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For the second time in three years, a bearded closer for the Giants leaps into Buster Posey's arms after closing out the World Series. Is this becoming a trend? |
HOW DID THEY GET HERE?: GIANTS.
It's too easy to say that luck played a huge factor in the Giants' championship run. Sure, they won it all in 2010, but 2011 was a lost season for them. They missed the chance to repeat by missing the postseason altogether, Buster Posey missed most of the season with a broken leg, and the offense was truly abysmal. Aubrey Huff led the team with a .246 batting average. Pablo Sandoval led with 70 RBI and 134 hits. So, when they let midseason pickup Carlos Beltran walk last offseason and swung a trade with the Royals that got them Melky Cabrera, it was clear that they were thinking about improving at the plate more so than in the field or on the mound. And while Cabrera's performance in the All-Star Game and in many games during the regular season paid off, the eventual 50-game suspension for his use of PEDs surprisingly didn't hurt the team as much as predicted. Behind Posey, a sudden MVP candidate, Sandoval, who had a bounceback season for the ages, and trade acquisitions Marco Scutaro and Hunter Pence contributing as well, their offense became immensely better. Although Tim Lincecum struggled mightily, Matt Cain, Ryan Vogelsong and Barry Zito held the rotation together while Sergio Romo and Santiago Casilla filled the beard-shaped void left by Brian Wilson in the bullpen.
It's too easy to say that luck played a huge factor in the Giants' championship run. Sure, they won it all in 2010, but 2011 was a lost season for them. They missed the chance to repeat by missing the postseason altogether, Buster Posey missed most of the season with a broken leg, and the offense was truly abysmal. Aubrey Huff led the team with a .246 batting average. Pablo Sandoval led with 70 RBI and 134 hits. So, when they let midseason pickup Carlos Beltran walk last offseason and swung a trade with the Royals that got them Melky Cabrera, it was clear that they were thinking about improving at the plate more so than in the field or on the mound. And while Cabrera's performance in the All-Star Game and in many games during the regular season paid off, the eventual 50-game suspension for his use of PEDs surprisingly didn't hurt the team as much as predicted. Behind Posey, a sudden MVP candidate, Sandoval, who had a bounceback season for the ages, and trade acquisitions Marco Scutaro and Hunter Pence contributing as well, their offense became immensely better. Although Tim Lincecum struggled mightily, Matt Cain, Ryan Vogelsong and Barry Zito held the rotation together while Sergio Romo and Santiago Casilla filled the beard-shaped void left by Brian Wilson in the bullpen.
HOW DID THEY GET HERE?: TIGERS.
The signing of Prince Fielder caused expectations for a World Series title to skyrocket in Detroit, and rightfully so. He would be batting behind powerhouse Miguel Cabrera, while having the reigning Cy Young and MVP winner Justin Verlander protecting him on the mound. It seemed like destiny. After losing last year's ALCS to the Rangers, the Tigers knew they had to retool. And when Victor Martinez went down with a torn ACL early in Spring Training, with Fielder still available, the Tigers pounced. Cabrera has been an MVP and Triple Crown threat for years, almost coming close to winning both on several occasions, but nobody could have predicted this would be the year that he would actually win the Crown, and possibly the MVP (damn you, Mike Trout). With Jose Valverde coming off a perfect season with 49 saves, the bullpen got a boost from signing Octavio Dotel, fresh off his championship win with the Cardinals. Doug Fister, Max Scherzer and midseason pickup Anibal Sanchez held the rotation down behind Verlander. All the pieces seemed to be in place for Detroit to finally hoist the Commissioner's Trophy again for the first time since 1984. They found themselves trailing the White Sox for the division for nearly the entire season, until they surged past the Chicago boys in the final week and into the playoffs.
The signing of Prince Fielder caused expectations for a World Series title to skyrocket in Detroit, and rightfully so. He would be batting behind powerhouse Miguel Cabrera, while having the reigning Cy Young and MVP winner Justin Verlander protecting him on the mound. It seemed like destiny. After losing last year's ALCS to the Rangers, the Tigers knew they had to retool. And when Victor Martinez went down with a torn ACL early in Spring Training, with Fielder still available, the Tigers pounced. Cabrera has been an MVP and Triple Crown threat for years, almost coming close to winning both on several occasions, but nobody could have predicted this would be the year that he would actually win the Crown, and possibly the MVP (damn you, Mike Trout). With Jose Valverde coming off a perfect season with 49 saves, the bullpen got a boost from signing Octavio Dotel, fresh off his championship win with the Cardinals. Doug Fister, Max Scherzer and midseason pickup Anibal Sanchez held the rotation down behind Verlander. All the pieces seemed to be in place for Detroit to finally hoist the Commissioner's Trophy again for the first time since 1984. They found themselves trailing the White Sox for the division for nearly the entire season, until they surged past the Chicago boys in the final week and into the playoffs.
WHAT WENT RIGHT?: GIANTS.
Their record in postseason elimination games, the theory that their pitching might actually be TOO good, and Pablo Sandoval. Except for the 1985 Royals, no team has ever won as many elimination games in a single postseason as the Giants did this year. In 6 separate games throughout the first two rounds of the playoffs, they had their backs against the wall, after going down 0-2 to the Reds in the Division Series and 3-1 to the Cardinals in the Championship Series. And yet, they just kept battling back. Could anyone have guessed that Barry Zito would have thrown a gem of a Game 5 in the NLCS in 2012? How could we have known that Tim Lincecum would shine in the playoffs, as a reliever? Did anyone speculate that Matt Cain would become the only hurler to win the clinching game of 3 postseason series in a single year? The mind reels when considering how good the Giants' pitching is. It almost seems unfathomable that they can throw out literally any pitcher they have, and he has a good chance to beat you. And what else do we need to say about Pablo Sandoval, the new World Series MVP? He became the 4th player in history to hit 3 home runs in a World Series game, in good company with Babe Ruth (who did it twice), Reggie Jackson and Albert Pujols. He could have flied out every other at-bat and still won MVP honors, but he ended up hitting .500 in these 4 games. Absolutely masterful.
Their record in postseason elimination games, the theory that their pitching might actually be TOO good, and Pablo Sandoval. Except for the 1985 Royals, no team has ever won as many elimination games in a single postseason as the Giants did this year. In 6 separate games throughout the first two rounds of the playoffs, they had their backs against the wall, after going down 0-2 to the Reds in the Division Series and 3-1 to the Cardinals in the Championship Series. And yet, they just kept battling back. Could anyone have guessed that Barry Zito would have thrown a gem of a Game 5 in the NLCS in 2012? How could we have known that Tim Lincecum would shine in the playoffs, as a reliever? Did anyone speculate that Matt Cain would become the only hurler to win the clinching game of 3 postseason series in a single year? The mind reels when considering how good the Giants' pitching is. It almost seems unfathomable that they can throw out literally any pitcher they have, and he has a good chance to beat you. And what else do we need to say about Pablo Sandoval, the new World Series MVP? He became the 4th player in history to hit 3 home runs in a World Series game, in good company with Babe Ruth (who did it twice), Reggie Jackson and Albert Pujols. He could have flied out every other at-bat and still won MVP honors, but he ended up hitting .500 in these 4 games. Absolutely masterful.
WHAT WENT RIGHT?: TIGERS.
Their perseverance in the regular season and unwillingness to allow the White Sox to run away with the division. Cabrera winning the first Triple Crown in 45 years, Fielder continuing his streak of .300/30/100 seasons in his first year in the AL, and a healthy Fister certainly didn't hurt either. As far as what went right in the postseason, well...
Their perseverance in the regular season and unwillingness to allow the White Sox to run away with the division. Cabrera winning the first Triple Crown in 45 years, Fielder continuing his streak of .300/30/100 seasons in his first year in the AL, and a healthy Fister certainly didn't hurt either. As far as what went right in the postseason, well...
WHAT WENT WRONG?: GIANTS.
It begins and ends with Buster Posey's offensive slump. While it clearly didn't impede the San Fran crew, his performance at the plate didn't touch what he did behind it. He hit 3 home runs, one of which was a grand slam in the final game of the NLDS against the Reds, but his average for the postseason was just .200. He struck out 15 times in 60 at-bats and walked 8 times. Sure, he's never been a power hitter, nor will he ever be. This isn't a catcher who will pass 30 home runs. He recorded 24 this year, and that may prove to be a career high. Still, it's hard to imagine anyone in San Francisco complaining about that. Otherwise, there isn't much that went wrong with the Giants this postseason. Hell, Barry Zito got the win in Game 1 and Tim Lincecum found more success in the bullpen than he did in the rotation at any point this season. Wacky things happen in October.
It begins and ends with Buster Posey's offensive slump. While it clearly didn't impede the San Fran crew, his performance at the plate didn't touch what he did behind it. He hit 3 home runs, one of which was a grand slam in the final game of the NLDS against the Reds, but his average for the postseason was just .200. He struck out 15 times in 60 at-bats and walked 8 times. Sure, he's never been a power hitter, nor will he ever be. This isn't a catcher who will pass 30 home runs. He recorded 24 this year, and that may prove to be a career high. Still, it's hard to imagine anyone in San Francisco complaining about that. Otherwise, there isn't much that went wrong with the Giants this postseason. Hell, Barry Zito got the win in Game 1 and Tim Lincecum found more success in the bullpen than he did in the rotation at any point this season. Wacky things happen in October.
WHAT WENT WRONG?: TIGERS.
...Well, damn near everything. Maybe the sweep of the Yankees in the ALCS made them a little too cocky, and they got ahead of themselves. Maybe that week off did them in, just like it did when they lost to the Cardinals in the Fall Classic of 2006. Maybe Fielder felt too much pressure to live up to his immense contract in his first season with the Tigers, and the first World Series in his career. Whatever it was, this was not the team that surged past the Bronx Bombers behind big at-bats from Young and Fielder, or shutout performances by Verlander and Fister. They played sloppy in the field, allowing too many errors and not executing enough double plays, certainly nowhere near as many as the team they faced. Their Gold Glove-caliber centerfielder Austin Jackson made several crucial errors, a surprise for such a talented young player. Verlander, still considered the best pitcher in baseball right now, continued to prove that he is not a big game pitcher, notching a 11.25 ERA in his one start this World Series (4 innings, 4 strikeouts, and 5 runs allowed, including 2 home runs by Sandoval en route to 3). This is, of course, after he allowed 5 runs to the NL All-Stars back in July that, ironically, gave the Giants home field advantage, something else that worked against these Tigers (not that they performed any better at their home stadium, but you get the point). Young and Jhonny Peralta, heroes against the Yanks, both got shut down at the plate in the same vein as Cabrera and Fielder. Valverde yielded the closer's role to Phil Coke, both of whom blew a save situation when they most needed to close it out. Basically, the Giants made the Tigers look like the Tigers made the Yankees look a little under 2 weeks ago. And in this case, that's not a good thing.
CAN THEY DO IT AGAIN?: GIANTS.
Yes. Absolutely. We should have seen this coming years ago. This is a team that is built to last: they're young, they're loose, and they're talented. Posey is just 25, even though he looks like he's 16. Cain signed a 5 year extension earlier this season, and will give the Giants his prime years. Lincecum's bullpen performance gives hope for a bounceback year in 2013. Sandoval has finally regained his power swing, and still defends third base like a player half his weight. Oh yeah, we'll be seeing them in the World Series again.
Yes. Absolutely. We should have seen this coming years ago. This is a team that is built to last: they're young, they're loose, and they're talented. Posey is just 25, even though he looks like he's 16. Cain signed a 5 year extension earlier this season, and will give the Giants his prime years. Lincecum's bullpen performance gives hope for a bounceback year in 2013. Sandoval has finally regained his power swing, and still defends third base like a player half his weight. Oh yeah, we'll be seeing them in the World Series again.
CAN THEY DO IT AGAIN?: TIGERS.
Probably. Maybe even better next time. Fielder finally has a taste of serious postseason play, and he can't do much worse in another Fall Classic than he did in this one (1 for 14 at the plate). Cabrera is still just 30 years old, and a second championship title (he was a rookie for the 2003 Marlins) would boost his potential Hall of Fame credentials. Verlander is chomping at the bit for another opportunity to prove that he can deliver in the highest of high-tension games. Don't ever count the Tigers out.
As another season begins to fade into the rearview mirror, we at TBF want to congratulate the San Francisco Giants for winning their 7th title in franchise history, and for doing so in such a masterful way. But just because the season is over doesn't mean we're done here at The Baseball Freak. Keep it tuned here for all the offseason awards, signings and trades, as well as the same in-depth analysis you've come to know and love.
Probably. Maybe even better next time. Fielder finally has a taste of serious postseason play, and he can't do much worse in another Fall Classic than he did in this one (1 for 14 at the plate). Cabrera is still just 30 years old, and a second championship title (he was a rookie for the 2003 Marlins) would boost his potential Hall of Fame credentials. Verlander is chomping at the bit for another opportunity to prove that he can deliver in the highest of high-tension games. Don't ever count the Tigers out.
As another season begins to fade into the rearview mirror, we at TBF want to congratulate the San Francisco Giants for winning their 7th title in franchise history, and for doing so in such a masterful way. But just because the season is over doesn't mean we're done here at The Baseball Freak. Keep it tuned here for all the offseason awards, signings and trades, as well as the same in-depth analysis you've come to know and love.