One more victory and the San Francisco Giants win the World Series. One more shutout and they do something that's been accomplished only once before — 46 years ago — in Major League Baseball history. The Baltimore Orioles tossed a World Series record three straight shutouts to close out the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1966. After they beat the Detroit Tigers 2-0 on Saturday night in Game 3, the Giants are nine innings from matching those O's. Of course, the mere mention of the possibility means the Tigers will score a run or several runs in the first inning Sunday against Matt Cain, win Game 4 and stretch the series to five or six or who knows how many games? However, if the Giants can keep the Tigers off the scoreboard for 27 more outs (and win the game), their pitchers will join the likes of Hall of Famer Jim Palmer, Wally Bunker and Dave McNally for otherwise unparalleled stinginess. But the Giants can't match those three in one respect: Palmer, Bunker and McNally threw complete games, with Bunker and McNally winning by 1-0 scores in Games 3 and 4, respectively. They were pitching without a net! Unless you count getting solo home runs from Paul Blair in Game 3 and Frank...