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Giants World Series Champions 2010: San Francisco Tops Texas Rangers In World Series Game 5 (VIDEO)

Giants World Series Champions 2010

HuffPost/AP   First Posted: 11/01/10 11:30 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:10 PM ET

ARLINGTON, Texas — Buster Posey caught the final strike, started to rush the mound, then stopped and turned toward the dugout.

The rookie catcher wasn't quite sure what to do or where to go. Hard to blame him, either. It's not as if the San Francisco Giants win the World Series every day.

More than a half-century after moving West, the Giants are taking the trophy to the city by the Bay for the first time. Tim Lincecum was wicked on the mound, Edgar Renteria broke a scoreless duel with a three-run homer in the seventh inning and San Francisco beat the Texas Rangers 3-1 in a tense Game 5 Monday night.

The prize that eluded Willie and Barry for so long finally belongs to San Francisco, thanks to a band of self-described castoffs and misfits and their shaggy-haired ace.

"World Series champs, 2010. Can you believe this?" October ace Matt Cain said.

It was an overdue victory. Willie Mays led the Giants to their previous crown in 1954, four years before they left the Polo Grounds in New York. After that, they never quite got it done despite the likes of baseball giants Barry Bonds, Juan Marichal and Willie McCovey.

"This buried a lot of bones – '62, '89, 2002," Giants general manager Brian Sabean said, ticking off losing Series appearances. "This group deserved it, faithful from the beginning. We're proud and humbled by the achievement."


WATCH:

In the Year of the Pitcher, the World Series proved the oldest adage in the game: Good pitching stops good hitting, every time. Lincecum and the team with the best ERA in the big leagues completely shut down Josh Hamilton and the club with the majors' top batting average.

Texas managed just 29 hits in the five games. The Giants scored 29 runs, with Renteria hitting .412, leading all Series players with six RBIs and becoming the unanimous pick as MVP.

"They beat us soundly," Rangers manager Ron Washington said. "They deserve it."

The Giants hit only .237 the entire postseason, the lowest for a Series winner since the Dodgers batted .227 in 1988. But they did enough to hand Cliff Lee his first two career losses in the postseason after a 7-0 start.

"World championships are won with a good pitching staff and defense and we had that," center fielder Aaron Rowand said.

"It takes a lot of luck for this to happen, too. You can have all the talent in the world. Those Giants teams with Willie Mays and McCovey – they had four Hall of Famers on that team," he said. "We had the talent on this team, especially on the pitching side, but we got lucky, too. It takes a little bit of both to win a World Series."

Lincecum won this game of Texas Hold 'em, beating Lee for the second time in a week. He gave up three hits over eight innings and struck out 10.

The two-time NL Cy Young winner arrived at Rangers Ballpark wearing a bow tie, as if he was going to a party. He had one on the mound, for sure.

"Pretty collected. I was very poised out there. From the first inning on my adrenaline kind of just dissipated and I was able to calm down," he said.

Nelson Cruz homered in the bottom of the seventh, but that was all for Texas.

Wilson pitched a perfect ninth for a save, completing a surprising romp through the postseason for a pitching-rich team that waited until the final day to clinch a playoff spot.

Wilson struck out Cruz swinging to end it, turned toward center field and crossed his wrists in front of his chest as he does after all his saves.

Manager Bruce Bochy enjoys calling his Giants a ragtag bunch. Maybe Renteria, Cody Ross, Huff and Freddy Sanchez fit that description. Cut loose by other clubs this season and before, they all wound up in San Francisco.

But the foundation of this team – for now, for the foreseeable future – is totally home grown, built on a deep, talented and young rotation, a rookie catcher with huge star potential and their funky closer.

"For us to win for our fans, it's never been done there, and with all those great teams," Bochy said.

Bonds spent 15 years wearing the black and orange.

"There is no city that deserves this championship more," Bonds said in a statement. "I grew up watching my dad and godfather as Giants, lived out my dream playing in the same uniform in front of the best fans in the world and I just witnessed the Giants winning the World Series. I am ecstatic for the team, the city and all the fans – you truly deserve it."

Renteria reprised his role of postseason star. His 11th-inning single ended Game 7 of the 1997 World Series and lifted Florida over Cleveland. Forget that he made the last out in the 2004 Series that finished Boston's sweep of St. Louis – this journeyman's path led to another title, helped by his go-ahead home run in Game 2.

"It was a tough year for me," the oft-injured shortstop said. "I told myself to keep working hard and keep in shape because something is going to be good this year."

A team seemingly free of egos did everything right to take the lead in the seventh. Ross, the surprising MVP of the NL championship series, stayed square and hit a leadoff single and Juan Uribe followed with another hit up the middle.

That put a runner at second base for the first time in the game and brought up Huff, who led the Giants in home runs this year. So what did he do? He expertly put down the first sacrifice bunt of his career.

Renteria homered with two outs, and that was enough.

"Wow. I don't know. What can you say," the 23-year-old Posey said. "This is ultimate high in baseball and I got to experience it my first year here. I don't know what to say."

The Giants won their previous title when they played in New York at the Polo Grounds. That's where Mays raced back for perhaps the most famous catch of all time.

They moved West in 1958 and had tried ever since to escape a sort of big league Alcatraz – the place where teams get stuck for decades as also-rans. The Red Sox and White Sox got free, not so the Cubs and Indians.

So clang the cable car bells. Loudly, too. Baseball's best play by the Bay.

Exactly when these Giants turned into world beaters is hard to say. Trailing San Diego by 7 1/2 games in the NL West on July 4, they meandered in the wild-card race until the stretch run, winning the division and finishing 92-70.

Come the playoffs, they became dangerous. Any well-armed team is. Start with Cain – three postseason starts, a 0.00 ERA. Throw in Lincecum, the two-time Cy Young winner. Add Madison Bumgarner, the 21-year-old rookie who helped blank Texas in Game 4.

San Francisco posted a trio of one-run wins in the opening round that sent Atlanta manager Bobby Cox into retirement, then stopped the two-time defending NL champion Phillies in the championship series. Those wins, like this, came on the road.

Texas became the latest Series newcomer to make a quick exit. Houston (2005) and Colorado (2007) got swept in their first appearances, Tampa Bay (2008) stuck around for just five games.

The AL champion Rangers became the first team since 1966 to get shut out twice in a World Series, with big hitters Hamilton, Vladimir Guerrero and Cruz left taking half-swings or flailing wildly.

Hamilton, the probable AL MVP, went 2 for 20 with one RBI.

"We just got cold at the wrong time with the bats," he said.

The Rangers' franchise wrapped up its 50th season overall, in good hands with Nolan Ryan as president and part-owner. If only Big Tex could teach his team to hit, too.

Many years ago, one swing of the bat prompted a call that resonates throughout Giants history and beyond.

"The Giants win the pennant! The Giants win the pennant! The Giants win the pennant!" announcer Russ Hodges shouted over and over after Bobby Thomson launched "The Shot Heard 'Round the World" in 1951.

Time to redo that cry: The Giants win the Series! The Giants win the Series! The Giants win the Series!

filed by Adam Rose

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ARLINGTON, Texas — Buster Posey caught the final strike, started to rush the mound, then stopped and turned toward the dugout. The rookie catcher wasn't quite sure what to do or where to go. Ha...
ARLINGTON, Texas — Buster Posey caught the final strike, started to rush the mound, then stopped and turned toward the dugout. The rookie catcher wasn't quite sure what to do or where to go. Ha...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
05:01 PM on 11/02/2010
The NL West is so weak, I see the Giants in control for at least the next two years. The price of success is always the salary bumps that follow, and still paying Zito and Bonds millions will not help Sabean's job much. I don't doubt there will be some loyalty (Huff, Ross) that will help the cause. The value of Kane, Timmy and Baumgartner just went through the roof, and dealing one of them for some offense (Jason Wirth, plus?) just might make sense as long as we keep the mid and late reliever corp intact. But I'm really an A's fan and have much bigger problems.
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AZterritory
Don't tell me you're a patriot. Make me guess.
04:41 PM on 11/02/2010
SUCH a pleasure to watch these games, last night in particular. You'll have to excuse me, as a Diamondbacks fan I've forgotten what pitching looks like. Nice reminder Giants, thanks! (and Rangers, too.)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
05:05 PM on 11/02/2010
Thanks for the compliment. It was a thing of beauty wasn't it?

I actually felt the Rangers hitters were being abused at one point, but got over it.
04:40 PM on 11/02/2010
Congratulations San Francisco!!!!

Maybe next year for my Red Sox.
04:29 PM on 11/02/2010
So baseball is finally over?

For about three more months until the way-too-long season starts up again
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Pailface
Music is the best!
04:09 PM on 11/02/2010
The Bay Area is a much BETTER place today! Thanks GIANTS!!!!
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03:49 PM on 11/02/2010
The bars up and down the street were overflowing with fans last night and my throat is hoarse today from cheering. They came out looking like the Bad News Bears but they played some of the best ball ever broadcast. And the Ranger fans were such good sports about it -- classy to the end. However, I have to say I felt a special pride when the bar erupted into boos, hisses and middle finger waving every time one of the Bushes popped up on the camera. I don't care if I have to pay $6 to cross the Bay bridge. It's worth every penny to live somewhere where knowledge and science is celebrated instead of abhorred and feared. Closing up the soap box now. Great job to both teams and awesome fans. Go Giants!
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
luvobama
Hospice volunteer...
07:18 PM on 11/02/2010
Fanned and faved!!!
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JacksonJones
Absit iniuria verbis!
03:47 PM on 11/02/2010
The Giants win the Series! The Giants win the Series! The Giants win the Series!!!!!!

(to paraphrase Russ Hodges' famous call)

A fitting tribute to Bobby Thompson in the year of his passing. His "Shot Heard Round the World" will now forever be entwined in history, though never eclipsed, by the efforts of Renteria and Linsecum. Congrats to the Giants and the city of San Francisco!
03:32 PM on 11/02/2010
Congrats to the giants. It's about time a city of brotherly love like San Francisco gets noticed for the value they bring to society. Even Obama believes we should hold up these type of people in high esteem and to become more like them...
http://americasnewsnow.com/video-president-obama-fiercely-defends-gay-lesbian-bisexual-and-transgenders-they-are-showing-us-the-way-forward.html
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gomezrules
Why Don't We Do It In The Road?
03:23 PM on 11/02/2010
I'm just glad someone other than the Yankees and Phillies were in the WS. Both the Giants and Rangers deserved to be there. It's nice to see pitching coming back into the fore in this post steroids era. I didn't care who won this thing, but I do like watching Lincecum pitch. Good for the Giants. Now maybe Frisco can be known for something other than being the home of the most militant of the beyond-the-fringe leftists in this country.

Congrats to them and their fans. Go Mets in '11!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
03:42 PM on 11/02/2010
I've lived here over 30 years and still have not found any of those people you are talking about. Is that something you saw on a tv show or something?
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NevadaLib
pwning cons since 2007
03:48 PM on 11/02/2010
SF isn't really beyond the fringe left at all.
03:21 PM on 11/02/2010
Congrats to all you Giant Fans!! You guys showed those Texas boys (and this Kansas transplant) what world class pitching is all about ... and your guys were classy all the way. I don't like losing ... but if I do, I don't mind losing to a team that's better ... not just for one game, but for an entire season. Pretty amazing thing your guys did ... and the way they did it. Enjoy this to the MAX!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
03:29 PM on 11/02/2010
The Rangers victory over the Bankees was a sweet one that millions watched.
The post-roid era may be a very different game, with goofy little guys like Cody Ross and Kinsler playing more dominant run-manufacturing rolls, and pitching taking center stage. The game really got off track there for a while, and sad to say the Bay Area was right in the middle of that. This game offers so much, and I seem to see something new every time I watch a game.
03:34 PM on 11/02/2010
Yea ...i had gotten to the point where I didn't even watch baseball anymore ... the steroid/HGH thing nearly ruined it for me. Some of my favorites (McGuire, Sammy, Pudge) all tainted ... all cheating.

When I watch this new crop of guys come in and play they way they do with just what God gave 'em (hopefully!) ... it's a darned good thing.

Congrats, again ....
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FZliveson
Beating the Conundrum
03:20 PM on 11/02/2010
I wish Mayor Gavin Newsome had been at the game and had taken the time to go tell George W. Bush; "This comes to you, courtesy of San Francisco, CA, whom you ignored for 8 years and for which we are grateful you did not cost us ridiculous security measures costs."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HHarvey
Do not feed the trolls
04:08 PM on 11/02/2010
did you know that Newsom was playing semi pro ball and that at one time the Rangers, when owned by Bush, were looking to recruit him?
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FZliveson
Beating the Conundrum
04:17 PM on 11/02/2010
Interesting. He should have stayed in baseball; he sure knows how to "pitch."
Cheers,
FZLO
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Milash
My microbio is fabulous
04:31 PM on 11/02/2010
I'm sure he'll never set foot in this town, he knows what we think of him.
03:17 PM on 11/02/2010
CONGRATULAITONS GIANTS!!!! As a San Franciscan born-and-bred, living in Los Angeles, I am so proud to wear the orange and black and celebrate your amazing season. Thank you!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
sugarmoes
what doth life?
03:14 PM on 11/02/2010
HAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHAHAHAHAHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!!!!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
02:57 PM on 11/02/2010
The Giants went deep down into the heart of Texas, and snatched that thing RIGHT OUT OF THEIR HOUSE!

BOOOOOOOOYAA!!!!

THE 2010 WORLD CHAMPION GIANTS. yes, that's what I said, THE WORLD CHAMPIONS.
03:12 PM on 11/02/2010
Not everything is bigger in Texas.... The Giants hearts, skills and bats were all bigger last night. And I thought the team owners, coaches and players showed what a class act this team is in every way last night. I also thought Ron Washington was a total class act in how he congratulated the Giants. What a huge win, what a great feeling! GIANTS!!!!!!!!!!
03:13 PM on 11/02/2010
Congrats!! One heck of a pitching staff you guys have ... amazing.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LivingDebtFree
I bet you I can be less competitive than you.
02:56 PM on 11/02/2010
A great lesson for all. Two great ball clubs that respected each other and enjoyed the challenge of playing each other. These are two top class organizations. And by class, I mean classy. Putting team before player. Fans before team.

Also, although I'm sad that my Rangers lost, thanks to the Giants fans for being so great. Had a friend that went to the game in San Fran wearing his Rangers shirt. He got a lot of ribbing in good fun, but loved how welcome he felt.
03:15 PM on 11/02/2010
I agree 100%. It was a great series by two very classy teams. I was very impressed with the comments from both the Giants organization and from Ron Washington last night. It really was a great series because it wasn't the Yankees and the Phillies once again. It was two team who really earned it every step of the way.
03:16 PM on 11/02/2010
Yea ... it was tough to watch. Thought Lee was going to be able to get back to his previous magic ... and he did for a short while. Gives me second thoughts about his mental toughness in the Series. He was "iron man" in the playoffs ... but he melted in the Series. The last 2 innings he pitched, you could tell the pressure was getting to him. That last inning, he was a cat on a hot tin roof. The 3-run homer was a fastball, right down the middle of the plate ... bye, bye ...