WORLD SERIES NEWS/RECAP

World Series Notes: Giants have been here before

The Sports Xchange

October 20, 2014 at 4:18 pm.

 

Madison Bumgarner will take the mound for the Giants in Game 1 of the World Series. (Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports)

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The San Francisco Giants have been here before, winning the 2010 and 2012 World Series.

The Kansas City Royals have not been to this biggest baseball stage since 1985 when they defeated the St. Louis Cardinals in seven games. That was also the last time the Royals were in the playoffs, so most of their players are postseason neophytes.

Advantage Giants.

“I can imagine any time you’ve done something more than your opponent, it’s going to make it easier to understand the weight of the situation,” said Royals eighth-inning setup reliever Wade Davis. “I think we’re all pretty comfortable where we are right now. We’ve played in some pretty big games and beat some really good teams.”

The Royals are 8-0 in postseason play, sweeping the Orioles and Angels after rallying to top the Athletics in extra-innings in the wild-card game.

Both teams worked out Monday afternoon, with the World Series beginning Tuesday night at Kauffman Stadium with James Shields starting for the Royals and Madison Bumgarner for the visitors.

While the Royals have the home-field advantage, that does not faze the Giants, who are 16-5 on the road in postseason play since 2010.

“That’s tough to explain,” Bumgarner said. “It definitely has worked that way for us. I don’t know the numbers, but it does seem like we’re not really affected much be being on the road. Obviously, you would like to be at home. Home-field advantage is a little bit of an advantage. But we’re here, and we’re playing the cards we were dealt.”

While Bumgarner will be working on his normal four days rest, Shields has not pitched in 11 days.

“Resting and some bullpen action, just trying to repeat my delivery in my bullpen sessions,” Shields said. “I think this late in the year almost too much throwing is too much, so I’ve just kind of rested by body up for (Tuesday).”

–Jarrod Dyson is the Royals’ fourth outfielder and deluxe pinch runner, but has become a go-to guy for the media. After the Royals won the first two ALCS games in Baltimore, he predicted the series would not return to Baltimore and it did not.

“It’s not a time for a prediction,” Dyson said Monday. “I can’t give you guys no headlines, man. I’m sorry. That’s my new name now ‘Headline.’ They (teammates) gave me a new name because I give you guys a headline, talking crazy.”

Dyson stole third base on his own in the ninth inning of the wild-card game against Oakland and scored the tying run on right fielder Nori Aoki’s sacrifice fly. If he had been thrown out, the Royals probably would have been eliminated.

“That was a gutsy move by me. If I get thrown out right there, the whole city is ready to kill me,” Dyson said and laughed.

–Giants right-hander Tim Lincecum, a two-time National League Cy Young Award winner, has not pitched since Sept. 28 and has not started since Aug. 23.

Bochy said Lincecum had a good bullpen session Sunday.

“We need to have him ready because you don’t know what’s going to happen in the game,” Bochy said. “He’s ready to go and he’s healthy. It’s an old adage, all hands on deck, and he’s one of them. If it’s the right spot, he’ll be out there.”

Bochy said Lincecum, who was 12-9 with a 4.47 ERA in 33 games, 26 of them starts, has mentally handled it “great.”

“Really been upbeat about it, he understands,” Bochy said. “He’s done so much, including this year. You go back to ’12 and he was a weapon in the bullpen, and he could be that this series. I feel bad for him that he didn’t get to pitch against Washington or St. Louis because I think a lot of Timmy. There was never any thought of not having him on this roster. Not just having him on the roster, but the fact that he could help us at some point.”

–NOTES: Bochy said Michael Morse would DH for the series opener, with Travis Ishikawa, who hit the game-winning home run in the series clincher against St. Louis, playing left field. Bochy also said the Giants’ World Series roster is “going to remain the same” as it was for the NLCS. The 25-man rosters have to be set Tuesday. … Ned Yost of the Royals said he is a “completely different” manager than when he managed the Brewers from 2003-08. “I think I’ve learned to let my players be themselves,” Yost said. “Because I have great coaches, I think I listen a lot more than I did back then. I’m pretty hard-headed, a little more flexible, and use the tremendous experience we have in our coaching staff to my benefit and our benefit.” … This is the second time in the wild-card era (since 1995) two wild-card teams advanced to the Fall Classic. The previous was 2002, when the Angels beat the Giants in seven games. … This is the second time two teams proceeded to the World Series with less than 90 victories during the regular season (excluding the strike-shortened 1981 season). The Giants went 88-74, while the Royals finished 89-73. In 1918, the Cubs (88-45) defeated the Red Sox (75-51) in the 1918 World Series.