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Tigers go silently in Game 2, head home in a scoring drought

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(MCT) — SAN FRANCISCO — Doug Fister did something no Tiger had ever done.

But left-hander Madison Bumgarner did something no Giant had done since Christy Mathewson, and he beat Fister, 2-0, in Game 2 of the World Series on Thursday night at AT&T Park.

Fister, unfazed by a line drive off his head in the second inning, allowed one run in his six-plus innings.

But Bumgarner didn’t allow a run in his seven innings.

Research on Baseball-Reference.com showed what each pitcher accomplished.

Fister became the first Tiger ever to make five straight postseason starts in which he went at least five innings and allowed two runs or fewer.

Bumgarner became the first Giants pitcher since Mathewson in 1905 to not allow a run in his first two career starts in the World Series. Mathewson did that as part of his legendary three shutouts in 1905 against the A’s.

Bumgarner won because the Giants scored a walk-fueled run in the seventh then added another in the eighth. The Giants have a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven Series that might be even more commanding than it looks. Even if the Tigers sweep the next three games at home, they still have to win Game 6 or Game 7 without the DH in the Giants’ big and loud home park. In two games there, they’ve scored only one run before the ninth inning.

The Tigers put a runner to scoring position against Bumgarner only in the second. With none out in that inning, Prince Fielder was thrown out at the plate when third-base coach Gene Lamont waved him home on Delmon Young’s double down the left-field line.

A third-base coach is like a punter — if there’s a crowd of reporters around him, it’s probably not to talk about something that turned out well.

“I saw the ball bounce away from the left fielder,” Lamont told several writers in the clubhouse. “They made a perfect relay. I was wrong. If I had to do it over again, I can’t say I would have sent him.”

When a walk and a well-placed bunt allowed the Giants to break the scoreless tie in the seventh, Fister became what he was so often in his pre-Tigers days in Seattle: a loser when he pitched well because of poor run support.

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