G****a 发帖数: 10208 | 1 After one of the more improbable comebacks in postseason history, the St.
Louis Cardinals will kick off the National League Championship Series on
Sunday against the San Francisco Giants in a matchup of the last two World
Series winners.
The Cardinals overcame an early six-run deficit and were behind by two
entering the ninth on Friday, but scored four times in their final at bat to
shock the Washington Nationals, 9-7, in the decisive fifth game of the NLDS.
"They just don't quit. I think that just says a lot about their character,"
Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said of his club. "They realized that no
matter what is being said out there, no matter how many people count them
out, they control their destiny."
Of course, coming back is nothing new to this Cardinals team, which last
season trailed in the wild card standings by 9 1/2 games only to roar back
and clinch a playoff spot on the final day of the regular season, parlaying
that into their 11th World Series title.
"That's an awesome feeling to share that moment with these guys after coming
back from a 6-0 deficit like that," said Daniel Descalso, who homered and
scored three times. "It was just awesome."
Carlos Beltran had three hits and was on base five times in the crucial win
for the Cardinals, who have now won six consecutive postseason elimination
games and will be playing in their seventh NLCS since 2000.
Beltran, who owns an all-time best .817 career postseason slugging
percentage, hit .409 against the Nationals with two home runs and four RBI.
He also joined Babe Ruth as the only players to reach base five times in an
elimination game.
"Tonight, I was thinking about the way the Cardinals came back last year,"
Beltran said, "and here I am, and we're doing it again. This is a great
feeling, being on this team. This is why I came here -- to win."
It was a year of adjustments for the Cardinals, who went into this season
with a new manager in Matheny following the retirement of Tony La Russa, and
without three-time NL MVP Albert Pujols, who bolted to the Los Angeles
Angels of Anaheim as a free agent.
St. Louis did not skip a beat, though, winning just two games less than last
season, and finished 88-74. Although, it wasn't quite the furious finish
they needed a year ago, the Cardinals still won 12 of their final 16 games,
then topped Atlanta in the first-ever one-game wild card contest.
Beltran was brought into replace Pujols and actually put up about the same
numbers, as he hit .269 with 32 home runs and 97 RBI. But, catcher Yadier
Molina really shined and should finish among the leaders in MVP voting.
Already an all-world defender, Molina excelled at the plate, batting .315
with 22 home runs and 76 RBI. However, he only had two hits in the series
with the Nationals.
"We lose Albert, Lance is out the whole year, but we still know how to win,"
Molina said. "That tells you how good we are. We've got some great players
here, guys who won't quit."
St. Louis is loaded with experience in their rotation, but it will be 25-
year- old righty Lance Lynn getting the call in Game 1. Lynn was 18-7 this
past season with a 3.78 ERA, but saw his ERA jump a full run in the second
half of the season. He's also lost both of his starts to the Giants,
surrendering nine runs in 11 1/3 innings of those outings.
Lynn made three relief appearances against the Nationals was 1-1 with an 8.
10 ERA.
Like the Cardinals, San Francisco needed all five games of its Division
Series matchup to get past the Cincinnati Reds, as Buster Posey's grand slam
punctuated a six-run fifth inning that helped the Giants cap an amazing
comeback with a 6-4 win.
"I didn't do much the whole series," said Posey. "I probably was a little
overanxious at times. I was happy to be in that situation."
San Francisco had dropped the first two games of the set with the Reds, but
reeled off three straight wins to earn their second trip to the NLCS in
three years.
Brandon Crawford picked up two hits, an RBI and a run scored in the decisive
win for the Giants, who became the first NL team to rally back from an 0-2
deficit to win a best-of-five series since the format was changed back in
1995. They also became the only team in either league to do so with three
consecutive road victories.
What made the Giants' first round win even more amazing was the fact that
Cincinnati outscored them 22-18, outhit them .261-.194 and recorded a 3.13
ERA, compared with San Francisco's 4.11.
San Francisco's bullpen was terrific, as no starter was able to pitch beyond
the sixth inning.
"(Jeremy) Affeldt, (Sergio) Romo, (George) Kontos, all of them did a great
job the whole series," manager Bruce Bochy said.
Getting the ball in Game 1 for the Giants will be 23-year-old right-hander
Madison Bumgarner, who was 16-11 this season, but 10 of those wins came at
home. However, he was rocked by Cincinnati in San Francisco in Game 1 of the
NLDS to tune of four runs in only 4 1/3 innings.
Bumgarner also gave up seven runs over 13 1/3 innings in his two matchups
with the Redbirds.
The Giants' offense is paced by NL MVP candidate Posey, who hit only .211 in
the NLDS, but was the NL's leading hitter at .336 with 24 home runs and 103
RBI during the regular season.
San Francisco has played the Cardinals twice before in the playoffs. St.
Louis edged the Giants in a thrilling seven-game series in 1987, but San
Francisco got its revenge in 2002 with a five-game win in the LCS.
This is the first matchup between the two previous World Series winners
since the New York Yankees and Milwaukee Braves dueled in the 1958 Fall
Classic. |
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