The title exists because it's more important to acknowledge the death of Skip Caray, and also to indicate the kind of feel this game had before it had even begun. No win on this particular day would be so important to overshadow the continuing Caray family legacy. He had his own personality on air, and he had just as much class off the field.
Nevertheless, there was a game to be played, and the Braves put on the mound a man who has been a diamond in the rough of injuries and trades, a 10-game winner that point: Jair Jurrjens. Jair came in winning his last four road starts with an ERA of 0.30. S.F., on the other hand, put the ball in the right hand of a should-be-at-least-a-10-game winner: Matt Cain; a man for whom the Giants have scored eight runs in his last seven starts. (Just to emphasize the tragedy of this, Cain is fifth in the NL for strikeouts; we've also won less than 50 games with Lincecum first and Sanchez tenth on that same list.) Even though Matt had given up only four runs in his last 29 innings, do you think the 0.30 ERA was going to be a toughie to continue for Jurrjens? Well guess what? It was. More on that later. But still, the only thing that could neutralize the fact that the Braves have the third-worst record on the road is the fact that we have the worst record at home.
This expectation about our offense when Matt starts is one of the reasons, most likely the primary one, you're not getting a perfectly-ordered per-inning rundown tonight. Here's the wrap, to compensate. If you're really upset about that lack of viewer-nuancing of mind, do something productive and write a letter to players like Randy Winn. Hey, Vizquel is man enough to encourage the youth to play in his spot and learn from him.
Beautiful once again to see, the youth were in full force: our "Great Frisco Hope". Ochoa (SS), Lewis (LF), Holm (C) and Burriss (2B) started, to join the 23-year old Cain. I really like Holm, and the fact both that he's been doing well offensively and catching Cain regularly (every time for the last three weeks, too), is telling me that both may be sticking around a long time. Burriss delights particularly of late - though each is worth seeing for this time in the franchise's transition. For example, he always looks for where the OFs are playing when he's on-base, to try and read the pitch and his ability to score given certain circumstances. His awareness, gutsy play and knowledge of little things like that make him "The Player To Be Watched" for us for the rest of the season, without question.
He and Ochoa turned a nice double-play in the 1st inning. Burriss' made a nice play to get a close out in the 3rd, the second of two such plays in a row.
Burriss got a hit early on; unfortunately he got the brunt of a close call on a pitchout and didn't get a chance to make good on his speed; he was clearly safe on the replay.
Oh My Scapegoat was in tonight at 3B. That's pretty much the only thing productive to know about him.
One hard luck occurrence at 3B on the other side of the ball as well: in the bottom of the 1st when after having runners at 1B and 2B with one out, Rowand - you Offensive Genius, you (you'll read why later) - grounded in such a way to have Winn thrown out at 3B. Bowker retired the side with a slow roller to 2B. Inning over.
The interesting thing is that Winn himself reached base in his first two ABs. He advanced the second time because Ochoa singled up the middle.
Another interesting thing tonight for the lineup was that Lewis was in the three-hole. Apparently, along with making a decision to start the youth almost every day, Bochy's also decided to make Lewis a run-producer. His seven HRs as a leadoff do make it a novel idea, but I wasn't complaining in the 3rd. Lewis showed his speed then (which is why he was a leadoff in the first place), and avoided being the second out of a DP. Lewis ran on the first pitch of the next AB, and Rowand showed a surprising RBI single. Winn scored easily from 3B, and Lewis made it to 3B as well.
So we were up 1-0, with one out and runners at the corners. A botched grounder to Escobar by Bowker led to Lewis scoring, 2-0 S.F. Castillo grounded out to Kotchman to end the inning, but two runs by the end of just three innings is never anything to cause disappointment. Especially when Cain is pitching. And he was pitching well.
It was at this point the fog rolled into the park. Yes, I'm being surreal, because McCann walked and then Kotchman was HBP - very rare for Matthew. Thankfully, Cain got a pop-up to Winn and a grounder to "The Man"ny Burriss to escape completely unscathed. Well, I do love the fog you know. Gotcha there, didn't I? The problem is that even my love of the fog couldn't keep Matt out of trouble.
There were two very unusual things to happen from that moment. We scored more than two runs, and Matt couldn't get out of trouble with his own control. Granted, this loss of control could have been because of all his action in the bottom of the 4th. Matthew singled in the bottom of the fourth with two out and no one on; Winn reached because of an error by the 2B; and because of a fielding error by the same guy on a hit by Ochoa and a late throw home, Cain scored to help his own cause - which, by the way, he does an awful lot. Matt is a perfect NL pitcher; he strikes people out, he has fantastic control (he's not all about one pitch), he gets out of most jams, and he hits. You can't take it easy on his ABs. End of four: 3-0.
Unfortunately, Kotchman got a 2-out triple in the top of the 5th (the first of only two baserunners allowed past second by Cain for the night), and Infante singled him home. Matt got out of it, but the seventh was not so kind, which brings us to another surprise: Winn's perfomance.
Randy went an amazing 3-4 with a 2-out RBI double in the bottom of the sixth, thanks again to another youngster showing up before him: Steve Holm. In addition to this, he possibly saved the game defensively by making an amazingly calculated catch on a deep drive by Norton in the seventh. This was important, because the next batter walked, the following batter doubled, and the third batter to follow Norton walked as well. Yes, that's bases loaded. So that would be all for Matthew, too, but he ended with 6 2/3 innings, 6 Ks, and only 1 ER. Thanks to going 1-3 with R on the other side of the plate, he also ended with a W. Congratulations Matt. You are no longer The Pitcher To Be Pitied.
7th: Cain was removed for Tasch, and Tasch got out of the inning. He got McCann with the bases loaded - the only guy who could have realistically done damage, and historically 3-7 (now) against Jack.
8th: Walker almost blew it after relieving Tasch in the eighth, but only gave up one run.
9th:
Brian Wilson. Is. The Shizzle. A ground ball out to compensate for a bad opening count for the first out; a called strikeout for the second; a low-low-high fastball combination for a swinging K. End of game. 22 saves in a row; 31 saves to lead the NL. To hell with the stats, this kid's on fire. Unreal. Say it with me, please: "Hit the deck; it's the ghost of Rod Beck."
A few awards now.
Player(s) To Be Pitied: NONE.
Player(s) To Be Noted: Ivan Ochoa (2-3, RBI, BB); Steve Holm (2-3, BB, R); Jack Taschner (huge final out in 7th)
Player(s) To Be Lauded: Randy Winn (3-4, BB, RBI, R, steal, defense); Matt Cain (W, 6.2IP, 6K, 1ER); Brian Wilson (SV - 31, 2K)
FINAL: 4-2, S.F.
We've won three of the last four,
and the fog keeps rolling.
Enough said.
-MSH
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