Alfonso Soriano steals his first base of the season, beating the tag from shorstop Alexei Ramirez |
CWS leads 2-1
It was yet another one-run loss for the Cubs, who have lost in this fashion in three of their last four losses. A comeback attempt for the third straight game fell short and the Cubs dropped their second in a row.
The Sox got their first two runs off Doug Davis in the fourth when A.J. Pierzynski tripled home two runs. The Sox also got a third run in the inning from a squeeze play by utility man Brent Lillibridge. This play represents the Sox' best attempt to play smallball. But the truth is that such a play wasn't even necessary in that situation, especially considering Lillibridge's knack for clutch plays this season.
A Starlin Castro RBI single put the Cubs on the board, but the Sox got an insurance run just a half-inning later thanks to an error by trippin' second baseman Blake DeWitt. Of course, Davis could have prevented the run from scoring by not hitting Lillibridge with a pitch, but the bottom line is the inning should have already been over.
Incredibly, Carlos Pena hit his third homer in as many days, as if competing head-on with counterpart Paul Konerko, who actually didn't homer in this game to end his consecutive-game-with-homer streak at five. Pena has gathered respect from all of his teammates as the calming influence as well as the defensive leader of this team, and it's great to see him catch fire offensively, too.
Jeff Baker redeemed himself for his big strikeout last night and singled home a run in the rally that knocked Peavy out of the game in the 6th. Unlike the night before, the Cubs were very patient with Peavy, who had serious trouble locating his breaking pitches and gave Pierzynski a workout behind the plate. His slider was all over the place, including bouncing in the dirt. Much of Peavy's success in his career can be attributed to the fact that everything he throws, from his running fastball to his changeup to his slider, is hard, hard, and harder. He's got a 'hot' heater and a power slider, a lethal and winning combination. But when he loses control, everything kind of flies off the end. The result: 104 pitches and 10 baserunners allowed through only 5.1 innings.
The Cubs bullpen was absolutely perfect on this night, throwing three innings and striking out four while allowing no baserunners between rookie Chris Carpenter, Jeff Samardzija, and Sean Marshall. Unfortunately, the Sox bullpen almost equally as good. Sox closer Sergio Santos has a save in each of the last two games; he has thrown a total of 26 pitches between the two games, including only three balls, no baserunners, and five strikeouts. This, this is the definition of dominance out of the 'pen.
Overall, this was a very entertaining series, with intriguing battles between the first basemen and Ozzie Guillen and Geovany Soto's catcher's mask. The Cubs lost two of three but now head to Kansas City for a weekend series against the Royals who are only one game better than the Cubs record-wise. They're also only 20-21 at Kauffman Stadium and have the bottom end of their starting rotation going, so the Cubs could capitalize. After all, the Cubs will finally be playing someone at their own level.
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