National League Game Summary - St. Louis at San Francisco
(Monday, October 15th)
Final Score: San Francisco 7, St. Louis 1
San Francisco, CA (Sports Network) - Marco Scutaro was taken out on a hard
slide by Matt Holliday while he was trying to turn a double play in the first
inning.
A few frames later, Scutaro exacted some revenge.
Scutaro hit a two-run single as part of a four-run fourth inning and Ryan
Vogelsong tossed seven frames of one-run ball in the San Francisco Giants' 7-1
win over the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 2 of the NLCS.
With one out and runners on first and second in the opening frame, Allen Craig
slapped a ground ball to shortstop Brandon Crawford, who threw to second for
the force out.
While Scutaro was trying to turn the double play, Holliday barreled into
the second baseman's left leg, which got pinned underneath Holliday. Scutaro
lay on the ground for a few moments to collect himself.
"I hated to see that it ended up that way. That's not how we play the game.
But we do go hard, but within the rules," Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said.
Scutaro, who hit a pair of singles, exited the contest after the fifth to have
X-rays on his left hip. They were negative.
"We'll do more tests tomorrow and see where he's at," Giants manager Bruce
Bochy said. "We're hoping for the best."
His replacement, Ryan Theriot, slapped a two-run single in the eighth inning.
Giants fans showered Holliday with boos each time he stepped up to the plate.
"You're trying to get to the second baseman and obviously try to knock him
down so he can't turn a double play," Holliday said. "As long as you're in the
baseline, it's within the rules."
Hard collisions are a sensitive subject for the Giants, who saw their All-Star
catcher Buster Posey suffer a broken bone in his left ankle during a play at
the plate by the then-Florida Marlins' Scott Cousins in May of 2011. Posey
missed the rest of that season.
Vogelsong (1-0) fanned four, scattered four hits and walked two for the
Giants, who lost Game 1 by a 6-4 score and had not held a lead at any point in
their three prior postseason home games coming in.
"All his pitches were right in the zone, you know, hitting the corners and
getting the hitters off balance," Giants center fielder Angel Pagan said.
Pagan joined the Philadelphia Phillies' Jimmy Rollins as the only two
players in history to hit a pair of leadoff homers in one postseason.
Chris Carpenter (1-1), last season's postseason hero who brought a career 10-2
mark in the playoffs coming in for the Cardinals, was touched for five runs --
two earned -- on six hits and two walks in just four innings.
"We have faith in him in these situations and know he'll come out next
opportunity and make good pitches for us," Matheny said of Carpenter.
Carpenter was limited to three 2012 regular-season starts while recovering
from shoulder surgery. He added an RBI double for St. Louis, which tallied
just five hits in the contest.
It was a 1-1 game prior to San Francisco's four-run fourth.
Brandon Belt hit a one-out double and Gregor Blanco slapped a single to left
field to put runners on the corners. Belt scored when Crawford reached first
on Carpenter's throwing error to first. After Vogelsong bunted Blanco and
Crawford over, Pagan walked to load the bases.
Scutaro stepped up next and lined a base hit to left-center field, which
brought home Blanco and Crawford. Pagan also came home when Holliday booted
the ball in the field to make it 5-1.
Theriot's two-run single in the eighth widened the margin to 7-1.
Earlier, Pagan's leadoff shot over the wall in right field got the Giants on
the board before Carpenter's double in the second knotted the contest.
Game Notes
San Francisco had been outscored 20-6 during its three home games this
postseason ... The Giants have never lost four consecutive postseason home
games ... San Francisco was 4-for-14 with runners in scoring position, while
the Cardinals finished 0-for-7 with RISP.
10/16 00:53:26 ET

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