[新聞] Lincecum spins 3-hit shutout against …
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Lincecum spins three-hit shutout against A's
By Chris Haft / MLB.com | 5/22/2011 12:40 AM ET
SAN FRANCISCO -- Though Tim Lincecum yielded little Saturday, he did flip the
baseball he threw for the game's final strike into the stands as he left the
diamond.
After all, Lincecum needed no mementos of his performance. The box score of
the Giants' 3-0 victory over the Oakland A's accurately conveyed his
excellence. And his sheer pitching mastery should have left an enduring
impression on the 17th consecutive sellout crowd at AT&T Park and the viewers
of FOX's telecast.
Lincecum allowed three hits, all singles, while recording his fifth career
shutout. Between Ryan Sweeney's two-out grounder to right field in the first
inning and Landon Powell's line drive to right in the eighth, Lincecum
retired 21 consecutive batters, permitting just five balls to clear the
infield in that span. Maintaining impeccable command of his entire repertoire
of deliveries -- fastball, curveball, slider and changeup -- Lincecum ran up
four three-ball counts in the first three innings but only one thereafter in
his 60th career victory.
"It's always a challenge going against him, because he has a hard fastball
and good arm action on his changeup," said A's third baseman Kevin
Kouzmanoff, a .351 lifetime hitter against Lincecum who went 0-for-3. "His
fastball and his changeup are so far apart, and that's what makes him a good
pitcher. It's an explosive fastball and he locates well. If you get that
pitch to hit, you have to hit it because you probably won't get it again."
Renowned for accumulating scads of strikeouts, Lincecum followed the pitching
gospel of Juan Marichal, the Giants legend to whom he's so often compared.
Lincecum dominated the A's without overpowering them, walking none while
striking out six. This was not a conscious effort, Lincecum said. But he
welcomed the results, which, he said, "allowed me to keep that good pace and
good rhythm throughout the game."
Then Lincecum summoned his strikeout magic in the ninth inning as if to
emphasize his authority.
A's pinch-hitter David DeJesus drilled a leadoff single, one pitch after
Giants closer Brian Wilson scampered to the bullpen to warm up. Lincecum fell
behind on the count to Coco Crisp, 2-0. That prompted a visit from pitching
coach Dave Righetti, who warned Lincecum that he was slightly rushing his
delivery. Lincecum responded by whistling a pair of called strikes past
Crisp, who ultimately grounded into a force play.
Then came the power: a swinging strikeout of Daric Barton on a 96-mph
fastball. A 95-mph fastball on a 1-2 count over the outside corner that
Sweeney merely stared at, ending the Giants' eighth consecutive home victory
and fourth in a row overall. The outcome widened San Francisco's National
League West lead to 2 1/2 games over Colorado.
It was as if Wilson actually had entered the game. Indeed, said Giants
manager Bruce Bochy, "I think your great starters are also closers. Though
[Lincecum] doesn't complete a lot of games, he's a guy you like out there.
... He turned it up a notch. I think he saw Willie warming up and wanted to
finish it."
Lincecum acknowledged that he redoubled his effort in the ninth.
"Especially with the lead we had, it wasn't big and anything can kind of
happen in that situation," he said. "You have to go out there and put out
what's left in the tank."
Bochy revealed that Sweeney would have been the last hitter Lincecum faced.
Lincecum was fully aware of this.
"That's kind of why I didn't want to let him [Sweeney] get away," Lincecum
said.
Lincecum didn't, though his pitch count climbed to 133, exceeded only by the
138 he flung in a four-hit shutout on Sept. 13, 2008, at San Diego. Yet if
anything, Lincecum looked sharper in the ninth inning than in the first, when
he needed 24 pitches to complete the frame. Asked how this could be, catcher
Buster Posey alluded to Lincecum's familiar nickname while responding, "I
don't know. He's a freak."
Lincecum had no explanation for his edge over the A's. He's 5-0 with a 0.64
ERA, three complete games and two shutouts in six career starts against
Oakland.
"Maybe it's that I don't see them that much throughout the year. I have no
idea," he said.
Lincecum admitted that the afternoon shadows, resulting from the game's 4:15
p.m. PT start, enhanced his brilliance.
"I have sympathy for them," Lincecum said, referring to hitters in general.
"It's tough at times [with] the game times that we have. The shadows kind of
settle in. You have to take advantage of it from a pitcher's perspective."
As Posey explained, "It's one of those things where the ball's coming in from
the sunlight to the shade. It's tough to see spin. We all have to deal with
it. It's one of those things you try to battle through."
Posey battled through it better than anyone else. He lengthened his hitting
streak to 10 games, going 2-for-4 while scoring a run and driving in another
to account for most of the Giants' offense.
"He was using the whole field," Bochy said, referring to the first-inning RBI
groundout and the eighth-inning single Posey poked the opposite way, as well
as the third-inning double and fifth-inning lineout he yanked to left.
Posey's production stood out, since Lincecum let none of the A's come close
to equaling it.
Chris Haft is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the
approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
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