francisco Giants 4

 

For questions regarding the article, please comment or send me an e-mail.

Paul Ferguson is an intern at Bleacher Report.

Visit www.cleefacts.com

Follow him on twitter at: @paulwall5


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2010 World Series: San Francisco Giants Misfits or Just Better Than Your Team?

Expect a healthy dose of torture tonight. 

After last night’s offensive firestorm, where the San Francisco Giants ran up a week’s worth of runs in one game, tonight should be a nice reversion to the tense, nail-biting and familiar mean. 

Cue “The Machine” and bring on the thumbscrews. 

The ability of the Giants to persevere in ridiculously tight matchups, has generated a fan base mirroring the same attributes.  Fans who can maintain a pure hope for success during a one-run lead and cheer for their team just as vociferously during a two-run deficit. 

This purity within the San Francisco Giants fan base is one that I hope will be maintained and one which other notable fan bases have, unfortunately, replaced with complaining, excuses and an air of expectation.   

When I read the East Coast press endlessly describing the “luck” that went into the ascension of the “misfit” San Francisco Giants to the 2010 World Series, the more I just see a sniffling bully off in the corner, trying to explain his black eyes.   

Sometimes luck has nothing to do with it and you actually lose because the other guy was just more talented.  Not because he had a “good day” or had a bunch of “retreads” or because you “choked” or because you “lost” the series, but just because he beat you four times before you could do it to him.   

The stories portending a “ratings implosion” and “unwatchable World Series”, ring more of pure jealousy than of any kind of objective journalism.  

Did last night’s game strike anyone as unwatchable?  

And to further suggest that just because many sulking East Coast fans will not be tuning into the World Series, and that fact somehow lessens the achievement, is just sour grapes at it’s highest level.     

Nothing has come easy for the San Francisco Giants or their fans.  We’ve had line drives, earthquakes and a manager who liked to give out early souvenir balls.  As such, the loyal Giants supporters are the furthest thing from an expectant fan base and ones who will hopefully maintain that attribute, if continued success chooses to shine on this team.Fans who will be living every game like a gift versus an assumption.  

If you have ever followed the San Francisco 49ers, you are aware of the dangers that routine success can breed.

Fighting that birthright urge to place your beloved team above all others, solely on their previous, historic successes is difficult.  It remains an intense struggle to keep your objectivity and fight that temptation, even in the face of blatant empirical evidence.  It becomes very easy to close your eyes to reality and delude yourself into thinking that that your champions “just got unlucky” again.

To stubbornly refuse to give credit to the teams that beat yours. Even when all objective reason, in the form of mounting losses and aged stars, points clearly to the fact that the current team you worship only shares the same uniform colors as the one that wrote the legend. 

Fighting this is not as easy as wearing a fake beard to a game and cheering on Steve Perry in the Club Level as he leads “Don’t Stop Believin’” (which was awesome) or making a few “Ross Boss” signs.  The haze of endless winning seasons, multiple playoff appearances and championships, is where the real danger of becoming a pouting supporter lurks. 

Sometimes, you just get beaten up by the unassuming drama geek with a dynamite right-right-left-left pitching combination.  You can get watery eyes and bellyache when that happens or you can give credit where credit is due. 

Granted, maybe you didn’t see the punch coming in your cocoon of perceived dominance, but that happens in life—and it just happened to your team.   

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2010 World Series: Texas Rangers Ace Cliff Lee in Select Company

Few things have been more certain that Cliff Lee’s dominance in the playoffs over the last two seasons.

Sure, there’s the sunrise and, nearly as certain, sunset.

There’s Glenn Beck angering liberals and Jon Stewart offending conservatives. 

And there’s MTV killing the brain cells of children with Jersey Shore.

But other than those things, there are few things you could set your clock by with more certainty than Cliff Lee shutting down opponents in October. Going into last night’s Game 1 of the World Series, Lee had allowed only two postseason earned runs while striking out 35 and walking one.

Wow.

Nevertheless, Lee got shellacked last night. Courtesy of baseballreference.com blogger “Andy”, we now know that Lee’s performance is tied for the 13th-worst Game Score in World Series Game 1 history.

Wow again.

Never fear, though, Cliff Lee fans. The company he’s keeping on this list is actually pretty impressive. Here is a look at the top seven pitchers to have sucked as bad as Cliff Lee did in Game 1 of a World Series.

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Sanchez Goes Extra Mile to Achieve Dream

Getting an opportunity to play in Major League Baseball doesn’t come without sacrifice and hard work. Everyone that gets there goes a different route in realizing their dreams.

Some players have more obstacles in front of them than others, which make the success of San Francisco Giants’ second baseman Freddy Sanchez quite remarkable.

If Sanchez is to go on and become the most valuable player of the World Series, it would top an already incredible career that has included three All-Star appearances and a National League batting crown.

Born with a pigeon-toed left foot and a club right foot, Sanchez’s parents were faced with the fear that he might never walk. But surgery at a young age helped correct the problem.

Sanchez grew up across the street from the baseball field at Burbank High School, about 20 minutes north of downtown Los Angeles. Having covered many of Burbank’s games during Freddy’s four years there, the Bulldogs were definitely on tough times, even though they made a brief playoff appearance during Sanchez’s junior year.

In his four years, there were three varsity baseball coaches, the last of which passed away just a short time after Sanchez graduated from high school.

Success was not something Burbank was used to. It hadn’t produced a big leaguer since Ralph Botting, who briefly appeared for the California Angels in 1979 and 1980.

The talent around Sanchez was clearly the worst in the five and later six-team Foothill League, which included schools from the Santa Clarita Valley, a baseball hotbed.

But Sanchez, who played shortstop, managed to earn the Foothill League’s Most Valuable Player award his senior year. The honor was remarkable because Burbank did not finish amongst the league’s top three teams, and thus missed the playoffs.

It was even more remarkable because of the division of the six teams in the league. Four of the six were based in Santa Clarita, with Burbank and its crosstown rival, Burroughs, being the others. Some within the two programs in Burbank felt they were at a clear disadvantage when it came to voting amongst coaches in the all-league meeting since it was perceived that the schools in the two cities stuck together in the voting.

Sanchez was drafted by the Atlanta Braves in the 30th round out of high school, but did not sign and decided to go to nearby Glendale Community College. This way he was able to stay close to his parents and his high school sweetheart Alissa, who was a grade behind him. They would later marry.

After two years at Glendale, Sanchez transferred. But he didn’t make the jump a Division I program. Instead he ended up at Dallas Baptist University, an NAIA school for his junior year. He stayed just one year and spent his senior year at Oklahoma City University, where he was named an NAIA All-Star in 2000.

From there Sanchez was drafted in the 11th round by the Boston Red Sox, an organization that generally spends money on high-priced free agents and is generally not prospect friendly.

Sure enough, Sanchez was eventually shipped to the Pittsburgh Pirates, a club that was very similar to his high school team.

But it was in Pittsburgh where Sanchez thrived, winning the 2006 batting title and earning three All-Star appearances.

However in 2009 the club had continued to struggle and with doubts over whether Sanchez wanted to sign a long-term contract, it decided to rebuild again by trading him to the Giants.

More than a year later, Sanchez became the first player in Major League history to collect doubles in his first three World Series at-bats.

Miracles are no longer linked with Freddy Sanchez, so it would not be a surprise to see him win his sport’s ultimate prize.

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World Series 2010: Texas Rangers Wise Up and Bench Vladimir Guerrero

When Texas Rangers manager Ron Washington wrote in Vladimir Guerrero as his starting right fielder for Game 1 of the 2010 World Series, he probably saw things going a bit differently.

Guerrero and the Rangers lost the Series opener 11-7, with starting pitcher Cliff Lee failing to make it through the fifth inning.

Guerrero drove in two runs in the contest, one in the first inning and one in the ninth. That was hardly impressive given his opportunities during the night.

His defense, however, led to at least two San Francisco runs. Guerrero committed two errors in the bottom of the eighth inning, a frame in which the Giants pushed across three runs to put the game far out of reach.

Guerrero played only 18 games in the field this year after playing just twice in right field in 2009. Washington surely would prefer to have Guerrero at his usual designated hitter position, especially because Guerrero’s age and accumulated leg injuries have left him lacking as much for range as for reliability in the field.

Guerrero misplayed or nearly misplayed four balls that did not even show up as errors in the final line and generally looked lost. His arm probably retains some of the fire that intimidated baserunners during his tenure with the Montreal Expos, but the days when he could use that arm and his speed to make up for bad routes and tentative handling of the ball on easy flies and ground-ball singles are long gone.

The Rangers rationalized Guerrero’s misadventures simply by minimizing them: “A couple balls got by him,” said Washington, who added that he plans to play Guerrero again Thursday night in Game 2. He has since reversed that position, though.

Presumably, the real reasoning for keeping Guerrero in the lineup would be to augment the team’s lineup, and on the surface, that logic might hold up. Under more intense scrutiny, though, chinks in Guerrero’s offensive armor in Game 1 become apparent.

In the top of the first inning, Guerrero came up with runners on second and third and one out. He drove in a run on a single in that at-bat, but the hit was a one-hopper off the leg of Giants hurler Tim Lincecum. With two runners in scoring position, Guerrero had gotten just one home and did so in fairly fluky fashion.

Guerrero did not come up with runners on base again until the ninth, this time with the bases loaded and one away. Guerrero earned another RBI, but did so with a sacrifice fly that brought Texas to within one out of losing.

In the end, his line showed Guerrero as a solid hitter with two RBI. Given the four runners in scoring position when he came to the plate, though, and since he gave up an out to record the second, the two RBI are not quite as impressive as they seem. He did a decent job, but no more.

Instead of accepting Guerrero’s nightmarish defense in the hope of getting a breakout performance against Giants right-hander Matt Cain in Game 2, Washington should insert David Murphy in left field and move Nelson Cruz over to right. In the past two seasons, Guerrero’s OPS against right-handed pitching is a shade under .820. Murphy’s is a shade over .830 in the same time frame.

Murphy is just average in left field, but his presence would allow the strong defender Cruz to move over to a spot much more comfortable to him, in right.

Guerrero could be used in a high-leverage pinch-hitting situation, especially against a left-handed reliever, but the Rangers would be better off on the whole by using Murphy to start Game 2. Succumbing to reason< Washington has slotted Murphy in. Keep an eye on this move, which could help the Rangers even the Series on its way back to Arlington.

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World Series Game 1: Texas Rangers’ Report Card Vs. the San Francisco Giants

Well, Game 1 of the 2010 World Series between the Texas Rangers and San Francisco Giants didn’t unfold quite the way the boys from Arlington expected.

There was far too little “claw and antlers,” and the Rangers were given ample reason to “fear the beard.”

Many observers had seemingly bequeathed the opening game to Texas, based solely on the fact that Cliff Lee, baseball’s newest playoff hero, was on the mound. The man had been 7-0 in his eight career playoff starts; but as the old axiom goes, “That’s why they play the games.”

It’s never wise to underestimate an opponent in the postseason. I’m not suggesting the Rangers did, but Texas looked flat in many key aspects of their play, a far cry from the way they played in the first two rounds of the playoffs.

After Texas jumped out to an early 2-0 lead with Cliff Lee on the mound, most people probably assumed that the Rangers already had Game 1 in the bag. And it’s possible that scenario crept into the minds of the Rangers, ever so slightly.

The offense wasn’t the issue as they managed to get to Giants ace Tim Lincecum for four runs in a less-than-stellar start for him. Texas tallied seven runs on 11 hits total.

However, the Rangers’ normally reliable play in other facets of the game abandoned them, and they were left with a massively disappointing start to the franchise’s first-ever World Series.

Of course, it is a best-of-seven set, so there is time for Texas to rebound and create their own momentum in the series. But they have to do their absolute best to put a comprehensively sloppy game behind them and not let it damage their confidence moving forward.

Let’s take a look at how the Texas Rangers fared in several key aspects of the game during their inaugural entry in baseball’s Fall Classic. 

 

Starting Pitching: C

After last night, we finally discovered that Cliff Lee is, in fact, mortal. 

Though his previous performances in the last two postseasons may have suggested otherwise, Game 1 proved that if a pitcher doesn’t have his best command, then he’s hittable, no matter what his prior numbers or reputation may suggest.

Staked to an early two-run lead, Lee appeared to be in the driver’s seat, but he never quite looked like the ace we’ve become familiar with.

He left several more pitches up than we are accustomed to seeing, and may have gotten away with a few very hittable pitches in the first few innings. The Giants swung through a few mistakes early that could have potentially resulted in big hits. Lee didn’t have command of his breaking pitches, and several times missed up and away with those pitches to right-handed batters.

When the Giants finally got to Lee in the bottom of the third, he was hurt by two Michael Young mistakes at third that gave the Giants a little momentum. The leadoff hitter in the inning, Edgar Renteria, hit one right at Young on his glove side that ate up the converted third baseman on a play he should have been made.

Lee was given a gift when Lincecum popped up a sac bunt attempt, but Cliff compounded his own problems when he hit Torres with a pitch. Freddy Sanchez then lined a run-scoring double past Young on a hit that appeared playable if not for Young shifting his weight onto the wrong foot and stepping the wrong direction when the ball was hit. Buster Posey followed Sanchez up with a game-tying single before Lee escaped by striking out Pat Burrell and Cody Ross to end the inning.

Lee was then chased from the game in the fifth, when five of the seven batters he faced in that inning reached base, four of them on hits. His command was off and the Giants feasted on his numerous mistakes when he pitched too near the strike zone.

We’ll never know if it was the long layoff between starts that did him in, or simply that he was due for a bad outing after the utter dominance he had displayed in his three postseason starts prior to last night. Whatever it was, Lee will likely shake it off and return stronger the next time he comes to the hill in the World Series, assuming the red-hot Giants don’t sweep the series before he gets to atone for his poor outing. 

 

Relief Pitching: C+

Though much of the tone was set early by Lee’s lack of command, the bullpen’s contribution didn’t make matters much easier for Ron Washington. When Lee was removed from the game, it was only 5-2, still easily within reach for an offense as potent as Texas’. 

The first reliever, Darren O’Day, normally a reliable right-hander who is death on righties, came in throwing meatballs.

After missing with two sliders to the first hitter he faced, O’Day let slip an 86 mile-per-hour fastball directly over the heart of the plate that Juan Uribe crushed for a devastating three-run home run that thrust the proverbial dagger into the hearts of the Rangers.

Once that happened, it was difficult to envision a miraculous comeback, as it emboldened the Giants and brought roaring approval from the thrilled AT&T Park crowd.

A true bright spot was Alexi Ogando, the flame-throwing righty who shut down the Giants in the sixth and seventh innings, allowing only one baserunner while striking out four.  

He regularly blew the ball by San Francisco hitters who had earlier feasted on Texas pitching. Though Ogando was little-used in the first two series, his Game 1 outing should give Washington the confidence to utilize him more often as the games progress.

Mark Lowe, recently added to the Texas roster in place of Clay Rapada, only served to throw fuel on the fire and put the game further out of the Rangers’ reach.

Lowe, who hadn’t even pitched for the Rangers until the last week of the season, was added to provide another right-handed veteran arm in the bullpen to combat San Francisco’s predominantly right-handed lineup. He faced only five batters, but allowed three hits and three runs. Of course, his poor outing was helped along by two Vladimir Guerrero errors within the span of four plays; but regardless, Lowe’s performance was less than confidence-inducing. 

In light of the Rangers’ scoring three runs in the ninth, if Lowe hadn’t helped the Giants expand their cushion from 8-4 to 11-4, it’s possible the game could have turned out differently.   

 

Hitting: B+

Offensively, the Rangers didn’t fare badly as they scored seven runs total on 11 hits.

They faced two-time defending Cy Young winner, Tim Lincecum, and hit him relatively well, scoring four runs on eight hits and two walks in only 5.2 innings. If not for the Giants’ battering Lee and the Rangers’ own miscues, Texas may very well have been happy with their offensive performance.

The Rangers may have had an opportunity to blow the game open in the top of the first, when Lincecum mysteriously didn’t throw the ball when he easily had Young trapped in no-man’s land between home and third. That mental miscue loaded the bases for Ian Kinsler, but he was impatient and swung at a first-pitch slider, grounding into a rally-killing double play that let the Giants off the hook early.

A few of the big bats, Young and Hamilton specifically, were quiet and left five men on base between them. Cruz and Kinsler combined to leave seven on between them as well, though Cruz had two RBIs. Lower in the order, Bengie Molina and Mitch Moreland had two hits apiece, continuing the hot hitting that each has enjoyed throughout the playoffs, which greatly lengthens the Texas lineup and makes it dangerous throughout.

Overall, the Rangers offensive performance was good enough to have won on most days, as they had 11 hits, 15 baserunners and scored seven runs. The Texas hitters were also 4-of-12 with runners in scoring position, and they produced two sacrifice flies with a runner on third.

Usually, with Lee on the mound, that’s plenty of offensive production, but on this day, it wasn’t enough. Lee had an uncharacteristically poor performance, and the Texas defense let the team down in the biggest game in Rangers franchise history. 

 

Defense: F

The most upsetting part of the game for the Rangers has to be their defensive failings, which helped build momentum for the Giants’ various rallies.

Without several key errors, the game could have possibly been vastly different. Three of the Rangers’ four errors led directly to Giants runs.

Young made two misplays in the Giants two-run third that led to runs, although only one was an error.

The inning’s leadoff hitter, Renteria, hit a ball right to Young’s glove side that ate up the inexperienced third baseman. Three batters later, Sanchez lined a run-scoring double right by Young’s glove that appeared catchable if not for a bizarre play by Young. He didn’t appear quite ready as the ball was hit, and he shifted his weight heavily onto his right foot, as if he expected Sanchez to pull the ball down the line. Once it was hit to his glove side, Young had no chance to play the liner with his body moving in the opposite direction. It may not have been obvious to everyone watching, but it was surely a ball Young had a much better chance on than first appeared.

Vlad’s two errors in the eighth inning were massively damaging and contributed heavily to an inning that saw San Francisco balloon its lead from four runs to seven.

The first one, on Renteria’s leadoff single to right, was a serious misjudgment. Vlad should have just casually played it for the single it was instead of approaching it so aggressively—it was a ball he had no play on. His poor outfield play will lead to further discussion over whether his bat outweighs his potential for fielding miscues in right when the Rangers play in the National League park.

Elvis Andrus contributed another error in the disastrous fifth inning, but his—mercifully—didn’t contribute to any more scoring. But by that point, the damage had already been done.

One bright spot was Ian Kinsler ranging deep into right center on a first-inning Buster Posey pop-up to make a spectacular running play and double Freddy Sanchez off second.

 

Baserunning: C-

As aggressive as the Rangers had been through the first two rounds of the playoffs, they didn”t get many opportunities to run on the Giants last night. The game situations didn’t yield many chances for them to steal bases, and once they were behind, they deemed it too risky to run.

Early in the first inning, the Rangers may have run themselves out of a chance to build an early cushion to deflate the Giants’ hopes.

With runners on first and third, Nelson Cruz hit a tapper to Lincecum. Young seemed slightly indecisive and got a poor jump from third. It appeared that they had the contact play on and he was going to advance home on any ball hit.  He did head toward home, but relatively slowly, and by the time Lincecum got the ball, Young had changed his mind and returned to third. Fortunately for the Rangers, the Giants’ ace misplayed the run-down, and Young was able to harmlessly return to third.  The next hitter, Kinsler, grounded into a double play on the next pitch, and the Rangers may have missed an opportunity on Young’s indecisive running.

Later in the game, Kinsler made a colossal baserunning mistake.

Trailing by four runs in the top of the eighth inning, Kinsler led off the frame with a chopper over the mound for a leadoff single, precisely what the Rangers needed to mount a comeback. Freddy Sanchez, while trying to make the tough play, threw wildly to first, but Aubrey Huff made a spectacular diving play to snare the errant throw. Kinsler, assuming the throw was heading elsewhere, aggressively rounded first, thinking that he was on his way to second.

However, the ball never made it out of the infield thanks to Huff’s brilliant play, and Kinsler was easily tagged out while attempting to return to the bag.

It took a great diving stop by Huff, but when trailing by four late in the game, the absolute last thing a team needs is to be overly aggressive on the basepaths, running themselves out of potential rallies. It was reminiscent of Kinsler’s error in getting picked off after leading off the bottom of the eighth while down by only one run against the Yankees in ALCS Game1. Mistakes like those are critical and can drain the life from any potential rally. 

 

Coaching: B

It becomes easy to question a coach’s decisions and planning when things don’t work out as well as you had originally hoped. Unfortunately, even the best-laid plans don’t always yield positive results. In hindsight, maybe playing Vlad in right field doesn’t appear to have been the best move, but how can you fault Washington for wanting one of his most potent bats in the lineup as often as possible?

Most coaches would have made the same move, as it is difficult to leave your team’s most productive RBI bat out of the lineup, even if he is best-suited for the designated hitter role.

Washington isn’t planning on using Vlad full-time in right during the games in San Francisco, but last night seemed a logical time to do it.

In the first game of the World Series, it would be desirable to get out to an early lead, and having your best hitters in the lineup to face the ace of the Giants’ pitching staff is a reasonably logical move. Of course, the move will be heavily scrutinized in hindsight, but it’s hardly a decision that wouldn’t have been made by most other managers.

The rest of the decisions were fairly reasonable, nothing out of the ordinary for Washington throughout most of the game.

His relief pitching maneuvers were fairly standard. Bringing in O’Day to face Uribe after Lee was chased would normally be the proper move, but on this day, O’Day simply didn’t execute. He left a very hittable fastball right over the plate and Uribe didn’t miss it.

Later, I would question using Lowe when the game was still reasonably close in the eighth. With an offense like the Rangers’, a four-run deficit is certainly not insurmountable. It would be desirable to keep the game close to allow your potent bats the opportunity to mount a late comeback.

Using Lowe, a hurler who hadn’t pitched in 24 days, and who had really only thrown three times since May due to injury, seemed like a risky proposition at best. After Ogando had done such a splendid job shutting the Giants down for two innings, I would have expected Washington to opt for a different arm, but he went with Lowe, who proceeded to allow three more runs, putting the game further out of reach. Of course, it may not have mattered anyway, but it certainly left the Texas manager open to questioning. 

 

Looking ahead to Game 2

Maybe it was jitters from playing in the first World Series for most of the Texas players.

The Rangers played far below their capabilities last night, especially on the defensive side of the game. If they expect to win the first World Series in franchise history, they will need to tighten up the glovework drastically to shut down this Giants team and their growing confidence.

Unfortunately, they simply got a bad night out of Cliff Lee, and they can likely expect much better from him if he gets another opportunity to pitch in the series.

The Rangers will send C.J. Wilson to the hill against San Francisco tonight, which should present a slight challenge to the Giants’ hitters. Lee, who is normally near the strike zone all night, allowed the free-swinging Giants to be aggressive and capitalize on Lee’s mistakes over the plate.

Wilson, a pitcher with less impeccable command than Lee, will force the Giants to be more patient, making sure they’re swinging at quality pitches and not expanding the zone, chasing his stuff off the plate. 

Offensively, Texas needs to continue doing precisely what they have been, hitting and more hitting.

Even in their two losses to the Yankees, they still hit plenty enough to win, and last night was no different. They’ll face a challenge in San Francisco’s other ace, Matt Cain, but the Rangers have shown that they are a dynamic offensive ballclub capable of putting up crooked numbers, so their confidence should remain high. If they get the opportunity, they will likely look to reignite their running game in an effort to fluster Cain and the young Posey behind the plate.

It will be interesting to see what Washington does with the Vlad situation in right. Though he failed spectacularly in Game 1, it’s difficult to leave a 115-RBI man out of your lineup.

If C.J. Wilson comes out strong early and maintains his command, I would expect the Rangers to follow suit and play a much crisper game than they did last night. Though the Giants appear to have some mojo working in their favor right now, Texas looked the same way when dispatching the Rays and Yankees over the first two rounds of playoff games.

The Giants were slightly sloppy themselves in Game 1, so, overall, expectations for a cleaner, better-fielded game from both sides should be high. Both pitchers are capable of shutdown performances that could produce a pitchers’ duel.

But the way both of these teams have been swinging the bat, we could very well see a slugfest of the type we witnessed last night.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


World Series 2010: Why San Francisco Giants Won Game 1

There’s something beautiful about the Giants.

More than the beards and the rally thongs, an intangible has sparked not only this team but an entire city. The Giants have been the underdog this entire season. But time and time again they have shown that they are a real championship contender.

With that, let’s break down the Giants’ Game 1 victory over Cliff Lee and the Rangers.

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