Record: 4-3Final Record: 29-42
Although the Yankees slowed down the Cubs in the last two games of this homestand, the Cubs overall played much better baseball, even in the losses. Fans also arrived in sellout or near-sellout fashion on this homestand and the Cubs definitely benefited from it. The Cubs are still only 16-22 at home, but their play at Wrigley could heat up with the weather and fans.
A pumped Carlos Marmol pumps his fist after getting the save Friday against the Yankees |
The Yankees came to town on Friday for the first time since 2003 and second since the 1938 World Series. The rare matchup attracted national attention, just like the Cubs-Red Sox series in May. And the series couldn't have begun any better for the Cubs, who put together their most complete win of the season in the opener with Doug Davis surprising everyone including himself in limiting the most powerful offense in the league to just one run over seven plus innings. Early runs were put on the board, and Reed Johnson saved the day with an amazing diving catch robbing Robinson Cano of extra bases late.
However, the Cubs would lose tight games in the late innings on both Saturday and Sunday. Perhaps the lack of being able to close these games is due to the fundamental difference between these teams. The Yankees were just teetering on the edge of breaking the game wide open pretty much the entirety of Sunday night, it seemed. Putting in rookie Chris Carpenter to face Nick Swisher with two men on in the 8th was just what the Yanks needed to finally come through. Not the greatest call on Mike Quade's part. Swisher homered for the first three of six runs that allowed the Yankees to pull away in the 8th and 9th inning on national TV.
Curtis Granderson follows through on an extra-base hit late Sunday at Wrigley. |
Attendance for the three game series totaled over 126,000, which set an all-time Wrigley record for attendance in a three game set, beating the previous record of almost 125,000 set in July 2007 against the Astros. Friday and Saturday's attendance both were over 42,000, a mark that hasn't been reached since the 2007 and 2008 playoffs. But Saturday's attendance, 42,236, surpasses all three of the home playoff games from those two seasons. Because the bleacher expansion of 2006 added about 3,000 seats to the ballpark, that number also surpasses all of the 2003 playoff games. This means that Saturday's attendance could be the largest in decades, although I don't know how many.
The improved play came just in time for the series with those evil White Sox, who lost the first game last night 6-3. Watch for the next couple weeks to decide the season for the Cubs, who will need to determine trade deadline status soon.
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