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词条 2002 San Francisco Giants season
释义

  1. Offseason

  2. Regular season

     Opening Day starters  Season standings  National League West  Record vs. opponents  Transactions 

  3. Game log and schedule

     Postseason  Roster 

  4. Player stats

     Batting  Starters by position  Other batters  Pitching  Starting pitchers  Other pitchers  Relief pitchers 

  5. National League Divisional Playoffs

     San Francisco Giants vs. Atlanta Braves 

  6. National League Championship Series

     Game 1  Game 2  Game 3  Game 4  Game 5 

  7. World series

     Game 1  Game 2  Game 3  Game 4  Game 5  Game 6  Game 7 

  8. Awards and honors

  9. Farm system

  10. References

  11. External links

{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2013}}{{Infobox MLB yearly
| name = San Francisco Giants
| season = 2002
| misc = 2002 NL Wildcard berth
2002 NL Champions
| logo =
| current league = National League
| y1 = 1883
| division = Western Division
| y2 = 1969
| Uniform logo =
| ballpark = Pacific Bell Park
| y4 = 2000
| city = San Francisco
| y5 = 1958
| owners = Peter Magowan
| general managers = Brian Sabean
| managers = Dusty Baker
| television = KTVU
(Mike Krukow, Joe Angel, Jon Miller, Lon Simmons, Duane Kuiper, Tim McCarver)
FSN Bay Area
(Mike Krukow, Duane Kuiper)
| radio = KNBR
(Mike Krukow, Lon Simmons, Jon Miller, Joe Angel)
KZSF
(Erwin Higueros, Amaury Pi-Gonzalez)
|}}

The 2002 San Francisco Giants season was the 120th in franchise history, the franchise's 45th season in San Francisco, and their third in Pacific Bell Park. The season ended with the Giants winning the National League pennant but losing to the Anaheim Angels in the 2002 World Series.

The Giants finished the regular season with a record of 95–66, {{frac|2|1|2}} games behind the Arizona Diamondbacks in the National League West standings. By virtue of having the best record among second-place teams in the National League, they won the NL wild card to earn a postseason berth.

In the postseason, the Giants faced the Atlanta Braves in the National League Division Series. After being brought to the brink of elimination, the Giants won Games 4 and 5 to clinch the series, three games to two. They went on to defeat the St. Louis Cardinals in the National League Championship Series by a series score of four games to one to win the franchise's 17th NL championship and its third in San Francisco. Then, in the World Series, they brought the Angels to the brink of elimination before the Angels came from behind to win Games 6 and 7.

2002 was manager Dusty Baker's tenth and final season managing the Giants. Following the season he departed to manage the Chicago Cubs.

Offseason

  • November 28, 2001: Wayne Gomes was released by the San Francisco Giants.[1]
  • December 16, 2001: Tsuyoshi Shinjo was traded by the New York Mets with Desi Relaford to the San Francisco Giants for Shawn Estes.[2]
  • December 18, 2001: Jason Schmidt was signed as a Free Agent with the San Francisco Giants.[3]
  • January 25, 2002: David Bell was traded by the Seattle Mariners to the San Francisco Giants for Desi Relaford and cash.[4]

Regular season

Opening Day starters

  • SP- Jason Schmidt
  • C- Benito Santiago
  • 1B – J. T. Snow
  • 2B – Jeff Kent
  • SS – Rich Aurilia
  • 3B – Pedro Feliz
  • LF – Barry Bonds
  • CF – Tsuyoshi Shinjo
  • RF – Reggie Sanders [5]

Season standings

National League West

{{2002 NL West standings|highlight=San Francisco Giants}}

Record vs. opponents

{{2002 NL Record vs. opponents|team=SF}}

Transactions

  • June 4, 2002: Matt Cain was drafted by the San Francisco Giants in the 1st round (25th pick) of the 2002 amateur draft. Player signed June 26, 2002.[6]
  • July 28, 2002: Kenny Lofton was traded by the Chicago White Sox to the San Francisco Giants for Felix Diaz and Ryan Meaux (minors).
  • September 4, 2002: Bill Mueller was traded by the Chicago Cubs with cash to the San Francisco Giants for Jeff Verplancke (minors).[7]

Game log and schedule

Legend
 Giants win
 Giants loss
 Postponement
BoldGiants team member
2002 Game Log (95–66) (Home: 50–31; Road: 45–35)

Postseason

2002 Postseason Game Log

Roster

2002 San Francisco Giants
Roster
Pitchers
  • {{MLBplayer|22|Kurt Ainsworth}}
  • {{MLBplayer|50|Manny Aybar}}
  • {{MLBplayer|51|Troy Brohawn}}
  • {{MLBplayer|40|Jason Christiansen}}
  • {{MLBplayer|49|Scott Eyre}}
  • {{MLBplayer|38|Aaron Fultz}}
  • {{MLBplayer|61|Liván Hernández}}
  • {{MLBplayer|43|Ryan Jensen}}
  • {{MLBplayer|36|Joe Nathan}}
  • {{MLBplayer|31|Robb Nen}}
  • {{MLBplayer|48|Russ Ortiz}}
  • {{MLBplayer|47|Félix Rodríguez}}
  • {{MLBplayer|46|Kirk Rueter}}
  • {{MLBplayer|29|Jason Schmidt}}
  • {{MLBplayer|26|Jay Witasick}}
  • {{MLBplayer|45|Tim Worrell}}
  • {{MLBplayer|41|Chad Zerbe}}
Catchers
  • {{MLBplayer|52|Trey Lunsford}}
  • {{MLBplayer|33|Benito Santiago}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 9|Yorvit Torrealba}}
Infielders
  • {{MLBplayer|35|Rich Aurilia}}
  • {{MLBplayer|28|David Bell}}
  • {{MLBplayer|39|Pedro Feliz}}
  • {{MLBplayer|21|Jeff Kent}}
  • {{MLBplayer|34|Ramón Martínez}}
  • {{MLBplayer|37|Damon Minor}}
  • {{MLBplayer|32|Bill Mueller}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 2|Cody Ransom}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 6|J. T. Snow}}
Outfielders
  • {{MLBplayer| 7|Marvin Benard}}
  • {{MLBplayer|25|Barry Bonds}}
  • {{MLBplayer|23|Shawon Dunston}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 8|Tom Goodwin}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 1|Kenny Lofton}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 8|Calvin Murray}}
  • {{MLBplayer|16|Reggie Sanders}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 5|Tsuyoshi Shinjo}}
  • {{MLBplayer|14|Tony Torcato}}
Manager
  • {{MLBplayer|12|Dusty Baker}}
Coaches
  • {{MLBplayer|20|Gene Clines (hitting)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|15|Sonny Jackson (third base)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|59|Juan Lopez (bullpen)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|19|Dave Righetti (pitching)}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 5|Robby Thompson (first base)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|10|Ron Wotus (bench)}}

Player stats

Batting

Starters by position

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in
PosPlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI

Other batters

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in
PlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI

Pitching

Starting pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts
PlayerGIPWLERASO
Ryan|Jensen|Ryan Jensen (baseball)}} 32 171.2 13 8 4.51 105

Other pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts
PlayerGIPWLERASO

Relief pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts
PlayerGWLSVERASO

National League Divisional Playoffs

{{Main article|2002 National League Division Series}}

San Francisco Giants vs. Atlanta Braves

San Francisco wins the series, 3-2

GameHomeScoreVisitorScoreDateStadiumSeries
1Atlanta5San Francisco8October 2Turner Field1-0 (SFO)
2Atlanta7San Francisco3October 3Turner Field1-1
3San Francisco2Atlanta10October 5Pacific Bell Park2-1 (ATL)
4San Francisco8Atlanta3October 6Pacific Bell Park2-2
5Atlanta1San Francisco3October 7Turner Field3-2 (SFO)

National League Championship Series

{{Main article|2002 National League Championship Series}}

Game 1

October 9: Busch Stadium, St. Louis, Missouri

{{Linescore
| Road = San Francisco| RoadAbr = SFG
| R1 = 1 | R2= 4 | R3= 1 | R4= 0 | R5= 1 | R6= 2 | R7= 0 | R8= 0 | R9= 0 | RR= 9 | RH= 11 | RE= 0
| Home = St. Louis| HomeAbr = STL
| H1 = 0 | H2= 1 | H3= 0 | H4= 0 | H5= 2 | H6= 2 | H7= 0 | H8= 1 | H9= 0 | HR= 6 | HH= 11 | HE= 0
| WP = Kirk Rueter (1-0) | LP= Matt Morris (0-1) | SV= Robb Nen (1)
| RoadHR = Kenny Lofton (1), David Bell (1), Benito Santiago (1)
| HomeHR = Albert Pujols (1), Miguel Cairo (1), J. D. Drew (1)
}}

Game 2

October 10: Busch Stadium, St. Louis, Missouri

{{Linescore
| Road = San Francisco| RoadAbr = SFG
| R1 = 1 | R2= 0 | R3= 0 | R4= 0 | R5= 2 | R6= 0 | R7= 0 | R8= 0 | R9= 1 | RR= 4 | RH= 7 | RE= 0
| Home = St. Louis| HomeAbr = STL
| H1 = 0 | H2= 0 | H3= 0 | H4= 0 | H5= 0 | H6= 0 | H7= 0 | H8= 1 | H9= 0 | HR= 1 | HH= 6 | HE= 0
| WP = Jason Schmidt (1-0) | LP= Woody Williams (0-1) | SV= Robb Nen (2)
| RoadHR = Rich Aurilia 2 (2)
| HomeHR = Eduardo Pérez (1)
}}

Game 3

October 12: Pac Bell Park, San Francisco

{{Linescore
| Road = St. Louis| RoadAbr = STL
| R1 = 0 | R2= 0 | R3= 2 | R4= 1 | R5= 1 | R6= 1 | R7= 0 | R8= 0 | R9= 0 | RR= 5 | RH= 6 | RE= 1
| Home = San Francisco| HomeAbr = SFG
| H1 = 0 | H2= 1 | H3= 0 | H4= 0 | H5= 3 | H6= 0 | H7= 0 | H8= 0 | H9= 0 | HR= 4 | HH= 10 | HE= 0
| WP = Chuck Finley (1-0) | LP= Jay Witasick (0-1) | SV= Jason Isringhausen (1)
| RoadHR = Mike Matheny (1), Jim Edmonds (1), Eli Marrero (1)
| HomeHR = Barry Bonds (1)
}}

Game 4

October 13: Pac Bell Park, San Francisco

{{Linescore
| Road = St. Louis| RoadAbr = STL
| R1 = 2 | R2= 0 | R3= 0 | R4= 0 | R5= 0 | R6= 0 | R7= 0 | R8= 0 | R9= 1 | RR= 3 | RH= 12 | RE= 0
| Home = San Francisco| HomeAbr = SFG
| H1 = 0 | H2= 0 | H3= 0 | H4= 0 | H5= 0 | H6= 2 | H7= 0 | H8= 2 | H9= X | HR= 4 | HH= 4 | HE= 1
| WP = Tim Worrell (1-0) | LP= Rick White (0-1) | SV= Robb Nen (3)
| HomeHR = Benito Santiago (2)
}}

Game 5

October 14: Pac Bell Park, San Francisco

{{Linescore
| Road = St. Louis| RoadAbr = STL
| R1 = 0 | R2= 0 | R3= 0 | R4= 0 | R5= 0 | R6= 1 | R7= 0 | R8= 0 | R9= 0 | RR= 1 | RH= 9 | RE= 0
| Home = San Francisco| HomeAbr = SFG
| H1 = 0 | H2= 0 | H3= 0 | H4= 0 | H5= 0 | H6= 0 | H7= 0 | H8= 1 | H9= 1 | HR= 2 | HH= 7 | HE= 0
| WP = Tim Worrell (2-0) | LP= Matt Morris (0-2)
}}

World series

{{Main article|2002 World Series}}

Game 1

October 19, 2002 at Edison International Field of Anaheim in Anaheim, California

San Francisco won 4-3 at Edison International Field of Anaheim (now Angel Stadium of Anaheim) to take a 1-0 lead. Barry Bonds hit a home run in his first career World Series at-bat. He was one of three Giants to homer in the game (the other two were Reggie Sanders and JT Snow). Troy Glaus hit 2 home runs for the Angels.

{{Linescore
| Road = San Francisco| RoadAbr = SFG
| R1 = 0 | R2= 2 | R3= 0 | R4= 0 | R5= 2 | R6= 0 | R7= 0 | R8= 0 | R9= 0 | RR= 4 | RH= 6 | RE= 0
| Home = Anaheim| HomeAbr = ANA
| H1 = 0 | H2= 1 | H3= 0 | H4= 0 | H5= 2 | H6= 0 | H7= 0 | H8= 0 | H9= 0 | HR= 3 | HH= 9 | HE= 0
| WP = Jason Schmidt (1-0) | LP= Jarrod Washburn (0-1)| SV= Robb Nen (1)
| RoadHR = Barry Bonds (1), Reggie Sanders (1), J. T. Snow (1)
| HomeHR = Troy Glaus 2 (2)
}}

Game 2

October 20, 2002 at Edison International Field of Anaheim in Anaheim, California

Anaheim won 11-10 at home in a game where the lead kept fluctuating between the two teams, tying up the series. Bonds again hit a mammoth homer with 2 outs in the 9th inning, off of Troy Percival. The biggest home run of the night, however, was hit by Tim Salmon, a longtime Angel, with 2 outs and one on in the bottom of the 8th. The dramatic blast won the game for the Angels.

{{Linescore
| Road = San Francisco| RoadAbr = SFG
| R1 = 0 | R2= 4 | R3= 1 | R4= 0 | R5= 4 | R6= 0 | R7= 0 | R8= 0 | R9= 1 | RR= 10 | RH= 12 | RE= 1
| Home = Anaheim| HomeAbr = ANA
| H1 = 5 | H2= 2 | H3= 0 | H4= 0 | H5= 1 | H6= 1 | H7= 0 | H8= 2 | H9= X | HR= 11 | HH= 16 | HE= 1
| WP = Francisco Rodríguez (1-0) | LP= Félix Rodríguez (0-1)| SV= Troy Percival (1)
| RoadHR = Reggie Sanders (2), David Bell (1), Jeff Kent (1), Barry Bonds (2)
| HomeHR = Tim Salmon 2 (2)
}}

Game 3

October 22, 2002 at Pacific Bell Park in San Francisco

Anaheim won 10-4 in the first game at Pacific Bell Park (now AT&T Park). The Angels batted around twice without a home run in either of their 4-run innings. Barry Bonds hit another home run, becoming the

first man to homer in his first 3 World Series games.

{{Linescore
| Road = Anaheim| RoadAbr = ANA
| R1 = 0 | R2= 0 | R3= 4 | R4= 4 | R5= 0 | R6= 1 | R7= 0 | R8= 1 | R9= 0 | RR= 10 | RH= 16 | RE= 0
| Home = San Francisco| HomeAbr = SFG
| H1 = 1 | H2= 0 | H3= 0 | H4= 0 | H5= 3 | H6= 0 | H7= 0 | H8= 0 | H9= 0 | HR= 4 | HH= 6 | HE= 2
| WP = Ramón Ortiz (1-0) | LP= Liván Hernández (0-1)
| HomeHR = Rich Aurilia (1), Barry Bonds (3)
}}

Game 4

October 23, 2002 at Pacific Bell Park in San Francisco

San Francisco scored a 4-3 victory to tie the series. NLCS MVP Benito Santiago tied the game with a single in the 5th inning after the Angels walked Barry Bonds with a runner on second and two outs. David Bell put the Giants ahead with an RBI single in the bottom of the 8th. The run was unearned due to Anaheim catcher Bengie Molina's passed ball during the previous at-bat, allowing J. T. Snow to move to second.

{{Linescore
| Road = Anaheim| RoadAbr = ANA
| R1 = 0 | R2= 1 | R3= 2 | R4= 0 | R5= 0 | R6= 0 | R7= 0 | R8= 0 | R9= 0 | RR= 3 | RH= 10 | RE= 1
| Home = San Francisco| HomeAbr = SFG
| H1 = 0 | H2= 0 | H3= 0 | H4= 0 | H5= 3 | H6= 0 | H7= 0 | H8= 1 | H9= X | HR= 4 | HH= 12 | HE= 1
| WP = Tim Worrell (1-0) | LP= Francisco Rodríguez (1-1)| SV= Robb Nen (2)
| RoadHR = Troy Glaus (3)
}}

Game 5

October 24, 2002 at Pacific Bell Park in San Francisco

San Francisco took a 16-4 blowout win in a game in which the Angels never led. The most well-known moment in this game occurred when Giants first baseman J. T. Snow scored off a Kenny Lofton triple. 3-year-old batboy Darren Baker, son of Giants manager Dusty Baker, ran to home plate to collect Lofton's bat before the play was completed and was quickly lifted by the jacket by Snow as he crossed the plate, with David Bell close on his heels. Had Snow not acted quickly, Darren could have been seriously injured.

{{Linescore
| Road = Anaheim| RoadAbr = ANA
| R1 = 0 | R2= 0 | R3= 0 | R4= 0 | R5= 3 | R6= 1 | R7= 0 | R8= 0 | R9= 0 | RR= 4 | RH= 10 | RE= 2
| Home = San Francisco| HomeAbr = SFG
| H1 = 3 | H2= 3 | H3= 0 | H4= 0 | H5= 0 | H6= 2 | H7= 4 | H8= 4 | H9= X | HR= 16 | HH= 16 | HE= 0
| WP = Jason Schmidt (2-0) | LP= Jarrod Washburn (0-2)
| HomeHR = Jeff Kent 2 (3), Rich Aurilia (2)
}}

Game 6

October 26, 2002 at Edison International Field of Anaheim in Anaheim, California

The turning point in the series came in Game 6. Leading 5-0 with one out in the bottom of the 7th inning, 8 outs away from the Giants' first World Series title in San Francisco, Giants manager Dusty Baker pulled starting pitcher Russ Ortiz for setup man Félix Rodríguez after Ortiz gave up consecutive singles to third baseman Troy Glaus and designated hitter Brad Fullmer. In a widely publicized move, Baker gave Ortiz the game ball as he sent him back to the dugout. During the pitching change the Rally Monkey came on the JumboTron, sending 45,037 Angels fans into a frenzy. Angel first baseman Scott Spiezio came to the plate and fouled off pitch after pitch before finally hitting a 3-run home run that barely cleared the wall in right field. The rally continued in the 8th inning, as Angel center fielder Darin Erstad hit a leadoff line-drive home run, followed by consecutive singles by Tim Salmon and Garret Anderson. (Chone Figgins pinch ran for Salmon.) When Bonds misplayed Anderson's shallow left field bloop single, Figgins and Anderson took third and second respectively. With no outs, two runners in scoring position and now only a 5-4 lead, Baker brought in closer Robb Nen to pitch to Glaus, hoping that Nen could induce a strikeout that might yet preserve the Giants' slim lead. However, Glaus slugged a double to the left-center field gap over Bonds' head to drive in the tying and winning runs. In the 9th inning, Angels closer Troy Percival struck out Rich Aurilia to preserve the 6-5 victory in front of the jubilant home crowd.

{{Linescore
| Road = San Francisco| RoadAbr = SFG
| R1 = 0 | R2= 0 | R3= 0 | R4= 0 | R5= 3 | R6= 1 | R7= 1 | R8= 0 | R9= 0 | RR= 5 | RH= 8 | RE= 1
| Home = Anaheim| HomeAbr = ANA
| H1 = 0 | H2= 0 | H3= 0 | H4= 0 | H5= 0 | H6= 0 | H7= 3 | H8= 3 | H9= X | HR= 6 | HH= 10 | HE= 1
| WP = Brendan Donnelly (1-0) | LP= Tim Worrell (1-1)| SV= Troy Percival (2)
| RoadHR = Shawon Dunston (1), Barry Bonds (4)
| HomeHR = Scott Spiezio (1), Darin Erstad (1)
}}

Game 7

October 27, 2002 at Edison International Field of Anaheim in Anaheim, California

Game 7 proved to be somewhat anticlimactic after the drama of Game 6. The Giants scored the first run on a sacrifice, but the Angels responded with a run-scoring double from catcher Bengie Molina and a 3-run double to right field from left fielder Garret Anderson to open a 4-1 lead. Rookie starting pitcher John Lackey maintained that lead. In the 9th inning, closer Troy Percival provided some tense moments as he opened the inning by putting two Giants on base, with only one out. But Tsuyoshi Shinjo – the first Japanese player in a World Series game – struck out swinging, and Kenny Lofton, also representing the tying run, flied out to Darin Erstad in right-center field to end the Series. The Angels won Game 7, 4-1, to claim their franchise's first and so far only World Series Championship. John Lackey became the first rookie pitcher to win a World Series game 7 since 1909.[8]

{{Linescore
| Road = San Francisco| RoadAbr = SFG
| R1 = 0 | R2= 1 | R3= 0 | R4= 0 | R5= 0 | R6= 0 | R7= 0 | R8= 0 | R9= 0 | RR= 1 | RH= 6 | RE= 0
| Home = Anaheim| HomeAbr = ANA
| H1 = 0 | H2= 1 | H3= 3 | H4= 0 | H5= 0 | H6= 0 | H7= 0 | H8= 0 | H9= X | HR= 4 | HH= 5 | HE= 0
| WP = John Lackey (1-0) | LP= Liván Hernández (0-2)| SV= Troy Percival (3)
}}

Awards and honors

  • David Bell 3B, Willie Mac Award
  • Barry Bonds, National League Most Valuable Player
  • Barry Bonds, Major League record (since broken), highest on-base percentage in one season (.582)[9]
  • Benito Santiago, 2002 NLCS MVP
All-Star Game
  • Barry Bonds
  • Benito Santiago
  • Rob Nen

Farm system

{{See also|Minor League Baseball}}{{MLB Farm System|level15=AAA|team15=Fresno Grizzlies|league15=Pacific Coast League|manager15=Lenn Sakata
| level16 = AA |team16=Shreveport Swamp Dragons|league16=Texas League|manager16=Mario Mendoza
| level17 = A |team17=San Jose Giants|league17=California League|manager17=Bill Hayes
| level18 = A|team18=Hagerstown Suns|league18=South Atlantic League|manager18=Mike Ramsey
| level19 = A-Short Season|team19=Salem-Keizer Volcanoes|league19=Northwest League|manager19= Fred Stanley
| level20 = Rookie|team20=AZL Giants|league20=Arizona League|manager20=Bert Hunter}}[10][11]

References

1. ^https://www.baseball-reference.com/g/gomeswa01.shtml
2. ^https://www.baseball-reference.com/s/shinjts01.shtml
3. ^[https://www.baseball-reference.com/s/schmija01.shtml Jason Schmidt Statistics] Baseball-Reference.com
4. ^https://www.baseball-reference.com/b/bellda01.shtml
5. ^http://www.baseball-almanac.com/teamstats/roster.php?y=2002&t=SFN
6. ^https://www.baseball-reference.com/c/cainma01.shtml
7. ^https://www.baseball-reference.com/m/muellbi02.shtml
8. ^http://mlb.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/mlb/baseballs_best/mlb_bb_gamepage.jsp?story_page=bb_02ws_gm7_sfnana
9. ^Baseball's Top 100: The Game's Greatest Records, p.36, Kerry Banks, 2010, Greystone Books, Vancouver, BC, {{ISBN|978-1-55365-507-7}}
10. ^Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 3rd edition. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 2007
11. ^Baseball America 2003 Annual Directory

External links

  • [https://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/SFG/2002.shtml 2002 San Francisco Giants team] at Baseball-Reference
  • 2002 San Francisco Giants team at Baseball Almanac
{{National League champions}}{{National League Wild Card teams}}{{2002 MLB season by team}}{{San Francisco Giants}}{{DEFAULTSORT:2002 San Francisco Giants Season}}

5 : San Francisco Giants seasons|2002 Major League Baseball season|National League champion seasons|2002 in San Francisco|2002 in sports in California

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