Giants win a pitcher’s duel to take 2-0 Series lead Tigers

Giants win a pitcher’s duel for 2-0 World Series lead over Tigers

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SAN FRANCISCO (MCT) — It’s starting to look like 2010 all over again.

Two years ago, a supposedly overmatched Giants team threw up an impenetrable wall of pitching against the Rangers, dispatching the powerful AL champions in five games.

Madison Bumgarner, who starred in that Series, reprised that role on Thursday night, pitching seven innings as the Giants beat the Tigers, 2-0, at AT&T Park. The Giants, as they did in 2010, lead the Series 2-0.

San Francisco outhit the Tigers 5-2 in Game 2. Game 3 is Saturday night in Detroit, where Anibal Sanchez will try to get the Tigers on the board against Ryan Vogelsong, who was brilliant in Game 6 of the NLCS.

Doug Fister, who took a liner off his head in the second inning, was the hard-luck loser. His bullpen allowed an inherited runner to score the first run on a double play with the bases loaded in the seventh.

Fister, 0-0 with a 1.35 ERA in two previous starts this postseason, allowed one run and four hits in six innings.

Hunter Pence, who scored the seventh-inning run, hit a sacrifice fly in the eighth to drive in Angel Pagan for a 2-0 lead.

Bumgarner, who struck out six in eight scoreless innings in Game 4 of the 2010 Series as a 21-year-old, struck out eight.

This game couldn’t have been more different from Game 1, a surprising blowout in which the Giants’ Pablo Sandoval took center stage by blasting three home runs.

“That’s a big term that’s used quite a bit,” Giants manager Bruce Bochy said before the game when asked about any momentum his team might have gained from Game 1. “But I think it starts with the guy on the hill. Your pitcher usually sets the tone and creates that.”

Bumgarner and Fister were equal to the task. As good as Bumgarner was, Fister might have been more impressive.

With two outs and one on in the second, Gregor Blanco lined a 79-mph changeup straight off Fister’s head, with the ball ending up in center for a hit. Fister, after being evaluated by manager Jim Leyland and the training staff, stayed in and walked Brandon Crawford to load the bases. But Fister retired Bumgarner, the first of 12 straight. Sandoval ended that streak with a two-out single in the sixth.

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