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Here's what you need to know about Game One between the Giants and Cardinals: Marco Gonzales began warming with nobody out in the fourth inning.

***

Okay, so you need to know a little more than that, specifically about Madison Bumgarner. He was brilliant: 7 2/3 innings, no runs, four singles, seven strikeouts, a walk, and a hit batsmen. Bumgarner faced just three batters with a runner on second or third all night, and two of those came with two outs on the board. Credit the domination to his fastball command and control, but he was able to locate more than 65 percent of his cutters and 70 percent of his curveballs for strikes as well. It's almost impossible to hit a pitcher with his kind of stuff when he's locating.

Putting up zeroes on the road during the postseason has become a thing for Bumgarner. You've probably heard or seen the statistic by now—that he's at 26 2/3 scoreless innings now—but there should be an asterisk attached. Had the umpires rightly called Bumgarner for a balk during the seventh inning, the Cardinals plate a run. Though the call might not have changed the results otherwise, it needs to be noted.

Of course that's not to take anything away from Bumgarner. The way he pitched, he deserved some luck.

***

Returning to Wainwright for a moment, he put Mike Matheny in a tight spot. It's not that he was getting lined around the park or anything, he just wasn't efficient and struggled to put hitters away. There were a few balls that went against Wainwright—a blooper here or there, a defensive misplay or two as well—but he just didn't look as sharp as you'd like to see. If the Cardinals are going to win this series, they'll need better performances from him going forward. For now, St. Louis has to be concerned about his status.

***

Bizarre Harold Reynolds line of the night: "He has electric stuff," he said of Gonzales, a southpaw whose in-season scouting report read, "Gonzales is not oversized or overpowering."

***

There were three managerial moves of note.

  • In the fifth, with a runner on first base and one out, Matheny allowed Gonzales (who had entered to face the last batter of the previous half-inning) to stay in the game and put down a bunt. The obvious argument here is he shouldn't have done that; he should've sent up a pinch-hitter and played to score multiple runs. That's fair. The compromise between what happened and what ideally would have happened involves Gonzales—a decent hitter throughout his amateur career—swinging away. Overall, that's a small critique.
  • One other note on that decision that explains Matheny choosing against the pinch-hitter route: The Cards seem to be proceeding with a six-man bullpen, saving Michael Wacha for nothing short of an emergency. Wacha probably shouldn't be on the roster if that's the case, but Matheny can only use what he has, and that's likely part of why he chose against burning another pitcher.
  • In the seventh, the Cardinals used Tony Cruz to face Bumgarner with two on and two out. The alternatives were Pete Kozma, Peter Bourjos, A.J. Pierzynski, and Oscar Taveras. Right call? Assuming neither Pierzynski nor Taveras was getting the call for platoon reasons, that leaves Kozma (.624 OPS versus lefties over the past three years), Bourjos (.595), and Cruz (.374) as the choices. You can maybe argue that Cruz is better than his numbers show because he seldom plays, but none of these was a great choice. Go by the numbers alone and Kozma probably should have gotten the plate appearance.
  • Lastly there was letting Bumgarner bat for himself in the eighth. He'd return to retire two more batters, including the left-handed Matt Carpenter, thereby ensuring nobody would care.

A few other quick thoughts:

  • The Giants lead felt bigger than three runs throughout.
  • Bruce Bochy was aggressive in inserting Juan Perez in left field over Travis Ishikawa, opting for the better glove in the sixth inning.
  • Randy Choate faced one batter, threw one pitch, got one out, then exited. Left-handed One Out GuY indeed.
  • Pablo Sandoval had three hits, leaving him just one shy of matching his total from the NLDS.
  • Most of the Giants bullpen got the night off. Sergio Romo (one out) and Santiago Casilla (three outs) did not. They helped blank the Cardinals in short order to make up for it.

Game Two happens tomorrow evening. It'll air on FOX Sports 1.

Thank you for reading

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jjpzebra
10/12
Well, in the preview post, I noted that the Giants had only given up 6 in-play runs in the last 10 post-season games worth of pitching and defense. With tonight's shutout, make that 6 runs against them in the last 11 games worth.

It helps when MadBum is pitching, of course. But the bullpen also did its job.

And it helps that the last 11 post-season games, they only have allowed 15 runs total.
Dodger300
10/12
Pardon my ignorance, but you can you please explain the significance of whether or not a run is gien up "in-play?" Thank you!
jjpzebra
10/12
By in play, I mean the team scores with the ball in play, as opposed to a home run. The Giants have given up a total of 15 runs in their last 10 games, but one went 18 innings. Of those 15, 9 scored on home runs; so my point is that the fielders could not have kept the runs from scoring.
Dodger300
10/13
So is it that you are making a statement about how good you think the Giants defense is?
jjpzebra
10/13
Yes, I think they have taken it up a notch in the playoffs. I live in the Bay Area, and the defense went through a stretch earlier this year where they couldn't be counted on. But for some reason, they really hunker down in October. I don't have the resources to figure out if this is unusually good defense this post-season, but my intuition tells me that the defense has been one of the secrets of the Giants' success over the last few years in October.

By the way, the limitations of the phenomenon were on display last night: the Cards only scored one run on any ball in play, but won on the strength of four (!) home runs - - all of them solo shots.

Dodger300
10/14
Okay, thank you for your explanation.

Maybe you're right. Or maybe it's random noise in a small sample size.

I would suspect the later.