Author Archive

Cubs vs. Dodgers: Keys for Each Team to Win NLCS Game 4

Chicago Cubs fans might want to issue an APB on the team’s offense. Chicago was shut out for the second straight game in a 6-0 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers on Tuesday night, the first time that’s happened since May 2014.

It has left serious doubts as to whether this team will be able to even the National League Championship Series at two games after Wednesday’s Game 4.

It is, however, entirely possible. The talent exists on the roster of MLB’s best team this regular season. Care to see how it has to go about it?

Begin Slideshow


ALCS 2016: Toronto Blue Jays vs Cleveland Indians Position-by-Position Breakdown

Baseball’s two hottest teams will clash in the American League Championship Series when the Toronto Blue Jays and Cleveland Indians play at Progressive Field on Friday.

Each team swept its respective division series.

The upcoming ALCS can be compared to a great boxing card. In boxing, contrasting styles between fighters make a great fight.

The Indians and Blue Jays won this season in different ways. The Indians relied on solid pitching, particularly a starting rotation that carried the team through its best stretches of the regular season.

Toronto, on the other hand, is loaded with power and hit its way through the Texas Rangers in the American League Division Series.

Let’s move on and see what makes these two heavyweights so great.

Begin Slideshow


Chicago Cubs’ Historic Comeback Proves This Is Not the Same Old Franchise

For the last 107 seasons, any hope the Chicago Cubs held heading into postseason play was almost immediately followed by agony.

What took place in the ninth inning of Game 4 of the National League Division Series on Tuesday night is supposed to happen to the Cubs. Chicago is never the team that dishes out heartbreak.

But at AT&T Park, the Cubs borrowed—or maybe stole—some of the magic that has guided the San Francisco Giants to World Series titles in each of the last three even years.

Down by three runs, with a decisive Game 5 on the minds of everyone in attendance and watching at home, the Cubs scored four runs to take a 6-5 lead.

Chicago closer Aroldis Chapman saved the game with three swinging strikeouts in the ninth.

While the Cubs have been the champions of misfortune, it’s important to note that only one team has ever done what they did Tuesday.

Chicago’s comeback from a three-run deficit tied the largest ninth-inning deficit overcome in a clinching postseason game. The 1986 New York Mets did the same in Game 6 of the National League Championship Series.

It gives reason to believe this is the year for the Cubs.

Tuesday’s theatrics are commonplace at AT&T Park in October, only fans are used to seeing them performed by the home team. Chicago’s victory snapped the Giants’ 10-game winning streak in elimination games.

That means en route to winning the World Series in 2010, 2012 and 2014, San Francisco faced elimination nine times. Their 10th win in an elimination game came Monday, when they captured Game 3.

That’s suggestive of the kind of magic it takes to raise the Commissioner’s Trophy. It’s what the Cubs have been missing but finally seem to have.

All series, Chicago struggled offensively. Only third baseman Kris Bryant, who hit .375/.412/.688 in the four games, was hitting. And he began the ninth-inning rally with a leadoff single.

But seemingly everyone got in on the action. Anthony Rizzo walked, Ben Zobrist lined a run-scoring double and Javier Baez singled home Jason Heyward, who has struggled all year at the plate, for the game-winning run.

Manager Joe Maddon added a little of his out-of-the-box style to the inning, too.

With shortstop Addison Russell, who had 95 RBI this season, coming to the plate and the game-tying runs on second and third, Maddon elected to pinch hit.

He used left-handed batter Chris Coghlan, who hit just .188 and drove in only 30 runs this season, to get a lefty-righty matchup against Giants pitcher Sergio Romo.

Coghlan turned out to be a decoy.

Once his name was announced—the official designation that a player has entered a game—San Francisco manager Bruce Bochy countered by bringing in southpaw reliever Will Smith.

Maddon then removed Coghlan before he even stepped into the batter’s box and inserted right-handed hitting catcher Willson Contreras, who hit .311 against left-handers this season.

The Cubs had the matchup they wanted, and it paid dividends: Contreras singled home Rizzo and Zobrist to tie the game.

It was a picture-perfect ending for Chicago, which is typically the victim in a horror film.

The Cubs await the winner of the NLDS between the Washington Nationals and Los Angeles Dodgers. Those two teams will play a Game 5 on Thursday.

As if winning an NLDS wasn’t enough for Chicago, the Dodgers used ace Clayton Kershaw in Tuesday’s Game 4. The Nationals will throw their ace, Max Scherzer, in Game 5.

That means regardless which team the Cubs play in the NLCS, which starts Saturday, they will not face that team’s ace until at least Game 2.

But by virtue of closing out their NLDS in Game 4, Chicago will get to throw its ace, Jon Lester, in Game 1. Had San Francisco forced Game 5, Lester would have pitched Thursday, and had the Cubs advanced, he would not have been available until Game 3 of the NLCS.

Everything that could have gone the Cubs’ way Tuesday night did.

And while Chicago’s shocking comeback reverberated around the baseball world, it also left onlookers wondering whether the sport’s even-year magic had changed addresses.

It seems as if the Cubs are finally destined for some good fortune.

    

Seth Gruen is a national baseball columnist for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter @SethGruen.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


NLDS 2016: Keys for All 4 NL Teams to Win Game 4

Those seeking drama this MLB postseason need to turn their attention to the National League. Both the Cleveland Indians and Toronto Blue Jays swept their respective division series, while the two NLCS teams have yet to be determined.

Both the San Francisco Giants and Los Angeles Dodgers are facing elimination. They’ll play with urgency, but that alone won’t get them to Game 5.

What exactly will?

Begin Slideshow


NLDS 2016: Keys for All 4 NL Teams to Win Game 3

Many in baseball circles believe that Game 3 of a division series is most important. It makes sense, really.

A Game 3 has one of two scenarios attached to it: Either a team faces an elimination game or has the opportunity to force one.

Both scenarios will play out Monday as the San Francisco Giants find themselves down 2-0 to the Chicago Cubs, and the NLDS pitting the Washington Nationals and Los Angeles Dodgers is tied at one.

What are the keys for each team to winning this crucial game?

Begin Slideshow


Snakebit Cubs Fanbase Confident, Ready for Most Important Postseason in Century

CHICAGO — To understand the psyche of Chicago Cubs fans is not to be a team historian.

Steve Bartman and the Curse of the Billy Goat are integral events in the long-suffering organization’s history. As are countless postseason disappointments.

But almost universally, fans of the team are not a group that dwells on its heartbreak. Cubs nation is not depressed, like a person in mourning. The World Series-starved fanbase is more giddy, like expecting parents.

The tenor around Wrigleyville, the appropriately named area that is home to Wrigley Field, is somewhat a result of the group of young players president of baseball operations Theo Epstein has brought to the club.

Even in previous years, however, there was an eternal optimism that permeated the neighborhood.

“The Cubs’ greatest thing is Theo and [manager] Joe Maddon,” said Freddy Fagenholz, who has been the general manager of the world famous sports bar Murphy’s Bleachers for the past seven years. “I think they’re going to have these guys ready for the game.

“They’ve been there before, and they haven’t done it. I think this is the best team that they’ve had that I can remember.”

Fagenholz spoke to Bleacher Report as members of the Cubs grounds crew were relaxing inside the bar, which is located at Clark Street and Sheffield Avenue, directly across from the entrance to Wrigley Field’s bleachers.

In his time, Fagenholz has seen more losing than winning. But pressed, he would not waver from his optimism, even though he is well acquainted with the team’s history of futility.

He is aware that on Tuesday, October 14, 2003, Bartman deflected a foul ball in the eighth inning of a potential NLCS-clinching Game 6, preventing right fielder Moises Alou from recording the inning’s second out.

At the time, Chicago led 3-0. What ensued was an eight-run eighth inning that forced a Game 7, which the Cubs lost.

Fagenholz was at Murphy’s Bleachers, as a patron, drinking and watching the game.

See, Wrigley Field is the epicenter of the neighborhood. It tells the story. But the surrounding bars serve to write the team’s prologue and epilogue.

Long before games start, fans pack bars that line Wrigley Field’s bordering streets—Addison, Clark, Sheffield and Waveland. Win or lose, they pile back in and party into the next day’s early hours.

Zach Strauss, whose family owns Sluggers, a bar on Clark Street, a little more than a Hail Mary throw from the Wrigley Field marquee, remembers his venue being packed to the brim for that 2003 NLCS game.

Kegs were tapped, liquor was being poured and eyes were glued to Sluggers’ numerous television screens. By the time the game ended, the place had flatlined.

“People left this place, [and] it was supposed to be a huge celebration, and it was like a 180,” Strauss said. “It was like a funeral.

“Everyone started crying. It was terrible.” 

Because Cubs games have been televised on WGN nationally for decades, the organization is one of the few entities in sports, such as the New York Yankees and Notre Dame football, that transcends geography.

Fans of the team dot the map.

All MLB teams are now on national television, and the MLB.tv package provides access to every game. But people from a previous generation still pass the fandom down to their offspring, almost like religion.

Justin Wollmershauser’s grandfather is from Chicago and was a Cubs fan. Wollmershauser is a Tulsa, Oklahoma, native but caught the bug. So much so that the 23-year-old moved to Chicago and lives above Merkle’s Bar and Grill, another Wrigleyville staple on Clark Street.

He said he made the move for the Cubs, to be there when the team finally wins a World Series.

Wollmershauser moved the same night in 2015 when the Cubs beat the Pittsburgh Pirates in the NL Wild Card Game.

“They had to lift my mattress over fans that were jumping on cars and running up and down the streets just to get me moved in,” he said. “I was pretty excited for what was to come and going into the playoffs, the way the Cubs’ postseason has been, is twice as exciting.”

Robert Schweikher, 23, watched the Bartman game over his railing as a 10-year old in his West Lafayette, Indiana, home because, then 10, he was supposed to be asleep. When his parents found him crying after the game, they explained to him he’d have more heartbreak as a Cubs fan.

Later in his life, they suggested he move to Chicago. They lived there at one time. So Schweikher moved to Wrigleyville.

Today, not many people, the aforementioned proprietors included, blame Bartman. Thirteen years after the incident, it is widely understood he was one of many reaching for that baseball.

Bartman was just the unfortunate one to have touched it. That Alou immediately reacted negatively was no fault of Bartman’s. Nor was the error shortstop Alex Gonzalez made two batters later.

A strange phenomenon among Cubs fans is the group’s ability to get over heartbreak.

Rahsell Gordin is a bartender at Dark Horse on Sheffield Ave. She’s a Boston native and Red Sox fan but has worked at the Wrigleyville bar for the past 12 years. Her first was 2004, when the Red Sox won their first World Series since 1918.

She said she wasn’t made to feel bad about gloating that year, even though it was only a year removed from the ill-fated Bartman game.

Last year, she said grown men left the bar crying after the Cubs were swept out of the NLCS by the New York Mets.

“It’s just been like a roller coaster,” Gordin said. “Everybody has been waiting. Everyone’s hopes are up and up, and everyone is in a great emotional state.”

Good vibes are running rampant around Chicago’s north side. Cubs fans can’t get enough of it. It’s like dessert to someone with a sweet tooth.

Cubs superstar Addison Russell agreed, as he told Bleacher Report’s Zach Rymer he “can definitely see that Chicago is ready for something big to happen here.”

And no one can run away from it. Not even the Chicago Police Department.

The city is so optimistic about the team that the police department already has plans for street closures for potential series-clinching games, according to Al Rothlisberger, who is the general manager of HVAC Pub on Clark—a newer Wrigleyville watering hole.

Rothlisberger said police have already had meetings with the area’s proprietors, asking for their cooperation as it pertains to crowd management inside each establishment. Rothlisberger said he was holding a staff meeting after his interview with Bleacher Report in order to prepare for the playoffs.

But Cubs fans don’t even feel as though they are setting themselves up for disappointment. The group’s optimism lasts in perpetuity. Wollmershauser summed it up best: “If they don’t [win the World Series], I just know that the Cubs are going to be such a good contender for the World Series for years to come. There’s no point in even giving up on the Cubs.

“If not this year, then we learn something new and it’s next year.”

         

Seth Gruen is a national baseball columnist for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter @SethGruen.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


NLDS 2016: Keys for All 4 NL Teams to Win Game 1

Given the quality of starting pitching in the National League this season, both National League Division Series openers, which will see three of the four teams’ aces on the mound, should be high on excitement.

Don’t expect high-scoring affairs. But do expect every ground ball, relay throw and double play to matter.

Such is the case in playoff baseball, where everything is scrutinized. But while every stat will be dissected heading into these games, can you guess what’s most important to each team’s success?

Begin Slideshow


NL Wild Card Game 2016: Giants vs. Mets Breakdown and Predictions

When the 2016 MLB season began, few people figured the New York Mets and San Francisco Giants would be here.

Sure, a majority of baseball pundits and fans expected both teams to be playing in October. But most thought they’d be respective division winners readying for the National League Division Series—not participants in the Wild Card Game.

With both teams starting outstanding pitchers in Wednesday’s win-or-go-home game, the matchup can be dissected a multitude of ways, with each suggesting a different outcome. Follow along to determine who you think will win Wednesday’s NL Wild Card Game.

Begin Slideshow


AL Wild Card Game 2016: Orioles vs. Blue Jays Breakdown and Predictions

This season, the Toronto Blue Jays and Baltimore Orioles couldn’t have played each other closer.

In 19 games, Toronto won 10 and Baltimore nine.

Each team protected its home-field advantage. The Orioles went 5-4 at Camden Yards, while the Blue Jays were 6-4 at Rogers Centre. MLB couldn’t have hand-picked two better teams to pit against one another in the American League Wild Card Game.

Follow along as we break down one of baseball’s most hotly contested division rivalries.

Begin Slideshow


Takeaways from MLB Week 26

The death of Miami Marlins pitcher Jose Fernandez shook the baseball world. It stopped, memorialized one of its great young talents and mourned.

With difficulty, the sport tried to move on, holding onto the memory of the charisma and joy that Fernandez brought to the game while soldiering on to the end of the 2016 regular season.

But nothing was more touching or memorable than what the Marlins did to honor their teammate.

Begin Slideshow


Copyright © 1996-2010 Kuzul. All rights reserved.
iDream theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress