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Giants oust Carpenter after four innings, even NLCS

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The Cardinals reverted to their early September form on defense after playing crisply the last several weeks.

Absent was the collegiate enthusiasm that spilled over the dugout rail during Sunday’s 6-4 Cardinals win.

The Cardinals appeared in counterpunch mode, unable to generate a hit with runners in scoring position while trying to patch together another five innings from an increasingly stressed bullpen.

The Cardinals left runners in scoring position in four of the first five innings while failing to score any of three men who rattled Vogelsong with doubles.

The night’s most promising threat also became its most controversial after Carlos Beltran walked and Holliday singled with one out in the first inning.

First baseman Allen Craig bounced a ground ball to shortstop. Scutaro took the feed while keeping the bag between him and the churning Holliday, who appeared to launch himself over the base at Scutaro’s left leg.

Giants manager Bruce Bochy briefly argued for interference against Holliday but received no satisfaction.

The play was fresh enough for Pagan to salute the Cardinals dugout as he began his home run trot.

Vogelsong dodged the threat when he extended catcher Yadier Molina’s tough postseason with a ground ball. (Molina singled in the ninth to break a one-for-19 funk.)

The Cardinals have scored 41 runs in five playoff wins. They have scraped for 10 hits in their three losses.

The Giants badly needed an extended outing from their rotation and Vogelsong delivered.

Vogelsong, the NL earned-run average leader through Aug. 12, was good enough to construct a string of 16 consecutive quality starts early this season but entered Monday with only two outings of at least six innings among his last seven.

Monday he lasted seven innings before turning over a four-run lead to a bullpen that had thrown 51/3 hitless innings the previous night.

Vogelsong never faced the tying run at the plate after a fourth inning in which first baseman Brian Belt opened the surge with an opposite-field flare that dropped near the left-field line for a double.

The Giants then took advantage of the Cardinals’ defensive positioning when left fielder Gregor Blanco chopped a one-hopper over third baseman David Freese for a single to put runners at the corners.

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