Archive for October, 2016

World Series 2016 Schedule: Complete Guide for Indians vs. Cubs

If you were to go up to any baseball fan in years past and tell them that the Chicago Cubs would meet the Cleveland Indians for Major League Baseball’s championship, there’s a good chance they would laugh in your face. 

But after the Cubs defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 6 of the NLCS from Wrigley Field on Saturday night, that’s the exact matchup we’ll have in the 2016 World Series, via MLB

Here is how the schedule will look for the Fall Classic, beginning on Tuesday:

There will be a very long, tortured drought that comes to an end at the conclusion of this series. 

The Cubs haven’t won a World Series since 1908, while the Indians haven’t reigned triumphant since 1948. 

However, one drought has come to an end with Chicago’s win on Saturday night, as it clinched its first National League pennant since 1945. 

A well-rested Indians team will be waiting for the Cubs after it took down the Toronto Blue Jays in five games in the ALCS that ended on Wednesday. 

Thanks to an American League victory in the All-Star Game in San Diego, the Indians will also be hosting an opening game of the World Series for the first time in franchise history. 

With a struggling offense that’s batted .208 in the postseason, Cleveland has been reliant on the long ball and pitching, which has riddled opposing batters all throughout October. 

In eight games, Indians pitching has allowed just 15 runs with a 1.77 ERA while compiling a 7-1 record. It’s been headlined by reliever Andrew Miller, who won the ALCS MVP thanks to his dominance, via SportsCenter

But they’ll be playing a Cubs offense that exploded to life in the final three games of the NLCS

After two straight shutouts at the hands of the Dodgers in Games 2 and 3, Chicago has reeled off 23 runs on 33 hits in its last three games. 

With the big bats of Kris Bryant, Anthony Rizzo, Addison Russell and now Javier Baez, this World Series could be a case of an unstoppable force meeting an immovable object in Cleveland pitching. 

And with both teams playing against history, this could be one of the most exciting Fall Classics we’ll see in quite some time. 

                          

Stats courtesy of MLB.com

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Dodgers vs. Cubs: Game 6 Score and Twitter Reaction from 2016 MLB Playoffs

The Chicago Cubs are partying like it’s 1945.

Seventy-one years after the Cubs clinched their last pennant, the National League Central champions set up a World Series date against the Cleveland Indians with a 5-0 Game 6 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers. It came behind a two-hit gem from starting pitcher Kyle Hendricks, who struck out six hitters in 7.1 scoreless innings at Wrigley Field on Saturday:

The Cubs’ official Twitter account relayed video of the final two outs as they turned a double play to win the National League Championship Series: 

Dodgers starter Clayton Kershaw allowed a grand total of two hits in his dominant Game 2 outing, but the Cubs refused to let the three-time Cy Young winner enjoy similar success Saturday.

Dexter Fowler led off the first inning with a double to right, and Kris Bryant brought him home a few pitches later with a single to give the Cubs a 1-0 lead.

The Cubs may have been content with one run in the first, but things took a turn in their favor when left fielder Andrew Toles dropped a fly ball off Anthony Rizzo’s bat, which moved Bryant to third and put two men in scoring position with no outs.

A sacrifice fly by Ben Zobrist allowed Bryant to score, and the Cubs left the first inning with a 2-0 lead.

The deficit represented uncharted territory for Kershaw, as ESPN Stats & Info noted:

Kershaw had tossed 30 pitches by the time the opening frame ended, which represented his highest first-inning tally since 2011, according to ESPN Radio (via the Chicago Tribune‘s David Haugh).

Kershaw escaped the second inning with just 16 pitches, but the Cubs hit him hard. Addison Russell doubled to lead off the second, and Fowler knocked him in three batters later with a single to left.

With the Cubs in possession of a 3-0 lead, ESPN.com’s Jesse Rogers observed that Kershaw did not have his best stuff:

MLB.com’s Adam McCalvy pointed out a statistical disparity that displayed how off Kershaw was:

Meanwhile, Hendricks breezed through the first three innings after striking out five and walking four in an up-and-down Game 2 outing.

The 26-year-old faced the minimum of nine batters through three innings while allowing just one hit, and his command of the strike zone had the Cubs in control, as the New York Times‘ Doug Glanville explained:

Solo home runs by Willson Contreras in the fourth and Rizzo in the fifth put the Cubs ahead 5-0, and at that point, Kershaw was cooked.

With his curveball nonexistent and his slider moving inefficiently, the Dodgers pulled their ace, who allowed seven hits and four earned runs through five innings.

According to the Orange County Register‘s Bill Plunkett, Saturday represented another misstep for Kershaw in a big spot:

Hendricks was brilliant, and his masterpiece set up Aroldis Chapman with five outs remaining.

With their ticket to the Fall Classic punched, the Cubs can turn their attention to the Indians. Cleveland has been off since Wednesday, when it downed the Toronto Blue Jays in Game 5 of the American League Championship Series.

Although the teams didn’t meet during the regular season, they figure to combine for some theatrics when things get underway Tuesday night at Progressive Field in Cleveland.

While the Indians pitching staff has been the best in the big leagues throughout the postseason, recording a 1.77 ERA while limiting opponents to a .206 batting average, the Cubs have the players to make them pay at the plate.

Considering the Cubs and Indians are seeking to snap championship droughts that span 108 and 68 years, respectively, this year’s World Series should be a sight to behold.

 

Postgame Reaction

With the pennant in tow, the Cubs took their celebration to the field, as the team’s official Twitter account documented: 

Once the final out was recorded, Rizzo told Fox’s Tom Verducci that he wasn’t letting go of the game ball anytime soon: 

Catcher David Ross was also fired up, as Fox Sports MLB displayed on Twitter: 

“I can’t even describe it right now,” owner Tom Ricketts said, per Haugh. “All I know is we have to win 4 more games.”

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Kyle Schwarber Injury: Updates on Cubs Star’s Recovery from Knee Surgery

Kyle Schwarber’s powerful bat has been absent from the Chicago Cubs lineup since the third game of the 2016 season, when the outfielder suffered a torn ACL and LCL. His availability for the World Series has yet to be determined.

Continue for updates.


Latest on Schwarber’s Rehab

Monday, Oct. 24

Jonathan Mayo of MLB.com reported Schwarber will serve as a designated hitter in the Arizona Fall League on Monday and will fly to Cleveland to join the Cubs afterward.


Epstein Comments on Schwarber’s Status

Saturday, Oct. 22

“He’s made it to a best-case scenario after six months,” Cubs president Theo Epstein said to Jesse Rogers of ESPN.com regarding Schwarber’s recovery. “We’re not ruling anything in; we’re not ruling anything out. We’re not getting ahead of ourselves. We have a lot of work here before this becomes pertinent.”


Schwarber Has Missed Most of Cubs’ Historic Season

The second-year outfielder suffered the injury when he collided with teammate Dexter Fowler while pursuing a fly ball during an April 7 game against the Arizona Diamondbacks:

Schwarber underwent surgery April 19 and missed the remainder of the regular season.

But Epstein suggested the outfielder is on the cusp of making an unlikely return if the Cubs win one more game thanks to his hard work during rehabilitation, per Rogers:

It was a pleasant surprise. We got news that was better than expected. …

He asked for a chance to do this. With as hard as Kyle has worked and as much as this means to him — and potentially us — we wanted to give him that opportunity. …

We’re going to evaluate him day to day from a medical standpoint and a baseball standpoint.

With the Cubs having made it to the World Series for the first time since 1945, they could add a bat that hit 16 home runs with 43 RBI in just 69 games last season as they try and clinch their first title since 1908.

             

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

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Dodgers vs. Cubs NLCS Game 6: Live Score and Highlights

Game 6 of the National League Championship Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago Cubs is underway from Wrigley Field!

Keep it here for all the latest updates, analysis, reaction, pictures, videos and whatever else comes our way, and let us know your thoughts on the action in the comments section below and on Twitter (@RickWeinerBR).

FINAL SCORE

Cubs 5, Dodgers 0

WP: Hendricks

LP: Kershaw

 

Scoring

Bottom 1st: Bryant RBI single

Bottom 1st: Zobrist sac fly

Bottom 2nd: Fowler RBI single

Bottom 4th: Contreras solo HR

Bottom 5th: Rizzo solo HR

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World Series 2016: Latest Expert Predictions on Potential Matchup

With the Cleveland Indians waiting for their opponent and the National League Championship Series between the Chicago Cubs and Los Angeles Dodgers nearing its conclusion, World Series predictions continue to roll in for the three teams still alive in the 2016 playoffs.

While it isn’t surprising that the Cubbies have made it this far considering they had the best record in Major League Baseball during the regular season, pre-playoff picks suggest few expected the Indians and Dodgers to still be in the hunt at this point.

As the start of the Fall Classic draws closer, here is a look at predictions for the World Series winner from some of the top experts in baseball.

     

FiveThirtyEight

FiveThirtyEight uses statistical models to make predictions across multiple sports including baseball.

According to FiveThirtyEight.com, the Cubs are favored to win the World Series with a 51 percent chance, followed by the Indians at 39 percent and the Dodgers at 10 percent.

Chicago is also a heavy favorite in the NLCS with an 81 percent chance to get past L.A.

The numbers make plenty of sense, as the Cubs were the best team in baseball during the regular season and don’t seem to have a weakness.

Their starting rotation is great from top to bottom with Jon Lester, Jake Arrieta, Kyle Hendricks and John Lackey. They also boast an elite closer in Aroldis Chapman.

On top of that, Chicago is capable of getting production from anywhere in its lineup thanks to the contributions of Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant, Addison Russell, Javier Baez and Ben Zobrist, among others.

Cleveland, on the other hand, is without ace pitchers Carlos Carrasco and Danny Salazar, while Trevor Bauer’s status remains unclear after cutting his pinkie finger on a drone.

Despite that and everything the stats suggest, Tribe owner Paul Dolan believes his team may be meant to win it all, per Zack Meisel of Cleveland.com:

In February or March of many years, we foresee a team that can win. And then the story develops and something happens and we don’t. This has been that year where everything goes right. Even when something goes wrong, it turns into something right. I’ve heard ‘Team of Destiny’ mentioned a few times. It sure feels like something like that.

Both the Cubs and Indians have had unexplained collapses and shortcomings in the playoffs over the years despite fielding great teams.

The result is that Chicago hasn’t won the World Series since 1908, while Cleveland hasn’t accomplished its ultimate goal since 1948.

Both may be due to end their respective droughts from a statistical perspective, and FiveThirtyEight favors the Cubs to do precisely that.

    

ESPN

ESPN polled 32 of its experts prior to the start of the MLB playoffs, and only one of them has a chance to correctly call both World Series participants as well as the winner.

According to ESPN.com, Adam Rubin predicted a clash between the Indians and Cubs in the Fall Classic, which will occur if Chicago takes care of business in one of the next two games.

David Schoenfield also picked Cleveland to go all the way, but he picked the Indians to lose to the San Francisco Giants.

Eric Karabell was the only expert to predict the Dodgers would reach the World Series, but he had them losing to the Boston Red Sox.

Rubin chose the Cubs over the Indians in the World Series, but he was far from the only one to predict that Chicago would end its long title drought. In fact, 19 experts chose the Cubs, which was more than any other team, while no one chose the Indians or Dodgers.

The confidence in the Cubs is understandable, but recent history hasn’t been good to them when it comes to closing out the NLCS and reaching the World Series, according to ESPN Stats & Info:

Regardless of whether the Cubs or Dodgers reach the World Series, they will be at somewhat of a disadvantage to the Indians.

The fact that Cleveland beat the Toronto Blue Jays in five games has given the team extra rest and allowed it to set up its starting rotation however it pleases.

That may not matter because the team lacks great starters behind Corey Kluber due to myriad injuries, but any rest in October is a luxury after such a long season.

      

USA Today

Like ESPN, USA Today polled multiple experts before the playoffs started, and they too were largely behind the Cubs to win it all.

While no expert correctly predicted the World Series since nobody chose the Indians to reach the Fall Classic, six of the seven had the Cubs making it to the end, while Gabe Lacques picked the Dodgers to win the NLCS.

Of the six experts who penciled in the Cubs as NL champions, Steve Gardner, Bob Nightengale, Jorge L. Ortiz and Ted Berg believed they would win the World Series as well.

Pressure is an immeasurable factor, but after winning the most games during the regular season and getting picked by so many to end its supposed World Series curse, Chicago is under the most pressure to win.

Cleveland is playing with house money to some degree since none of the aforementioned experts picked the Indians to win, likely because their starting rotation as been depleted.

The Indians do have a big advantage over both the Cubs and Dodgers in the bullpen, though, as Cody Allen and championship series MVP Andrew Miller carried them through the first two rounds by pitching in any and all situations.

Miller, in particular, put forth an historic performance to push the Tribe into the World Series:

Bullpen dominance has gone a long way toward championship success in recent years, as the Kansas City Royals largely rode their relievers to a World Series triumph last season.

The Indians have a chance to do the same, but they’ll still be heavy underdogs if the Cubs can seal the deal against the Dodgers.

    

Follow @MikeChiari on Twitter.

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World Series 2016: Schedule Details, Format and Predictions

The Cleveland Indians earned home-field advantage for the 2016 World Series by virtue of the American League’s All-Star Game triumph over the National League, which means we can officially take a look at how the schedule for this year’s Fall Classic will shape up.

The best-of-seven championship series will pit the Indians against either the Chicago Cubs or Los Angeles Dodgers, and odds favor the Cubs even though they’ve historically failed to break through when presented with the opportunity.

Chicago is 0-6 in its last six National League Championship Series games with a trip to the World Series on the line, per ESPN Stats & Info, but data from WhoWins.com suggests the Cubs are in a spot to exorcise those demons.

Specifically, teams holding 3-2 leads in a best-of-seven format have gone on to win the series 70.4 percent of the time in a 98-series sample.

So before taking a peek at how the Indians will try to quell their eventual National League competition, here’s a rundown of when and where you can catch this year’s World Series:

While it’s impossible to make a firm prediction for the World Series without knowing who the Indians will square off against, we can examine how they would fare against their prospective competition after they didn’t play a single game against the Cubs or Dodgers in the regular season.

From a pitching standpoint, Cleveland has been head and shoulders above the rest of its postseason peers.

The Indians boast a 1.77 ERA through eight playoff games, which compares favorably to the Cubs’ mark of 3.25 and the Dodgers’ tally of 4.60. Cleveland has also posted three shutouts—one less than all other playoff qualifiers combined.

Perhaps more frightening is the way Cleveland’s bullpen has performed.

To date, Indians relievers have posted a 1.67 ERA, 41 strikeouts and seven walks while holding opponents to a .212 average through 32.1 innings.

Conversely, the Cubs and Dodgers have bullpen ERAs of 3.71 and 4.29, respectively, in the playoffs, with opponents batting better than .240 against both units.

The good news for the NL contenders comes at the plate.

While none of the three remaining teams have bashed the ball to a stellar degree under the postseason lights, the Dodgers lead the pack with a .228 average and .322 on-base percentage.

That said, the Cubs lead the Dodgers in terms of total bases (119-115), doubles (18-9) and slugging percentage (.381-.355). The Indians are hanging steady with a .380 slugging percentage buoyed by 11 home runs.

Predicting a winner based on those comparisons alone would be foolish, but the Indians have to feel good about their chances considering the way their pitching staff has dominated in conjunction with a solid offense that has found ways to generate power and produce runs to create sufficient cushions.

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World Series 2016 Schedule: TV, Live-Stream Coverage for Fall Classic

The 2016 World Series could be set on Saturday night with the Chicago Cubs looking for their first berth in the Fall Classic since 1945 with a win over the Los Angeles Dodgers. 

While the two National League teams continue to duke it out, the American League champion Cleveland Indians patiently wait to know who their opponent will be when the best-of-seven series kicks off on Tuesday from Progressive Field. 

Cleveland has already had a year to remember with the Cavaliers winning their first NBA title in June. The Indians will look to join them and end their own 67-year championship drought. 

    

2016 World Series Schedule

    

Player to Watch: Andrew Miller

Baseball is a sport designed to make it nearly impossible for one player to carry his team in a way that can happen in the NBA or NFL. 

While Andrew Miller needed help from the Cleveland starting staff to put the team in a position to use him to protect a lead, he has been operating at a video-game level throughout this postseason, with Jared Carrabis of Barstool Sports providing the statistical evidence:

It’s fun to see those numbers, but they somehow look more impressive when you are able to see the weapons Miller is using to destroy hitters. 

This is what Miller did in the seventh inning of Game 2 against the Toronto Blue Jays, via MLB.com:

If the Dodgers end up coming back to defeat the Cubs in the NLCS, good luck to them trying to attack Miller. 

It’s no secret that Los Angeles’ lineup has had problems against left-handed pitching in 2016. The group had a collective .213/.290/.332 slash line versus southpaws, per Baseball-Reference.com.

Things are so bad for the Dodgers against lefties they had Carlos Ruiz hit in the cleanup spot against Jon Lester in Game 5 of the NLCS with the hopes he could provide a spark. 

The Cubs would be an interesting matchup for Miller because they were dynamite against left-handed pitching this season with an .807 OPS, per Baseball-Reference.com.

Miller has been an immovable object in his playoff career with six hits and three walks allowed with 31 strikeouts in 20 innings. 

Cleveland’s starting pitching depth was a question entering the postseason. Corey Kluber has been terrific in his first postseason with a 0.98 ERA, 20 strikeouts, 13 hits allowed and seven walks in 18.1 innings. 

But Indians manager Terry Francona has not had anyone else in his rotation make it through the sixth inning. His bullpen is deep enough to get by with starters who go four or five innings, but someone in the rotation not named Kluber will need one strong start if Cleveland is going to win the World Series. 

It also helps Miller succeed because the longer a starter goes, the fewer outs Francona has to bridge before he can just use Miller and Cody Allen to record nine outs. 

    

Better Matchup for Cleveland

As mentioned above, the Dodgers would serve as a more favorable matchup for the Indians in the World Series. 

Beyond the Miller factor, Andrew Simon of MLB.com noted how Los Angeles manager Dave Roberts could be in a bind with his rotation if the Dodgers win their next two games:

Los Angeles opted not to push ace Clayton Kershaw into another short-rest outing in NLCS Game 5, instead starting Kenta Maedaand slotting Kershaw in for Game 6 at Wrigley Field. That means that while the Indians will have time to align their starting rotation any way they choose for the Fall Classic—presumably with Corey Kluber at the front—the Dodgers wouldn’t be able to go to Kershaw until Game 2 on short rest or Game 3 on regular rest.

The Dodgers would also turn to Rich Hill against the Cubs in a potential seventh game, so Cleveland could avoid their two best pitchers until Games 3 and 4. 

In case you didn’t know based on the current NLCS results, Kershaw, Hill and Kenley Jansen have been the only things slowing down the Cubs, per Rany Jazayerli:

That won’t necessarily be the case for the Cubs if they are to play the Indians, because Francona can turn to Miller or Allen in the later innings, whereas Roberts has been throwing out Joe Blanton and Pedro Baez. 

But another obstacle for the Indians is that Cubs manager Joe Maddon has a deep rotation he can utilize however he wants. Jon Lester is on track to start Game 1 if they advance, while Jake Arrieta would presumably go in Game 2 and Kyle Hendricks, who will start against the Dodgers Saturday night, in Game 3. 

The Indians do have the luxury of home-field advantage in the series, which is not insignificant. They have yet to lose at Progressive Field in the playoffs and are tied for the AL’s best home record at 53-28. The Cubs were a modest 46-34 on the road compared to their MLB-high 57 home wins. 

The Dodgers were just 38-43 on the road during the regular season, though they have won three of their first five games away from Los Angeles in the postseason. 

It’s hardly a secret that the Cubs were the league’s best team in 2016. They were one of three teams to score at least 800 runs and led the league with a 3.15 ERA and defensive runs saved, per FanGraphs.

Nothing is ever guaranteed in a short series—few people were predicting Cleveland to get past the Boston Red Sox in the division series, let alone make it to the World Series—but the Indians’ simpler route to a title would go through Los Angeles. 

Of course, given the injuries Cleveland has overcome this season and in the playoffs to even reach this point, difficult tasks don’t seem to phase this team. 

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NLCS Schedule 2016: Game Time, Live Stream and Updated Odds

The Chicago Cubs offense finally came to life over the past two games of the 2016 National League Championship Series to push the drought-stricken organization within one victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers of reaching its first World Series since 1945.

Now the pressure shifts to the Dodgers, who had taken early control of the series with two straight shutouts in Games 2 and 3. They’ll hope sending ace Clayton Kershaw to the mound Saturday night can silence the suddenly revitalized Cubs lineup once again.

Let’s check out all of the important viewing information for the final two games of the series, though Game 7 may not be needed. That’s followed by a look at the updated odds and a prediction for whether Los Angeles can force a deciding game Sunday.

                                                    

2016 NLCS Schedule

                                                  

Current Series Odds

                                           

Game 6 Preview

The Dodgers were in the driver’s seat with a 2-1 series lead and Kershaw looming for Game 6. Winning one of the final two games at home would have sent them back to Chicago with the league’s best pitcher prepared to break the hearts of Cubs fans again.

Instead, the club now needs a dominant performance from its ace just to keep the season alive. He pitched a gem in Game 2, tossing seven shutout innings with six strikeouts while giving up just two hits and walking one. L.A. needs a similar outing Saturday night.

Knowing Kershaw will be on the mound is a mental boost for the Dodgers, though. Kike Hernandez further explained why the team remains upbeat about its chances of a comeback despite heading out on the road with its back against the wall, per Jack Baer of MLB.com:

This team is more than capable of winning two games in a row. In Game 6, we have the best pitcher on the mound, and then in Game 7, we have Rich [Hill], who looked pretty good against them. The last time we lost two in a row, we came back and won two in a row against Washington, so I don’t see why we’re out of this. We’re still pretty confident we can come back and win a series.

Of course, the Cubs don’t have a slouch taking the ball in Game 6, either. Kyle Hendricks actually led baseball in ERA during the regular season with a 2.13 mark because Kershaw (1.69) didn’t have enough innings to qualify due to some injury issues.

The 26-year-old breakout sensation has earned comparisons to former Atlanta Braves ace Greg Maddux, who had two stints with the Cubs, because he carves up hitters without the electric stuff of a Kershaw. Maddux told ESPN’s Jesse Rogers he likes what he’s seen from the Cubs starter.

“He does all those things usually better than the guys he’s facing,” Maddux said. “If it was a radar contest, then why play the game, right? Velocity is nice, but command and movement are better.”

In an era where there’s so much focus on upper-90s fastballs and monster strikeout totals, it’s refreshing to see a pitcher who can get hitters out consistently by attacking every area of the strike zone.

All told, it sets the stage for a pitcher’s duel Saturday night. It’s hard to imagine two offenses that have run hot and cold throughout the playoffs are going to generate a ton of chances against two of the top pitchers in the game this year.

ESPN Stats and Info passed along a stat to showcase how important it is for the Cubs to get into the Dodgers bullpen:

If Chicago is able to get Kershaw out of the game before the seventh inning, its chances of winning certainly skyrocket, even in a close game. But it’s more likely the lefty goes the distance to force Game 7 for the National League pennant.

Prediction: 3-2 Dodgers

                                           

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MLB Playoffs 2016: Examining Latest Results, Highlights and Stats

The 2016 Major League Baseball playoffs are nearing an end, and the Chicago Cubs are seeking to clinch their first World Series berth since 1945 with a victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 6 of the National League Championship Series on Saturday. 

The Cubs are on the cusp of fulfilling the promise they showed during the regular season when they won an MLB-best 103 games, though they will have to do something no one has been able to do this postseason: beat the Dodgers in a game started by Clayton Kershaw.

Fortunately, the Cubs have the luxury of playing at home in front of what’s sure to be a raucous and passionate crowd in Wrigley Field and the knowledge they have two chances to win one game. 

Meanwhile, the Cleveland Indians sucked some drama from the American League by reaching the World Series with a 7-1 combined record against the Boston Red Sox and Toronto Blue Jays. They wrapped up the AL title on Wednesday, giving them five days to rest before hosting the Fall Classic on Tuesday. 

Before moving ahead, let’s look back at how the three teams still playing for a championship have arrived at this point. 

      

LCS Results

          

Cleveland’s Unique Path

It’s fitting that this Cleveland team has overcome injuries and adversity in October because the season started with significant questions about the offense as a result of All-Star outfielder Michael Brantley’s shoulder. 

Brantley was limited to 11 games during the regular season before his shoulder flared up, requiring another surgical procedure in August.

September looked like a nightmare month for the Indians, despite them never losing their grip on first place in the American League Central. Danny Salazar’s arm flared up, and he hasn’t pitched since September 9. Carlos Carrasco’s season ended on September 17 due to a broken pinkie following a liner off the bat of Ian Kinsler. 

Yet that September 17 game helped set the stage for what MLB fans saw in Game 3 of the ALCS. On that day against the Detroit Tigers, eight relievers combined for 10 shutout innings in a 1-0 win. 

Trevor Bauer was forced out of Game 3 against the Blue Jays after recording two outs due to the stitches breaking on his pinkie. Manager Terry Francona used six pitchers to get the final 25 outs in a 4-2 win for a commanding 3-0 series lead. 

Cleveland made history in that game, with ESPN’s Cristian Moreno providing this statistical nugget:

While Cleveland’s entire relief corps has opened a lot of eyes this postseason, the unit is being led by the dominating effort of ALCS MVP Andrew Miller. 

Richard Justice of MLB.com provided Miller’s final stat line from the ALCS:

Because of the injuries to the Indians’ rotation, Francona has often relied on Miller and Cody Allen to record nine outs this postseason. 

Per Jared Carrabis of Barstool Sports, the combined numbers for Miller and Allen in eight playoff games for the Indians have been incredible:

They have needed the pitching staff to be that good because the lineup isn’t putting up gaudy numbers. In five games against the Blue Jays, Cleveland’s offense scored 12 runs on 25 hits, and seven of those runs came on six homers.

It’s easy to get away with little offensive production when the pitching staff has three shutouts in eight games, but the Indians will likely need more of a spark with the bat if they hope to capture the franchise’s first World Series since 1948. 

Of course, if Miller and Allen remain unhittable, the Indians could keep doing exactly what they have done through two playoff series. 

            

Dodgers vs. Cubs

The story of this year’s NLCS boils down to what the Cubs have done against Dodgers pitchers not named Kershaw, Rich Hill and Kenley Jansen. 

Los Angeles’ Big Three has combined to allow five hits, three walks, no runs with 18 strikeouts in 16.1 innings this series. In three games the Dodgers have lost thus far, their pitching staff has given up 35 hits and 26 runs. 

Kershaw continues to change the (ludicrous) narrative about his inability to pitch in the postseason based on what he was able to do against the Cubs in Game 2.

Unfortunately for Kershaw, because the Dodgers are staring elimination in the face, no one will remember that brilliant effort if he doesn’t duplicate it on Saturday night. 

When the Cubs went down 2-1, there was talk of an offensive slump that were nearly as ludicrous as those previous narratives about Kershaw. Everything gets heightened in the postseason, but judging baseball teams on any two-game stretch is insane because it’s a game built on peaks and valleys. 

Peter Gammons of GammonsDaily.com also helped illustrate why the Cubs were unable to hit in Games 2 and 3:

They didn’t hit against Kershaw and Hill because no one hits against that duo. That’s not an exaggeration, as both left-handers hold opponents to a sub-.200 batting average, per FanGraphs.

The Cubs aren’t lacking in the pitching department. Jon Lester gave them the edge in the series with seven brilliant innings of work in Game 5, in which he allowed five hits and one run with six strikeouts. 

Of course, as noted by Christopher Kamka of Comcast SportsNet Chicago, Thursday’s outing from Lester has been par for the course since the All-Star break:

The Dodgers don’t figure to see Lester again in this series, though Cubs manager Joe Maddon could opt for an all-hands-on-deck approach if it goes to a seventh game on Sunday. 

Kyle Hendricks will start Game 6, with Jake Arrieta ready for Game 7 if necessary. Hendricks was the hard-luck loser against Kershaw in Game 2, with his only mistake in 5.1 innings being a solo homer from Adrian Gonzalez. 

Hendricks didn’t look sharp in that outing with four walks, but he worked around them by allowing just three hits and striking out five. 

One thing that works to the Dodgers’ advantage is they don’t have to face a left-handed starter. Their team OPS was 150 points higher against right-handed pitching (.772) than left-handed pitching (.622) this season, per Baseball-Reference.com

With Kershaw on the mound in Game 6, the Dodgers don’t have to light up the scoreboard to keep their season alive. They just need to find a way put the Cubs in an early hole that leaves them searching for runs against the best pitcher in baseball. 

Odds are firmly in the Cubs’ favor right now, but the Dodgers’ pitching lines up perfectly to give them a shot at challenging Cleveland for the World Series. 

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Dodgers vs. Cubs: Keys for Each Team to Win NLCS Game 6

In Game 6 of the National League Championship Series, the Chicago Cubs will take on the Curse of the Billy Goat and Clayton Kershaw will take on the narrative.

It wouldn’t be October without a big chance for Kershaw to prove he can be a clutch postseason performer. Saturday’s Game 6 assignment will be his best chance yet, as the Los Angeles Dodgers will need a good performance from their ace to get out of a 3-2 hole and force a Game 7.

Meanwhile, Kyle Hendricks will be trying to pitch the Cubs into their first World Series since 1945. The Wrigley Field crowd would no doubt appreciate it if he did.

First pitch will happen shortly after 8 p.m. ET. Let’s pass the time by looking at three keys for each team to win Game 6.

           

Keys for the Los Angeles Dodgers

For Clayton Kershaw, Keep Pounding Those Fastballs

We all know about Kershaw‘s struggles in the postseason, but he’s still the best pitcher on the planet and the best hope for the Dodgers to get back on track after dropping Games 4 and 5.

Or as first baseman Adrian Gonzalez told Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register, “We can grab back that momentum with one nameKershaw.”

A repeat of Kershaw‘s start in Game 2 would do nicely. He pitched the Dodgers to a 1-0 win with seven scoreless innings in which he allowed just two hits and a walk. He wasn’t messing around, and Brooks Baseball shows he went right at the Cubs with his highest fastball percentage of the season:

Why go right at the Cubs? Well, here’s a better question: Why not go right at the Cubs?

The defining characteristic of Chicago’s offense is its patience. Few teams swung less often in the regular season, and few teams expanded the strike zone less often. These things were big factors in the team’s NL-best .343 on-base percentage.

Kershaw is the perfect pitcher to combat this habit and make the Cubs beat him the hard way. Only fellow Dodger Rich Hill pounded the zone more often in 2016.

And if Kershaw sticks with his fastball to do so in Game 6, he’ll be relentlessly pounding the Cubs with 93-94 mph heat. Per Baseball Savant, their offense only tied for 15th in batting average when attacking that kind of heat in the zone.

             

Come Out Swinging Against Kyle Hendricks

Kershaw may be the best pitcher on the planet, but Hendricks is no slouch. He led baseball with a 2.13 ERA in the regular season. No wonder he’s not sweating Game 6.

“This is still the same game,” he said, per Paul Skrbina of the Chicago Tribune. “You’re making the same pitches. It’s the same lineup. There’s just more going on (on) the outside.”

It presumably will be the same lineup Hendricks faced in Game 2, when he allowed one run in 5.1 innings. The Dodgers did well to work him for four walks. But if they want to get to him, they should make like Merrill Hess and swing away.

Attacking Hendricks early makes sense on two fronts. One is within his first 25 pitches, where he was relatively hittable, allowing a .693 OPS this season. On another, this chart from Baseball Savant shows he’s most vulnerable early in counts:

Here’s a simpler breakdown: Hitters hit .302 against Hendricks on 0-0, 1-0 and 0-1 counts and just .172 in all other counts.

The trick is to avoid his changeup. It’s his only swing-and-miss offering, and he throws it often. But he throws it most often in two-strike counts, when it makes up over 40 percent of his pitches.

               

Have Kenley Jansen on Speed Dial

If at all possible, the Dodgers do not want to use any reliever other than Kenley Jansen in Game 6.

This should be obvious in light of what Dodgers relievers not named Jansen have done in this series. Joe Blanton has served up two big home runs, and other relievers not named Jansen helped turn close games into laughers in the club’s last two losses.

Manager Dave Roberts seems to be more aware of how ugly it’s been than he wants to let on.

“I’m not going to shy away from any of these guys [in the bullpen],” he said after Game 5, per Eric Stephen of SB Nation. “But obviously you look at going into Game 6, Kenley’s going to have a few days off, and we’ve got our ace going. So it will give our guys a chance to reset. But again, these guys have gotten big outs for us all year long.”

Translation—I know they’re there, but I’d rather only Kershaw and Jansen pitch in Game 6.

Good idea. Jansen will indeed be well-rested after last being used in Game 3 on Tuesday. He’s also a good matchup for the Cubs in the same way Kershaw is a good matchup for them: He’s an aggressive strike-thrower with an overpowering fastball. The only difference is that Jansen’s is a cutter.

It shouldn’t be a big deal if Roberts needs Jansen before the ninth inning. He’s entered earlier than the ninth in four of his six appearances this postseason. He’s put a goose egg on the board each time.

If he can do so again in Game 6 after a Kershaw-like performance from Kershaw, this series could be tied.

             

Keys for the Chicago Cubs

Come Out Swinging Against Clayton Kershaw

Cubs hitters should approach Kershaw the same way Dodgers hitters should approach Hendricks.

The alternative is working Kershaw and trying to drive up his pitch count, with the idea being to get at the underbelly of the Dodgers bullpen. Or if that fails, possibly luring Kershaw into the kind of seventh-inning trap that tends to snare him in October.

However, the Cubs experienced the pitfall of taking such an approach against Kershaw in Game 2.

After swinging at just 45.4 percent of all pitches in the regular season, Baseball Savant put their swing rate in Game 2 at just 46.1 percent. Given how much Kershaw pounds the zone, it’s no wonder he got through seven innings on just 84 pitches before handing the ball to Jansen to close out Game 2.

Going into attack mode is a better idea when facing the three-time Cy Young winner. He has a similar count split to Hendricks, holding batters to a .276 average on 0-0, 1-0 and 0-1 counts and a .155 average on all other counts

Besides that, trying to work Kershaw is typically a good way to get into a two-strike count. On that note, check out where he ranked in OPS allowed with two strikes this season:

  1. Clayton Kershaw: .281
  2. Corey Kluber: .357

When you’re that much better at something than Corey Kluber, you’re really good at that something.

Let that be a warning to the Cubs. Don’t mess around. Swing the bats.

            

Sinkers and Changeups for Kyle Hendricks

Hendricks doesn’t normally need to be told to throw sinkers and changeups. ESPN.com’s Jesse Rogers has some notes about why:

According to ESPN Stats & Information, he used [sinkers and changeups] more than 75 percent of the time in the regular season, keeping the ball in the lower third of the strike zone 56 percent of the time. The result was a .450 OPS on those pitches, by far the lowest among all qualified pitchers.

And yet, Hendricks got away from his two bread-and-butter pitches in Game 2. Only 51 of his 91 pitches (56 percent) were sinkers and changeups. Instead, he opted for one of the highest percentages of four-seam fastballs he’s used all season.

This may have been a reaction to the lineup he was facing. The Dodgers started only one right-handed hitter (Justin Turner) in Game 2, attacking Hendricks with left-handed hitters in the other eight spots in their lineup. Throughout the year, Hendricks generally has preferred his four-seamer against lefties.

The argument for sticking with his four-seamer against the same lineup in Game 6 is the .355 average lefties compiled against his sinker. But it’s a hollow .355, containing only eight extra-base hits (all doubles). Given that 53.5 percent of the sinkers lefties have put in play have been on the ground, that can continue in Game 6.

As for Hendricks’ changeup, there are no issues there. Lefties have hit just .135 against it this year. It’s not a pitch they’re jonesing to see.

             

No Lefties Left Behind

Here’s a not-so-hot take: The Cubs bullpen is better than the Dodgers bullpen. If Game 6 becomes a bullpen battle, the Cubs will have the advantage by default.

But if Chicago skipper Joe Maddon wants to press his advantage in Game 6, he’ll unleash the lefties.

You’ve probably heard about the Dodgers’ struggle against left-handed pitching. If not, well, they put up a .622 OPS against lefties this season, easily the worst of any team. If given a choice between facing a lefty and a root canal, they may go for door No. 2.

This is where Mike Montgomery, Travis Wood and Aroldis Chapman come into focus.

They’re three solid left arms for Maddon to throw at the Dodgers if need be, and he shouldn’t be afraid to use any one of them. Although Montgomery and Chapman have given up four earned runs in this series, they’ve also combined for four scoreless appearances. Wood has three of those of his own. In other words, these three have mostly been able to exploit the most obvious weakness on either side of this series.

If they can do it again in Game 6, the Cubs could find themselves in their first World Series in 71 years and that much closer to finally ending their 108-year championship drought.

              

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted or linked.

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