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MLB
Detroit, MI

Analysis: Reinvented Giants reigning again

Paul White, USA TODAY Sports
Giants pitcher Sergio Romo and catcher Buster Posey celebrate defeating the Tigers in four games.
  • The Giants have won two World Series championships in three years
  • Pitching and defense won this World Series
  • The Tigers were swept in four games

DETROIT – Two World Series championships in three years?

That's unheard of.

Not since the Yankees rolled through three of three in 1998-2000 has anyone produced what qualifies as dominance these days.

These San Francisco Giants are relative newcomers to the revolving door of recent World Series winners but they certainly have a handle on how it's done these days and believe they've established their own culture of winning.

"I hope so," says catcher Buster Posey. "That's the goal."

Pitching and defense won this World Series, even more emphatically than in 2010, when the Giants were making their first post-season appearance since 2003.

"It's how you win championships," says Posey, who caught the called third strike to Miguel Cabrera, hung onto the ball and presented it to manager Bruce Bochy.

Posey's emphasis was on the plural, as in hardly being satisfied with two in his first three major-league seasons.

"It's definitely a possibility," he says. "We've got a great group of young, core guys. I don't think we're off the radar anymore, which will present its obstacles. I think it's a challenge we're all looking forward to. After you get that first one, you want to go through that whole experience again, you want to go through those pressure situations, the excitement when you come out on top."

St. Louis can make a case for more prolonged excellence in the past decade – and the Cardinals also have two trophies to show off.

But the Giants rule now.

They have a ballpark they fill every night, a revenue stream that allows them to continue competing and – hey, how's this for a refreshing concept in the midst of all that business talk? -- they've certainly embraced the team concept.

"It's almost like something you experience in high school and college," general manager Brian Sabean says. "The camaraderie and the emotions. They didn't try to be the guy. They were just trying to be a guy. That's the mantra of this organization – be a teammate."

And their final victory was fitting: Strong pitching, stronger defense and a couple of singles in the 10th inning by guys named Ryan Theriot and Marco Scutaro.

"Slingshots and rocks, that's what we come to play with," coach Tim Flannery says of the Giants' way of doing business. They were last in the majors in home runs.

And there are no Goliaths in baseball these days -- no great teams but a lot of good ones.

"You never know what's going to happen, performance from year to year, how you start and finish a season, injuries," Sabean says. "We're happy that a lot of these guys are going to go forward with us. We're sitting in a good spot."

The only key free agents are Scutaro, center fielder Angel Pagan and lefty reliever Jeremy Affeldt. All played significant roles but none should attract offers so lucrative they'd rule our returning to their comfortable situation in San Francisco.

There's still a difference between operating like a financial giant and, well, playing baseball like the San Francisco Giants.

They have a core group of players. Posey, third baseman and World Series MVP Pablo Sandoval were on the 2010 team, as were most of the pitchers.

But there was a freshness with some new faces and new roles.

When the Giants won two years ago, Tim Lincecum was a two-time Cy Young Award winner who had led the NL in strikeouts three consecutive seasons. Now, though, he's had to reinvent himself on the fly as a post-season reliever just to contribute.

And he has – both reinvent and contribute.

The closest thing to a household name on the team now – especially with the eclectic and effective Brian Wilson on hiatus from closing thanks to surgery – is Posey.

He hasn't solidified superstar status yet and didn't have a particularly huge postseason. However, his grand slam triggered the Game 5 Division Series victory at Cincinnati and his two-run homer Sunday erased the only lead Detroit had in the entire World Series.

The Giants' two championships came with Posey in the middle of the order and everything else. He received the NL Hank Aaron Award for his offensive prowess before Game 3 and he's a favorite to add the MVP next month.

And the missing year for the Giants in between? It was Posey's missing year, too. When he went down for the season May 25, 2011, San Francisco was leading the NL West. They finished eight games back and out of the playoffs.

This championship was won, among numerous other names and reasons:

  • Because the "other guy" they picked up in a mid-season trade – we're talking about Scutaro rather than the more heralded Hunter Pence – was the NLCS MVP and drove in the World Series-winning run.
  • Because shortstop Brandon Crawford handled just about anything hit in area pretty much the size of McCovey Cove.
  • Because a little guy named Sergio Romo took off his knit cap long enough on three of the four nights these Series games were played to do everything Wilson was able to do in ninth innings two years ago – and Romo even has a replica beard. And he ended the series by shaking off Posey's call of his best pitch, the slider, to instead freeze Cabrera and launch the celebration. "That shows what type of guts he has," Posey says." It's hard to get your head around a guy who throws 88, 89 (mph) with a plus-plus slider. But he has all the confidence in the world."
  • Because Gregor Blanco became the regular left fielder in the wake of Melky Cabrera's substance-abuse suspension. Even general manager Brian Sabean admits he didn't know what he was getting with Blanco. A fourth outfielder maybe? How about the guy with key hits in two of the three Giants' scoring innings over games 2 and 3? "He went off in spring training and distinguished himself early in the year," Sabean says. "He's a nice story, a nice young man." And that's in direct contrast to the feeling around the team about Cabrera, who's been eligible to return since the NLCS, but who the Giants clearly stated they wanted no part of.
  • Because Bochy had patience with Crawford and first baseman Brandon Belt and numerous others because he knew the Giants would need all of them to win.

"Nobody said a word, complained or anything," Bochy said. "That's truly the only way it got done."

It's a formula that works. Let's see for how long.

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