Comeback Kings: The San Francisco Giants' Incredible 2012 Championship Season
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About this ebook
The San Francisco Giants' 2012 postseason run was symbolic of the team's season. The 2012 season saw the Giants lose closer Brian Wilson to injury in April, overcome the departure of All-Star left fielder Melky Cabrera to suspension in August, and adjust to the season-long struggles of ace Tim Lincecum. Yet the Giants captured the National League West crown. In the National League playoffs, the Giants won a record six elimination games in the NLDS and NLCS to reach the World Series, where they swept the Detroit Tigers.
Packed with unique analysis and outstanding color photography from the Bay Area's largest newspaper publisher, Comeback Kings takes fans through the Giants' amazing journey, from spring training to Matt Cain's perfect game to Sergio Romo's mound celebration in Detroit. This commemorative edition also includes in-depth profiles of National League batting champion Buster Posey, manager Bruce Bochy, second baseman Marco Scutaro, and other fan favorites.
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Comeback Kings - Bay Area News Group
Contents
Introduction by Alex Pavlovic
World Series
World Series: Game 1
World Series: Game 2
World Series: Game 3
World Series: Game 4
World Series MVP Pablo Sandoval
Road to the Title
Offseason Moves Designed to Give Pitching a Hand
Buster Posey
Wilson Shelved for the Year
Sergio Romo
Matt Cain Pitches First Perfect Game in Giants History
Matt Cain
All-Star Game: Giant Romp
Marco Scutaro
Cabrera Receives 50-Game Suspension for PEDs
Bruce Bochy
Barry Zito
‘Relentless’ Giants Capture N.L. West Crown
National League Division Series
NLDS: Game 1
NLDS: Game 2
NLDS: Game 3
NLDS: Game 4
NLDS: Game 5
National League Championship Series
NLCS: Game 1
NLCS: Game 2
NLCS: Game 3
NLCS: Game 4
NLCS: Game 5
NLCS: Game 6
NLCS: Game 7
Giants right fielder Hunter Pence, who delivered fiery speeches all postseason long, rallies the troops before Game 5 of the NLDS. (Getty Images)
Introduction by Alex Pavlovic
The band of misfits gave way to a band of brothers, driven by the simple desire to spend one more day playing the game, one more day together on the diamond. On their final day as a team — and surely it will be the last as no team, however great, returns the next spring fully intact — the 2012 San Francisco Giants paraded down Market Street with a World Series trophy for the second time in three years.
The short trip down Market capped a long, improbable journey, one that seemed at its end numerous times between April and October.
During their stunning run, the Giants, a team with a heavy Latin presence, embraced the Spanish word pelea,
meaning fight.
We fight like an upside-down cat,
leadoff hitter Angel Pagan said.
As it turned out, they had nearly as many lives, too.
The Giants could have folded in April when closer Brian Wilson was lost for the year, or in mid-August when All-Star left fielder Melky Cabrera was suspended, or a week later when the Dodgers swung a set of blockbuster trades in an attempt to deliver the knockout blow. Instead, the Giants ran away with the division.
They could have surrendered in October when twice they found themselves one loss from elimination. Instead, sparked by a fiery Hunter Pence speech, they pushed their chips to the center of the table. If they were going to go down, they were going to go down fighting.
Pelea!
These guys come out with their slingshots and rocks and they’re going to fight you,
third base coach Tim Flannery said. These guys just believe.
The Giants believed when they fell behind two games to none in the National League Division Series before stunning the Cincinnati Reds by winning three straight games on the banks of the Ohio River. They believed when they fell behind three games to one in the National League Championship Series, only to outscore the St. Louis Cardinals 20-1 over the next three games.
In the World Series, the Giants were brimming with belief.
They beat Tigers ace Justin Verlander in Game 1 and beat him badly, Pablo Sandoval leading the way with a historic three-homer night. They won the next two games by not allowing a run, the first back-to-back Series shutouts since the legendary Baltimore Orioles staff blanked the Dodgers three straight in 1966. They completed the sweep with a 4-3 victory that was absurdly emblematic of their season, fighting back from a deficit to win on a 10th-inning single by Marco Scutaro, the journeyman infielder who became a giant star after his July 27 acquisition.
The Giants had every answer against Detroit, just as they had an answer to every challenge that arose along the way.
Giants center fielder Angel Pagan congratulates Ryan Theriot. In the starting lineup as the designated hitter, Theriot scored the winning run in Game 4 of the World Series. (Gary Reyes/Staff)
Everyone counted us out four or five times,
pitcher Ryan Vogelsong said. I think it’s the perseverance through the whole season that’s where we draw the confidence that it’s not over until the last out is made.
Their mettle was tested the first week of the season when Wilson, the man who clinched the final out of the 2010 World Series, needed reconstructive elbow surgery for a second time. The entire bullpen, led by charismatic right-hander Sergio Romo, picked up the slack.
In all, the Giants made 18 trips to the disabled list, two by Sandoval, who missed 53 games with first a hand injury and then a hamstring strain. Looking for a temporary solution at third base, General Manager Brian Sabean made a trade that barely registered on the national radar, sending minor league infielder Charlie Culberson to Colorado for Scutaro. The deal came to be known as a blockbuster,
as did Scutaro, who earned that nickname while leading the team’s late charge into the autumn. In October, he also became forever known as MVP of the National League Championship Series.
The Giants could have been excused for packing it in when Cabrera was suspended, for looking back on their series of misfortunes and determining that it just wasn’t their year. Manager Bruce Bochy had a different idea: Focus forward,
he told his players, and they did.
Needing to win an unprecedented three straight road games in the LDS against Cincinnati, Bochy delivered another speech before Game 3. Then Pence stood up in the cramped visitors’ clubhouse and started bouncing around like a linebacker.
Look into each other’s eyes,
Pence screamed. I want one more day with you. We must not give in. We owe it to each other. Play for each other!
The Giants came out of the rally throng
(as it was termed by our Daniel Brown) and toppled the Reds, then stunned the Cardinals, becoming the first team in MLB history to reach a World Series by winning six elimination games. The Tigers proved to be no match.
Posey, coming off the gruesome home plate collision that ended his 2011 season and threatened his career, punctuated one of the best seasons ever by a catcher with a grand slam that downed the Reds. Barry Zito, the long-beleaguered pitcher so out of sync in 2010 that the Giants left him off the postseason roster, won two of the biggest games in franchise history with dominating performances. Tim Lincecum shook off an unimaginably rocky season to become a shutdown reliever in October.
By the time the Giants were done throwing haymakers, their hands were being fitted for championship rings.
Giants pitcher Matt Cain, who allowed three runs during his Game 4 start in the World Series, celebrates the final out of the seventh inning. (Nhat V. Meyer/Staff)
World Series: Game 1
OCTOBER 24, 2012 | GIANTS 8, TIGERS 3
Pablo’s Show
Zito Solid, Sandoval Hits Three Home Runs in Game 1 Rout
By Alex Pavlovic
SAN FRANCISCO—After winning six elimination games to reach the World Series, the Giants said they wanted to take an easier route this time around. They got off to a crushing start Wednesday, making it look easy against the best pitcher in baseball.
Pablo Sandoval homered in his first three at-bats and Barry Zito was dominant again as the Giants cruised past Justin Verlander and the Detroit Tigers 8-3 in the first game of the World Series.
Sandoval hit two homers off Verlander, and in his third at-bat he took Al Alburquerque deep to join one of the most elite lists in sports. He’s the fourth player in MLB history to hit three home runs in a World Series game, along with Hall of Famers Babe Ruth (who did it twice) and Reggie Jackson and future Hall of Famer Albert Pujols. Appropriately, the bat Sandoval used to hit the first two homers — it broke in his third plate appearance — was donated to the Hall of Fame.
I still can’t believe it,
Sandoval said. I don’t try to hit home runs. I’m not trying to do too much right now, especially at this time of the season.
Sandoval did plenty, and he did it on a stage that had previously represented the low point of his career. Out of shape and out of sync, Sandoval had just three at-bats and played in one game in the 2010 World Series. That was much more action than the Giants gave Zito, who was left off the roster altogether.
On Wednesday, the redemption train rolled right through the Tigers.