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"I don't care how they come. We just needed to score some runs," Young said. "In that situation, sacrifice flies are what we needed. Josh's job was to get the guy to third and my job was to get him in. Just team baseball. Something we've done all season long."
It was the first time in Series history that the tying and go-ahead runs scored on sacrifice flies, STATS LLC said.
Then it was Rangers manager Ron Washington's turn. He signaled for closer Neftali Feliz, who worked around a leadoff walk to earn the save.
"Classic ninth inning," La Russa said.
Said Motte: "It stinks."
The sellout crowd at Busch fell silent as Rafael Furcal flied out to end it. Moments earlier, the fans gave Pujols a big cheer in what could have been his final at-bat at home before he heads into free agency. Pujols flied out to the wall, leaving him 0 for 6 in the Series.
Mike Adams, the third Texas pitcher, got the win.
Up through the ninth, the Texas hitters were flailing.
Hamilton, the reigning AL MVP, seemed to be wearing down with every swing in his first three at-bats.
Hamilton shattered his bat the first time up and slowly jogged to first base. Later, he weakly waved and appeared overmatched as he struck out on three pitches. That left him with an 0-for-16 Series slump dating to last October.
The acrobatic Andrus made a sensational play in the fifth to keep the game scoreless.
After a two-out single by Nick Punto and a walk to the light-hitting Garcia, Furcal slapped a hard grounder up the middle. Andrus dived to his left to stop it on the edge of the outfield grass, got to his knees and flipped the ball with his glove to second baseman Kinsler, who barely beat Garcia to the bag for a forceout.
"I always say when you're not hitting good, you better do something good defensively," Andrus said.
NOTES: Garcia was the first Mexican-born starter in the World Series since Fernando Valenzuela in 1981. ... The Cardinals hit into the most double plays in the majors this year, Texas was second. ... Rangers president Nolan Ryan, before the game, on why he thought Texas would win in six games: "When I looked at St. Louis' pitching, I don't look at their pitching like a (Detroit ace Justin) Verlander, where you say boy, 'Verlander is on, we're going to hope that something good has to happen.' I'm not downplaying the Cardinals' pitching by any means."
[Associated Press;
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