Results tagged ‘ Rich Aurilia ’

View Level Timeline – Part 6

In 2008, to celebrate our 50th anniversary in San Francisco  we installed a timeline on the View Level at the ballpark which highlighted some of our great players and amazing moments.  We know that all of our fans are not able to come to a game at the park, or those who do may not be old enough to remember some of our alumni.  For this road trip we decided to showcase the timeline and give everyone a bit more information about the moments. One banner, lots of recent memories are highlighted here.

sf giants, san francisco giants, 2012, photo, view level timeline,

The first 7 years at our new ballpark packed a lot of memories.

View Level Timeline – Part 5

In 2008, to celebrate our 50th anniversary in San Francisco  we installed a timeline on the View Level at the ballpark which highlighted some of our great players and amazing moments.  We know that all of our fans are not able to come to a game at the park, or those who do may not be old enough to remember some of our alumni.  For this road trip we decided to showcase the timeline and give everyone a bit more information about the moments. The 1997 team, the final game at Candlestick and the first few years at PacBell/AT&T Park are all represented in these two panels.

sf giants, san francisco giants, photo, 2012, timeline, view level, 1997

Great moments during the final 3 years at Candlestick are the highlights of this banner

sf giants, san francisco giants, photo, 2012, timeline, view level, pacific bell park, 2000

A New Ballpark!

View Level Timeline – Part 4

In 2008, to celebrate our 50th anniversary in San Francisco  we installed a timeline on the View Level at the ballpark which highlighted some of our great players and amazing moments.  We know that all of our fans are not able to come to a game at the park, or those who do may not be old enough to remember some of our alumni.  For this road trip we decided to showcase the timeline and give everyone a bit more information about the moments. Everything from 1987 to 1999 is on the banners for today.

sf giants, san francisco giants, photo, 2012, view level, 1987

The 1987 team is the focus of the twelfth banner

sf giants, san francisco giants, photo, 2012, view level, 1989

The next banner contains images from the 1989 team

sf giants, san francisco giants, photo, 2012, view level,

The fourteenth banner highlights the first years of the Peter Magowan Era

sf giants, san francisco giants, photo, 2012, view level,

Some of the great players from the 90s are featured on the next banner

2002 Team Reunion

2002 team reunion, sf giants, san francisco giants, photo, 2012, team

The 2002 Team

It’s been a great Sunday!  Members of the 2002 team turned out to be honored during a pre-game ceremony.

A Look Back – 2002 – NLCS

In honor of the 2002 Team Reunion coming up on July 1 we wanted to look back at some of the great moments during the 2002 season. Following a furious late-season run to capture the Wild Card berth and a stirring five-game NLDS victory over Atlanta, the Giants provided the only truly fitting encore—they won the club’s first NL pennant in 13 years by defeating the St. Louis Cardinals in a scintillating and highly competitive five-contest NLCS.

San Francisco began its run to the Fall Classic by winning each of the first two contests in St. Louis. The Giants pounded Cardinals ace Matt Morris early and often en route to a 9-6 victory in Game #1, while Jason Schmidt turned in a dominating Game #2 performance. The right-hander struck out eight and carried a shutout into the eighth inning, while Rich Aurilia’s two-homer, three-RBI effort spurred a 4-1 triumph.

Despite Barry Bonds’ dramatic three-run, fifth- inning homer into McCovey Cove that briefly tied Game #3 at AT&T Park, a solo clout by St. Louis’ Eli Marrero and stingy pitching by the Cardinal bull- pen gave the visitors a 5-4 win and renewed hope.

St. Louis jumped out to a 2-0, first-inning lead in Game #4 and appeared on its way to evening the series until a pair of Giants veterans turned the tide. In the sixth, J.T. Snow delivered a two-out, two-run double that knotted the contest. Following a two-out intentional walk to Bonds in the eighth, Benito Santiago cemented his series MVP honors by clubbing a full-count offering from Rick White into the left field bleachers for a 4-2 lead. Robb Nen struck out the final two hitters in the ninth to strand the tying run at third and close out a 4-3 SF victory.

Giants’ lefty Kirk Rueter and Morris engaged in a classic October pitchers’ duel in a Game #5 that was scoreless until St. Louis broke through with a run in the seventh. Bonds tied the contest 1-1 with an eighth-inning sacrifice fly, thus setting the stage for one of the most dramatic moments in San Francisco history.

Morris retired the first two Giants hitters in the bottom of the ninth inning, but was chased by consecutive singles from David Bell and Shawon Dunston. St. Louis turned to reliever Steve Kline, and Kenny Lofton greeted the southpaw by lining his first pitch into right-center field for a single that scored a sliding Bell as the jubilant NL champion Giants poured onto the field.

A Look Back – 2002 – WC Clinch & NLDS

2002 NLDS, sf giants, san francisco giants, photo, team

Winning the National League Division Series in Atlanta

In honor of the 2002 Team Reunion coming up on July 1 we wanted to look back at some of the great moments during the 2002 season.   Fans were excited on September 28th when Barry Bonds hit the 46th ball into McCovey Cove, but everyone erupted when Robb Nen got his 43rd save of the season that gave the Giants the NL Wild Card Championship.  But that was just the beginning. A little over a week later Tim Worrell struck out 3 batters in his 2 innings and Nen nailed down a 3-1 victory over the Atlanta Braves to win the NLCS.

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