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Giants sweep Tigers for second title in three years

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(MCT) — DETROIT — The chant started loud and got louder, grown men hopping up and down in a pack, chanting a single syllable, over and over.

“HOO! HOO! HOO!”

It was 20 days ago that the San Francisco Giants first faced extinction, 20 days ago that Hunter Pence spoke up for the first time. His inspirational speeches turned into dugout pep rallies, with the players gathering before the game and chanting themselves into a frenzy.

“HOO! HOO! HOO!”

The Giants chanted one last time this season, this time with a prop. The players held aloft the World Series championship trophy, passing it among themselves in a cramped visiting clubhouse drenched in alcohol and emotion.

For the second time in three years, the Giants are champions. After surviving six elimination games in the first two rounds of the playoffs, the Giants swept the favored Detroit Tigers in the World Series.

Marco Scutaro delivered the clincher, a two-out single in the 10th inning to lift the Giants to a 4-3 victory. Since Willie Mays led the New York Giants to a sweep of the 1954 World Series, only four National League clubs have swept: the Los Angeles Dodgers of 1963, the Cincinnati Reds of 1976 and 1990, and the Giants of 2012.

Hoo about that?

“All the momentum we had from the first two series led us to sweep the World Series,” pitcher Barry Zito said. “We were just on edge the whole time.”

Pablo Sandoval, who tied a World Series record with three home runs in Game 1, was selected as most valuable player. Scutaro, the MVP of the NL Championship Series, drove in the winning run. Buster Posey, the probable NL MVP, hit a two-run home run.

And yet, when the chants evolved from that one repetitive syllable to the names of various players, the first one was this: “BAR-RY! BAR-RY!”

Zito, heretofore identified as the $126 million man who failed to make the playoff roster two years ago, etched his place in franchise lore by beating the heralded Justin Verlander in Game 1 of the World Series — and by saving the Giants’ season in Game 5 of the NLCS.

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