The Washington Times

Giants’ Scutaro takes long journey to NLCS MVP

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Fans labeled Marco Scutaro a super-sub in Oakland for all his fill-in roles. Others called him a Colorado castoff in July, and his new San Francisco Giants teammates nicknamed him “Blockbuster” for the often overlooked trade-deadline move.

Now he has a new title: NLCS MVP.

Scutaro tied the league championship series record with 14 hits to earn the honors, capping off his remarkable run with three singles and a walk in San Francisco’s 9-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Monday night in the decisive Game 7.

After several stops and bumps along the way, the 36-year-old has finally found a place where fans will know his name for years to come.

“As soon as you get traded, you kind of start thinking where you’re going to live, your family, you have to pack,” Scutaro said. “I kind of thought I had a really good opportunity to make the playoffs with this team. We just started playing good, and here we are in the World Series.”

In a fitting ending to a series that saw Scutaro absorb a hard and an admitted late slide from Matt Holliday that strained the second baseman’s left hip, Scutaro caught Holliday’s popup through the pouring rain for the final out.

He batted .500 with two walks, scored six runs and drove in four. Hideki Matsui (2004 Yankees), Albert Pujols (2004 Cardinals) and Kevin Youkilis (2007 Red Sox) also had 14 hits in an LCS. And Scutaro’s 10-game hitting streak ties Cody Ross and Alvin Dark for the longest in Giants postseason history.

Starting Wednesday night in San Francisco, he’ll have a chance to break that mark when the Giants host the Detroit Tigers in Game 1 of the World Series.

“It took him a couple days to adjust to us, but he really has been a leader since he got here,” said pitcher Ryan Vogelsong, who won Games 2 and 6. “He’s played great. He’s played great defense. He’s a true professional. He knows the game. He does all the little things right. Everything you’d lay out on a table for a guy to do, he does.”

The Giants acquired the Venezuelan native at the trade deadline. It turned out to be one of baseball’s best moves, and easily one of its most overlooked.

While the rival Dodgers’ spending spree made headlines from coast-to-coast, the Giants took on just $2.1 million of Scutaro’s salary from Colorado in exchange for minor leaguer Charlie Culberson.

All Scutaro has done since is make opponents pay _ and he earned a $75,000 bonus for winning NLCS MVP honors in the process.

“That’s the best thing that’s ever happened so far,” said Giants ace Matt Cain, who threw 5 2-3 innings of five-hit ball in the clincher. “That’s why it’s `The Blockbuster.’”

He had a major impact even before October, batting .339 after the All-Star break to power the Giants‘ playoff push. Scutaro has delivered in the biggest moments in the postseason, and in many ways, has become the 2012 version of Ross.

The Giants plucked Ross off waivers in August two years ago and watched him capture MVP honors in the NLCS against Philadelphia and help lead them to the first World Series title since moving from New York in 1958. And just like in 2010, general manager Brian Sabean’s move made the biggest noise at the most key time.

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