Final
San Francisco won 4-1
| Game 1: Wednesday, October 27 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Texas | 7 | Final |
| San Francisco | 11 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
| Game 2: Thursday, October 28 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Texas | 0 | Final |
| San Francisco | 9 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
| Game 3: Saturday, October 30 | ||
|---|---|---|
| San Francisco | 2 | Final |
| Texas | 4 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
| Game 4: Sunday, October 31 | ||
|---|---|---|
| San Francisco | 4 | Final |
| Texas | 0 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
| Game 5: Monday, November 1 | ||
|---|---|---|
| San Francisco | 3 | Final |
| Texas | 1 | |
| Recap »Boxscore » | ||
7:57 PM ET, November 1, 2010
Rangers Ballpark in Arlington, Arlington, Texas
Tim Lincecum, Edgar Renteria deliver Giants' first title since 1954
ARLINGTON, Texas -- Say Hey.
Say World Series champions.The prize that eluded Willie and Barry for so long finally belongs to the San Francisco Giants, thanks to a band of self-described castoffs and misfits and their shaggy-haired ace.Tim Lincecum, Edgar Renteria and the Giants won the title Monday night, beating the Texas Rangers 3-1 in a tense Game 5 and taking the trophy home to the city by the Bay for the first time.More World Series Coverage
ESPN.com
An unlikely cast of characters brought the Giants their first World Series championship since moving from New York, Jayson Stark writes. Story
Tim Lincecum has fashioned a Giant-sized legacy, adding a World Series-clinching gem in Game 5, Jerry Crasnick writes. Story
The Giants' title vanquished years of torment and brought honor to great San Francisco teams of the past, Jim Caple writes. Story
Two World Series losses could mark the end of hired gun Cliff Lee's brief run with the Rangers, Gene Wojciechowski writes. Story
• Neyer: Giants are worthy champs
• Nelson: MVP Renteria delivers again
• Stats & Info: Giants do it in style
• FanGraphs: Should've walked him ![]()

ESPNDallas.com
Cliff Lee and the Rangers are a match, even if they didn't get it done against the Giants, Richard Durrett writes. Story
Despite fizzling out at the end, the Rangers started something special in 2010, and the future is bright, writes Jim Reeves. Story
Both Sides Of History
Edgar Renteria became the fourth player in MLB history to win the MVP of one World Series and make the last out of another.
| Player | MVP | Last out |
|---|---|---|
| Edgar Renteria | 2010 | 2004 |
| Ron Cey | 1981 | 1978 |
| Pete Rose | 1975 | 1972 |
| Bobby Richardson | 1960 | 1964 |
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On Strike
Cliff Lee finished the postseason with 47 strikeouts, tied for the second-most in a single postseason, trailing Curt Schilling's 56 K's in 2001.
Single Postseason
| Year | Player | Strikeouts |
|---|---|---|
| 2001 | Curt Schilling | 56 |
| 2010 | Cliff Lee | 47 |
| 2003 | Josh Beckett | 47 |
| 2001 | Randy Johnson | 47 |
| 1998 | Kevin Brown | 46 |
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Game notes
Renteria went 7 for 17 (.412) with a Series-leading six RBIs. ... At 2 hours, 32 minutes, it was the fastest Series game since Game 4 in 1992 between Toronto and Atlanta, according to STATS LLC. ... Burrell was 0 for 13 with 11 strikeouts in the Series.
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ARLINGTON, TX - NOVEMBER 01: Manager Ron Washington of the Texas Rangers pitches batting practice to his players...
(Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)Playoff Series
Scoring Summary
| SF | TEX | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7th | E Renteria homered to left center (404 feet), C Ross and J Uribe scored. | 3 | 0 | |
| 7th | N Cruz homered to left (397 feet). | 3 | 1 | |
| View complete Play-By-Play | ||||
Game Information
| Stadium | Rangers Ballpark in Arlington, Arlington, TX |
| Attendance | 52,045 (108% full) - % is based on regular season capacity |
| Game Time | 2:32 |
| Weather | 68 degrees, clear |
| Wind | 4 mph |
| Umpires | Home Plate - Jeff Kellogg, First Base - Gary Darling, Second Base - John Hirschbeck, Third Base - Sam Holbrook |
Research Notes
How the Giants beat Cliff Lee again in Game 5:
- Lee had better command than during his Game 1 start, throwing 65 percent of his pitches in the strike zone compared to 53 percent in Game 1. However, for all the quality strikes Lee's flashed this season, the pitch that cost him Game 5 was just the opposite of that - a cutter that was supposed to be on the outside corner that came back right over the heart of the plate. Edgar Renteria made him pay for it, sending the pitch over the left-center field fence. It was only the third homer all year by a right-handed hitter off Lee's cutter - the first of which that was left over the middle of the plate.
- In the seventh, the inning in which the Giants broke through for three hits and three runs, they had success by being aggressive. Lee threw 20 pitches that inning and the Giants swung at 14 of them
(70 pct), the second highest percentage of any inning in Game 5. Cody Ross and Juan Uribe, who had the two hits to set up the homer, were particularly hungry, swinging at eight of the nine pitches they saw. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lincecum is the 4th NL pitcher with at least 10 K, allowing 3 hits or fewer and 1 ER or fewer in a World Series game. [+]10+ K, 3 Hits or Fewer, 1 ER or Fewer
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How Tim Lincecum dominated the Rangers, giving the Giants their first World Series title since 1954:
- Since changing the grip on his slider in early September, the pitch has been Lincecum's new best friend. He's been relying on it more frequently with increased success and Game 5 was no different. He threw 26 sliders, second-most this season to only his Game 1 start, when he threw 35. Eighteen of the 26 sliders (12 for strikes) came early in the count, as Lincecum paired it with his fastball to get ahead. Overall, the Rangers swung at the pitch 14 times, missing on an incredible nine of those swings (64 pct, season avg 31 pct).
Tim Lincecum's Slider
Since Changing Grip
Before After
Pitch pct 9.6 18.8
Opp BA .208 .148
Miss pct 28.2 34.7
K pct 27.6 35.1
>>Changed grip before September 12 start
- For his out pitch, Lincecum went to his bread and butter: the changeup. Hitters were 0-for-10 against his change with two strikes, including eight of his 10 strikeouts, which tied a season high. He had outstanding command of the pitch as he got Rangers hitters to expand their strike zone all night. Seven of his eight strikeouts on the change came on pitches out of the zone, with six of those seven coming down in the zone.
- Lincecum's devastating off-speed stuff was so effective, thanks to, at least in part, an improved fastball he showed in Game 5. His fastball averaged 92 MPH, only the third time since July 15 he's averaged 92 or higher. Of the 46 fastballs he threw, 29 were in the strike zone (63 pct), his best since September 18. Since his dominant start in Game 1 of the NLDS, opponents were hitting .440 against Lincecum's fastball. On Monday, showing improved velocity and command, hitters were just 1-for-8. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
The Giants won 6 games this postseason scoring 3 runs or fewer. That ties the 1972 Athletics for the most wins scoring 3 runs or fewer in a single postseason. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Single Postseason
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Tim Lincecum wins his 4th game of the postseason. He passes Christy Mathewson (1905) for the most wins by a Giants starter in a single postseason. Of course, Mathewson got all 3 of his wins in the World Series.
Lincecum won 2 games in the World Series. The only other Giants starters to win 2 games in a World SEries are Mathewson (1905), Rube Marquard (1912), Carl Hubbell (1933) and Phil Douglas (1921) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
6th HR this postseason for Nelson Cruz, breaking the Rangers record for most HR in a postseason (Juan Gonzalez and Josh Hamilton have 5). He also ties Juan Gonzalez for the most career postseason HR in Rangers history. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Edgar Renteria is the 6th SS with a go-ahead HR in the 7th inning or later of a World Series game. [+]Go-ahead HR, 7th Inning or Later
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Matt Cain went 21 1/3 IP without allowing an earned run this postseason, the 3rd-most IP in a single postseason without allowing an earned run: [+]Most IP in a Postseason - Without Allowing an ER
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Mitch Moreland's single in the 6th inning was his 13th as the No. 9 batter in the postseason. That ties the postseason record for most hits by a No. 9 hitter. Bucky Dent (1978), Alfonso Soriano (2001) and Adam Kennedy (2002) also had 13 hits. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Edgar Renteria becomes the 5th shortstop to win the World Series MVP: [+]Shortstops to Win World Series MVP - All-Time
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The Rangers offense just never found its groove in the World Series: [+]Rangers Team Batting - By Series This Postseason
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Tim Lincecum ties the all-time record for most strikeouts in a World Series-clinching game with 10. He's the first to do it since Bob Gibson in 1967: [+]Most Strikeouts in World Series-Clinching Win - All-Time
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Andres Torres had a double in the 2nd inning. Its his 4th straight game with an extra-base hit, tying the Giants postseason record. Edgardo Alfonzo (2003), Rich Aurilia (2002), Jeffrey Leonard (1987) and Irish Meusel (1921) also have 4-game streaks. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Pat Burrell: 2nd Giant with 4 K in a World Series game, joining Josh Devore (1911, also in 4 AB) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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