2012 All Star Game In accordance with the standard since 2003, the outcome of the
All-Star Game decided whether the American or National League would hold
home field advantage in the World Series. The National League All-Star Team won the
2012 All-Star Game, played on July 10 in
Kansas City, Missouri, by a score of 8–0. Representatives of both the Giants and the Tigers played key roles in the outcome. Giant players scored and/or drove in seven of the NL All-Star team's eight runs. The NL scored five runs in the first, all yielded by a Tiger,
ace Justin Verlander. Pablo Sandoval would hit a triple, and Melky Cabrera—who would wind up the All-Star Game MVP—hit a home run during the game.
San Francisco Giants was the
league batting champion and the 2012
National League Most Valuable Player. The Giants finished the regular season atop the
National League West with a 94–68 record, eight games ahead of the second place
Los Angeles Dodgers and good enough to secure the #3 seed in the NL. They defeated the second-seeded
Cincinnati Reds in the
National League Division Series, a best-of-five series, in five games. They then defeated the defending
2011 World Series champions, the fifth-seeded
St. Louis Cardinals, in a seven-game series to capture the National League pennant. The manner in which the Giants defeated the Reds and then the Cardinals created some historical firsts. Because of the addition of a wildcard game, the National League Division Series between the Giants and Reds began with two games in San Francisco. Cincinnati, who posted a better won-lost record than the Giants, hosted the final three games. The Giants lost the first two games at home in San Francisco, yet won the last three on the road. The Giants became the first major league team to win three straight road games in a best-of-five playoff series after losing the first two games at home. In the second round of the playoffs, the
National League Championship Series, they came back from a three-games-to-one deficit to defeat the
St. Louis Cardinals. Through this playoff course, the 2012 Giants became the first National League team and the second team in American major league baseball history (after the
1985 Kansas City Royals) to win six consecutive playoff games in which they had faced elimination. This was the Giants' 22nd NL pennant overall, their fifth as the San Francisco Giants. Their World Series berth was their second in three years (since , when they defeated the
Texas Rangers in five games). This was the fifth World Series in which the Giants faced a team from the
American League Central Division (
1917,
1924,
1933,
1954). San Francisco's notable preseason acquisitions were outfielders
Melky Cabrera and
Ángel Pagán. Cabrera set the Giants' franchise record for hits in the month of May, with 51, and Pagán set the San Francisco Giants record for triples in a season, with 15. On August 15, Major League Baseball meted a 50-game suspension upon Cabrera for his use of a
banned substance. At the time, his 159 hits led both leagues, his .346 batting average measured second in the NL, and he had received the 2012
All-Star Game MVP. The suspension expired after the NLDS, but the Giants opted not to add him to the team's NLCS or World Series rosters. All-Star
Buster Posey finished the regular season with a .336 batting average to win the 2012
NL batting championship. In the World Series, he would go on to catch every inning, including the shutouts in Game 2 He would begin a double play in Game 1 He would start Game 4 of the World Series, which the Giants would win to clinch.
Detroit Tigers won the
Triple Crown. The Tigers finished the regular season atop the
American League Central, with 88 wins and 74 losses. The Tigers repeated as champions of this division, having also won it in 2011. This was their first repeat title in the divisional-play era (i.e., since 1969). The last time, before 2011–2012, that the Tigers franchise had made consecutive playoff appearances was
1934–
1935. The Tigers entered the postseason as the third seed in the AL, and defeated the second-seeded
Oakland Athletics in the
American League Division Series three games to two. The Tigers then captured their 11th American League pennant, sweeping the top-seeded
New York Yankees four games to none in the
American League Championship Series. This World Series berth was their first since , when the St. Louis Cardinals defeated them four games to one. The Tigers entered the World Series as heavy favorites to win the title, despite the Giants having home-field advantage and the better regular season record. The 2012 Tigers became the fourth team to accomplish a four-game sweep in an ALCS. The three other teams to do so (1988 Oakland A's, 1990 Oakland A's, and 2006 Detroit Tigers) did not win the World Series, and the 2012 Tigers would, in the 2012 World Series, continue this trend. Pitcher
Justin Verlander (17–8) led the American League in strikeouts with 239.
Max Scherzer (16–7) finished second in the AL with 231 strikeouts. During the 2012 season, pitcher
Doug Fister set an AL record by striking out nine consecutive batters.
Miguel Cabrera became the first player in 45 years (since
Carl Yastrzemski in 1967) to win the
Triple Crown. Miguel Cabrera compiled a .330 average, hit 44 home runs, and had 139 RBIs, all of which led the American League. In the 2012 ALCS, Cabrera extended his hitting streak in LCS games to 17, a major league LCS record. (Cabrera made ten hits in seven games with the
Florida Marlins in the 2003 NLCS, eight hits in six games with the Tigers in the 2011 ALCS, and five hits in the Tigers' 2012 ALCS sweep.) Including this season, Miguel Cabrera has played in exactly 17 LCS games.
Miguel Cabrera would compile a .231 batting average for, and make the last out of, the 2012 World Series. In January 2012, prior to the start of the season, the Tigers signed first baseman
Prince Fielder to a nine-year, $214 million contract. In the 2012 World Series,
Prince Fielder would manage only one hit, a single, in 14 at-bats. Manager
Jim Leyland made his third trip to the World Series, and his second with the Tigers (he also managed them in 2006). He managed the
1997 Florida Marlins to a seven-game victory in the
World Series. Leyland's starting rotation for the 2012 World Series: Verlander in Game 1,
Doug Fister in Game 2,
Aníbal Sánchez in Game 3, and Scherzer in Game 4. In Game 1 of the World Series, Verlander would not fare much better against Giant bats than he had in the All-Star Game; allowing five earned runs in four innings. ==Summary==