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San Francisco Giants second baseman Marco Scutaro (right) hits a single with the bases loaded as St. Louis Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina looks on. Photo: EPA

Giants rout Cardinals to level playoff series

Marco Scutaro drove in two key runs before leaving with an injury on Monday and San Francisco defeated reigning champion St. Louis 7-1 to level their Major League Baseball playoff series.

The best-of-seven National League Championship Series, deadlocked at 1-1, shifts to St. Louis for three games on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. The winners will face either the New York Yankees or Detroit in the World Series.

It was the first home victory of the playoffs for the Giants, who dropped two games at home to Cincinnati in the previous round and the series opener to St. Louis on Sunday.

Giants starting pitcher Ryan Vogelsong allowed only one run in seven innings, scattering four hits while walking two batters and striking out four on a night when San Francisco sluggers pounded out 12 hits and plenty of runs.

“It feels better getting one here rather than going in there down 0-2,” said Vogelsong. “They are a great hitting team. I was just making pitches.”

San Francisco’s Angel Pagan blasted a solo homer in the first inning to open the scoring but the Cardinals equalised in the second when Pete Kozma walked and scored on a double by St. Louis pitcher Chris Carpenter.

San Francisco scored four runs in the fourth inning to seize command, the first of them crossing home plate on a throwing error by Carpenter.

Scutaro added a bases-loaded double to drive in two runs and a fielding error by Cardinals outfielder Matt Holliday allowed a third San Francisco run to score on the play, giving the Giants a 5-1 lead.

“Early runs are important,” Pagan said. “They tie it up and we put a few more up and that was important.”

Scutaro, the Giants’ second baseman, was removed from the game and later taken to a hospital for an MRI exam with a left hip injury that he suffered in the first inning on a fielding play when struck by a sliding Holliday.

Scutaro’s teammates chose their words carefully when asked if Holliday’s slide into Scutaro was an improper play.

“He hurt Scutaro a little bit but we will be coming back in game three and come out playing hard,” Pagan said.

“I don’t think that’s for us to worry about,” Vogelsong said. “It’s for us to go out and win three more games.”

One night after an umpire in the American League final between the Yankees and Detroit made an incorrect call on a runner getting back to a base before being tagged out, a similar controversy occurred at San Francisco.

Giants’ base runner Gregor Blanco appeared in television replays to be tagged out trying to return to first after a diving fly out grab by Jon Jay in the eighth inning, but Blanco was ruled safe by first base umpire Bill Miller.

Aubrey Huff and Pagan followed with singles to load the bases and Ryan Theriot followed with a single to left field that brought home Blanco and Huff and boosted the Giants’ lead to the final margin.

 

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