2:07AM EDT
October 15. 2012 - SAN FRANCISCO — Roaring back from a 6-0 deficit with four
runs in the fourth inning Sunday, the San Francisco Giants knocked out starter
Lance Lynn and seemed to have the St. Louis Cardinals right where they wanted
them.
It was a trap.
Getting Lynn out of the game only
unleashed the Cardinals relievers, who have become a force in the second half
of the season and the playoffs.
The St. Louis bullpen not only
quelled the rally, but held the Giants to two singles and no runs in the final
5 1/3 innings as the Cardinals prevailed 6-4 in Game 1 of the National League
Championship Series.
GAME 1: Freese, Beltran blast
Cardinals over Giants
San Francisco's bullpen tossed 5
1/3 scoreless innings as well, as both groups of relievers totaled 10 2/3
innings without giving up a run, an LCS record.
Considering the clubs combined for
one quality start in their respective Division Series — by St. Louis' Kyle
Lohse in Game 4 against the Washington Nationals — there's a fair chance the
bullpens could be the determining factor in this series.
GIANTS STARTERS: Rotation in
question after Bumgarner rocked
If that's the case, the Cardinals'
power arms may give them an edge.
"It's a very aggressive bullpen,"
Giants outfielder Gregor Blanco said. "As Hector Sanchez told Yadier
(Molina) when he came up to bat, 'Wow, you guys don't have any average
pitchers. They're all aggressive power pitchers.'"
In fact, the Cardinals had the
hardest-throwing bullpen in the league this season, with an average fastball
velocity of 94.5 mph. Rookie Trevor Rosenthal (97.4), closer Jason Motte (97.1)
and Mitchell Boggs (95.7) averaged better than 95 mph with their heaters.
"It's really tough to step in
the box and hit 98-100 the first time," Cardinals first baseman Allen
Craig said. "And those guys were throwing strikes too. It's not just 98
all over the place. They're throwing strikes, so you have to be aggressive, and
that's tough to do as a hitter."
Cardinals manager Mike Matheny
seemed to be taking a risk in burning the only lefty on his roster, Marc
Rzepcynski, to retire Brandon Belt with two outs and two runners on in the
fifth.
Surely with five Giants hitters
swinging from the left side, including switch-hitters Angel Pagan and Pablo
Sandoval, that would leave St. Louis vulnerable.
Except sheer power tends to
neutralize matchup advantages. So in came a procession of fireballers, with
Edward Mujica being the relative soft-tosser — his fastball averaged 91.9 mph
during the season — but in many ways the most impressive.
The seven-year veteran from
Venezuela, acquired in a trade-deadline deal with the Miami Marlins, struck out
Marco Scutaro, Sandoval and Buster Posey — all swinging — in the seventh inning
to earn the win.
"I think this is the second
time in my career I've struck out the side," Mujica said. "I did it
one time after coming over to St. Louis. I try to make my best pitch to get a
fly ball or a grounder, so I cherish having gotten the three strikeouts."
That was part of a string of nine
consecutive Giants retired by the St. Louis relievers in the final innings
until Pagan singled with two outs in the ninth. Motte then got Scutaro on a
game-ending groundout.
"They shut us down and we
couldn't do much with their bullpen," Giants manager Bruce Bochy said.
"They have some great arms coming out."
So, what to do against them? This,
after all, is the same set of relievers that allowed St. Louis to mount its
epic comeback in Game 5 against the Nationals by holding them to four hits and
one run in the last 6 2/3 innings.
The bullpen was often shaky during
the first half of the season, but with Mujica's addition and Rosenthal's
emergence, it transformed into one of the Cardinals' strengths. It has allowed
just six earned runs in 24 2/3 postseason innings for a 2.19 ERA.
"They have a lot of movement
on the ball, they can keep you off-balance, they can make you chase their
pitch," Belt said. "So the best thing to do is go up there with a
plan, stick to it and make them come in the zone."
Sometimes even that doesn't work.
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