Today's frustrating and depressing 10-5 Cub loss to the Pirates hinged on two sinking line drives to center field, one of which was caught, and, well... one of which wasn't.
The one that wasn't, a line drive that should have ended the second inning with the Cubs trailing only 3-2, was misjudged by Jacque Jones -- he broke to his left when he should have broken to his right, and his frantic dive after the ball when he realized he'd gone the wrong way failed, the ball rolling to the wall, and only a nice relay by Ryan Theriot to the plate to nail Freddy Sanchez prevented it from being an inside-the-park grand slam.
So although Steve Trachsel's pitching line looks pretty awful, I believe it wasn't all his fault.
The second of those sinking liners was caught by Pirates rookie CF Nyjer Morgan (a very, very impressive looking young player, I might add) off Aramis Ramirez, who had a look of utter disgust on his face after the catch.
It was that kind of day. The Cubs managed to fight their way back to a 7-5 deficit on the strength of a two-run HR by Alfonso Soriano and a solo shot from Geovany Soto, his first (of what we hope are many) major league home run.
Two runs down going into the seventh. Doable, right? Even more doable after Ramirez leads off the 8th with a double.
But after that the Cubs saw exactly FIVE MORE PITCHES in that inning -- a pitch fouled off by Matt Murton, and following that a groundout, and a useless groundout, because it couldn't even advance Ramirez to third. Then Jacque Jones took ball one, and after that hit a rocket -- right into the glove of Jose Bautista at third base. Who knows? Had Ramirez been at third, maybe Sanchez' defensive positioning would have been different and that would have been an RBI single. One pitch later, Mark DeRosa grounded out and that, as they say, was that.
Who was managing that inning, anyway? Dusty Baker? Don Zimmer?
There still might have been a chance at a ninth-inning comeback, except for Kerry Wood, who up to now had had ten good outings and three bad ones.
Make that four bad ones, and this one was probably the worst, as he threw only 9 strikes in his twenty-one pitches, giving up two hits and two walks (he probably should have been yanked after the second hitter, except he was already the seventh pitcher used in the game and I don't think Lou had any intention of using anyone except Will Ohman, who finally did come in, even if the Pirates had scored ten runs in that inning). Three of those baserunners scored, and as is often the case after a team makes a close game a blowout in the last of the 8th, the trailing team goes out meekly in the ninth, and the Cubs complied with that old baseball saw.
So. With Milwaukee's 10-5 win over Cincinnati, the Cubs drop out of first place, a game behind, for the first time since August 16 (they have been either ahead or tied for first since August 17). And just as things were decided four years ago, this division -- or at least the Cubs' chances of winning it -- may be decided by the five games they have remaining with the Cardinals, one tomorrow at Wrigley Field (weather permitting), and four next weekend in St. Louis.
I take this opportunity to remind you that pennant races do have their ups and downs. Don't take this as a statement that "well, because it happened this way in 1998 or 2003, it's going to happen that way this year", because of course that's not true. But I will remind you that after losing two straight games in Pittsburgh on September 19 (2nd game of a DH) and 20, 2003, the Cubs stood a game and a half out of first place -- with only seven games remaining. I further note that after getting swept by the Reds from September 18-20, 1998, the Cubs stood a game out of the wild card lead with only five games remaining -- and the team they were trailing on that day, the Mets, not only didn't win the wild card, they finished third.
There are twenty games remaining. The examples above are only races involving the Cubs -- if I had time, I could easily find similar examples of tight playoff races involving other teams that completely turned around.
Oh, heck, here's one that I remember well. On September 24, 25 and 26, 1987, the Detroit Tigers lost three straight games to the Toronto Blue Jays, who they then trailed by 3.5 games with eight games remaining. The next day, they were losing 1-0 in the top of the ninth -- a loss that day would have put them 4.5 games out with seven left, an almost insurmountable deficit. Kirk Gibson homered to tie the game and the Tigers won 3-2 in 13. Toronto, then a powerhouse in the AL who had won the AL East in 1985, didn't win another game, and the Tigers beat them 1-0 on the last day of the season to clinch the division.
You see the point, I think. Today felt awful. But what the Cubs must do is shake this off, beat the Cardinals tomorrow, and then go to Houston and remember what it was like playing there from 2004-2006, when they went 16-10 combined in the Juice Box.
One note: Len and Bob started talking about doubleheaders during the telecast today, in advance of the split DH the Cubs will play in St. Louis this coming Saturday. Len mentioned, correctly, that back in the 1970's, they used to play DH in Pittsburgh that started in the morning -- and I'm sure those of you old enough to remember that will remember holiday doubleheaders (particularly Memorial Day and Labor Day) in Pittsburgh that started at 9:30 am Chicago time. Anyway, that triggered a memory for Bob of a day where -- he claimed -- he caught the first game of a DH, then was supposed to just sit in the bullpen and not play at all in the second game, since it was a hot midsummer day.
However, he said, Giants RF Jack Clark was ejected, so he (Brenly) had to go in and play right field, then as the game went into extra innings, he wound up behind the plate, and the second game went eighteen innings.
I was skeptical -- because sometimes the passage of time makes memories like this fuzzy, and makes ten-inning games into 18-inning games.
So I looked. And darned if Brenly didn't get it all correct, except for the identity of the right fielder that day. The date was July 13, 1984; here's the first game, which Brenly started and caught. In the second game, Giants right fielder John Rabb, not Clark (and Rabb played exactly eight games in the OF for the '84 Giants), left the game. The play-by-play doesn't make it clear why, but I'll take Brenly's word that he was ejected. In the 12th inning Brenly was moved to catcher, so he wound up catching sixteen innings that day.
Nice job, Bob, remembering something that happened twenty-three years ago. That was a Cub division title year. Let's get that going in 2007. Starting rightfreakingnow.
0 recs | 78 comments
If I had my own blog.
My review of todays game would be: You can't lose to the Pirates in the middle of a pennant race in September. End of story.lemon20pie - September 9, 2007
My response to that is...
... Go Pirates. Beat the Brewers. The Pirates just split a four-game series with the Cardinals, blowing them out twice.This is still anyone's division.
Al Yellon - September 9, 2007
This one hurt
a lot. I know stranger things have happened but this team is just flat. Nothing works out for them. I think you need talent and luck to win a division. I think we are lacking in both. With that said the Cardinal's series is crucial. I just turned down tickets (good ones I might add) to tomorrow's game. The wind is out of my sails a bit and I think I am better off watching from afar.mgfabc - September 9, 2007
My friend..you are forgetting one simple
thing like almost everyone else. Mere talent is not important. It looks good only on paper. That talent should be put to use. So with that talent in full force, we would need some luck to win some close games.But this year our talent is over hyped or at least it looks good only on paper. We are getting blown apart for the last few games. Do you think it's solely based on luck? I would say its because we have been playing really pathetic ball than the worst team in the division. When we loose by 5 runs to the worst team in the division I would not attribute that to luck.
cubsnlinux - September 9, 2007
Well put
I can't argue with any of it.mgfabc - September 10, 2007
Baseball is a weird game
You can not get too up or too down. Plenty of time left to make up one game. Teams can look terrible against bad teams and then get hot against good teams.No time to panic.
mweil - September 9, 2007
Precisely.
The Cubs have played well against the Cardinals this year. This week will tell the story, I think.Al Yellon - September 9, 2007
I agree. I think we'll have a pretty good idea
of how this will all pan out 1 week from tonight after the Cubs/Cards finish out their 5 game stretch and I know many Cardinal fans also think so....having said that, if the Cubs/Cards essentially split (3-2 or 2-3) and the Brewers play sub-par baseball this weeek, it's anyone's guess as again the Cards/Brewers still do have a 3 game game set and both still play some tough teams down the stretch...regardless, these last couple of weeks will likely be both frustrating and hopefully exciting for all of us until the end. We still have a very good shot at this thing and are by no means out of this thing despite how frustrating the last week has been. Despite the frustration seen here on the site (and most very warranted), I don't think anyone here will stop watching b/c we all know there is a real shot here-so let's ride this thing and somehow will these guys to get into the postseasonLuisSalazar - September 9, 2007
Personally,
I haven't been this excited about Cubs baseball in some time. Hate the record, hate the strength of the division. Hate the maddening ups and downs of a baseball season. But it's a huge week for the Cubs, and with less than three weeks left, they are completely in the playoff mix. Which is all any team (and its fans) can hope for at this point in the season.Best of twenty wins it. I say game-on.
Damen Jackson - September 10, 2007
mweil...
That is the world's greatest signature.As far as today's game...uh
cubfanwill - September 9, 2007
My signature
Thanks - I read that quote in the paper and laughed out loud. I am glad I am able to keep it alive on these posts.mweil - September 10, 2007
You can let a loss set you on fire
This next week will do it for us....we will know one way or another. One this is for sure though, that this team is a helluva lot better than last year's !!!I think someone on that team needs to start beating the drum, because I'm sure they are tired. Lou looks disgusted. He should be clean shaven and full of confidence and he's not. He is a good leader and that is what we need him to do. As Al said, who was managing after Rami's double ?
Let's go guys -- gut it out !!!!
coral - September 9, 2007
Al asks who was managing?
I wondered the same thing and wrote this:http://www.bleedcubbieblue.com/comments/2007/9/9/5283/80094/266#266"target="_blank"
Fraggin Judge - September 9, 2007
Wood
I've been ripped for writing it before, but Kerry Wood needs to be relegated to mop-up work. He cannot be trusted to take care of business.Four bad outings in 14 appearances is unacceptable The fact that he has had two bad outings in has last three appearances is even more alarming.
Righties are hitting .293 against him. He has 10 walks to 11 strikeouts. He has a 9.95 ERA on the road he has a WHIP of 1.70 overall. He is just chucking the ball at the plate and hoping that somebody will swing and miss. It is pretty sad, really.
No, we shouldn't DFA him, because he can save somebody's arm in a long relief situation. But it is time to stop rolling him out there in any games in which the Cubs still have a chance of winning. It just isn't worth the risk.
Ross - September 9, 2007
I regret to admit you're right.
n/tFraggin Judge - September 9, 2007
I was saying this
weeks ago, and people got on me. Poor Kerry Wood. Please retire.San Diego Smooth Jazz Man - September 9, 2007
Incidentally...
The Cubs are now 0-1 on days where Al has a large feature written on him in a major metropolitan newspaper. I think that might have to go on the front page sidebar.Ross - September 9, 2007
LMAOL
n/tFraggin Judge - September 9, 2007
LMAO too.
That record isn't likely to change, either.Al Yellon - September 9, 2007
Al Yellon
Al,It was great reading about you in the Chicago Tribune yesterday!
mweil - September 10, 2007
Hey, thanks!
n/tAl Yellon - September 10, 2007
Does anyone know a good bear site like Cubbie
Blue? I live in South Carolina.Saratoga - September 9, 2007
Here's one for ya
http://www.windycitygridiron.com/sue369 - September 9, 2007
There's a troubling theme
going on. Let's not trust the youngsters and let's go with the veterans.Trachsel was a BP pitcher today in the 2nd. He gave up 6 hits and a walk and yet Lou didn't pull him. Why not? That's when the game was lost. Hart was ready. Terrible decision allowing Sanchez to face him.
It was referenced that DeRosa was injured yesterday and needed a wrist brace today. Well, he went 0-4 today and left 5 runners on base. Why wasn't Fontenot used today?
Finally, Lou needs to cleanup. I remember a scene from the Hustler. Jackie Gleason was getting beaten by Paul Newman and took a break. All he did was go go into the restroom and freshen up. He looked confident coming back and ended up beating Newman.
Lou looks beaten down. The team looks beaten down. They are getting beaten down. Look like a winner and there's a good chance you'll play better.
This game should have been won. Stop expecting a streak. That mantra is old. Win tomorrow and stop expecting the law of averages to get us into the playoffs.
tharr - September 9, 2007
I did myself a favor today
and left the house after the end of the 2nd inning. Took my youngest son to the park, walked around a bit with him and my wife and tried out his new air hog plane for awhile. It beat the hell out of watching the game. I'm not going to obsess about them anymore. Whatever happens happens. I have let them make me miserable the last week and I just don't feel like doing that anymore. I'll still watch because I am a fan, but lets just say that my expectations are considerably lower today than they were a week ago.qccub - September 9, 2007
I've been doing that...
for the last three days... and those losses still hurt, man. I end up watching replays and condensed games on MLB.com every night. So I decided to watch today and got in a bad mood. I finally got fed up and put most of the game in the small picture in picture screen on my TV and watched the NFL games, instead.Fraggin Judge - September 9, 2007
You would like to think we will snap out of this
funk we're in, but most of us have been saying that for a month or more. Based on what I've seen lately I wonder about our ability to turn this around.It seems like every game something else goes wrong.
It's almost like something out of a bad movie. As others have said this week should tell a lot about our playoff future.
Saratoga - September 9, 2007
I agree
with the above post, Find your razor Lou. I also was wondering why Fontenot was not in the lineup. I love what DeRosa has done, but he needs a break, and the night before gets cracked on the hand, come on Lou, run Fontenot out for one start.Cubs need Theriot on base more often, he has been doing the 1 for 4 enough now.
I understand Jones made a bad play on the ball, however Traschel was meat today.
20 games to go, minimum 13-7
Johnny Callison was a Cub - September 9, 2007
I also agree.
Theriot is not seeing good pitches in the 2 hole. That's a direct consequence of batting with one or more outs.He is a better lead off than the current lead off, DeRosa didn't get the break he needed, Wood and Ohman came in to pitch in a game that was within reach. Ohman pitched decently: Wood did not. What can I say. As Al asked, are you sure that was Lou managing today?
Fraggin Judge - September 9, 2007
What I take as a positive
from today is, that this team did show great energy in coming back from 6-2 and had it to 7-5 with plenty of at bats left. If not for Kerry Wood's blow up, I think we could have done it. But we can't run the same arms out there every day. So we lost today...move on. I do think Lou has to consider using Pie in CF as the one thing "Captain Morgan" showed Lou is that a guy like that in CF can be a pitcher's best friend. He can still have Jones in RF if he wants his bat in there. Lou talks about small ball and energy but he keeps leaving Pie on the bench. I seem to recall that two things that were a part of the June/July run were Z winning and Pie playing. Time for Pie to be inserted again.LAcarl519 - September 9, 2007
Murton hit relatively well.
2 for 4; 2 LOB. I think that if you need hitting, you start Murton and Jones, not Pie.Fraggin Judge - September 9, 2007
C-R-A-P-P-Y D-A-Y!!!
All around.sue369 - September 9, 2007
The Birds on the Bat just gave up 4 to...
..the Dbacks and now trail 6-4 after 7.Reverend Jim Ignatowski - September 9, 2007
I was at the game today
Nygel Morgan reminds me like Juan Pierre a little bit.Bricks and Ivy - September 9, 2007
So what causes greater panic?
Cubs one game out in second with 20 to go. OR Bears one game out in fourth with 15 to go. I'm just looking for some perspective...LAcarl519 - September 9, 2007
My opinion is meaningless, but
I just looked at the next four games and realized that this season may hinge on these games.Yeah, yeah. I know many have said it before, and many will say it again, but look it this way.
We face:
Joel Pinero
Brandon Backe
Troy Patton
Woody Williams
If we cant beat those guys, and I mean beat them soundly, then we do not belong in the playoffs. Those are four VERY winable games. We have Lilly (14-7), Marquis(11 -8), Hill??(8 -8) and Z(15 - 10) going against guys with a combined win loss record of (13 - 20), with an ERA north of 5.
These are the 4 games. Not this weekend against the 3rd place team, now. This team just got man handled by a team that will lose 2 of 3 to the Brewers, and they will lose at leat that many. We need to find out how much heart the Cubs have, and we get to do it against sub par pitching and 2 BAD baseball teams.
And for any of you who think you have it bad right now, I live in Milwaukee and left home with my Bears and Cubs flags flying high on my front porch today. Well, lets just say, the flags are gone, and I didnt take them down. Somebody had to have sold them for some cheese or something.
Go Cubs. Remember these next 4 games will tell the tale.
louslovechild - September 9, 2007
I'm not worried too much
about the Bears. The Chargers may be the best team in the league and should be expected to get the win at home. That being said, the Bear offense looked like absolute crap today. The defense will be solid, often exceptional, all year long but they need the offense to stay on the field longer and score some freaking points. I also don't expect them to turn the ball over four times every game. That was the killer today. I still think they need a real quarterback. I have far less confidence in the Cubs.qccub - September 9, 2007
Soto...
Should get the majority of the starts the rest of the season.His demeanor at the plate and behind it look more like a veteran's than a rookie's. His swing is a strong, short, compact swing and he seems to have a decent eye.
He has already thrown out two baserunners and has done a good job of blocking the plate.
His playcalling could be suspect but I would figure that Lou and Larry can help him with that.
I do not see Jason Kendall (who has been ok) or Henry Blanco being the impact player we need for the stretch run.
My .02
cubbietenor - September 9, 2007
Maybe that's the spark the team needs.
It's not a bad idea to give Soto more playing time. Unlike others, he's earned it, so far.Fraggin Judge - September 9, 2007
Well...
Glad I decided not to go to Pittsburgh this weekend. Saving my energy for three in two days (!) in St. Louis next weekend.I think this is going to go down to the wire. We have nothing but nailbiting left before us, my friends, although I would certainly be happy to whip off a good winning streak and be proven wrong.
08Cubs - September 9, 2007
I fear
the Cubs have missed an opportunity to bury the Brewers, and now they (the Brewers) are feeling a 2nd life and just may finish strong.Look what happened to the White Sox in 05 and the Tigers in 06, both teams led their division for an extended period and then hit a long cold spell before finishing strong at the very end and going deep in the playoffs. Let's hope the Brewers don't do the same.
MPH73 - September 9, 2007
Yeah, but the Tiggers...
...fell out of first, losing the division to the Twins in the last game of the '07 season IIRC. Of course they did get to the World Series where the wheels fell right off their bus.The NL Central is still up for grabs. As of yet no one has stepped up their play by all that much.
So long as the Cubbies don't fall back 3 games or more they have a very good chance.
DrCrawdad - September 9, 2007
'06 that is
n/tDrCrawdad - September 9, 2007
Clearly
all three teams have a chance. What I was referring to is the emotional part of the game. Considering the Brewers led for the majority of the year, lost that lead, and have now gained it back, may give them a new life that will lossen them up.The Cubs are playing tight and have been for the last 2-3 weeks. They can certainly still win the division, but the momentum has clearly shifted back to the Brewers.
MPH73 - September 9, 2007
Momentum swings...
...one way and can swing back too.For example: '05 the Indians were EXTREMELY HOT the second half of the season. In September they had a run of 17 wins in 19 games. The Tribe took two of three from the Sox at the Cell. Then the Tribe went to KC and won two straight. Momentum was clearly on their side. The local media was all heated up (and many Cubbie fans) for a Sox choke.
A funny thing happened though. The Tribe blew the last game of the series in KC (with Howry taking the loss). IIRC a fairly routine ball went over Grady Sizemore's head.
The Tribe then got swept by the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. Momentum had clearly gone against them when the Sox ended their post-season hopes with a sweep in Cleveland.
The Tribe won 93 games and failed to win the Wild Card.
My point? The Cubbies can turn things around.
Fortunately for the Cubbies their two rivals have absolutely lousy pitching, which may help turn things around for the Cubbies.
DrCrawdad - September 10, 2007
I'm so frustrated...
that I decided to cancel plans to go to Miami to see the Cubs the last week of the season. If we keep playing this way, we may be out of the race by then. I'll save my money for next year.Fraggin Judge - September 9, 2007
Cincinnati
I have game tickets for Cincinnati the last weekend of the season, just debated whether to pull the trigger on airfare, and went ahead. I figured that regardless of the race, I'll want to be at a game the last week of the season. If it's close, you definitely want to be there. If they're out of it - well, last chance to see the Cubs until spring!(How's that for optimism?)
08Cubs - September 9, 2007
I pulled the triger on the airfare too
FYI if you want to go to Cincy and live within 750 miles( Like New York or Chicago) American has a special for using miles. It only takes 15,000. I expect an INVASION of Cincy that weekend. More on this later.
jessica - September 10, 2007
Chalk up another juicer's name
Jay Gibbons received shipments of steroids and human growth hormone from an Orlando pharmacy between 2003 and 2005, SI.com reports.Gibbons reportedly received six separate shipments of Genotropin (a brand name for synthetic Human Growth Hormone), two shipments of testosterone and two shipments of human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG), a hormone produced naturally during pregnancy, but taken by anabolic steroid users to stimulate the production of testosterone. Gibbons' name had surfaced in connection with steroids before, as he's believed to be one of the players named by Jason Grimsley in his affadavit last year.
Chanman25 - September 9, 2007
I had to laugh.
Lou Piniella said this today:Fraggin Judge - September 9, 2007
LOL!!
sue369 - September 9, 2007
Seasons Over
It's over guys.We can get any momentum going and when we finally start hitting the ball our bullpen finds a way to blow it.
gocubs40 - September 9, 2007
tsk-tsk!
Seasons OverIt's over guys.
actually it isn't, the cubs have 20 games to be played.
rm463 - September 9, 2007
I know this is heresy but . . .
I posted this during the game, but am interested in your thoughts on this: Do you even want this team to go into October?God knows we all want a World Series, but I always imagined that when we finally got one, it would be with a team that showed dominance throughout the season and really deserved the title, one that we could really be proud of and happy for. This team is so mediocre and inconsistent they look nothing like champions. If they weren't playing in a terrible division, we'd be no where near the playoffs. If they somehow managed to win the World Series, it would be a fluke and I would almost feel cheated because the World Series wouldn't mean that much if a team like this could win it.
All that said, I feel like we're on the right track. With guys like Theriot, Soto and (hopefully) Pie coming into there own, this could be a very solid team in a year or two. Hopefully, it will grow into one we can all be proud of. They're not there yet though, no matter what happens this year.
ksreed - September 9, 2007
My thoughts exactly
This team only plays well when EVERYTHING is going right. This team had that insane stretch where the offense, defense, starting pitching, relief pitching and just plain dumb luck were ALL going their way.Since then, I'm pretty sure, barring another insane run like that which runs over the next 20 games and into the playoffs, this team does not have enough talent to go past the first round of the playoffs.
The worst part- this team does the same hang-of-the-head and navel gazing when they fail that every fucking Dusty Baker team ever did. Lou is not the motivator I thought he was. He just isn't.
I'm still hoping for the best, but now fully expecting (and i MEAN expecting) the worst.
SouthsideCub - September 9, 2007
I totally agree.
Including what you said about the acting manager, Lou "Dusty" Piniella. (Apparently the real manager is Soriano; he writes his name in the top spot of the lineup.)Fraggin Judge - September 9, 2007
I would like to see a count.
How many of us really believe (I'm not talking about a fan's eternal hope but about a reasoned thought) that this team can make it to the World Series? How about winning it?Fraggin Judge - September 9, 2007
Can they make it to the WS? yes...
is it likely? No.The 2006 Cardinals were no better than this team. That's the thing about the postseason - anything can happen once you're in. The key is getting in.
If the Cubs make it, they can definitely win it. It would take some combination of various ifs, but it could happen. If Zambrano reverts to his dominance of years past, he could win all his postseason starts. If Hill can spot his fastball/changeup and keep dropping that big curve for strikes, he could be dangerous in October. If the offense shows up in the games Lilly and Marquis start, we can win those games too.
SouthernCub - September 10, 2007
Has anybody mentioned that....
we are 15 - 20 since Kerry Wood's return?I believe in mojo, hexed, karma. Wood and the memory of all things Wood is bad. Plus the fact he really has looked horrible all year.
Just a thought.
louslovechild - September 9, 2007
Said this a month ago, upon his return
..didn't want Wood or The Employee anywhere near this team for the reasons you state. It's just bad news, bad memories.San Diego Smooth Jazz Man - September 9, 2007
Lose 2 of 3 to the Pirates?
That's unpossible!santoswoodenlegs - September 9, 2007
Thank you -
that made my night!:)
ilovepie - September 9, 2007
A real contender
beats the crap out of the bad teams. For example, look what the Yankees did this weekend to the Royals, in Kansas City no less.The Brewers look like contenders right now. They are 7-6 in their last ten games. They have won their last three series. Meanwhile, the Cubs are 4-6 in their last ten games and have lost their last two series. Notice a trend? The Cubs better reverse course now or they will end their season September 30th, in Cincinnati.
Fraggin Judge - September 9, 2007
Late poster tonight, doing homework :(
Someone can look it up, but the last bunch of series's (is that a word? lol) we have lost the first game. It seems that when we lose the first game, it'a almost a guaranteed lost series. We are not coming out of the chute strong against teams anymore. When we do get a lead early on, we give it right back, and then some. We are playing from behind every game lately.I wanted to put up a diary asking a simple question of all BCBer's. Based on the ENTIRE season as of tonight, have we underachieved, overachieved or right where we should be? I have always felt since March that this was a .500 team, maybe a couple wins more.
You want to see some team that doesn't quit? Watch the Diamondbacks! Cards put a couple crooked numbers up on them this weekend and they came back to WIN each time. Their youth is propelling them into the playoffs, our vets are slipping us out. Enough of the d&g.
We needed to win 3 this weekend. Didn't get it done. Have to win tomorrow big time and start this streak that Lou is waiting for.
BigJohnAZ - September 10, 2007
I may be
in the minority here, but I think this team has underachieved so far. I think this is a team that should win 88-90 games. Pretty decent pitching and what I thought coming into the season would be a good hitting team with some power. For whatever reason, they just don't score as many runs as they seemingly should. I think they will struggle to win 82 games at this point.qccub - September 10, 2007
That would be 10-10.
Obviously, that would be better than they've done in their last 20 games (although not much -- in the last 20 games the Cubs are 9-11); I think they can do better than that.I feel a winning streak coming. If the Cubs can go 13-7, that'd be 85 wins and that should be enough to win the division.
Al Yellon - September 10, 2007
I'm knocking on wood, Al.
As long as the Brewers don't do the same, that should win the division.Fraggin Judge - September 10, 2007
I really don't know
if they can go 13-7 at this point. I do agree that 85 wins would most likely win the division. I still have a sliver of hope.qccub - September 10, 2007
Wow, the Brewers must be really good!
They have gone 7-6 in their last ten games, according to the post above.(7-3, actually. The Cubs are 4-6 in their last 10, the Cardinals 5-5.)
Al Yellon - September 10, 2007
Thanks for correcting my typo, Al.
n/tFraggin Judge - September 10, 2007
youth needs serving
I agree w/BigJohn. The Cubs veterans look very lethargic. An infusion of youth might have helped. Lee & DeRosa in particular look very haggard.
KedzieKid - September 10, 2007
Wrigley Getting Dressed Up?
http://www.cubworld.com/category/a_cubworld_camIt seems like they are out there as we speak. Why are we puting the Missouri state flag and the St. Louis Flag? I don't like this.
tony412 - September 10, 2007
They do that
for every game. e.g.- at the Dodoger game, I recognized both the California state flag and the LosAngeles flag right next to the marquee.SouthsideCub - September 10, 2007
I think they do this for all the visiting teams.
n/tAl Yellon - September 10, 2007
I should probably
try to do one of those Wrigley tours next year. I'm sure there is a lot I have never noticed about Wrigley. It's too bad there isn't a live webcam of inside the stadium (not of the game ofcourse). Reminds me of an old Depeche Mode song, Just Can't Get Enough.tony412 - September 10, 2007
The tour is great
Took my dad one year. One of the best father-son days ever.SackMan - September 10, 2007
I agree.
The tour is highly recommended, and they really do get you just about everywhere.Al Yellon - September 10, 2007
Well... Cubs lose and Bears lose
Ughhh.And Lou's beard is growing.... that's the major sign that the Cubs are falling apart.
SackMan - September 10, 2007
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