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Winn supports Cain as Giants edge Nationals
SAN FRANCISCO 3, WASHINGTON 2
 


By Todd Jacobson
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

WASHINGTON (Ticker) -- For the better part of seven innings, San
Francisco Giants righthander Matt Cain labored through 92-degree
heat and humidity thick as a fog, while sweating through 108
pitches.

But it took just two brief appearances from reliever Keiichi
Yabu and closer Brian Wilson to extricate Cain from a pair of
tough situations as the Giants posted a 3-2 victory over the
Washington Nationals on Monday night.

With two men on base and Cain watching from the Giants' dugout
in the seventh inning, Yabu needed just four pitches to coax an
inning-ending double play out of Nationals pinch hitter Aaron
Boone.

Before he pitched a scoreless ninth inning for his 18th save,
Wilson recorded the final out of the eighth with the bases
loaded when Felipe Lopez lined out to right field.

"That's the ultimate situation for me. I like it," said Wilson,
who was well aware of the gravity of the situation. "We had the
opportunity to win that fourth game, and it was just that
much-added emphasis going out there and getting the job done."

Randy Winn drove in two runs and scored another to spark the
offense for San Francisco, which completed a four-game sweep and
helped lift Cain to his first win since May 13.

"We have had some good stretches and some bad stretches but we
haven't been able to put together a long stretch of playing
good," Winn said. "It's a good start to our road trip, but
we'll see. We just have to keep it up."

As the Giants finished up the first leg of a seven-game road
trip, it was never easy.

Cain (3-4) was bailed out by veteran catcher Bengie Molina, who
caught Elijah Dukes and Lastings Milledge trying to steal second
base on back-to-back at-bats in the first inning. Cain also
scattered eight hits and one walk to go with six strikeouts in 6
1/3 innings.

He gave up just one run, which came in the fourth inning, when
Milledge narrowly missed a home run - his opposite-field shot
cleared the top of the out-of-town scoreboard in right-center
field but caromed back into play off of a clear piece of
plexiglass separating fans from the field.

Milledge eventually came around to score on a sacrifice fly by
Nationals catcher Jesus Flores.

"Cain was good today," Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. "That
was a great outing for him. He did what we needed, which was go
deep into the game. ... He just looked determined to go out
there and get it done."

That seemed especially true as he wriggled out of a sixth-inning
jam.

With runners on first and third and two outs, Cain fired pitch
after pitch to Flores - 11 fastballs and sliders - before Flores
finally swung and missed at a slider diving off the corner of
the plate.

In that situation, Cain said "somebody's going to have to give
in, and I didn't want it to be me."

Despite green caps - worn on the team's environmentally-friendly
"Get Your Green On" Night - the Nationals remained in a
series-long, and season-long, offensive funk.

With five members of the team's Opening Day lineup on the
disabled list, including 3-4-5 hitters Ryan Zimmerman, Nick
Johnson and Austin Kearns, Washington scored just six runs in
four losses to the Giants and remained last in the National
League in batting average and runs scored.

"This is our team," Washington manager Manny Acta said.
"Nobody's going to feel sorry for us. We shouldn't feel sorry
for ourselves. We just have to keep on fighting and snap out of
it."

Dmitri Young and Cristian Guzman had two hits apiece for the
Nationals, who left eight on base. But no situation was more
telling than what transpired in the eighth.

After nearly scoring in the seventh, Washington loaded the bases
against reliever Tyler Walker one frame later and scored a run
on a throwing error by Molina. That brought on Wilson, who got
Lopez to fly out.

Meanwhile, the Giants provided just enough offense against
Nationals righthander Tyler Clippard (0-1), who was acquired in
a trade with the New York Yankees during the winter. He made
his Washington debut, and like rookie Garrett Mock a day before
him, Clippard lasted just 4 1/3 innings, tiring in the heat.

He allowed just five hits and struck out six, but Winn broke up
a 1-1 game with one of his two RBI on a fifth-inning single.

Molina added a run-scoring double to end Clippard's night. Like
Mock, Clippard was sent back to Class AAA Columbus following the
loss, when infielder Ronnie Belliard was activated from the
15-day disabled list.

 
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