SAN FRANCISCO -- Unable to produce a clutch hit, the San Francisco Giants still found a way to win. Brayan Villarreal walked Marco Scutaro with the bases loaded and two outs in the bottom of the ninth, handing the Giants a 3-2 victory over the Boston Red Sox on Tuesday night. The Giants squandered numerous opportunities early in the game, going 0 for 10 with runners in scoring position, but they tied it in the eighth inning on a sacrifice fly in foul territory and used two walks and a hit batsman to win it. "We have been on the other end of these games," manager Bruce Bochy said. "You take it any way you can get it. This was a good one." Roger Kieschnick started the winning rally with a one-out single against Franklin Morales (2-1) for his third hit of the game. The Giants loaded the bases with two outs when Morales walked Andres Torres and hit pinch-hitter Hector Sanchez on the left wrist. "We started out the inning in pretty good shape and then seemingly in a matter of about seven or eight pitches it looked like Franklin lost the strike zone a little bit and leaves us in a tough spot with two outs," Red Sox manager John Farrell said. With Brandon Workman having pitched the past two days, Farrell gave Villarreal his first appearance with the Red Sox. Villarreal was acquired in a deal last month from Detroit and called up from Triple-A Pawtucket on Monday. He made a poor first impression, throwing four straight balls to Scutaro. Giants hitting coach Hensley Meulens told Scutaro that Villarreal had control problems before the at-bat and that proved true. Villarreal has walked nine of 29 batters he has faced this season, including two with the bases loaded. "When he told me that, I wanted to make sure I looked for my pitch and not be too aggressive," Scutaro said. He did just that, giving the defending World Series champion Giants a rare reason to celebrate. "Its nice to win one like this because we have been on the other side of them," said starter Ryan Vogelsong, who allowed two runs in seven innings. "When you play a tough game like that and things arent going your way ... its good to come out on the winning end of it." The Red Sox couldnt hold a 2-0 lead and lost for the fifth time in seven games to fall percentage points behind Tampa Bay for the lead in the AL East. Sergio Romo (4-6) pitched a perfect ninth for the win. After twice failing to get a runner in from third with no outs, the Giants finally delivered in the eighth inning to tie the game. Scutaro reached on a one-out single and went to third on Brandon Belts single against Junichi Tazawa. Buster Posey then hit a high fly down the right-field line that Shane Victorino caught in foul territory. Scutaro scored easily on the sacrifice fly but Tazawa escaped without any further damage to keep the score tied at 2. "No second-guessing guys. I let that ball fall and he hits a three-run homer then what are you guys going to say?" Victorino said. "When I was on the move over there I told myself catch the ball and try and get in the best position I could to make the throw." Victorino helped give Boston the lead when he hit a rare right-handed homer off a righty pitcher. The switch-hitting Victorino is unable to bat left-handed because of an injured left leg. But that did not bother him when he led off the third inning with a drive to left that made it 2-0. It was just the second time Victorino had hit a right-handed homer against a righty in his career, also doing it against knuckleballer R.A. Dickey on Sept. 24, 2010, according to STATS LLC. It looked as if that 2-0 lead would stand up when Jake Peavy escaped jams in the fourth and fifth innings. Belt, who had three hits, was stranded after a leadoff triple in the fourth when Posey grounded out and Peavy struck out Hunter Pence and Brandon Crawford. The Giants scored their first run of the series when Kieschnick led off the fifth with a single and scored on Joaquin Arias triple. But San Francisco couldnt get the equalizer when Vogelsong, Gregor Blanco and Scutaro followed with groundouts. NOTES: SS Xander Bogaerts (20 years, 323 days) became the youngest position player to appear in a game for Boston since Dwight Evans (20, 318) in 1972. He went 0 for 3 and stranded five runners. ... San Francisco 3B Pablo Sandoval was scratched because of a sore back. ... Boston RHP Clay Buchholz (neck and shoulder) threw 46 pitches in a simulated game and is set to make a rehab start Sunday. Farrell said he would like Buchholz to get three rehab starts but he might only get two depending on the minor league schedule. ... LHP Barry Zito (4-8) makes his first start of the month for the Giants in the series finale Wednesday after Chad Gaudin was placed on the DL. Felix Doubront (8-6) goes for Boston. Saucony Shoes Factory Outlet . 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Saucony Shoes Clearance . The Croatian served 21 aces and hit 42 winners against Sijsling, who double-faulted to give Cilic a 4-3 lead in the deciding set. "All the players, they know me and they were really happy to see me and they were really happy that this is over for me," Cilic said. Working the waiver wire is crucial to succeeding in fantasy basketball. With so many games, injuries and endless shifts in rotations throughout the season, we need to source stats from free agency in order to maximize our imaginary rosters.In this weekly series we identify players available as free agents in at least half of ESPN leagues at each position. Some nominations are purely specialists capable of helping in one or two categories, while others deliver more diverse and important statistical offerings. Either way, we believe the names below -- ordered by ownership rate at each position -- can contribute positively to fantasy rosters.Point guardJrue Holiday, New Orleans Pelicans (Owned in 34.6 percent of ESPN leagues): ESPNs Zach Lowe shared some revealing intel on his The Lowe Post podcast, noting the Pelicans could get Holiday back in the mix by mid-November. Even if this estimate proves optimistic, we should see Holiday return within the month, making him a worthy stash in deeper formats given his ability to immediately become a top-12 fantasy point guard. Last season, Holiday tied for seventh among point guards in usage rate with Kyrie Irving.Matthew Dellavedova, Milwaukee Bucks (32.4): A career-high clip of 28.3 minutes helps support a strong steal rate and positive contributions as a passer and shooter. As a bonus, you can also lead your league in grit, determination, and annoying other NBA players.J.J. Barea, Dallas Mavericks (21.9): Sixth in the NBA in drives per game, just ahead of guys like John Wall and Dennis Schroder. Barea has at least four assists in each game and is hitting a robust 2.4 3-pointers per game, further evidence hes truly underappreciated as a fantasy option.Shooting guardKyle Korver, Atlanta Hawks (29.8): A down shooting season for Korver is relative, as he shot only 39.9 percent from beyond the arc last year. Hes back up to 43.3 percent this season from 3-point range.Sean Kilpatrick (23.1) and Bojan Bogdanovic (20.9), Brooklyn Nets: We endorsed Kilpatrick last week and with the market still asleep on the watch, he merits additional hype given hes produced at least 13 points in every game this season and helps in points, 3-pointers and steals. Fellow Brooklyn scorer Bogdanovic can be considered more of a specialist in the shooting department, as hes hitting two 3-pointers per game and should see steady opportunities on a Nets team that rates sixth in the league in pace.Danny Green, San Antonio Spurs (16.3): Even with deflated offensive output last season, we still netted a steal and nearly a block per game from Green. One of the truly special block producers from the backcourt, Green is set to return soon and should be speculatively added in deeper formats.Malcolm Brogdon, Milwaukee Bucks (3.8): You might not know much about Brogdon, but hes played at least 24 minutes and has four assists in each of his past three games. The combo guard also has seven total steals over this span and should see steady exposure as the team is without Khris Middleton for the season.Small forwarddMichael Kidd-Gilchrist, Charlotte Hornets (47.dddddddddddd.5): MKG rates ninth in the league in rebounding chances per game -- defined as being within 3.5 feet of an available rebound. Such a rich clip of opportunities supports a high fantasy floor for the versatile forward, while we also appreciate the rare help he can provide in steals and blocks. Simply put, Kidd-Gilchrist is among the most underappreciated fantasy options in ESPN leagues.Jaylen Brown, Boston Celtics (13.0): Eligible at both small and power forward, dont let Browns sluggish seasonal rates throw off the trail, as we identify a surging role for this rookie. Brown played 35 minutes this past Thursday after playing just 23 in the previous two games. With impressive 3-point efficiency and a steal per game, Brown is on the rise as a needed scoring complement to Al Horford in the teams frontcourt.Wilson Chandler, Denver Nuggets (11.1): Elite in leagues that reward neck tattoos, Chandler is also helpful in standard fantasy formats thanks to steady minutes (30.2) and a secure role as a scoring wing (14.4 points per game) for the Nuggets.Power forwardTaj Gibson, Chicago Bulls (41.8): A career clip of 1.3 blocks signals Gibson can help in this scarce stat now that hes seeing over 26 minutes per game. It also helps to consider Gibson ranks in the top 25 in rebounding opportunities and also offers some upside in the steals department.Ersan?Ilyasova, Philadelphia 76ers (6.0): With Brett Browns system pushing the ball and in need of spacing, the newly acquired stretch forward has averaged 25.5 minutes and 12.5 shots in two games with Philly.Terrence Jones, New Orleans Pelicans (5.6): Finally deployed as a starter this past Friday, Jones thrived in 28 minutes of exposure. A key 3-and-D asset for a team in need of complementary production for Anthony Davis, Jones could be a truly rewarding addition for those in need of upside at the four.CenterAndrew Bogut, Dallas Mavericks (41.9): Just ahead of Paul Millsap and Karl-Anthony Towns in rebounding chances per game, Bogut can also help with blocks and assists as a complementary commodity at a shallow center position.Tyson Chandler, Phoenix Suns (36.0): Third in the league in rebounding opportunities with a rich 22.7 chances per game on the glass so far, its fitting to find Chandler third in the NBA in rebounds per game. While the 16-year vet doesnt block many shots or score much at this advanced stage of his career, we can expect elite rebounding and shooting efficiency (63 percent from the field) from the big man.Clint Capela, Houston Rockets (33.9): A favorite sleeper of mine heading into the season, were starting to see Capelas steal rate rise, although consistent foul trouble has limited his minutes so far this season. As the key rim protector for the Rockets, expect an uptick in blocks for a line that mimics a lesser approximation of what we can net from Phillys Nerlens Noel. ' ' '