The win streak is at one, but the way the Giants reacted you would have thought they had just won the World Series. Players mobbed Nate Schierholtz after he singled in the winning run in the 13th, with some guys leaving their feet to hit the dogpile.
They just got back from an 0-6 road trip that saw the Giants take the lead twice. Game 1 in Boston, the Giants scored two in the top of the 1st, but gave up two in the bottom to tie. Game 4, the opener in Milwaukee, the Giants scored one in the 1st, but gave up two in the bottom of the inning. Obviously it feels good to end an eight-game losing streak, but June is still awful at 6-15, the season 31-42.
That the Giants were even in the game late was something of a miracle. Matt Morris got cuffed around pretty good, but the Yankees never could cash in big, despite all the hits.
Alex Rodgriguez's homer in the 9th did not get the crowd reaction it deserved. Giants fans were disappointed, sure. Yankees fans celebrated. But had Rodriguez yanked that toward the seats rather than straightaway center, the crowd would have been buzzing right through the 13th. The man slaughtered that ball. (The NYT reported 458 feet. HitTracker should have it up soon.)
You can't tell from television or even just looking while at the ballpark, but beyond the centerfield fence is a building that houses a strip of concession stands. This is the eighth season of baseball at McCovey Cove. During that time, I've seen Barry Bonds hit the roof of the thing a few times and once saw Mark McGwire hit it during batting practice. My memory tells me I've seen at least one other opposing player launch one that far, but I'm having trouble finding it. Rodriguez cleared that building. I've been to roughly half the Giants home games since 2000, and that was the farthest I've seen a ball hit to center. (If someone else saw something bigger, let me know.)
Because it's so hard to really gauge how far someone hits it to center here, I think the crowd reaction was centered on how the homer affected the game and very few noticed much just how far it went. When Galarraga hit his monster shot in 2001, it was early in the game and he hit it over the bleachers and near the landmark bottle. Even if you'd never seen a homer to left in that ballpark, you knew that ball went a long way. (The freakish sound of the bat on the ball would have clued you in as well.)
Even forgetting the home run, Rodriguez has been a monster this series, with eight hits. Everything he hits is scalded. It's like Bonds circa 2001. Friday night I joked that I just hoped he didn't hit it back through the box and kill Matt Cain. I was partly joking, partly making a sincere wish. He's hitting it that hard.
The Giants, on the other hand, aren't. As the game went along in extras with Bonds in the clubhouse, you had to start creating more and more fanciful ways to imagine the Giants scoring a run. Walk, SB, balk, balk. HBP, grounder hits the bag, throwing error. That sort of thing. The reality was close. Single, sac bunt, useless Feliz AB, scratch single (following two tantalizing fouls down the third-base line), dying quail to center by the rookie.
We'll take it. I'm no fan of interleague play, but if it must happen, I'm going to try to wring some sort of value from it. My current fantasy is that the Yankees somehow come up just one game short of catching Boston for the NL East title (wild card has long since been ceded to the West). They'll scan the schedule and see that Boston won three from the Giants while the Yankees only managed two (or one). Ouch.
Two other random things:
1- Watching Clemens warm up -- sorta -- in the 13th was interesting. The Yanks had run out of pitchers, save Rivera. How beautiful would that have been, to have, say, Molina hit a walk-off homer against Clemens?
2- Steve Kline has become the Giants' symbolic white flag. Kline in? Game's over. Good for him Saturday. He got himself into a mess, but pitched his way out of it.
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