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Thursday, October 17 World Series: Five key questions By Tim Kurkjian ESPN The Magazine The first wild-card World Series will be ... wild. From the crowd in Anaheim to the first trip to the Series for the Angels and for Barry Bonds, to the uncertain future of manager Dusty Baker to the anticipated confrontation between Bonds and Francisco Rodriguez, it will be great. Here are five key questions:
1. Can San Francisco slow down Anaheim's offensive machine?
They are relentless from one through nine in the order. Adam Kennedy, their No. 9 hitter, batted over .300 from that spot this season; he also had a three-homer game in Game 5 of the ALCS. The Angels will do anything to get on base, led by leadoff man David Eckstein, who wears no padding, but is willing to stick any body part in front of pitches thrown in the 90s. To combat this, the Giants have versatile starting pitchers, including Kirk Rueter, who has allowed just six stolen bases in the last three years. He's so quick to the plate, teams rarely start a runner against him. Livan Hernandez has great hands, so it's not a good idea to try to bunt against him.
2. Who will be the DH for the Giants?
3. What team has a better bullpen? The Angels bullpen was brilliant in the first two rounds, led by closer Troy Percival and a bunch of set-up guys, including Brendan Donnelly, Ben Weber and Scott Schoeneweis, who is more than a situational left-hander. The key to the Angels pen is 20-year-old Francisco Rodriguez, who won his first four major-league games in the playoffs -- no one had ever gotten his first major-league win in the postseason. Rodriguez's slider and 95-mph heater has been nearly untouchable, giving the Angels another power arm in the late innings.
4. How will the Angels pitch Barry Bonds? Benito Santiago, the most important player for the Giants because he hits behind Bonds in the No. 5 slot, has gone 5-for-13 with two homers and eight RBIs in the postseason following walks to Bonds. The Angels likely will make Santiago beat them. In 13 interleague games against the Giants (none this year) the Angels walked Bonds 15 times, six intentionally. Bonds hit five homers. Bonds' first opponent will be left-hander Jarrod Washburn. Counting the postseason, Bonds, according to Elias, has hit 22 home runs this year against left-handers, most ever by a left-handed hitter off left-handed pitching.
5. How did the Giants get this far without a 15-game winner? Prediction: Giants in seven. Tim Kurkjian is a senior writer for ESPN The Magazine and a regular contributor to Baseball Tonight. |
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