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Giants' World Series-winning pitcher has Pinoy roots


Tim Lincecum is a World Series champion pitcher, a two-time Cy Young winner in the National League, twice winner of the Sports News NL Pitcher of the Year and a 2009 Major League Baseball (MLB) All-Star starting hurler for the NL squad. And another thing, the 26-year-old right-hander has Filipino roots.

San Francisco Giants' Tim Lincecum celebrates after Game 5 of baseball's World Series against the Texas Rangers Monday, Nov. 1, 2010, in Arlington, Texas. The Giants won 3-1 to capture the World Series. AP
While Filipinos dream of some day seeing one of their own playing in the National Basketball Association (NBA), here is Lincecum, a Filipino-American who is proud of his Pinoy roots, playing in the big stage of America's favorite pastime. Despite his slight 5-foot-11, 170-lb frame, Lincecum packed a wallop as a baller. He compiled 2010 season stats of 3.04 earned run average (ERA), 907 strikeouts, 293 walks, and pitched four shutout games for a 56-27 win-loss record. Lincecum didn't stop there, helping San Francisco get deep into the postseason where he scored a 3-1 win over the Atlanta Braves in the NL Division Series and a 4-2 victory against the Philadelphia Phillies in the NL Championship Series. Lincecum and the Giants then met the Texas Rangers, the American League champions, for the World Series crown. He posted a 2-0 record in the two games – Games 1 and 5 – he started for the Giants, winning his match-up against American League ace Cliff Lee of the Texas Rangers. He pitched a total of 13.2 innings and struck out 13 batters, while giving up a combined 11 hits and four walks. He also had a 4.82 earned run average (ERA), surrendering a solo home run to Texas right fielder Nelson Cruz in the seventh inning of Game 5. The Giants steamrolled past the Rangers in the World Series, winning the best-of-seven contest, 4-1, clinching the title with a 3-1 win on Game 5 behind Lincecum and veteran shortstop Edgar Renteria who homered with two runners on. Lincecum became a hero in the San Francisco Bay Area, known for one of the largest Filipino-American communities in North America. Known as "The Freak," Timothy Leroy Lincecum, is a fourth-generation Filipino-American. He became the latest international sporting icon with Filipino roots, joining the ranks of other athletic greats such as Manny Pacquiao in boxing and Paeng Nepomuceno in bowling. According to research by Filipino-American historian Dawn Bohulano Mabalon, Lincecum's great-grandmother, Alberta Alcoy Asis, was originally from Carcar, Cebu. She arrived in Hawaii as a young child at the turn of the century. She eventually married Genaro Asis and lived in Stockton where she gave birth to daughter Philomena. Lincecum's mother Rebecca is in turn the daughter of Philomena Marcigan Asis and Balleriano Asis. Rebecca Asis married Chris Lincecum. The Asises and Marcigans have a long history in the Stockton-Northern California area. Both families were part of a huge wave of Filipino laborers that were recruited to work in sugar plantations in Hawaii during the 1900s. – KY/Jon Perez/HS, GMANews.TV