Tag: World Series

World Series 2016 Schedule: Dates, Game Times, TV Guide for Cubs vs. Indians

Very few World Series matchups in recent history offer more intrigue than Cleveland facing the Chicago Cubs in a series that will ultimately be remembered for one of these organizations ending a long championship drought.

But this would be a fantastic matchup without all of the historical context, and one you simply don’t want to miss. So let’s take a look at the championship schedule before breaking down both of these teams.

    

Cleveland

It was easy to overlook this Cleveland team coming into the postseason. They were dealing with a number of injuries, and they were facing the big bats of the Boston Red Sox in the ALDS. Surely, they would be steamrolled by David Ortiz, Mookie Betts and the star-laden lineup that Boston possessed.

Not so fast, folks.

Cleveland’s pitching, instead, dominated both Boston’s boppers and the big bats of the Toronto Blue Jays in the ALCS. Cleveland’s staff through eight games has an ERA of 1.77, a WHIP of 1.01 and 81 strikeouts in 71 innings.

Corey Kluber and Josh Tomlin have been fantastic as starters, giving up just five runs between them in five starts and 29 innings pitched. Reliever Andrew Miller has been basically unhittable as the team’s stopper out of the bullpen and has yet to give up a run. Closer Cody Allen hasn’t given up a run, either, and has five saves. 

The team’s bullpen, in general, has been superb. In the ALCS, Cleveland’s relievers gave up just four runs in 22 innings. In Game 3, the bullpen was required to throw 8.1 innings after Trevor Bauer had to be taken out of the game with a finger injury.

The result? Six relievers gave up just two runs and Cleveland won, 4-2.

In part, Cleveland’s bullpen has been so successful because manager Terry Francona doesn’t have strict roles assigned for his various components, instead using pitchers when he feels he needs them. It’s why a pitcher like Miller—who easily could fill the closer role—has found himself in the setup role, but he has also appeared in games in the fifth, sixth and seventh innings.

“Everybody (puts) the ego aside on this team,” reliever Bryan Shaw told Rob Oller of the Columbus Dispatch. “If guys were down there (saying) ‘I’m pitching my inning or I’m doing this,’ I don’t think we could have gotten to where we’re at right now.”

Cleveland’s bullpen has had to be superb—after Kluber and Tomlin, the team doesn’t have great starting pitching. But the team’s offense shouldn’t be an afterthought, either.

Carlos Santana and Mike Napoli provide the pop. Jason Kipnis, Francisco Lindor and Jose Ramirez do a little bit of everything. Rajai Davis has been a revelation. Cleveland doesn’t have the bats that the Cubs possess, but they didn’t have the bats that the Red Sox and Blue Jays possessed, either.

But here they are. And once again, they’ll rely on their bullpen, their defense and timely hitting against a Cubs team that, on paper, is clearly more talented. 

 

Chicago Cubs

The Cubs were the best MLB team during the regular season, and it was never really in doubt. Few teams have the star power, depth and balance that the Cubs possess. 

Offensively, Kris Bryant and Anthony Rizzo each hit over 30 home runs and 100 RBI, while Addison Russell added 21 dingers and 95 ribbies. Then there’s Javier Baez, who has hit .342 this postseason with one home run, four doubles, seven RBI and seven runs scored. 

And hey, for good measure, the Cubs also throw Ben Zobrist, Dexter Fowler and Willson Contreras at opposing pitchers, while Jason Heyward provides excellent defense in right field for the team. Good luck finding many weaknesses with this unit.

Oh, but it doesn’t end there. Players like Albert Almora Jr. and Jorge Soler are available off the bench, and Kyle Schwarber might return from a season-long injury to improve the team’s depth as well, per Gordon Wittenmyer of the Chicago Sun-Times. And the ever-brilliant Joe Maddon is pulling the strings, and he always seems to know exactly what strings to pull with this lineup.

Of course, the team’s pitching is pretty stacked, too. 

The Cubs have a much more reliable postseason rotation than Cleveland, leaning on Jon Lester, Jake Arrieta, Kyle Hendricks and John Lackey. Lester has given up two runs in 21 postseason innings. Hendricks has given up just three runs over 16.1 innings. Arrieta and Lackey have been shakier this postseason but both had solid regular seasons and have October experience.

In the bullpen, Aroldis Chapman has also been a bit shakier, giving up three runs in eight innings pitched, though he does have three saves. Travis Wood and Carl Edwards, however, have given up one run in a combined 8.1 innings pitched, so Chicago’s bullpen has solid options as well.

Like Cleveland, the Cubs also play very good defense. And unlike Cleveland, which is without starting pitcher Carlos Carrasco and outfielder Michael Brantley, the Cubs are mostly healthy.

The argument for the Cubs is pretty simple: They’ve been the best team in baseball all year, they’re the better team on paper and their offense woke up against the San Francisco Giants. They were constructed to win a title, and they certainly feel they are capable of living up to those expectations.

“We’ve been believing it all year,” Cubs shortstop Addison Russell told Jared Diamond of the Wall Street Journal. “And the moment’s here.”

Indeed it is. Cleveland’s performance thus far has been magical, but the Cubs appear to simply be the better team.

      

Prediction

The Cubs will end their World Series drought, winning this matchup in six games.

   

You can follow Timothy Rapp on Twitter.

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Jon Lester, Corey Kluber Announced as Game 1 Starters for 2016 World Series

The pitching matchup for Game 1 of the 2016 World Series is set as the Chicago Cubs and Cleveland Indians attempt to win their first World Series since 1908 and 1948, respectively.

According to the MLB and Indians Twitter accounts, Jon Lester will take the mound for the Cubs while Corey Kluber gets the ball for Cleveland at home Tuesday.

Both pitchers have excelled so far in the postseason. Kluber has posted a 0.98 ERA in three starts, while Lester has been just as good with a 0.86 ERA in the same number of games.

It was likely an easy choice for Indians manager Terry Francona. Injuries to his pitching staff have created a number of question marks about the postseason rotation, but Kluber has been Cleveland’s one constant throughout the year. The 2014 American League Cy Young Award winner had a 3.14 ERA this season, and his 227 strikeouts ranked fifth in the AL.

According to Zack Meisel of Cleveland.com, Josh Tomlin and Trevor Bauer will likely start Games 2 and 3 in some order, depending on Bauer’s health after suffering a pinky injury on his throwing hand.

The Cubs had a few more options for Game 1, including 2016 ERA leader Kyle Hendricks and 2015 Cy Young winner Jake Arrieta. However, Lester has been as good as both of them this season with a 19-5 record and a 2.44 ERA.

He is also one of the few players in this matchup with World Series experience, having compiled a 3-0 record and a 0.43 ERA in three starts in the sport’s final round. He won two titles with the Boston Red Sox.

Arrieta will get the ball in Game 2, per Carrie Muskat of MLB.com.

While the rest of his teammates and fans were celebrating the National League pennant, Lester remained focused on the next goal, per JJ Stankevitz of CSN Chicago:

No matter who wins, Lester and Kluber are likely going to provide an entertaining duel in Game 1.

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Scott Miller’s Starting 9 (+6): Droughts, Edges in a Cubs-Indians World Series

CLEVELAND — Pinch us. The 112th World Series starts here Tuesday night, and the Cleveland Indians will tangle with the Chicago Cubs? For reals? Next thing you’ll tell us is there are cordless telephones you can carry around that also double as computers.

These two teams, collectively, haven’t won a World Series in (quick, somebody find a calculator!)…let’s see (still adding!)…um…(almost there!)…176 long, cold, hardball years. 

Combined, these franchises have been playing professional baseball for 255 years, the Cubs since 1876 (first as the Chicago White Stockings, changing to the Cubs in 1903), the Indians since 1901. Neither has hoisted a World Series championship flag since Cleveland beat the Boston Braves in six games in 1948.

So Midwest meets Midwest, Lake Michigan vs. Lake Erie, The City of Broad Shoulders vs. Believeland, Chi-Town vs. The Land.

Matching it up and breaking it down as we all count it down…

        

1. Water, Anyone? We’re Parched

This World Series is brought to you by Aquafina, or Evian, or Gatorade (take your pick): These are, easily, baseball’s longest two active World Series title droughts.

As the sign said on Chicago’s Waveland Avenue during Saturday afternoon’s raucous pregame anticipation: “Party Like It’s 1908.” As everyone from Billy Williams to billy goats to Oprah knows, that’s the last time the Cubs won one of these blasted things. They haven’t played in one since 1945.

Last time the Indians won the World Series was in 1948, when Lou Boudreau’s club beat the Boston Braves in six games. They last were here in 1997, when Edgar Renteria singled home Craig Counsell in the bottom of the 11th inning in Game 7 to win it for the Florida Marlins.

“It’s great for baseball,” Cubs manager Joe Maddon says. “Listen, none of this is lost on me. One thing you always hear is that we need to attract younger fans. We have a team of young players, Cleveland [has such great young talent], I would hope people would tune in and check it out.”

“This moment kind of takes your breath away,” Theo Epstein, the Cubs’ president of baseball operations, says. “We never doubted, but at times it seemed a long way away.”

In Cleveland, they’ve had a few days to regain their breath after chain-sawing through Boston and Toronto in the playoffs. And after, you know, the Cavaliers’ NBA title in June.     

“Obviously, they got a taste of the basketball championship,” Indians relief ace Andrew Miller says. “The crowds for the playoff games at home have been special, as you would expect them to be. I’m looking forward to seeing how they react. It’s going to be a lot of fun.”

Drought, schmout, says Cleveland manager Terry Francona.

“I don’t feel responsible for the fact that my dad didn’t win. That was his fault,” Indians manager Terry Francona quips of his father, Tito, who played outfield for Cleveland from 1959-1964. “We’re responsible for playing the Cubs.”

And that should be a blast over these next several days.

“It’s going to be unbelievable,” Cleveland first baseman/DH Mike Napoli says. “It’s going to be crazy. Here and there.”

Edge: Cubs

          

2. Cleveland: City of Championships

In Cleveland, how cool will Tuesday night be? The Cavaliers open their NBA title defense against the New York Knicks at 7:30 p.m. at Quicken Loans Arena, Progressive Field’s next-door neighbor. They will receive their rings in a pregame ceremony. 

Thirty-eight minutes later, at 8:08 p.m., Corey Kluber will throw the first pitch of the World Series.

Chicago? The Bears stink, the Bulls haven’t won since 1998, the White Sox haven’t won since 2005, and the Blackhawks couldn’t defend their 2015 Stanley Cup title.

Edge: Cleveland

      

3. The Coronation of Theo Epstein and Terry Francona

Both men, Chicago’s president of baseball operations and Cleveland’s field manager, stamped their Hall of Fame passes this month.

Epstein was the 30-year-old whiz kid GM when Boston broke The Curse of the Bambino in 2004, winning the World Series for the first time since trading Babe Ruth in 1919 (ending the drought since 1918). Now, he’s the architect of the Cubs’ first World Series team since 1945 with the very real possibility of being the first winner since 1908.

If he winds up being the architect of both the Red Sox and Cubs teams that win their first World Series in decades? Straight to Cooperstown.

Francona was the manager of that ‘04 Boston World Series-winning team, then won again (with Epstein as GM) in Boston in 2007. Now, Francona has pulled the levers and pushed the buttons to move the Indians to historic heights.

“We were together eight years in Boston,” Francona says of him and Epstein. “Eight years in Boston, I would say, is miraculous.”

Epstein texted Francona congratulations 30 minutes after the Indians clinched the AL pennant in Toronto last week, and an hour later, his phone buzzed with a response.

“Hope to see you next week,” Francona texted.

Edge: Even

        

4. The Ex-Yankee Factor

How backward is this: Remember when some folks once sized up the postseason by adding up the “Ex-Cub Factor,” and the team with the most ex-Cubs immediately became the underdog?

Now it’s the Yankees who went all Amazon and special delivered key pieces to this year’s World Series contestants.

The Cubs acquired closer Aroldis Chapman from the Yankees on July 25 in exchange for four players: pitcher Adam Warren and prospects Gleyber Torres, Billy McKinney and Rashad Crawford.

Six days later, on July 31, the Indians acquired Miller from the Yankees in exchange for four minor leaguers: outfielder Clint Frazier, left-handed pitcher Justus Sheffield and righties J.P. Feyereisen and Ben Heller.

“It’s fun to be a part of this team,” Miller says. “I really enjoyed my time with the Yankees. It’s tough when you leave a comfort zone and a place that you like and people that you like. But I knew I was coming to a team that had won a lot and had expectations to win more. I was coming to play for Tito. I couldn’t have dreamt it up any better.”

Miller is rip-roaring through this postseason, pitching all over the place. The fifth inning. Seventh. Ninth. He has faced 41 batters, and he has fanned 21 of them. At one point, he had struck out 20 of 27 batters faced. He’s producing like few have produced before.

“I think the first thing that really struck a chord with me is, when we walked into the clubhouse when we first got him and he’s watching videos of the opposing hitters [and studying] the scouting report,” Indians pitching coach Mickey Callaway says. “Man, you’ve got two pretty good pitches that you could just stick with. But he’s totally prepared, and that’s what allows him to do above and beyond what most people can do.”

Those two “pretty good pitches,” by the way, are a four-seam fastball and a sweeping slider.

Chapman’s 105 mph gas is sexy, but he is the more high-maintenance of the two. It was telling that Maddon said following Game 6 he was happy to get Chapman in for the final five outs, basically, to make him feel good about himself again after surrendering runs earlier in the series.

Edge: Indians

        

5. For the Glove of the Game

Cubs infielder Javier Baez, 23, doesn’t play defense so much as he performs alchemy in the field whenever the baseball is hit near him. He spins impossible plays into gold.

Indians shortstop Francisco Lindor, 22, is magical in his own way.

Together, these two infielders alone make this World Series a can’t-miss. We may see some of the slickest fielding in baseball history.

“Unbelievable,” Cubs center fielder Dexter Fowler says of Baez. “He’s a diamond in the rough. He plays hard, and he loves the game. You see it in his face.”

“He’s been playing unbelievable,” Napoli says of watching Baez on television this autumn. “It’s been cool to see.

“He’s making some sick plays.”

Lindor is too, while also hitting .323/.344/.581 with two homers and four RBI in eight postseason games this month.

“He’s been a superstar since he’s been here,” Indians closer Cody Allen says. “He’s 22 years old, but he’s a leader in this clubhouse. He’s a special player, one of the guys who helps keep things moving in the right direction.

“I’m looking forward to watching him play these [World Series] games.”

Edge: Even

          

6. Cleveland’s Bullpen Rocks

Over eight postseason games, Cleveland has a 1.77 ERA overall, and its bullpen owns a 1.67 ERA and 0.99 WHIP (walks plus hits divided by innings pitched; basically, how many baserunners per inning allowed).

The Cubs bullpen has surrendered a 3.53 ERA and 1.21 WHIP.

Francona has deployed his relievers like a master surgeon, winning universal praise for using Miller and Allen in the highest-leverage situations no matter the inning, mixing in Bryan Shaw and spotting Dan Otero and Jeff Manship.

Maddon has gotten far more out of his rotation and hasn’t had to rely on his bullpen nearly as much. 

Edge: Indians

           

7. Paths to the World Series

The Indians swept Boston in the AL Division Series despite the fact the Red Sox scored more runs than anybody in the majors in 2016. Then they dispatched the powerful Blue Jays, who ranked fifth in the majors in runs scored.

The Cubs bounced the San Francisco Giants in the NL Division Series after the wild-card winners skidded to a 30-42 record after the All-Star break. Then they blitzed a Los Angeles Dodgers team that was toothless against lefty pitchers this year and employed a ragtag crew of pitchers.

Edge: Indians

                 

8. Just Call Uber

The Cubs have been working on building an uber-team since Epstein, Jed Hoyer and Co. were hired in 2011, and this year’s 103-win unit qualifies. From NL MVP favorite Kris Bryant to Anthony Rizzo to infielders Baez and Addison Russell and beyond, this is an exceptionally deep lineup that scored 808 runs this year, second in the NL only to the Colorado Rockies, who benefit by playing in high altitude.

Though the Indians ranked second to Boston in runs scored in the AL, they’ve scored just 27 in eight postseason games. Aside from Lindor (.323) and Lonnie Chisenhall (.269), nobody in the lineup is hitting above .225 this postseason.

“I guess I was hoping they would keep playing extra innings, all kinds of stuff,” Francona says, chuckling, about watching the Cubs win Game 6 on Saturday night. “They’re built for October. They had a heck of a year.

“They’re going to be a handful.”

Edge: Cubs

        

9. Two World Series Managers, One Interview

It was 2003, and Boston was looking for someone to replace Grady Little.

Epstein, then Boston’s GM, interviewed both Francona and Maddon, who at the time was one of the coaches on Mike Scioscia’s staff in Anaheim.

The Maddon that Epstein hired before the 2015 season after opting for Francona in ’03?

“Same guy, but different context,” Epstein says. “He didn’t have the major league managing pedigree to understand. Also, we were interviewing him for sort of a different role, at a different point in his career, for a different job. In the end we loved him, but we thought taking over a veteran team in a big market, there would have been some risk involved because he’s so unique.

“I think it worked out best for both sides. He got to go to Tampa, which was really a petri dish at that time, and try some things out and grow into it with some young players, and, obviously blossom. And for us, having Tito, who had already managed in the big leagues, it obviously worked out great for both.”

What stood out about Maddon at the time?

“How different he was than anyone else we’d ever interviewed for a managerial job,” Epstein says. “Offbeat sense of humor, use of the language, the way his mind worked and his mode of transportation. He rode his bike everywhere. Everything was different than anything you’d expect from a managerial candidate.”

Edge: Even

           

10. Historic World Series Characters

Hall of Famer Mordecai “Three Finger” Brown pitched in four different World Series for the Cubs in the early part of the last century, including two title runs in 1907 and 1908, and won five games.

Three Finger? He lost part of one finger on his right hand in a farm-machinery accident when he was a boy and damaged other fingers soon after. Classic.

Albert “Mr. Freeze” Belle dominated the Indians lineup during the 1995 and 1997 World Series runs, slamming 50 homers and collecting 126 RBI in ‘95 and 30 and 116 in ‘97.

Mr. Freeze? Belle preferred the Indians clubhouse to be meat-locker cold, and he was a bully who got his way. Brrrr.

Edge: Cubs

           

10. Celebrity Fans

In Wrigley Field, among others, you will find Bill Murray, who makes us laugh, John Cusack, who will say anything, and Eddie Vedder, Pearl Jam vocalist.

Rooting for the Indians are comedian Drew Carey and NBA star LeBron James (who will be occupied during the NBA’s opening night).

Edge: Cubs

                

11. Party at Napoli’s

Elder statesman/club leader/cult hero Napoli is the inspiration for T-shirts all around town that have “Party at Napoli’s” printed on them. A fan had one made early this summer and sent it to Napoli. Then, Napoli wore it at a news conference, and it took off.

Since then, official “Party at Napoli’s” T-shirts have raised more than $120,000 for Cleveland Clinic Children’s Hospital.

The Cubs? Their clinch celebration Saturday night was as wild as you’ll see.

“We can party,” Cubs catcher Miguel Montero says. “I think we lead the league in that, too.”

Both teams are fun, but since the T-shirt money goes to charity…

Edge: Indians

             

12. Tunes

Following every Cubs victory at home, they blast “Go Cubs Go!” over the sound system, and everybody sings along. Know what’s cool about that? It was written by a late Chicago songwriter named Steve Goodman, who also wrote “A Dying Cubs Fan’s Last Request” and, most famously, the classic “City of New Orleans.” (“Good morning, America, how are you? Don’t you know me, I’m your native son. I’m the train they call the City of New Orleans, I’ll be gone 500 miles when the day is done…”)

In the eighth inning at Progressive Field, everybody sings and dances to the McCoys’ “Hang On Sloopy,” a No. 1 hit song in 1965. Classic song, but…

Edge: Cubs

          

13. Ballparks

The Cubs produced the best home record in baseball this summer (57-24). Wrigley Field is the Friendly Confines, unless you are the opponent. It has ivy and wind and history. It is a museum.

Progressive Field opened in 1994 and was a colossal upgrade over the old Cleveland Stadium, the real Mistake by the Lake. Nice ballpark, but it ain’t Wrigley.

Edge: Cubs

       

14. Hobbies

Indians starter Trevor Bauer needed stitches after slicing open his right pinkie finger in a drone accident. The Indians plan for him to start Game 2, with Corey Kluber starting Game 1 and Josh Tomlin Game 3. But if doctors still don’t like the way Bauer’s finger is healing, Francona says Cleveland will flip-flop the latter two and have Tomlin start in Game 2 and Bauer in Game 3.

“I think we’ve all, probably everybody in here, at some point or another had a drone-related problem,” Francona cracked during the Toronto series.

Cubs infielder/outfielder Ben Zobrist rides a bike, and his hand is fine.

Edge: Cubs

           

15. Final Take

Top to bottom, left to right, east to west, the Cubs are the best team in baseball. They have the deepest talent, the best rotation, a strong bullpen and play breathtaking defense.

Cleveland has been the underdog all the way through this month and continues to rise to challenges. When the World Series was here in 1997, it was so cold it snowed one day during pre-game batting practice, and the game-time temperature of 38 degrees for Game 4 remains a record low for a World Series game. Thankfully, this week’s temperatures should be warmer—and, especially, in one dugout.

Pick: Cubs in 6

          

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

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World Series 2016 Schedule: Dates, TV Info and More for MLB Championship

The 2016 World Series is set, and no matter who wins, it will be a celebration a long time in the making.

The Chicago Cubs are considered the team of destiny as they try to win their first championship since 1908. On the other hand, the Cleveland Indians haven’t won a title since 1948, and their fans will be just as excited about the possibility of a win.

Both teams will come out with a lot of energy to provide fans with the best possible matchup on the sport’s biggest stage. Here is what you need to know about the upcoming battle. 

   

Preview

When it comes to the Cubs, it’s hard not to talk about history. Not only has it been more than 100 years since the last World Series win, but the organization hadn’t even won the pennant since 1945.

After the Cubs clinched the National League Championship Series, that was just about all anyone could talk about.

“To stand on that platform afterwards,” Cubs manager Joe Maddon said, per Bob Nightengale of USA Today, “and you’re looking at the ballpark and the fans and the ‘W’ flags everywhere. I think about the fans, and their parents, and their grandparents, and great-grandparents, and everything else that’s been going on here for a while.”

However, it’s important to remember that the current squad stands on its own as an elite team. The players aren’t necessarily carrying history with them; they won 103 games with a lot of talent in just about every part of the roster.

The starting pitching has been great all year, especially Jon Lester and Kyle Hendricks. The duo has allowed just five earned runs in 37.1 innings this postseason, including just three runs total in four starts in the NLCS.

Jake Arrieta hasn’t been quite as dominant, but he is the reigning NL Cy Young winner and has good enough stuff to be a shutdown pitcher in the upcoming round.

Meanwhile, the lineup is even more dangerous, as so many different players can carry the offense on a given night. Kris Bryant, Anthony Rizzo, Addison Russell, Javier Baez and others can get hot at any time, and they have shown it throughout the season and playoffs. If this team is clicking, there aren’t too many holes.

Of course, the Indians aren’t in this spot by luck, either.

The bullpen is the real story of the team’s success, featuring the lights-out combo of Andrew Miller and Cody Allen. While Allen is usually considered the “closer” on the team, the reality is that either pitcher can come in any inning and shut down any part of the lineup.

Manager Terry Francona has been creative in his use of the bullpen this postseason, and it has led to opponents having seemingly no chance of coming back late in games.

Although the starting rotation has been a mess because of a handful of injuries, the team still has Corey Kluber leading the way as one of the top pitchers in baseball. It’s tough to know what to expect from either Josh Tomlin or rookie Ryan Merritt, but you can’t count either out.

The real question mark is the lineup, which has loads of talent but struggled last series against the Toronto Blue Jays, as ESPN Stats & Info noted:

Cleveland is batting only .208 in the postseason, which is impressive for a team that has won two series already. With Francisco Lindor, Jose Ramirez and Jason Kipnis capable of racking up hits and Carlos Santana and Mike Napoli adding power, this unit can be quite dangerous if it gets going.

In any case, these two teams should create a memorable World Series that could go the distance.

        

Follow Rob Goldberg on Twitter.

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The Cleveland Indians’ Star-Studded ’90s MLB Dynasty That Never Was

Thirteen-year MLB pitcher Brian Anderson grew up in Northeast Ohio, living the history and living the heartache.

The local sports teams never won, and the losses could be excruciating. He was a 15-year-old kid watching what Clevelanders will always call The Fumble, the Earnest Byner fumble that cost the Cleveland Browns a chance at the Super Bowl in 1988.

“I was kicked out of the living room because my mom didn’t want my negativity,” Anderson said. “When it was over, through my tears, I told her, ‘I will play on the first Cleveland team that wins a championship.'”

Nine-and-a-half years later, it was coming true. The Cleveland Indians were in the 1997 World Series, Anderson was on the team, and the morning of Game 7 he reminded his mother of his long-ago promise.

“This is happening,” he said. “We’re going to win the World Series tonight.”

They didn’t win. They haven’t won. Since that night in Miami, when Jose Mesa couldn’t hold a ninth-inning lead and Edgar Renteria’s 11th-inning single off Charles Nagy made the Florida Marlins champions, the Indians haven’t been back to the World Series.

Not until now.

They begin the 2016 World Series Tuesday night at home, carrying a title drought that has reached 68 years. It shouldn’t have, but it has.

It should have ended two decades ago, when the Indians were among the best teams baseball has seen. They averaged 94 wins a year and nearly six runs a game over a five-year span. They had 44 players who made All-Star teams at some point in their career.

Three of them are already in the Hall of Fame (Eddie Murray, Dave Winfield and Roberto Alomar), at least two more will likely get there (Omar Vizquel and Jim Thome), and at least two were headed there but got sidetracked by health or other issues (Albert Belle and Manny Ramirez).

They had future managers (Dave Roberts, John Farrell, Bud Black and Torey Lovullo), others who could be managers (Vizquel and Sandy Alomar) and a future general manager (Ruben Amaro). The front office spun off executives who would make it big elsewhere (Dan O’Dowd, Josh Byrnes, Paul DePodesta, Ben Cherington and Neal Huntington), and the coaching staff spun off future managers (Buddy Bell and Charlie Manuel).

They sold out 455 consecutive games, a major league record later eclipsed by the Boston Red Sox. They had such a following on the road that security people would usher them through the back door of hotels, like a rock band or a president. They had a celebratory parade after a World Series they lost.

They had big numbers and big personalities.

“That was magical,” Vizquel said. “It was amazing. Every time you came to the park, it was electrifying.”

The Indians of the late ’90s had everything—everything except the ring you get when you win it all.

“It doesn’t take anything away from what we did,” Vizquel said. “But it left a deep pain inside.”

**

That pain has never left. Even as the players, coaches and executives from those teams prepare to root for the Indians to win this World Series, they can’t bear to watch the last one they competed in.

“When the outcome changes, I’ll watch it,” Sandy Alomar said. “I’ve watched it seven times, and the outcome never changes. I’m really proud of what we accomplished, but you’re going to be scarred forever.”

Mike Hargrove, the manager then and an Indians adviser now, feels the same way.

“Why would I want to see it?” he said. “I lived it. A fan asked me in spring training the next year how long it took me to get over that game. I said as soon as it happens, I’ll let you know. Just a few weeks ago, someone came up to me and asked the same thing. I said as soon as it happens, I’ll let you know.”

To a man, they feel they should have won, at least in ’97 and maybe in other years too. To a man, they look back and believe they were as good as any team they met, including the New York Yankees teams that won four World Series in the span where the Indians won none.

“I loved those guys,” said John Hart, the Indians general manager who later ran the Texas Rangers and now is president of baseball operations of the Atlanta Braves. “I wish I had a team like that all the time. I still do feel the scar of ’97, but I am at peace.”

**

To fully understand what the 1990s Indians were, you have to remember what the franchise and the city were like before they came around.

The franchise had gone 41 years without playing in the postseason, and from 1969-93 the Indians won more than 81 games in a season just once—84 during the 1986 season. Most years, they didn’t come close to that.

“In 39 of those years, they were out of the race by the Fourth of July,” longtime Indians announcer Tom Hamilton said, exaggerating only slightly.

They played in a cavernous, mostly empty rat-infested stadium, in a city known for a polluted river that once caught fire. The city and the stadium were alternately derided as the Mistake by the Lake.

It all changed in the mid-1990s. Jacobs Field opened in 1994, a beautiful ballpark in a city finally showing life. The NFL’s Browns departed for Baltimore a year later, leaving a rabid fanbase to embrace the rapidly improving Indians.

They had a winning team, one that embodied everything Cleveland wanted to be.

“They knew they were good, they weren’t afraid to tell you they were good and then they’d go out and prove it,” Hamilton said. “I think that’s why Cleveland loved that team. It was the first time Cleveland was the big bad bully.”

**

Even in 1992 and 1993, the Indians spoke among themselves about walking and talking and running the bases like champions. When they did start winning, it didn’t take long for other teams to resent the talk and the look.

“I think the team was despised by everyone else in the game,” said O’Dowd, the assistant general manager. “No one likes a bully. But it was so much fun from my standpoint.”

“Other teams may not have liked us,” Hargrove said. “But I guarantee you a lot of those guys wanted to play for us.”

Bob Tewksbury, then pitching for the Rangers, said something about the Indians lacking discipline. A few days later when it came time to take the team picture, the Indians took one the regular way and another with players in every stage of dress and undress.

Hargrove has both versions on his office wall.

“They talk about those Oakland A’s teams of the 1970s that fought among each other and went out and won,” Hargrove said. “I think our team was a little like that. It was their world up until about 6:30, and then it was mine. They were grown men, and they acted like grown men—most of the time.”

When they didn’t, Hargrove took care of it in his own way.

Sometimes, he did it with humor, like the time the clubhouse manager told him Belle was breaking too many dinner plates.

“Get paper plates,” Hargrove responded.

Sometimes it took more.

“John Hart paid me the ultimate compliment when he said, ‘Mike Hargrove had the ability to walk into a clubhouse in total chaos and 15 minutes later have everyone singing ‘Kumbaya,'” Hargrove said.

“I don’t think Grover ever gets the credit he deserves,” said Buddy Bell, Hargrove‘s bench coach in 1994-95. “There were some egos in that clubhouse. But those guys came to play every night.”

They were better defensively than many people remember, and they weren’t just power hitters. In 1999, the year the Indians became the first team in 50 years to score 1,000 runs, they led the league in stolen bases and sacrifice bunts.

They could create runs, but they could also bludgeon their opponents. From 1995-99, the Indians won a major league-high 62 games by at least eight runs.

“It wasn’t even the varsity against the JV,” said Bell, who was 7-24 against the Indians in his two-plus seasons managing the Detroit Tigers. “It was the varsity against the junior high.”

**

There were big egos and big names—”lots of energy, lots of testosterone,” as Bell puts it—but two of them stand out.

There was Belle, the intense competitor who scared even his own teammates. And there was Ramirez, the kid who could really hit but was just as liable to leave teammates shaking their heads.

Both were high draft picks, Belle in 1987 and Ramirez four years later. Belle got into trouble in college at LSU and also in the minor leagues with the Indians, twice disappearing during games.

“[General manager] Hank Peters called me in and said we’ve got to release Albert,” O’Dowd said, remembering the fallout from one incident. “I said, ‘Hank, we can’t do that. He’s the only prospect in the system.'”

They kept him, they knew him, and when he snapped they learned to deal with it.

“I remember one time we had a new guy on the team,” said Mark Wiley, the pitching coach. “Albert struck out, and when he went down the tunnel [to the clubhouse] there was an explosion. He threw bats through walls. The new guy looked stunned and said, ‘What’s that?’ The other guys said, ‘That’s just Albert.’ And they went back to watching the game.”

They saw quite a show. Belle’s numbers in 1995 were ridiculous: 52 doubles and 50 home runs in a lockout-shortened season that ran just 144 games. Even more ridiculous: He didn’t win the Most Valuable Player award that year, finishing second to Boston’s Mo Vaughn.

“I’m convinced Mo Vaughn won the MVP because he had a better personality,” Amaro said. “I mean, c’mon.”

Belle was a force, a physical force.

“Albert was our Lawrence Taylor, the linebacker who destroys the quarterback,” O’Dowd said.

Too often, he would destroy other things, and his personality landed him in trouble. Hart remembers spending much of the 1995 World Series answering questions about Belle’s pregame confrontation with NBC reporter Hannah Storm, a tirade that MLB eventually punished with a $50,000 fine. Teammates would look on in wonder, but many would keep their distance.

“The one guy who could say something to him without getting his brains beat in was Kenny Lofton,” Amaro said. “The rest of us were scared of him.”

That’s not completely true. A few others describe warm relationships with Belle and say he could be a different person altogether away from the park.

“I played golf with Albert, and the only person throwing a club was me,” Hamilton said.

Belle batted cleanup for the 1995 Indians, in a lineup so deep that Ramirez regularly batted seventh (and still drove in 107 runs). Two years later, after Belle left for the Chicago White Sox via free agency, Ramirez was batting third or fourth.

Ramirez would eventually leave as a free agent too. He would have disciplinary issues of his own.

His issues in Cleveland were more innocent, more amusing. He was the “Baby Bull,” the kid who showed up in the big leagues just after his 21st birthday seemingly born to hit. He worked at it and studied it and was as good at it as anyone.

“Best hitter I’ve ever seen, bar none,” said Hart, who has been in professional baseball since 1982. “I’ll tell you where he had a Ph.D. He had a Ph.D. from MIT in the batter’s box.”

He would do funny things, like asking two Indians beat writers if he could borrow $60,000 to buy a motorcycle or walking through the clubhouse, grabbing teammates’ clothes and putting them on. He once carried a broken bat up to the plate and hit a home run with it.

“I asked him why he used it if he knew it was broken,” said Sheldon Ocker, who covered the Indians for the Akron Beacon-Journal. “He said, ‘I liked that bat.'”

Other times, Ramirez would amaze his teammates by hitting a home run with one bat, then discarding it and choosing another one for his next at-bat.

“It was like raising a kid,” said Manuel, the Indians hitting coach.

It was, and the Indians were like a family—a wild and also wildly talented family.

They had Murray, the older brother who could keep everyone in line with just a look and a finger wave. They had Thome, the cousin everyone likes (“Arguably the nicest guy on the planet,” Matt Williams said). They had Carlos Baerga, the mischievous younger brother who kept everyone loose.

“We had so many guys who had things a perfect ballplayer should have,” Vizquel said. “If you won or if you lost, you were always happy.”

**

For the most part, the Indians won.

They were American League Central champions five consecutive years. They beat Randy Johnson in Game 6 to go to the 1995 World Series and survived draining playoff series with the New York Yankees and Baltimore Orioles to get back to the World Series in 1997.

The ’95 team lost to the Atlanta Braves in six games, batting just .179 as a team against a Braves pitching staff that matched up with them particularly well. The ’97 team had that ninth-inning lead against the Marlins, but the Indians will always believe they should have had a bigger lead with all their hard-hit balls early in the game.

They’ll always wonder if they could have done more with a true No. 1 starting pitcher. They had Orel Hershiser and Dennis Martinez at the end of their careers, and Bartolo Colon just at the beginning of his. CC Sabathia, who would go on to win the Indians’ first Cy Young since 1972, was drafted in 1998 but didn’t debut in the big leagues until 2001.

“We had really good pitchers, but we didn’t have a big monster,” said Wiley, the pitching coach.

They tried. The Indians lost out to the Toronto Blue Jays when they pursued Roger Clemens as a free agent after 1996. They made offers for Pedro Martinez when he went from the Montreal Expos to the Boston Red Sox in a trade a year later. The Expos wanted both Colon and Jaret Wright (who had just started Game 7 of the World Series), and as Hart said, “I just couldn’t do it.”

The following summer, they went right to the July deadline trying to get Johnson from the Mariners but again balked at the asking price (Colon, Brian Giles and one other player).

**

They still should have won. They were still just two outs away on that Sunday night in South Florida 19 years ago this week, when Craig Counsell’s sacrifice fly off Mesa tied the game and Renteria’s 11th-inning single won it.

Sandy Alomar was catching that night. Soaked in sweat from the Florida heat, he went to the clubhouse late in the game to change jerseys.

“They had the trophy there and the plastic over the lockers,” he said. “I was so disappointed to see that. The game’s not over yet.”

Hamilton had gone to the clubhouse to prepare for postgame interviews, while his partner Herb Score called the ninth-inning play-by-play.

“They were wheeling in the stage, and I turned to [PR man Bob DiBiasio] and I said, ‘Bobby, this doesn’t feel right.’ He said they do this every year. They have to. I’ll tell you one thing, that plastic comes down a lot quicker than it goes up.”

It was all set. Indians starter Chad Ogea was going to be the unlikeliest of World Series MVPs for his two wins over Kevin Brown. The wait for a championship was going to end at 49 years.

Then came the sacrifice fly. The trophy was wheeled out of the clubhouse, right in front of the Cleveland television reporters waiting to cover the celebration.

“There was a sinking pit in my stomach,” said Matt Underwood, an Ohio native who then worked at Cleveland’s Channel 5 and is now the Indians’ television voice.

Hart had grudgingly left his seat in the stadium, summoned downstairs to join owner Dick Jacobs for the trophy presentation. He and Jacobs watched the ninth inning in the bowels of Pro Player Stadium, staying right there until the Renteria single that ended their best chance at a championship.

“You talk about a bad hour,” Hart said. “But when we lost, Dick just shook my hand and said, ‘Another great year.’ We went in the clubhouse and watched the players walk in. They were all in tears. Dick shook everyone’s hand and thanked them. I did too.”

The run of great years would continue, but those Indians would never win a World Series. Most of them would move on, to retirement or to other teams, but they would always hope another group of Indians could finish what they never could.

“Even to this day, I want Cleveland to win,” Manuel said last week. “I like the coaching staff there, but I want them to win for Cleveland. I want it for the city. I always thought we should have won 2-3 World Series. It’s absolutely unreal that we didn’t win a World Series.”

They didn’t win in 1995 or 1997, and the Indians lost in the playoffs in 2001, 2007 and 2013. For 19 years after 1997, the franchise never did make it to another World Series.

Not until now.

    

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

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World Series 2016: Schedule and Predictions for Cubs vs. Indians Fall Classic

The Chicago Cubs and Cleveland Indians have both earned adoration by punching their tickets to the World Series. Only one long-suffering MLB franchise can obtain a happy ending.

Some people might have heard that the Cubs haven’t won a championship in a while. Cleveland can’t match the century-long misery, but it hasn’t captured a title since 1948. 

Both droughts, further illuminated by ESPN’s Buster Olney, explain why so many fans dreamed of this final matchup once the regular season concluded:

While Cleveland has already exceeded expectations by overcoming significant injuries, Chicago comes in as the juggernaut favored all along to win the Fall Classic. But Cubs fans know better than anyone that nothing is a done deal, and Cleveland dubiously receives home-field advantage thanks to the worst rule in sports.

Here’s a look at the World Series schedule along with predictions leading to a championship pick.

   

Don’t Count on Comebacks

Heading into Tuesday’s opening game, each squad harbors hope of a notable contributor returning from a lengthy absence.

Danny Salazar has not pitched since Sept. 9, and he followed a stellar first half by surrendering 29 runs over 32.2 innings after the All-Star break. Nevertheless, Cleveland can’t feel confident in getting another storybook outing from Ryan Merritt, who baffled the Toronto Blue Jays in his second career start to help clinch the American League pennant.

The team also must be careful with Trevor Bauer, whose bloody finger forced him out of his American League Championship Series start after he recorded two outs. According to MLB.com’s Jordan Bastian, he is currently slated to pitch either Game 2 or Game 3.

Because of his rotation’s uncertainty, manager Terry Francona will turn to Salazar if he’s ready, which is looking like a realistic possibility. Per Bastian, the 26-year-old righty could make the roster and even start a game depending on the team’s impression of his Sunday simulated outing.

“If Danny pitches and he pitches healthy,” Francona said, “and he’s throwing the ball over the plate, we have a really good pitcher for however amount of innings he’s built up for, which can potentially help us.”

According to Bleacher Report’s Scott Miller, the team attempted to prepare him for a frenzied playoff atmosphere:

Salazar hasn’t lasted six innings in a start since July 19, so don’t anticipate anything more than three or four innings. In those frames, Chicago would wait out the erratic hurler, who issued 4.12 walks per nine this season. The Cubs’ 10.4 walk percentage, per FanGraphs, led the majors

An even bigger long shot to help, the Cubs have surprisingly left the door open for Kyle Schwarber‘s return. The 23-year-old tore his ACL two games into the season, but he took swings in the Arizona Fall League while the Cubs clinched the National League pennant.

Preparing to play as many as four games under AL rules, the Cubs wouldn’t mind retrieving the slugger, who belted five home runs last postseason. Per USA Today‘s Bob Nightengale, manager Joe Maddon said the circumstances keep his comeback alive:

It makes sense from a “leave no stone unturned” perspective, but Schwarber hasn’t faced major league pitching since early April. The Wall Street Journal‘s Jared Diamond approached the thought with skepticism:

Chicago has plenty of other options, most notably Jorge Soler. Maddon can keep catcher Willson Contreras in the lineup when David Ross starts with Jon Lester, who will likely take the mound in Game 1 or 2 at Progressive Field.

Predictions: If Salazar is available, Cleveland thinks better of the situation and limits him to a bullpen role with uninspiring results. The Cubs don’t include Schwarber on their World Series roster.

   

Chicago Cracks Cleveland’s Pitching

Despite facing two prolific lineups in the Boston Red Sox and Blue Jays, Cleveland enters the World Series wielding a 1.77 postseason ERA and 81 strikeouts in 71 innings. Corey Kluber, Andrew Miller and Cody Allen should give Francona valuable innings, but the Cubs can mitigate their value by attacking everyone else.

The same Josh Tomlin who allowed 36 home runs over 174 regular-season innings kept Boston and Toronto in the park. Righties registered an .845 OPS against the strike-tossing veteran, and the Cubs have a good one in MVP favorite Kris Bryant.

If healthy, Bauer is a shaky bet because of his 3.32 BB/9. Polar opposites in style, neither Salazar nor Merritt is a comfortable bet for a playoff start against an offense that upended the Los Angeles Dodgers with 23 runs over three straight victories.

“You knew it was going to happen,” Cubs outfielder Dexter Fowler said after Game 4’s 10-run outburst, per MLB.com’s Jenifer Langosch. “It was just a matter of when.”

Observers are well aware of Miller’s playoff brilliance. The dominant reliever has compiled 21 strikeouts over 11.2 scoreless innings. Cleveland won all six of his appearances, all by three runs or fewer.

Even with Francona optimizing his value in high-leverage situations, the Cubs can diminish his impact by jumping out to early leads. Look at Saturday’s victory over the Dodgers, in which Kenley Jansen threw three perfect innings in vain.

Predictions: Cleveland’s pitching staff falls down to earth against a surging Chicago lineup. Kluber, Miller and Allen keep the series interesting, but the Cubs counter with a deeper staff and more offensive firepower. As a result, the Cubs win their first title since 1908 in a six-game series.

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Kyle Schwarber, Danny Salazar Looming as Possible World Series X-Factors

For the entire 2016 postseason, the Chicago Cubs’ Kyle Schwarber and Cleveland Indians’ Danny Salazar have been like the rest of usspectators.

When the World Series launches Tuesday at Progressive Field, that could change.

Rosters won’t be set until Tuesday morning. There are strong indications, however, that both players could see action.

If they do, you’re looking at a couple of compelling comebacksand significant X-factors.

Let’s begin with Schwarber, who hasn’t played in a big league game since tearing the ACL and LCL in his left knee on April 7:

Schwarber was the fourth overall pick by Chicago in 2014 and posted an .842 OPS with 16 home runs in 69 games as a rookie last season. The Cubs notched 103 wins then plowed through the first two postseason rounds without him in 2016, but he was supposed to be an offensive cog.

Could that happen now, at the eleventh hour, on baseball’s brightest stage?

He took three at-bats Saturday with the Mesa Solar Sox of the Arizona Fall League. He went hitless, but there were positives. Here’s a sketch of the performance from an unnamed American League scout, per ESPN.com’s Christopher Crawford:

The timing is just a little bit off. But that’s to be expected; this guy hasn’t played in a game since April. He still showed quality bat speed, he appeared to recognize pitches well, and he’s always a threat with the long ball. As talented as this young man is, it wouldn’t surprise me at all if he’s ready to contribute with the bat in a couple of days.

Before the Cubs punched their World Series ticket with a 5-0 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday, president of baseball operations Theo Epstein noncommittally cracked the door on a Schwarber return.

“We’ll see where this goes,” Epstein said, per CSN Chicago’s Patrick Mooney. “We’re not getting ahead of ourselves. We have a lot of work to do here before this becomes pertinent on a short-term basis. But it’s a testament to how hard Kyle has worked to even be in this position where it’s a possibility.”

Schwarber won’t play regularly in the field. The Cubs are set at every position and have the defensive flexibility to mix and match in the late innings as needed.

But as a left-handed bat off the bench and perhaps a designated hitter in the AL-park games? What a tantalizing option.

The Cubs don’t need Schwarber, as they’ve demonstrated all year.

After an MVP-caliber season, Kris Bryant owns a .948 postseason OPS. Second baseman Javier Baez is throwing himself a superstar coming-out gala as he dazzles with the lumber and the leather. And first baseman Anthony Rizzo showed signs of emerging from his October hibernation with four hits in the final two games of the National League Championship Series, including two doubles and a home run.

Others, however, including right fielder Jason Heyward (.071/.133/.179 playoff slash line) have been virtual non-entities. This Chicago lineup has holes. Plus, it’s about to face a Cleveland pitching staff that sports a 1.77 postseason ERA, tops among the 10 qualifiers.  

Having Schwarber on the roster would also provide an emotional boost to a young, hungry club that’s riding a cresting wave. Imagine the decibel level if he were announced at Wrigley Field, let alone got a key knock. It would rattle the rocks in the depths of Lake Michigan.

As important as Schwarber could be for the Cubs practically and symbolically, Salazar could be even more impactful for Cleveland.

So far, the Tribe has cruised despite losing Salazar and Carlos Carrasco prior to the playoffs. That’s two of the team’s top three starters, gone.

Carrasco, who suffered a broken hand in late September, was placed on the 60-day disabled list and won’t be available. 

Salazar, however, could pitch for the first time since Sept. 9, when he went down with a strained forearm muscle. He tossed a side session Oct. 20 and drew encouraging words from his skipper.

He threw the ball really well,” said Indians manager Terry Francona, per Paul Hoynes of Cleveland.com. “He let it go, which is good. He really let it go. He threw his changeup with some arm speed.”

On Sunday, Salazar threw a three-inning simulated game, and it “looks like” he’ll be on the World Series roster, according to Chris Assenheimer of the Chronicle-Telegram.

Will he start?

Corey Kluber should be the Game 1 starter, followed by Josh Tomlin, whose 2-0 record and 2.53 ERA in these playoffs have been a godsend for Cleveland.

After that, the picture is murky. Trevor Bauer remains a question mark after re-aggravating his drone-sliced finger in Game 3 of the American League Championship Series. Rookie Ryan Merritt, the only left-handed starter in the mix, is a possibility. Butas much as he showed in his scoreless, 4.1-inning start in Game 5 of the ALCS—it’s risky to bank on a kid with only two big league starts under his belt.

Rust is a concern for Salazar. He’s got great stuff when he’s right, however, including a fastball that touches the upper 90s and a devastating changeup against which opposing batters hit just .127 this season. 

The 26-year-old All-Star misses bats, as evidenced by his 10.6 strikeouts per nine innings. Strikeouts aren’t the Cubs’ kryptonite the way they were in 2015. But Salazar would be a potent weapon regardless.

He may not be able to go more than a few innings at a time, either as a starter or out of the bullpen. Thus far, that’s been all Cleveland has needed with ALCS MVP/postseason demigod Andrew Miller and closer Cody Allen waiting to finish the job.

Even the best players face an adjustment period after returning from injury. It’s a lot to expect either Schwarber or Salazar to carry much weight. Schwarber, in particular, has missed a ton of time, and it’s not as if his MLB resume is that extensive to begin with.

The World Series, though, is when unexpected heroes rise and implausible storylines unspool.

There’s so much to watch for in this clash of long-suffering franchises, whose combined championship droughts add up to 176 years. Add Schwarber and Salazar’s respective comebacks to the list.

From spectator to stud—has a nice ring, doesn’t it?

     

All statistics current as of Sunday and courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted.

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World Series 2016: Known Schedule Info, TV Guide and Predictions

No matter who wins the 2016 World Series, history will be made. The Cleveland Indians’ last championship came in 1948. The Chicago Cubs’ last World Series appearance was three years earlier.

Facebook wasn’t even invented yet! Everyone’s internet was dial-up! There was only a Starbucks every two blocks instead of every block!

It’s amazing that people existed back in those times. But here we are, all this time later, with a pair of teams that took their own unique route to the Fall Classic.

The Indians are, by far, the bigger surprise. Experts who chose them to win the AL Central were in the minority—let alone those who picked them to win the American League. Their rotation behind Corey Kluber was seen as shaky, and their bullpen needed some work behind Cody Allen. No one questioned their offensive firepower, but games in October are time and again won with elite arms.

Cleveland has gone ahead and proved everyone wrong over the last few weeks, posting a 7-1 postseason record behind elite pitching. The Indians have given up more than five runs just once so far and have gotten by despite fielding a makeshift rotation at times.

Their Game 5 American League Championship Series starter, Ryan Merritt, had one career start and 11 innings on his MLB resume before contributing to a six-hit shutout of the Toronto Blue Jays. Merritt was only placed in that position after Trevor Bauer injured his hand while fixing a drone in the middle of a postseason run.

Had the Indians gone on to blow the ALCS, that drone incident would have been enough to push a “curse” conspiracy theory.

Cleveland can attribute a lot of its success to manager Terry Francona, who has pushed all the right buttons in this postseason run. He’s trusted reliever Andrew Miller to go multiple innings in each of his appearances, has known just when to pull a tiring starter and has kept his team loose amid the postseason pressure.

Second baseman Jason Kipnis told Kevin Kernan of the New York Post:

Tito is the forefront of us, in all we do. You are not going to find one guy in here who does not enjoy playing for him and doesn’t wish he would be their manager the rest of their careers.

Once you have a guy like Tito, you really don’t want anybody else to manage you. You are like, ‘This is the way it should be, this is the way I want it to be, this is the way I enjoy it.’ He’s so much fun and he lets you be who you are.

Joe Maddon can take just as much credit in the triumph of these Cubs. Brought over as part of Theo Epstein’s master rebuilding plan before last season, Maddon has won 200 regular-season games in two years. If Chicago wins more than two games in this series, he will have surpassed his postseason win total with the Tampa Bay Rays.

Epstein has been at the forefront of the headlines over the last few days for good reason. Brought over after an unfortunately tense exit from Boston, the Cubs president enacted one of the best slow rebuilds in recent history. He stocked the prospect cupboards with elite bats, bided his time in free agency and then pounced when everything was ready to culminate.

The Cubs posted a ridiculous plus-252 run differential during the regular season. While they didn’t wind up blasting records as projected, it’s hard to do much better than rank third in runs scored and first in runs against.

“I think sometimes in the game today, it gets to the point where it’s just about acquiring a number,” Maddon said, per Tyler Kepner of the New York Times. “I’m a big believer in that, but I also like the balance between the person and what the back of his baseball card says. Our guys do a wonderful job of balancing the math with the actual person.”

Chicago enters this series as a heavy favorite, listed at minus-185 at Odds Shark. The depth of its roster is hard to contend with. If you get past Jon Lester, here comes Jake Arrieta. If you get past Arrieta, Kyle Kendricks and John Lackey are right behind him. It’s hard to imagine a lineup starting better than Dexter Fowler, Kris Bryant, Anthony Rizzo and Ben Zobrist.

Oh yeah, sure you can. You can add Kyle Schwarber to the end of that. He has made progress in his rehab and may wind up being available for designated hitter duties in the Fall Classic.

“He asked for a chance to do this,” Epstein said, per Jesse Rogers of ESPN.com. “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.”

Even if Schwarber winds up being available for only pinch-hitting duty, he would give the Cubs another weapon in their seemingly endless arsenal. It’s hard to look at the talent on the two sides of the diamond and come up with any other outcome than a Cubs win.

The Indians have an almost-unhittable back end of their bullpen, but getting to Miller and Allen will be hard against this lineup. After more than a century, the Cubs are primed for another World Series championship.

Prediction: Cubs in six.

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World Series 2016: Cubs vs. Indians Early Odds, Schedule and Preview

A long drought is going to come to an end at the conclusion of the 2016 World Series between the National League champion Chicago Cubs and the American League champion Cleveland Indians.

The Cubs have not been to the World Series since 1945, when they lost in seven games to the Detroit Tigers. Chicago’s last World Series title came in 1908, and that was before the team called Wrigley Field home.

The Indians are baseball royalty in comparison. The Tribe last made it to the World Series in 1997, when they lost in seven heartbreaking games to the Florida Marlins (not yet rebranded as the Miami Marlins). Cleveland had the lead in the ninth inning of the seventh game but could not hold onto that advantage.

The Indians last won the World Series in 1948, surviving a one-game playoff with the Boston Red Sox to win the American League pennant and defeating the Boston Braves in six games to win the championship.

One of those droughts is about to go by the wayside, as one of these excellent teams will soon triumph in the World Series.

The city of Chicago went through a catharsis Saturday night when the Cubs defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 5-0 in the sixth game of the National League Championship Series to clinch a long-awaited pennant.

The celebration outside Wrigley Field lasted until morning as Cubs fans laughed, cried, partied and broke out in song.

The World Series will start in Cleveland Tuesday night, and the Cubs will bring a dominant team to Progressive Field. The starting rotation includes Jon Lester, Kyle Hendricks, Jake Arrieta and John Lackey, and it appears likely that Arrieta or Lester will get the start in Game 1.

Arrieta was scheduled to start Game 7 versus the Dodgers if that had been necessary, but Chicago manager Joe Maddon did not make pronouncements on his Game 1 starting pitcher during the middle of the pennant celebration.

The Indians don’t appear to have the depth among their starters to compare to the Cubs. Corey Kluber is the ace and has been effective throughout the postseason. However, Josh Tomlin is the only other regular starter who is not battling an injury, and he appears to be hittable. He had a 13-9 record with a 4.40 ERA and a 1.19 WHIP in the regular season.

Starters Danny Salazar, Carlos Carrasco and Trevor Bauer (cut pinkie) are all hurt, and that means Cleveland manager Terry Francona will have to rely on a sensational bullpen led by Andrew Miller.

The Cubs have a powerful lineup, which is led by Kris Bryant (39 HR, .554 slugging percentage) and Anthony Rizzo (32 HR, 109 RBI) and has outstanding supporting players, including Dexter Fowler (.393 on-base percentage), Javier Baez (14 HR, 59 RBI), Addison Russell (21 HR and 95 RBI) and Ben Zobrist (18 HR, 76 RBI).

The Indians have a couple of power hitters in Mike Napoli (34 HR) and Carlos Santana (34 HR), and they also have a fine supporting cast in Francisco Lindor (.301 average, 78 RBI), Jason Kipnis (23 HR, .469 slugging percentage) and Lonnie Chisenhall (.286 average).

The Cubs, who won 103 games to lead Major League Baseball, are strong favorites to come away with the World Series title. They are minus-185 favorites (bet $185 to win $100) to win the title, according to Odds Shark.

The Indians are plus-160 underdogs (bet $100 to win $160).

A dramatic World Series is about to unfold, and each voracious fanbase is hopeful that its long World Series dry spell will come to an end.

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World Series 2016 Schedule: Dates, Known TV Coverage and More Details

A drought is going to end in the 2016 World Series. The question is if it will be the Cleveland Indians winning their first title since 1948 or the Chicago Cubs winning their first title since 1908.

Starting on Tuesday, we’ll find out. Before we preview the matchup, here’s a look at the schedule and television information for the series: 

No team was better during the regular season than the Cubs. No team has been better in the postseason than Cleveland.

The Cubs finished an MLB-best 103-58 this season, led by manager Joe Maddon and the most balanced team in baseball. Offensively, the Cubs are paced by a cadre of superstars, including Kris Bryant, Javier Baez, Anthony Rizzo and Addison Russell, and few teams are deeper on the bench. That offense has survived arguably the two best pitchers in baseball, Madison Bumgarner and Clayton Kershaw, this postseason.

The pitching staff, meanwhile, has a fantastic one-two punch in Jon Lester and Jake Arrieta and Aroldis Chapman closing down games with his heat-seeking fastballs. 

While the Cubs have gone 7-3 this postseason, Cleveland has gone an impressive—and surprising—7-1.

First, the team dispatched of the American League’s best offense, the Boston Red Sox, sweeping the series and holding Boston to seven runs in three games. Then the Toronto Blue Jays’ big boppers came to town and were promptly handled in five games, with Cleveland’s pitchers shutting out the Jays twice.

Cleveland’s pitching has been superb, led by Corey Kluber (2-1 with a 0.98 ERA, 1.09 WHIP and 20 strikeouts in 18.1 innings pitched), Josh Tomlin (2-0, 2.53 ERA, 0.94 WHIP), Andrew Miller (1-0, 0.00 ERA, 0.60 WHIP, four holds, one save, 11.2 innings pitched) and Cody Allen (0.00 ERA, 1.04 WHIP, five saves).

In many ways, these teams are similar. The Cubs were third in baseball during the regular season in runs scored (808); Cleveland was fifth (777). The Cubs led baseball in ERA (3.15) and batting average allowed (.212) during the regular season; Cleveland was seventh (3.84) and fifth (.243), respectively. 

Neither team has hit particularly well in the postseason (.222 batting average for the Cubs, .208 for Cleveland), though that is to be somewhat expected against baseball’s top pitchers in October. And the Cubs offense has recently awoken, scoring 23 runs in the last three games, while Cleveland has relied on timely hitting and the ability to win close games—five of its seven postseason triumphs have come by two or fewer runs—to reach the World Series. 

Of course, the storylines surrounding these teams are different. The Cubs are laden with talent, led by the curse-breaking Theo Epstein, the quirky but prescient Maddon and a giant payroll supplementing an impressive collection of young talent that has come through the team’s system.

Cleveland, meanwhile, is the scrappy, never-say-die bunch that has overcome injuries and was overshadowed by sexier organizations in the American League but has quietly been excellent all season long.

Of course, all the storylines are coated in drought. Neither one of these franchises has won a title in a long time. While Chicago has at least had the Bulls, Blackhawks and even the Bears in 1985 to help scratch that championship itch, Cleveland has had to suffer through the Browns and wait for the return of LeBron James to bring the Cavaliers a title this past season.

Ultimately, how each team handles the pressure will be a huge factor. So, too, will be each team maximizing its strengths and minimizing its weaknesses. The Cubs, on paper, have the better offense and starting rotation. Cleveland has home-field advantage and a lights-out bullpen. Maddon and Terry Francona are both excellent managers. 

Any way you slice it, this year’s World Series shapes up to be one of the most memorable in quite some time. One fanbase that hasn’t had a reason to celebrate a baseball team’s ultimate achievement will get that opportunity this season. The other will have the most familiar of heartbreaks to endure once again.

Watching it all unfold will be fantastic theater. And hopefully fantastic baseball, too.

              

You can follow Timothy Rapp on Twitter.

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