SAN DIEGO — Tony Vitello did his best to hide it. His hair was wet, but it was tucked neatly into his Giants cap. His torso was covered in beer and condiments and whatever else could be found in a mad rush from his 26 players, but all of that was hidden by a black hoodie. As he answered questions about a 3-2 win, Vitello kept circling back to the contributions of his pitchers. Vitello did not want this night to be just about him and the magnitude of that first handshake line, but there was no shying away from it. That much was clear as he walked out of the clubhouse and took his spot in front of a backdrop outside the visiting clubhouse at Petco Park. As Vitello stood there, he was barefoot. That, like other parts of this night, counted as a first. Vitello remembered the last time he had been put in a shopping cart. It was at Kmart when he was a young boy, which tells you how long ago it was. He could not remember the last time he did a postgame interview with no shoes on. He never did them, period, until getting to Tennessee nearly a decade ago. Most of those postgame media sessions happened in a batting cage. “I don’t think you...