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Giants 2, Cardinals 1
Tuesday October 15, 2002
By BEN WALKER AP Baseball Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The scoreboard flashed ``The Giants Win the
Pennant!'' The crowd chanted ``Beat L.A.!'' The sound system played
``I Left My Heart in San Francisco.''
Inside the clubhouse, Giants players shouted and sprayed
champagne. All except one.
Because off in a corner and away from the bedlam, Barry Bonds
stayed dry until his 12-year-old son, Nikolai, poured water over
his head.
``When we win the World Series, I'll celebrate,'' Bonds said.
Bonds will get a chance to capture the one prize that has eluded
him, thanks to Kenny Lofton's RBI single with two outs in the ninth
inning that sent the Giants over the St. Louis Cardinals 2-1 Monday
night to win the NL championship series in five games.
The first all wild-card World Series will start Saturday night
at Anaheim when the Angels take on the Giants.
His postseason failures now in the past, baseball's biggest star
will get his first opportunity to play on baseball's biggest stage.
Bonds made it at age 38, in his 17th major league season.
``It's a feeling I can't explain. Maybe in a few days I'll be
able to tell someone how I feel,'' he said.
Often criticized for being selfish and not interacting with his
teammates, Bonds led the rush from the Giants' third-base dugout to
congratulate Lofton. The four-time MVP and five-time playoff
series loser was the first player off the bench to reach him.
``I'm just so glad I'm going to the World Series,'' Bonds said.
``For me, it's a long time coming.''
Bonds did his part in Game 5, hitting a bases-loaded sacrifice
fly in the eighth off a determined Matt Morris that tied it at 1.
Before this year, Bonds had hit only .196 with one homer and six
RBIs in 97 postseason at-bats. But he hit three home runs against
Atlanta in the opening round and kept coming through against the
Cardinals.
``Once I got past the ghosts of my past, I just played
baseball,'' he said.
There was a good omen before this game started, too. His father,
former big league star Bobby Bonds, threw out the first ball.
The Giants and Angels did not meet in interleague play this
season, but they've seen each other. They both hold spring training
in the Phoenix area and hook up in exhibition games.
Giants manager Dusty Baker and Anaheim manager Mike Scioscia
were teammates on the Dodgers from 1980-83, and helped lead Los
Angeles to the 1981 World Series title.
Though the Giants' biggest rivals are the Dodgers, Baker was
already looking forward to this all-California matchup against
Anaheim.
``Southern L.A. It's Orange County, but let's beat L.A.,'' he
said.
The Cardinals, playing on emotion since the death of Darryl Kile
in June, once again could not get a big hit when it counted. They
finished 3-for-39 with runners in scoring position in the series.
``It was a storybook season,'' said reliever Steve Kline, who
gave up the game-winning hit. ``It just didn't have the right
ending.''
Morris retired the first two batters in the ninth before David
Bell and Shawon Dunston singled.
At that point, Kline relieved and Lofton pulled the first pitch
into right field. Bell scored easily, sending the Giants to their
first World Series since 1989 as the sellout crowd of 42,673
erupted at Pacific Bell Park.
Lofton especially enjoyed the party, having been booed at Busch
Stadium in Game 1 when his objection to an inside pitch triggered a
bench-clearing skirmish. He had been in an 0-for-16 rut before
hitting singles in his final three at-bats.
``It's an awesome feeling at this point,'' said Lofton, acquired
July 28 from the Chicago White Sox for two minor leaguers. ``I
wanted to get to the playoffs, I wanted to get a ring, and the
opportunity came up.''
Bonds jumped up and down with the NLCS MVP, 37-year-old catcher
Benito Santiago. It was Santiago's home run in Game 4 that gave the
Giants a 3-1 lead in this series.
``This is a dream come true,'' Santiago said. ``I can't be
happier than this.''
Bonds got the chance of a lifetime in the eighth, coming up with
the bases loaded, one out and the Giants down 1-0. The home-run
king and first-time batting champion delivered sort of with a
fly ball that evened it.
Tim Worrell, the third Giants reliever, wound up with the win.
Cardinals manager Tony La Russa stuck with Morris until the final
batter, letting him pitch in a game that honored his mentor Kile.
``I think he was giving me the opportunity to win or lose it,''
Morris said. ``I ended up losing it.''
After sweeping the defending champion Arizona Diamondbacks in
the first round, St. Louis stopped hitting. All-Star third baseman
Scott Rolen did not play in the series after injuring his left
shoulder against Arizona.
The Cardinals were blanked for six innings by Kirk Rueter, then
broke a scoreless tie in the seventh when Morris' sacrifice bunt
set up Fernando Vina's sacrifice fly.
Morris held San Francisco hitless until two outs in the fifth,
when a double by Bell wound up bringing a howl from Baker and the
crowd.
Santiago drew a leadoff walk and was still at first base with
two outs when Bell blooped an opposite-field double to right. With
third-base coach Sonny Jackson putting up a two-handed stop sign,
Santiago bumped into third baseman Miguel Cairo as he rounded the
bag and stayed put.
The fans wanted an obstruction call to send Santiago home, and
so did Baker as he sprung out of the dugout to discuss it with
third-base umpire Jeff Nelson. But Nelson's call was absolutely
correct, according to Rule 7.06.
The rule states that it's the umpire's judgment on whether a
runner would have advanced without the interference. Since right
fielder Eduardo Perez was already making an accurate relay throw as
Santiago was reaching third base, it was clear he would not have
scored.
``Even looking at the replay again, I'm 1,000 percent convinced
of that,'' Nelson said.<
^Notes:@ Morris raised the ire of fans when he hit Lofton in the
back with his pitch in the fourth. Plate umpire Tim Welke
immediately stepped in front of Lofton, who took his time getting
down to first base. ... Perez started while Tino Martinez, stuck in
a 2-for-25 postseason slump, was benched. ... There have been three
previous all-California World Series: Giants-Athletics in 1989,
Dodgers-A's in 1988 and Dodgers-A's in 1974.
(Copyright 2002 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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