Saturday, October 29, 2011

Allen Craig no mere bench player for Cardinals

The injury to slugger Matt Holliday that kept him out of Game 7 was but a minor concern for the Cardinals.

They had the perfect replacement.

Allen Craig had a better September than Holliday ? and a better October, too. Stepping in after Holliday was taken off the World Series roster with a bruised right wrist, the 27-year-old Craig had the go-ahead hit Friday night with his fourth homer of the postseason and saved a run with a leaping catch at the left field wall that robbed Nelson Cruz of a homer.

St. Louis took the title with a 6-2 victory in Game 7.

  1. More Entertainment stories
    1. Is Daria returning to 'Beavis and Butt-head'?

      Fans of the show from back when it originally aired were excited for the return of the duo, but there's possibly some more good news.

    2. TV's undead battle: Zombies vs. vampires
    3. 'Sister Wives' kids struggle to adjust
    4. 3-D 'Puss in Boots' is the cat's meow
    5. Party on! The five best wild guys in film

In Game 6, Craig stepped in after Holliday was hurt diving back to third while getting picked off and homered in the eighth to fuel the first of two comebacks in the Cardinals' wild 10-9, 11-inning victory.

Craig was one of the Cardinals' most productive players in the World Series, with three homers and five RBIs.

He made only 47 starts in an injury-plagued regular season but was productive whenever he got the chance, batting .315 and elevating his game with a .327 average over the final month.

Holliday, hindered by injuries down the stretch, batted .254 in September. He was 3 for 19 (.158) in the World Series with no RBIs.

___

BERKMAN'S BIG SERIES: Lance Berkman was supposedly on the decline, his best years behind him, his big chance to win a championship with the New York Yankees spoiled and spent.

The St. Louis Cardinals disagreed.

Signed to an $8 million, one-year deal in the offseason, Berkman repaid the Cardinals for their faith during a scintillating postseason run. They capped it off Friday night, beating the Texas Rangers 6-2 in Game 7 for their 11th World Series championship.

The 35-year-old Berkman batted .423 with a homer and five RBIs during the Series, including a tying single in the 10th inning of Game 6 that kept St. Louis alive. David Freese ended up winning it with his homer leading off the 11th inning, sending the wild, back-and-forth Series to one more game.

In his typical, affable nature, Berkman brushed off the critical hit.

"If you don't come through right there, it's only one at-bat and it's over with. They might talk about it for a couple of days," he reasoned. "If you come through, it's the greatest."

"Plus, you've built an account of coming through," Berkman added. "So, if I don't come through in Game 7, I can be like, 'Well, I came through in Game 6!'"

His entire team came through in Game 7.

___

ALL IN: The Rangers' potent lineup was intact for Game 7 of the World Series. It just didn't do much.

Nelson Cruz was in right field and Mike Napoli was behind the plate against the St. Louis Cardinals on Friday night. Both were banged up in Game 6, and together they were 1 for 8 with a single.

Cruz strained his right groin after flying out in the 11th inning of Game 6. Napoli was banged up earlier in Game 6 when he slid awkwardly into second base, catching his left foot in the dirt and tumbling over the bag.

___

CODE BLUE: Rangers closer Neftali Feliz was available for Game 7 despite blowing the save in the ninth inning the previous night, costing Texas a chance to wrap up the series. He did not pitch.

Feliz struck out Ryan Theriot to start the ninth in Game 6, but Albert Pujols doubled to left and Lance Berkman drew a walk. Feliz rebounded to strike out Allen Craig, and David Freese was down to his final strike, before he hit a tying, two-run triple to right field.

Manager Ron Washington said he wasn't concerned with Feliz's psyche Friday night.

"He's very stable. We certainly didn't have to put a respirator on him. We didn't have to shock his heart back," Washington said. "In this game, there will be days when you don't have good days, and I think if you talk to Neftali last night, he didn't feel like it was a good day."

___

NERVOUS NELLIES: Cardinals manager Tony La Russa acknowledged that he was nervous before Game 7 of the World Series. After all, it's only natural.

"Whoever is not nervous should not participate," La Russa said, "because it means you don't care. Nervous is good. Nervous means you care and you're ready, and you learn how to control your nerves.

"I tried to explain this because it's how I feel," he said. "Every time you get into one of these things, you enjoy it more because of your past experience. It never disappoints. So here is like, the final piece, you participate in a Game 7, and that's as good as it gets."

So, does Ron Washington get nervous, too?

"Well, if Tony is nervous," the Texas manager said, "how can Ron Washington not be nervous?"

___

TORNADO RELIEF: Major League Baseball dedicated Game 7 to tornado relief efforts in the Southeast and Midwest, including Joplin, Mo., where an EF5 tornado wiped out a large swath of town.

Children from the Joplin South Little League were recognized prior to the first pitch between Texas and St. Louis. MLB encouraged fans to visit MLBCommunity.org, where they can contribute to the Heart to Heart Organizatoin and Habitat for Humanity.

"We are a social institution, and it's not that we should be doing these things, we're privileged to be doing them," MLB Commissioner Bud Selig said.

___

TAKE THE MIC: Chris Daughtry, the four-time Grammy Award nominee, was scheduled to perform the national anthem before the deciding game of the World Series on Friday night.

Daughtry is the second alum of the Fox television show "American Idol" to sing the anthem ? Scotty McCreery performed it before Game 1. The World Series is televised by Fox.

Country music artist David Nail was to sing "God Bless America." The Missouri native headlined a disaster relief concert in May following the tornados that ravaged much of the Midwest.

___

RAMS CELEBRATING: The St. Louis Rams are offering $23 tickets to fans who come to the Edward Jones Dome box office before their game against the New Orleans Saints on Sunday.

The tickets honor the jersey number of Cardinals third baseman David Freese, who hit the winning homer in the 11th inning Thursday night to force Game 7.

The Rams are 30th in the NFL with average home attendance of 56,374 this season. That's 86.3 percent of capacity, which ranks 28th among the 32 franchises.

___

AP Sports Writer R.B. Fallstrom contributed to this report.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45083995/ns/today-entertainment/

post office hours post office hours coptic coptic breaking bad season finale breaking bad season finale jets patriots

No comments:

Post a Comment