您现在的位置是:綜合 >>正文
【】
綜合7373人已围观
简介There is a list — a short list — of San Francisco Giants postseason legends.This particu ...
There is a list — a short list — of San Francisco Giants postseason legends.
This particular list doesn't include Madison Bumgarner, Buster Posey, Tim Lincecum and all of the perennial household names in San Francisco.
No, this is a list of Giants who were virtually nameless until a dose of 'even year' magic shoved them into San Francisco Giants lore forever. These select few cashed in when no one expected them to — when the lights were brightest — and will never be forgotten.
Conor Gillaspie just joined that list.
SEE ALSO:The San Francisco Giants just aren't weird enough to win the World Series this even yearIn the ninth inning of Wednesday night's one-game wild card playoff, Gillaspie knocked one over the right field fence, breaking a scoreless tie, giving the Giants a 3-0 lead and essentially punching their ticket to the National League Division Series.
“I’d be lying to you if I said I had words to describe that moment,” Gillaspie told reporters after the game. “Absolutely incredible, I guess, is the best that I can do."
Because of Gillaspie, who was cut by the Angels exactly a year ago, the Giants will live to see at least three more games.
World, meet Conor Gillaspie.
— MLB (@MLB) October 6, 2016
He just set up a @SFGiants-@Cubs #NLDS. https://t.co/Q4F1uxVpqA #WildCard pic.twitter.com/wcGDJ0VNnc
Before Wednesday, Gillaspie was a player vaguely familiar (at best) to Giants fans, but he just reached "legend" status. And his path to this moment is even more remarkable.
The third baseman was drafted by the Giants in 2008, the 37th overall pick. He bounced around the organization for a few years before getting traded to the White Sox, where he earned a starting job for two years. He struggled in 2015, and was traded for pocket change to the Angels, who released him a few weeks later.
In February 2016, the Giants took another chance on Gillaspie.
It paid off, in weird, serendipitous form, no less.
When Giants starting third baseman Eduardo Nunez went down with a hamstring injury on Sept. 25, Gillaspie filled in and never looked back. He finished the regular season hitting .500 with four runs and five RBI in five games. Gillaspie's performance was not only impressive, it was essentialto the Giants even making the postseason. Their playoff fate hung in the balance until the season's final day, when Gillaspie made this incredible catch.

He didn't have a job a year ago. Now, he's a Giants hero.
But somehow, there's a precedent that goes along with all this. What Giants fans call "even year magic" works in mysterious ways. It's part superstition, part fact, part undeniable truth. And it just got confirmed for the fourth consecutive even year.
San Francisco's postseason teams in 2010, 2012, 2014, and now 2016, are all characterized by clutch performances from relatively unknown players.
Just ask Cody Ross.
The Giants acquired him in 2010 only to prevent him from going to the Padres. The Giants started him in right field in the playoffs because their usual right fielder was caught with human growth hormones. Ross wasn't a big name to Giants fans. That is, until he hit two home runs off Cy Young Award winner Roy Halladay in the 2010 National League Championship Series, leaving fans both ecstatic and dumfounded.
Now, he's on the list.

Just ask Travis Ishikawa.
Drafted by the Giants, he played for five other teams between 2012 and 2014, when the Giants decided to take another chance on him. Six months later, he hit the walk-off home run that sent the Giants to the 2014 World Series.

He didn't have a job. Now he's a Giants hero, and he's most definitely on the list.
Sound familiar?
There are a couple others, Marco Scutaro and Michael Morse, whose postseason heroics came out of nowhere in 2012 and 2014, respectively, and thrust them into San Francisco baseball history.
The Giants are a team that defies all odds and predictions when it comes to October, at least during even years in this decade. They're a team filled with the most improbable stories and the most unlikely stars.
By that measure, it's no surprise Conor Gillaspie is 2016's installment of the list.
He is the pure essence of the unsung Giants hero, the embodiment of even year magic, when nameless players with whirlwind careers find themselves on the biggest stages.
That stage gets arguably bigger on Friday, when San Francisco faces off against the Chicago Cubs, baseball's best regular season team.
If "even year magic" has anything to say about it, Gillaspie's story is far from over.
Tags:
转载:欢迎各位朋友分享到网络,但转载请说明文章出处“夫榮妻貴網”。http://new.maomao321.com/news/01c7699922.html
相关文章
Dramatic photo captures nun texting friends after Italy earthquake
綜合The image of an injured, bloodied nun, calmly texting friends and family in the wake of the deadly e ...
【綜合】
阅读更多Elizabeth Warren hid some inspiring Easter eggs in her Democratic convention speech
綜合Senator Elizabeth Warren might have been one of the last candidates standing in the race for the Dem ...
【綜合】
阅读更多The best messaging apps not owned by Facebook
綜合With purchase after purchase, milestone surpassed after milestone surpassed, Facebook continues its ...
【綜合】
阅读更多
热门文章
- Two states took big steps this week to get rid of the tampon tax
- Shazam is coming to iPhone's control panel soon
- Trump is desperate to seem manly. It's hurting us all.
- Next Google Nest thermostat might support motion control, like Pixel 4
- Fake news reports from the Newseum are infinitely better than actual news
- How a TikTok ban could work, and what it means for your content
最新文章
Twitter grants everyone access to quality filter for tweet notifications
Mariah Carey reveals hidden vocals on '90s alt
The virtual DNC missed out on reaching young voters
Gabbie Hanna returns to social media
Sound the alarms: Simone Biles finally met Zac Efron
What is invisible labor? It's real and it hurts. Here's what to know.