Glamorous? No. Stylish? Probably not. Unique? Yes. This is Major League Baseball, where all 30 teams wear monochrome gray uniforms on the road, dating back to a no-longer-necessary routine that began over one hundred years ago.
Why do baseball teams wear gray on the road? Way back in the day, teams on the road sometimes had trouble finding places to wash their uniforms, so they needed to use a color that wouldn't show dirt easily in the event of not being able to wash the uniforms for the next game. In today's society, teams don't struggle as much to get the stuff washed. At all. But the gray color just became a dominant tradition, and there's no breaking of one of those in baseball.
Like most baseball traditions, it has caught on probably for a very long time, despite many teams going for the powder blue in the 70s and 80s and the Padres being all rebellious for most of the last decade. But as of 2011, all teams are back in the ol' grays. So here are the top 10 road uniforms in MLB right now:
10. Cleveland Indians
A new addition for 2011, the Indians did it right on this one. This uniform is almost sort of a throwback, but the style still fits. Going from the red script and more modern looking jersey to the simpler version is similar to what the Red Sox did in 2009. But overall, the main idea with this jersey is that it's not too flashy for a gray uniform. The Indians are strong contenders this season - now we know why. Sort of.
9. Pittsburgh Pirates
Surprised to see this one on here? Few give the Pirates respect for hardly anything that they've done right in the last decade because of their infamous futility on the field. But at least their uniforms are a big win. In fact, if they would still wear this uniform, they would probably top my list. But just like winning, it hasn't been seen since the 90s. In today's league full of an overload of red and blue on so many teams, the Pirates have black and yellow all to themselves. That definitely makes this uniform all that more sharp.
8. St. Louis Cardinals
Even when they did go powder blue in the 70s and 80s, the Cardinals never changed the template of this uniform. The classic script with the two Cardinals perched on the bat is one of the most recognizable scripts that this sport has produced; the main reason for why is the consistency the Cardinals have shown to it. I don't have any records on this, but I'm pretty sure the Cardinals have been wearing something very similar to this uniform for over half a dozen decades. The blue cap is also a nice contrast to the red overload that the home uniform is.
7. Oakland Athletics
The good old green and gold. The Oakland A's have been playing ball for over 100 years, mostly in Philadelphia, for a while in Kansas City, and for a while longer in Oakland. But the one constant has been that green and gold. The A's aren't the most respected team around the league, but this uniform is one of the best because of the green. Luckily they haven't replaced it with black like so many other teams have for their primary colors.
6. Los Angeles Dodgers
Introduced in 2007, the Dodgers road uniform is one of the few in Major League Baseball that doesn't have a white outlining on the letters and numbers. In fact, there's no white to be found anywhere on this uniform at all, except for the cap logo. But the Dodger blue and red combination is enough to make it stand out. No alternate necessary; this stands alone for the Dodgers.
5. New York Yankees
Well of course, there's no forgetting the Yankees. Like that's possible in today's league. But in all seriousness, the Yankees deserve to be on this list, too. The underwhelming, subdued nature of the simple 'New York' script has become more than just a uniform script; it's become a part of the branding of New York character. Then of course, the midnight blue that colors the script, cap, and sleeves is just cool and couldn't be more surprisingly in style today. The Yankees are the only team in MLB whose road gray uniform doesn't include the player name on the back, and rightfully so.
4. Atlanta Braves
In recent years, the Braves have favored their road alternate for the most part. And it's a real shame. The Braves shouldn't need to boost merchandise sales with a gem like this. What other team ever has or ever will feature a tomahawk? The answer, hopefully, will always be zero. Braves tradition, like the tomahawk chopping at home games, is some of the most interesting tradition to be found in baseball. This uniform represents it well.
3. Kansas City Royals
They're not called the Royals for nothing. The blue in this uniform, in case you haven't noticed, is quite royal. Much like the Pirates, you probably wouldn't have thought of this uniform right away because the Royals aren't exactly the talk of the league very often. If their farm system is as good as its supposed to be, you'll probably be seeing this uniform around a lot more often and soon. And that's definitely a good thing; after all, royal blue is classy.
2. Detroit Tigers
From one AL Central team to the next, the Detroit Tigers made the list as well. The Tigers' main colors are definitely orange and navy, but there is no orange at all on the home uniform. Thankfully, orange does appear on the road uniform. The numbers and script are outlined by orange, then white. This just results in an awesome combination. The orange looks powerful in the reserved role, and the navy is classic. Plus, the Tigers are a winning ballclub, certainly a plus on the popularity scale.
1. Washington Nationals
Yep, a team that didn't exist eight years ago and a uniform that didn't exist a year ago just beat road uniforms that have been in place for over 100 years. Introduced in 2009, the Nationals made a few edits for this season and overall couldn't have done a better job designing this uniform. In fact, they even snuck the logo into the script. How rare is that? For a road uniform, extremely. For 2011, the tan-colored drop shadow on the name and number on the back were both removed and a red bill was added to the road cap. The results, albeit minor, made a noticeable difference. For a team that has been known for its perennial mediocrity, there's absolutely nothing mediocre about this.
Coming Soon: posts about MLB Realignment and how to fix the All-Star Game!
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Road Trip Analysis: Chicago (AL), Kansas City
For analysis of the White Sox series, see the game recap posts below.
Sloppy series earns just one win; Royals bullpen shuts down Cubs offense late
Record: 2-4
Final Record: 31-46
A series that began mildly well for the Cubs ended highly disappointingly as the Cubs dropped the final two games of the series against a dismal Kansas City squad.
The Friday night opener was a win, but the Cubs didn't do much well in it. Four baserunners were thrown out on the basepaths, although Mike Quade later said he had no problem with the aggressiveness. Ryan Dempster allowed two through six innings, but an error allowed two more. Luckily, the bullpen didn't allow anything after that.
The stories on Saturday and Sunday were very much the same. Back-to-back home runs from Aramis Ramirez and Geovany Soto were the only runs for the Cubs on Saturday, and Chris Getz drove in the winning run in the 8th inning for a 3-2 Royals win. On Sunday, a valiant comeback effort in the 3rd and 4th innings fell short and the Cubs trailed the entire game. After the comeback fell short at 4-3, the Royals would add two more runs later and go on to win, 6-3.
The problem in this series was too many hittable pitches given up by Cubs pitchers. They kept the ball down, allowing only one home run in the series, but walked at least four in each game, which set up countless RBI singles. The offense was also mostly minimal in the two losses, stymied by an underrated KC bullpen.
With an eight game homestand that began Monday against Colorado, the Cubs were scheduled to play four games in three days against three different opponents. Monday, originally scheduled to be a day off, was scheduled for the Cubs-Rockies rainout back on April 27. Tuesday, originally scheduled to be just one game against the Giants at night, was scheduled to be a day-night doubleheader. This totals to the Cubs playing the Royals Sunday afternoon in Kansas City, the Rockies Monday afternoon at Wrigley Field, and the Giants in the afternoon and at night on Tuesday at Wrigley.
Sloppy series earns just one win; Royals bullpen shuts down Cubs offense late
Record: 2-4
Final Record: 31-46
A series that began mildly well for the Cubs ended highly disappointingly as the Cubs dropped the final two games of the series against a dismal Kansas City squad.
The Friday night opener was a win, but the Cubs didn't do much well in it. Four baserunners were thrown out on the basepaths, although Mike Quade later said he had no problem with the aggressiveness. Ryan Dempster allowed two through six innings, but an error allowed two more. Luckily, the bullpen didn't allow anything after that.
The stories on Saturday and Sunday were very much the same. Back-to-back home runs from Aramis Ramirez and Geovany Soto were the only runs for the Cubs on Saturday, and Chris Getz drove in the winning run in the 8th inning for a 3-2 Royals win. On Sunday, a valiant comeback effort in the 3rd and 4th innings fell short and the Cubs trailed the entire game. After the comeback fell short at 4-3, the Royals would add two more runs later and go on to win, 6-3.
The problem in this series was too many hittable pitches given up by Cubs pitchers. They kept the ball down, allowing only one home run in the series, but walked at least four in each game, which set up countless RBI singles. The offense was also mostly minimal in the two losses, stymied by an underrated KC bullpen.
With an eight game homestand that began Monday against Colorado, the Cubs were scheduled to play four games in three days against three different opponents. Monday, originally scheduled to be a day off, was scheduled for the Cubs-Rockies rainout back on April 27. Tuesday, originally scheduled to be just one game against the Giants at night, was scheduled to be a day-night doubleheader. This totals to the Cubs playing the Royals Sunday afternoon in Kansas City, the Rockies Monday afternoon at Wrigley Field, and the Giants in the afternoon and at night on Tuesday at Wrigley.
Thursday, June 23, 2011
The Worst Announcing Duo in Baseball
Joe Buck and Tim McCarver, who called the Yankees-Cubs game on Fox on Saturday, are the worst announcing duo in baseball. Buck, the play-by-play man, sounded like he was narrating a funeral the entire game. He's always been bad, but literally everything he said on Saturday had a downward inflection on it. The two also contribute plenty to the East Coast bias that Fox is a big part of in MLB. This doesn't make listening to these two a good experience for fans.
Fox continues to promote Buck to the top of their sports broadcasters, and he's certainly at the top now. He called Super Bowls 39, 42, and 45 and does NFL games every Sunday for Fox. In addition to calling MLB games every Saturday afternoon for Fox, he also calls the World Series and one of the two LCS. But I've never seen the potential in him. He has a professional, booming broadcaster voice, but he wastes it with a lack of enthusiasm and just a boring style.
McCarver, on the other hand, is known for some of the biggest broadcaster blunders of all time. He often says obviously simple statements, possibly in an effort to simplify the game for the fans at home, but he just ends up looking stupid. "One thing about ground balls; they don't leave the ballpark." Did that statement add anything to the broadcast at all? In context or out of context, it's too obvious to even be said. "It's better to have a fast runner on base than a slow one." Really? During the 2005 All-Star Game, he said "with Guerrero, it's not so much a strike zone as it is a strike area." During the 2005 World Series, he said "Roy Oswalt is a drop and drive pitcher. What is a drop and drive pitcher? He is a guy who drops and drives. Very simple."
These pieces of 'analysis' have become infamous in the broadcasting world. Comedy show Family Guy mocked such analysis in a episode about ten years ago. But the irony there is that Family Guy is a Fox show, meaning the Fox producers allowed one of their comedy shows to make fun and criticize one of their top sports broadcasters. The begging question is if Fox is willing to allow this criticism, why don't they just replace him with any of the other dozens of competent color commentators around MLB.
World Series TV ratings were the lowest of all time last year. It probably isn't a coincidence that Buck and McCarver called the Series. For as long as these two are in the booth for Fox, Saturday broadcasts, the LCS, and the World Series will continue to be a monotonous drone of talk about how "David Ortiz, from the Dominican Republic, can obviously read lips in Spanish."
Fox continues to promote Buck to the top of their sports broadcasters, and he's certainly at the top now. He called Super Bowls 39, 42, and 45 and does NFL games every Sunday for Fox. In addition to calling MLB games every Saturday afternoon for Fox, he also calls the World Series and one of the two LCS. But I've never seen the potential in him. He has a professional, booming broadcaster voice, but he wastes it with a lack of enthusiasm and just a boring style.
McCarver, on the other hand, is known for some of the biggest broadcaster blunders of all time. He often says obviously simple statements, possibly in an effort to simplify the game for the fans at home, but he just ends up looking stupid. "One thing about ground balls; they don't leave the ballpark." Did that statement add anything to the broadcast at all? In context or out of context, it's too obvious to even be said. "It's better to have a fast runner on base than a slow one." Really? During the 2005 All-Star Game, he said "with Guerrero, it's not so much a strike zone as it is a strike area." During the 2005 World Series, he said "Roy Oswalt is a drop and drive pitcher. What is a drop and drive pitcher? He is a guy who drops and drives. Very simple."
These pieces of 'analysis' have become infamous in the broadcasting world. Comedy show Family Guy mocked such analysis in a episode about ten years ago. But the irony there is that Family Guy is a Fox show, meaning the Fox producers allowed one of their comedy shows to make fun and criticize one of their top sports broadcasters. The begging question is if Fox is willing to allow this criticism, why don't they just replace him with any of the other dozens of competent color commentators around MLB.
World Series TV ratings were the lowest of all time last year. It probably isn't a coincidence that Buck and McCarver called the Series. For as long as these two are in the booth for Fox, Saturday broadcasts, the LCS, and the World Series will continue to be a monotonous drone of talk about how "David Ortiz, from the Dominican Republic, can obviously read lips in Spanish."
Crosstown Showdown: White Sox 4, Cubs 3
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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Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Crosstown Showdown: White Sox 3, Cubs 2
Matt Garza was unable to contain Paul Konerko and for the fifth night in a row, Konerko homered, tying a franchise record. Garza also gave up a run in the 3rd on a sacrifice by Juan Pierre. The Sox had an early 2-0 lead, but the Cubs came back again. Carlos Pena homered in the fifth to get the Cubs on the board, and the Cubs loaded the bases in the 6th when the weather began to change unfavorably. Jeff Baker, batting with no outs and those loaded bases, needed to just put the ball in play somewhere and hope to get the tying run home from third to tie the game, no matter how he did it.
On the Cubs telecast on WGN, Len Kasper even said the Cubs would be happy with a double play ball just to get that one run home before the delay could possibly end the game. Because if Baker wasn't able to get that run home, the game could be ended as a rain-shortened final score of 2-1 through six innings. And the way the wind was wreaking havoc didn't suggest the storm was going to let up anytime soon. Baker struck out looking, and the umps went straight to delay before Aramis Ramirez could have a chance to bat.
Luckily for the Cubs, Ramirez got his chance nearly two hours later and drove in the tying run with a sacrifice fly. But it only took an inning for the Sox to get the run right back, Brent Morel driving it in with a sac fly. There was no comeback this time, and the Sox evened the season series at one apiece.
The Cubs played a hard game, although they certainly got lucky after Baker's strikeout could have cost them the game. The pitching has done a great job of containing a powerful offense thus far, although stopping Konerko has definitely been a problem thus far. But the Cubs offense was alarmingly aggressive, and only made Mark Buehrle throw 70 pitches into the 6th inning and didn't a single walk the entire game. The Sox bullpen was even less unforgiving, allowing only two hits, no walks and no runs over 3.2 innings. Patience should be the key against hard-throwing righty Jake Peavy, fresh off the DL and possibly rattled. The Cubs need to make him earn strikes, especially because it will take some time for his pitches to start getting the full movement on them. For pride's sake, just win tonight, please.
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Crosstown Showdown: Cubs 6, White Sox 3
Three key Cubs step up big in win over streaking Sox
CHC leads 1-0
Last night the Cubs and Sox met for the first of six games this season. The news coming up to game time and in the 1st inning was all about Carlos Zambrano and his temper tantrum last season at The Cell, which nearly led to him being kicked off the team. But a different Zambrano emerged, despite another bad first inning. He gave up three in that first inning before calming down and staying as cool as the other side of the pillow for most of the game. Through 8 innings, Zambrano allowed only those three runs.
The blow up actually came from the other side as Ozzie Guillen was ejected arguing a fair or foul call on home plate. These disputes are rare because such an instance was very rare but nonetheless the umpire called Alexei Ramirez out after Geovany Soto tagged him with the ball which the ump thought he had picked up off home plate. The Sox claimed the ball had rolled off and Soto grabbed it in foul territory. Guillen, in his frustration, kicked Soto's catcher's mask towards his own dugout, prompting eruptions of laughter and hysteria from the Cubs dugout. Even Soto, standing near Guillen behind home plate, pointed and laughed along with his teammates.
The three keys to winning the game for the Cubs were Zambrano, Starlin Castro, and Carlos Pena. Castro knocked in the first three runs with a two-RBI single and a solo homer, and Pena gave the Cubs the lead for good with a big three-run homer to the right field bleachers off a stumbling Gavin Floyd.
Carlos Marmol, who puts the fire in fireman, aka closer, gave up singles to catcher A.J. Pierzynski and center fielder Alex Rios just to give Cubs fans a headache before retiring Mark Teahen and left fielder Juan Pierre.
This win was huge in my opinion. It proved that the Cubs' improved competitive play against the Yankees wasn't a fluke, and that they can hang around with an American League team. Also, the current Chicago fad of hating on the Cubs takes a big hit with every win they get over the White Sox. It's as if the bandwagon shrinks, if even just a little.
CHC leads 1-0
Last night the Cubs and Sox met for the first of six games this season. The news coming up to game time and in the 1st inning was all about Carlos Zambrano and his temper tantrum last season at The Cell, which nearly led to him being kicked off the team. But a different Zambrano emerged, despite another bad first inning. He gave up three in that first inning before calming down and staying as cool as the other side of the pillow for most of the game. Through 8 innings, Zambrano allowed only those three runs.
The blow up actually came from the other side as Ozzie Guillen was ejected arguing a fair or foul call on home plate. These disputes are rare because such an instance was very rare but nonetheless the umpire called Alexei Ramirez out after Geovany Soto tagged him with the ball which the ump thought he had picked up off home plate. The Sox claimed the ball had rolled off and Soto grabbed it in foul territory. Guillen, in his frustration, kicked Soto's catcher's mask towards his own dugout, prompting eruptions of laughter and hysteria from the Cubs dugout. Even Soto, standing near Guillen behind home plate, pointed and laughed along with his teammates.
The three keys to winning the game for the Cubs were Zambrano, Starlin Castro, and Carlos Pena. Castro knocked in the first three runs with a two-RBI single and a solo homer, and Pena gave the Cubs the lead for good with a big three-run homer to the right field bleachers off a stumbling Gavin Floyd.
Carlos Marmol, who puts the fire in fireman, aka closer, gave up singles to catcher A.J. Pierzynski and center fielder Alex Rios just to give Cubs fans a headache before retiring Mark Teahen and left fielder Juan Pierre.
This win was huge in my opinion. It proved that the Cubs' improved competitive play against the Yankees wasn't a fluke, and that they can hang around with an American League team. Also, the current Chicago fad of hating on the Cubs takes a big hit with every win they get over the White Sox. It's as if the bandwagon shrinks, if even just a little.
Homestand Analysis: Milwaukee, NY Yankees
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.
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Attendance, Frustration at Wrigley Rises
39,000 pack Wrigley for first three games against Milwaukee, but team's struggles ignored by ownership
The 2011 Cubs season has seen attendance at its lowest in nearly a decade. But as the weather heats up and local businesses attract more boozers, the buzz is returning to Wrigleyville. The average attendance for the Cubs on the season is still only 35,000, good for 10th in the league, but the first three games against Milwaukee have seen a change.
It's about time for Cubs fans to start showing up. But for once, the Cubs might actually appreciate the fans. Before this season, nearly every home game since 2003 had at least 38,000 filling the stadium. It was what is known as a 'playoff atmosphere'. Such an atmosphere was taken for granted most of the last decade because the Cubs, for the most part, were a winning team that played exciting baseball, especially in 2007 and 2008. But recently, the story has obviously been not quite as happy.
Plus, the attendance figure lies. For the last decade, Miller Park has been Wrigley Field North. Now, Brewers fans are turning Wrigley into Miller Park South. The Brewers got a considerable amount of support the first three games. The Yankees will also get plenty of support when they come to town this weekend, although those games will definitely be packed houses of over 40,000.
Regardless of who is in the stands, it's good to see fans in seats at the Friendly Confines, because that's the way it's supposed to be.Fenway Wrigley is the ultimate neighborhood ballpark, there's no debate about that. And the party somehow just ain't the same when there's a void of 6,000 boozers at the ballpark whose absence is the gorilla in the room no one wants to deal with.
Although the fans are showing up, they're not happy about the team's performance, and rightly so. The key question this season is if GM Jim Hendry is to blame for this mess, and he certainly is. Stay tuned for more on Hendry story. But when asked about Hendry's job security, majority owner Tom Ricketts just had this to say:
“I’m not at all happy with our team. I know we’ve had injuries, but so have other teams, and they have been able to find help at the minor-league level. This kind of record is not acceptable. This kind of play is not acceptable. This kind of performance by an organization is not acceptable. Everybody’s a professional here. Everybody’s on notice. Nobody’s job is safe. Nobody’s job SHOULD be safe when you look at how badly we’ve performed. I’m taking names and numbers and I will change whatever I need to change to make the Cubs a winner.’’
Does that surprise you? It should, because Ricketts never actually did say that. If he were a responsible owner that knew how to communicate with fans, he would say that, according to Tribune writer Steve Rosenbloom. Instead, he offered this pathetic remedy:
"I have 100 percent confidence in Jim [Hendry]. He's working very hard to do everything he can to get this season back to where we want it to be. And I think Mike [Quade] has done a great job. You know Mike has those guys playing hard. You know they're not giving up. You know there's good spirit in the clubhouse. Yeah, those guys are fine."
Ricketts angers fans nearly as much as the team does now. He's not doing himself any favors with this talk. There's positive reassurance, and then there's lying to take blame off himself. Either that or he lives under a rock. Because there's no way an owner of a professional sports team, an owner who paid $900 million for this team, an owner who's been a lifelong fan could honestly think that about his team. But instead he chooses to go back to this false talk that has plagued the fan base for over a year now.
100% confidence in Hendry? If he had 100% confidence, this team would be winning. A lot. Also, we don't know the Cubs aren't giving up. If they're not giving up, they should feel free to show us. But a team that hasn't even won three games in a row the entire season heading into July clearly has not put their best product on the field. Good spirit in the clubhouse? Try again. There's decent spirit, but nothing builds spirit like good old fashioned winning. It's something every winning team has, and most losing teams don't.
But you've probably heard me say this about a thousand times by now. Winning is winning. Winning is all that matters. If it's not conducive to winning, what's the point? Yo T-Rick (Ricketts), if the team has such great spirit, why isn't it winning?
Rosenbloom also wrote an article on this topic. He has nicknamed Ricketts, appropriately enough, Fanboy Owner. I've decided to adopt this nickname for future posts. After all, he's been so over optimistic, he sounds like one of the Bleacher Boozers.
The 2011 Cubs season has seen attendance at its lowest in nearly a decade. But as the weather heats up and local businesses attract more boozers, the buzz is returning to Wrigleyville. The average attendance for the Cubs on the season is still only 35,000, good for 10th in the league, but the first three games against Milwaukee have seen a change.
It's about time for Cubs fans to start showing up. But for once, the Cubs might actually appreciate the fans. Before this season, nearly every home game since 2003 had at least 38,000 filling the stadium. It was what is known as a 'playoff atmosphere'. Such an atmosphere was taken for granted most of the last decade because the Cubs, for the most part, were a winning team that played exciting baseball, especially in 2007 and 2008. But recently, the story has obviously been not quite as happy.
Plus, the attendance figure lies. For the last decade, Miller Park has been Wrigley Field North. Now, Brewers fans are turning Wrigley into Miller Park South. The Brewers got a considerable amount of support the first three games. The Yankees will also get plenty of support when they come to town this weekend, although those games will definitely be packed houses of over 40,000.
Regardless of who is in the stands, it's good to see fans in seats at the Friendly Confines, because that's the way it's supposed to be.
Although the fans are showing up, they're not happy about the team's performance, and rightly so. The key question this season is if GM Jim Hendry is to blame for this mess, and he certainly is. Stay tuned for more on Hendry story. But when asked about Hendry's job security, majority owner Tom Ricketts just had this to say:
“I’m not at all happy with our team. I know we’ve had injuries, but so have other teams, and they have been able to find help at the minor-league level. This kind of record is not acceptable. This kind of play is not acceptable. This kind of performance by an organization is not acceptable. Everybody’s a professional here. Everybody’s on notice. Nobody’s job is safe. Nobody’s job SHOULD be safe when you look at how badly we’ve performed. I’m taking names and numbers and I will change whatever I need to change to make the Cubs a winner.’’
Does that surprise you? It should, because Ricketts never actually did say that. If he were a responsible owner that knew how to communicate with fans, he would say that, according to Tribune writer Steve Rosenbloom. Instead, he offered this pathetic remedy:
"I have 100 percent confidence in Jim [Hendry]. He's working very hard to do everything he can to get this season back to where we want it to be. And I think Mike [Quade] has done a great job. You know Mike has those guys playing hard. You know they're not giving up. You know there's good spirit in the clubhouse. Yeah, those guys are fine."
Ricketts angers fans nearly as much as the team does now. He's not doing himself any favors with this talk. There's positive reassurance, and then there's lying to take blame off himself. Either that or he lives under a rock. Because there's no way an owner of a professional sports team, an owner who paid $900 million for this team, an owner who's been a lifelong fan could honestly think that about his team. But instead he chooses to go back to this false talk that has plagued the fan base for over a year now.
100% confidence in Hendry? If he had 100% confidence, this team would be winning. A lot. Also, we don't know the Cubs aren't giving up. If they're not giving up, they should feel free to show us. But a team that hasn't even won three games in a row the entire season heading into July clearly has not put their best product on the field. Good spirit in the clubhouse? Try again. There's decent spirit, but nothing builds spirit like good old fashioned winning. It's something every winning team has, and most losing teams don't.
But you've probably heard me say this about a thousand times by now. Winning is winning. Winning is all that matters. If it's not conducive to winning, what's the point? Yo T-Rick (Ricketts), if the team has such great spirit, why isn't it winning?
Rosenbloom also wrote an article on this topic. He has nicknamed Ricketts, appropriately enough, Fanboy Owner. I've decided to adopt this nickname for future posts. After all, he's been so over optimistic, he sounds like one of the Bleacher Boozers.
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Road Trip Analysis: St. Louis, Cincinnati, Philadelphia
Record: 2-8
Final Record: 25-39
As the Cubs finished this road trip, they watched their spot in the standings drop to becoming one of the NL's worst teams. The last loss to Philadelphia Sunday afternoon left them 3-13 in their last 16 games.
Albert Pujols didn't help the Cubs in their quest to return to .500 at all. Walk-off home runs on back-to-back days at Busch Stadium propelled the Cardinals to a sweep. The first homer, off Jeff Samardzija, was a well executed changeup below the knees. The pitch was a ball, but Pujols homered anyway. A moment like this mandates a sportsmanlike tip of the cap.
But on Sunday, Pujols had a much easier path to victory. Rodrigo Lopez left him a fastball right down the middle, and Pujols had no issues driving it out of the park to become just the second player since Ron Santo in 1966 to hit walk-off homers in back-to-back games. The Cubs were just simply beaten at the end of the day, although having been beaten in such a preventable manner was disturbing. If Pujols can hit Cubs pitching that well, imagine the damage he could do in batting practice if he came to play for the Cubs. Not that he will or anything, but an interesting thought.
The team showed a variety of ways to lose on this trip while the injury bug continues to infect the entire roster. The Cubs were without Alfonso Soriano for the entirety of the trip, and weren't too impressed with the continued return of Randy Wells. Giving up grand slams to scrubs like Miguel Cairo can never be a good thing. And the only two bright spots on the entire trip were the highlights of the two wins. Ryan Dempster shut down the Reds in seven innings, Carlos Pena launched a 443 foot blast to right field in Cincinnati, and Tyler Colvin hit what should have been the go-ahead homer in the opener of the Philly series, breaking an unbelievable 0-for-34 slump.
Besides these things, there weren't many positives that came out of this trip for the Cubs. So I won't bore with complaints about the losing, because it's become more routine. At least we know what we're getting here. Nowadays, the phrase goes 'bad teams find a way to lose'. With this brand of baseball, it appears Cubs fans will just have to Wait Till Next Beer yet again.
Final Record: 25-39
As the Cubs finished this road trip, they watched their spot in the standings drop to becoming one of the NL's worst teams. The last loss to Philadelphia Sunday afternoon left them 3-13 in their last 16 games.
Albert Pujols didn't help the Cubs in their quest to return to .500 at all. Walk-off home runs on back-to-back days at Busch Stadium propelled the Cardinals to a sweep. The first homer, off Jeff Samardzija, was a well executed changeup below the knees. The pitch was a ball, but Pujols homered anyway. A moment like this mandates a sportsmanlike tip of the cap.
But on Sunday, Pujols had a much easier path to victory. Rodrigo Lopez left him a fastball right down the middle, and Pujols had no issues driving it out of the park to become just the second player since Ron Santo in 1966 to hit walk-off homers in back-to-back games. The Cubs were just simply beaten at the end of the day, although having been beaten in such a preventable manner was disturbing. If Pujols can hit Cubs pitching that well, imagine the damage he could do in batting practice if he came to play for the Cubs. Not that he will or anything, but an interesting thought.
The team showed a variety of ways to lose on this trip while the injury bug continues to infect the entire roster. The Cubs were without Alfonso Soriano for the entirety of the trip, and weren't too impressed with the continued return of Randy Wells. Giving up grand slams to scrubs like Miguel Cairo can never be a good thing. And the only two bright spots on the entire trip were the highlights of the two wins. Ryan Dempster shut down the Reds in seven innings, Carlos Pena launched a 443 foot blast to right field in Cincinnati, and Tyler Colvin hit what should have been the go-ahead homer in the opener of the Philly series, breaking an unbelievable 0-for-34 slump.
Besides these things, there weren't many positives that came out of this trip for the Cubs. So I won't bore with complaints about the losing, because it's become more routine. At least we know what we're getting here. Nowadays, the phrase goes 'bad teams find a way to lose'. With this brand of baseball, it appears Cubs fans will just have to Wait Till Next Beer yet again.
Sunday, June 12, 2011
MLB's Best Uniforms, Part 1: Home Uniforms
Robinson Cano and the Yankees check in at #2. |
The design of these caps was leaked before the design was released by manufacturer New Era just a few days before Memorial Day. Leaked, as in the Mets decided to wear the caps earlier than scheduled thanks to the Bin Laden events. And so, feeling patriotic, the Mets wore these for a home game against the Giants just a while ago. They appear to be pretty much the same thing as last year's version, except that the back is now the same color as the bill. They appear to be running out of ideas, to be honest. It's important to remember that although wearing 'patriotic' caps may seem cool, they only exist for more revenue, which is exactly why they insist on making a new design every year.
Anyways, this gets us to the main subject of this post. This is the first of a three-post series in which I will count down MLB's top ten of each type of uniform (home, away, and alternate). This is supposed to start arguments, not end them. Of course, this is being written in my opinion and I want to point out that, maybe because of my age, I'm much more of a modern style of uniform liker and less traditionalist than most. This countdown only ranks the top ten out of the 30 current home uniforms. No throwbacks or retro uniforms. The top ten:
10. Cincinnati Reds
In the late 90s and early 2000s, the Reds were just another of those teams to go BFBS (black for black's sake), meaning they just added black to their color scheme spontaneously because it was a fad at the time. In fact, the BFBS revolution probably influenced more teams uniforms than any other color fad, ever. It began fading in the early to mid 2000s, but the Reds didn't unroll these (photo, left) clean, straight up home unis until 2007. I think this version rivals all other that the Reds have ever had, and considering that the Reds have been a franchise for nearly 150 years, that's an awfully long time. The black remains, but in a minor role as the highlight color.
9. Kansas City Royals
The Royals are yet another team that went crazy with black after being a royal blue and gold team for the rest of franchise history. But in 2006, they dropped all black whatsoever. All that remained was the core uniform that they've always had. The Royals as a franchise have made tremendous progress since unveiling the new uniforms, from renovating Kauffman Stadium to developing the best farm system of all time to hosting the All-Star Game next season.
8. Seattle Mariners
This is probably not one you would expect to see on a list like this. And to be sure, this uniform has its share of flaws. For one, the script is boring. For two, this looked a whole lot better when they wore this with a teal cap, which they did from 1993 to 2003. But the Mariners home uniform makes the top ten because it's just so unique. The blue they use, which I don't even know what to call, looks great complemented by the teal that has sort of disappeared over the last decade but returned with the new teal alternates they have this season. The humble style of the uniforms are very much characteristic of the organization.
7. Chicago Cubs
Bias aside, the Cubs pinstripes is one of the greatest uniforms around, and that's not going to change soon. It's also been improved with minor changes over the years. It's such a classic look that under the Ricketts' 'administration', the Cubs have worn it exclusively at home. The blue alternate only appears on the road because of the popularity of this uniform. Also, it's even better this year with the Ron Santo '10' patch on the right sleeve (can't be seen on this photo).
6. Cleveland Indians
Not one you would expect to see on this list, but the Indians just have great stuff all around. Great stadium, great uniforms, great logo, great fan base, and this year, a great team. What really makes these worthy of the top 10 is the cursive script on the chest. Although the design overall isn't the most classic, it's a good mix of old school (the writing script) and modern (the blue piping down the middle).
5. Baltimore Orioles
Does something look different about this uniform when compared to those of the rest of the league? Maybe it's that there's no red or blue, making the Orioles one of only a handful of teams that don't choose one. The Giants are the only other team to venture into black-and-orange territory, but the Orioles do it way better. For once, the black actually seems to fit the orange very well, as opposed to a lot of other teams where it seems forced.
4. Atlanta Braves
Respect the class! This uniform has all the ingredients to pull off the retro, classic look that they're going for. Personally, I love the red bill on the cap. The contrast there is what makes the entire thing work. In fact, I wouldn't even be opposed to the Cubs wearing their red-billed cap at home. But I digress. The blue sleeves make this uniform an equal mix of blue and red. And although they aren't the most original as the Braves have changed uniforms quite a bit in their history, it sure looks original.
3. San Diego Padres
It seems as if most Padres fans prefer the old lame brown and mustard uniforms, but I beg to ask why a change is even necessary. The current home uniforms are perfect for all that San Diego is. Not including sealife like Marlins and (Devil) Rays, the Padres are the only team in the league with a specific ocean reference. The theme in their logo is the script as a wave and it's terrific. In fact, the Padres script on the home uniform is hands down the best script in baseball. Besides that, the uniforms are simple and great. It's basically navy-on-white with a hint of sand.
2. New York Yankees
This one is a total no-brainer. Like the Yankees, hate the Yankees, but either way the Yankee pinstripes is one of the most legendary uniforms in the history of sports. When considering this uniform, consider all that it's meant for baseball as a whole in pop culture and everyday life. This is one of those aspects about the league that makes it what it is today. As far as I know, the Yankees have never had an alternate uniform and they've never had to because this is all the franchise will ever need. It is perhaps the most famous pinstriped uniform, as well as the thickest; technically, the Yankee uniform's pinstripes are wider than those of any other teams'. Could this be symbolic of the importance of the pinstripes?
1. Los Angeles Dodgers
In the late 90s and early 2000s, the Reds were just another of those teams to go BFBS (black for black's sake), meaning they just added black to their color scheme spontaneously because it was a fad at the time. In fact, the BFBS revolution probably influenced more teams uniforms than any other color fad, ever. It began fading in the early to mid 2000s, but the Reds didn't unroll these (photo, left) clean, straight up home unis until 2007. I think this version rivals all other that the Reds have ever had, and considering that the Reds have been a franchise for nearly 150 years, that's an awfully long time. The black remains, but in a minor role as the highlight color.
9. Kansas City Royals
The Royals are yet another team that went crazy with black after being a royal blue and gold team for the rest of franchise history. But in 2006, they dropped all black whatsoever. All that remained was the core uniform that they've always had. The Royals as a franchise have made tremendous progress since unveiling the new uniforms, from renovating Kauffman Stadium to developing the best farm system of all time to hosting the All-Star Game next season.
8. Seattle Mariners
This is probably not one you would expect to see on a list like this. And to be sure, this uniform has its share of flaws. For one, the script is boring. For two, this looked a whole lot better when they wore this with a teal cap, which they did from 1993 to 2003. But the Mariners home uniform makes the top ten because it's just so unique. The blue they use, which I don't even know what to call, looks great complemented by the teal that has sort of disappeared over the last decade but returned with the new teal alternates they have this season. The humble style of the uniforms are very much characteristic of the organization.
7. Chicago Cubs
Bias aside, the Cubs pinstripes is one of the greatest uniforms around, and that's not going to change soon. It's also been improved with minor changes over the years. It's such a classic look that under the Ricketts' 'administration', the Cubs have worn it exclusively at home. The blue alternate only appears on the road because of the popularity of this uniform. Also, it's even better this year with the Ron Santo '10' patch on the right sleeve (can't be seen on this photo).
6. Cleveland Indians
Not one you would expect to see on this list, but the Indians just have great stuff all around. Great stadium, great uniforms, great logo, great fan base, and this year, a great team. What really makes these worthy of the top 10 is the cursive script on the chest. Although the design overall isn't the most classic, it's a good mix of old school (the writing script) and modern (the blue piping down the middle).
5. Baltimore Orioles
Does something look different about this uniform when compared to those of the rest of the league? Maybe it's that there's no red or blue, making the Orioles one of only a handful of teams that don't choose one. The Giants are the only other team to venture into black-and-orange territory, but the Orioles do it way better. For once, the black actually seems to fit the orange very well, as opposed to a lot of other teams where it seems forced.
4. Atlanta Braves
Respect the class! This uniform has all the ingredients to pull off the retro, classic look that they're going for. Personally, I love the red bill on the cap. The contrast there is what makes the entire thing work. In fact, I wouldn't even be opposed to the Cubs wearing their red-billed cap at home. But I digress. The blue sleeves make this uniform an equal mix of blue and red. And although they aren't the most original as the Braves have changed uniforms quite a bit in their history, it sure looks original.
3. San Diego Padres
It seems as if most Padres fans prefer the old lame brown and mustard uniforms, but I beg to ask why a change is even necessary. The current home uniforms are perfect for all that San Diego is. Not including sealife like Marlins and (Devil) Rays, the Padres are the only team in the league with a specific ocean reference. The theme in their logo is the script as a wave and it's terrific. In fact, the Padres script on the home uniform is hands down the best script in baseball. Besides that, the uniforms are simple and great. It's basically navy-on-white with a hint of sand.
2. New York Yankees
This one is a total no-brainer. Like the Yankees, hate the Yankees, but either way the Yankee pinstripes is one of the most legendary uniforms in the history of sports. When considering this uniform, consider all that it's meant for baseball as a whole in pop culture and everyday life. This is one of those aspects about the league that makes it what it is today. As far as I know, the Yankees have never had an alternate uniform and they've never had to because this is all the franchise will ever need. It is perhaps the most famous pinstriped uniform, as well as the thickest; technically, the Yankee uniform's pinstripes are wider than those of any other teams'. Could this be symbolic of the importance of the pinstripes?
1. Los Angeles Dodgers
Much like the Yankees, the Dodgers have kept things the same uniform wise for quite a while in Chavez Ravine. Except for this weird one-year experiment back in the late-90s, the Dodgers haven't used hardly any home alternates. Technically, the white fabric that the Dodgers use is actually the brightest white fabric used on any uniform in MLB. The Dodgers have done experimenting with taking names off the jerseys, but even now that they do the script is small and a lot less noticeable that most uniforms. So the Dodgers, much like the Cubs, have done minor tweaks to the uniform but ultimately have kept the same uniform alive for many years. The result? A modern, classic and clean looking uniform that goes great with some late-arriving Dodger Dog-eating Dodger fans at good ol' Dodger Stadium.
Thank you for reading my countdown! Do you agree or disagree with any of the rankings? Definitely shoot me an email right here. Happy summer; it could be a long one with these Cubs, so get outside or celebrate the fall of the Miami Heat!
Thank you for reading my countdown! Do you agree or disagree with any of the rankings? Definitely shoot me an email right here. Happy summer; it could be a long one with these Cubs, so get outside or celebrate the fall of the Miami Heat!
Monday, June 6, 2011
Homestand Analysis: New York, Pittsburgh, Houston
Note: technical difficulties have prevented me from posting in the last week. I apologize for this and guarantee more posts are coming, and soon. Thank you for being patient.
Record: 3-6
Season Record: 23-31
Games Behind First: Irrelevant at the moment
Well so much for that. This was supposed to be the point where the Cubs kicked it into gear, hosting three of the worst teams in the National League. Not only was the homestand bad, it progressively got worse. The Cubs routed the Mets in two of three in the first series, and their only loss was a wild one that showed plenty of effort from the Cubs.
In one of the weirdest things I have ever seen, Justin Berg came in in relief during that game with two men on and one out and promptly walked the next three batters, forcing in two runs. Not only did he walk these hitters, he walked them on 12 pitches, meaning he didn't throw a single strike. After the third walk he was taken out and sent to the minors immediately.
The Cubs were basically shut out in the first two games against the Pirates, not including a ninth inning two-run bomb by Alfonso Soriano that didn't hold much significance. The Pirates, meanwhile, put up 14 runs between the two games, including a homer parade from former Cub shortstop Ronny Cedeno, first baseman Lyle Overbay, catcher Chris Snyder, and center fielder Andrew McCutchen. The Cubs won the Sunday matinee 3-2 on a homer from Aramis Ramirez (about time, don'tcha think?) and a pair of sac flies.
The Astros, jealous of their fellow NL Central team the Pirates, decided to jump on the bandwagon and create a homer parade of their own at Wrigley Field, which is just this magical place for opposing power hitters. I think the media is sticking with the story that the wind blows in during the spring despite the fact that visitors seem to have no trouble homering. The Astros' homer parade consisted of second baseman Clint Barmes, right fielder Hunter Pence, catcher J.R. Towles (really?), and shorstop Jeff Keppinger. They cruised to a 12-7 win.
As manager, Mike Quade can't just come to a press conference and blame the entire loss on one player because of the media frenzy and drama that would follow. Luckily, I am not bound to such restrictions. Tuesday's loss was almost entirely the fault of Carlos Marmol. Almost entirely. As usual, the Cubs left a million runners on base and could have scored plenty more, but Marmol comes in a 3-1 game in the ninth and gives up six. And here's the one part I just don't understand.
Marmol comes in, blows the lead, and then puts two men on base with a 4-3 Astros lead. He clearly didn't have good stuff out there that day, and had his morale blown after blowing the lead. But Mike Quade leaves him out there to pitch to Hunter Pence, who homers off him. A closer, especially one as emotionally pumped as Marmol, should never be left in a game after blowing a lead and letting the other team go ahead. A pathetic waste of a game.
The Cubs would lose the next afternoon too, ending the homestand at 3-6. Weren't they supposed to have their big winning swing on this homestand? No one on the Cubs actually got the memo. And not only that, the Cubs, as they have the last two years, looked completely disinterested. There's no anger here besides that of Carlos Zambrano (stay tuned on that).
I say it all the time; if the Cubs aren't going to beat the bad teams, they'll have to beat the good ones. Because you can't turn around the season without winning games. And the Cubs don't seem to be too interested in doing that these days. That is precisely the most frustrating thing about watching the Cubs. The Cubs just got swept by the Cardinals, and now head to Cincinnati and Philly. With all these injuries, underperformers, and losses, this is probably rock bottom for this team. If it isn't, the Cubs will probably lose 100 games this season.
Record: 3-6
Season Record: 23-31
Games Behind First: Irrelevant at the moment
Well so much for that. This was supposed to be the point where the Cubs kicked it into gear, hosting three of the worst teams in the National League. Not only was the homestand bad, it progressively got worse. The Cubs routed the Mets in two of three in the first series, and their only loss was a wild one that showed plenty of effort from the Cubs.
In one of the weirdest things I have ever seen, Justin Berg came in in relief during that game with two men on and one out and promptly walked the next three batters, forcing in two runs. Not only did he walk these hitters, he walked them on 12 pitches, meaning he didn't throw a single strike. After the third walk he was taken out and sent to the minors immediately.
The Cubs were basically shut out in the first two games against the Pirates, not including a ninth inning two-run bomb by Alfonso Soriano that didn't hold much significance. The Pirates, meanwhile, put up 14 runs between the two games, including a homer parade from former Cub shortstop Ronny Cedeno, first baseman Lyle Overbay, catcher Chris Snyder, and center fielder Andrew McCutchen. The Cubs won the Sunday matinee 3-2 on a homer from Aramis Ramirez (about time, don'tcha think?) and a pair of sac flies.
The Astros, jealous of their fellow NL Central team the Pirates, decided to jump on the bandwagon and create a homer parade of their own at Wrigley Field, which is just this magical place for opposing power hitters. I think the media is sticking with the story that the wind blows in during the spring despite the fact that visitors seem to have no trouble homering. The Astros' homer parade consisted of second baseman Clint Barmes, right fielder Hunter Pence, catcher J.R. Towles (really?), and shorstop Jeff Keppinger. They cruised to a 12-7 win.
As manager, Mike Quade can't just come to a press conference and blame the entire loss on one player because of the media frenzy and drama that would follow. Luckily, I am not bound to such restrictions. Tuesday's loss was almost entirely the fault of Carlos Marmol. Almost entirely. As usual, the Cubs left a million runners on base and could have scored plenty more, but Marmol comes in a 3-1 game in the ninth and gives up six. And here's the one part I just don't understand.
Marmol comes in, blows the lead, and then puts two men on base with a 4-3 Astros lead. He clearly didn't have good stuff out there that day, and had his morale blown after blowing the lead. But Mike Quade leaves him out there to pitch to Hunter Pence, who homers off him. A closer, especially one as emotionally pumped as Marmol, should never be left in a game after blowing a lead and letting the other team go ahead. A pathetic waste of a game.
The Cubs would lose the next afternoon too, ending the homestand at 3-6. Weren't they supposed to have their big winning swing on this homestand? No one on the Cubs actually got the memo. And not only that, the Cubs, as they have the last two years, looked completely disinterested. There's no anger here besides that of Carlos Zambrano (stay tuned on that).
I say it all the time; if the Cubs aren't going to beat the bad teams, they'll have to beat the good ones. Because you can't turn around the season without winning games. And the Cubs don't seem to be too interested in doing that these days. That is precisely the most frustrating thing about watching the Cubs. The Cubs just got swept by the Cardinals, and now head to Cincinnati and Philly. With all these injuries, underperformers, and losses, this is probably rock bottom for this team. If it isn't, the Cubs will probably lose 100 games this season.
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