Record: 4-4
Final Record: 35-50
Against the Rockies, the Cubs finally got their first series sweep of the season. Unfortunately, it was a one-game series, as in a makeup game for the rainout back in April. This means the Cubs have yet to sweep a three-game series, and also haven't even won three in a row. But play later in the week was encouraging for the Cubs.
Behind two homers each by Aramis Ramirez and Carlos Pena, the Cubs rolled past the Rockies 7-3. The four homers would be the first four of 12 homers on the eight-game homestand. Something was definitely in the water, as even backup Koyie Hill added one to the tally. The annual weather swing has struck Wrigley, with that summer wind blowing out to the bleachers.
In the Colorado game, starter Matt Garza gave up a deep fly ball to left field by Carlos Gonzalez. Alfonso Soriano went back to the track at his typical, lackadaisical pace. Soriano eventually just pulled up and stopped, facing the wall, waiting for the ball to drop. Garza, standing on the mound and thinking Soriano couldn't see the ball, raised his arms and said, "What are you doing?!" Sure enough, the ball landed in the bleachers for a home run. Garza, like most of the rest of the players, was shocked. This evidence of the bandbox that Wrigley Field becomes in the summer has to come as a big surprise to the newcomers like Garza, who thought this ball would be a routine flyout.
The jetstream helped the Cubs for the rest of the homestand. Ramirez hit six homers on it, en route to a well-deserved National League Player of the Week award. But even that couldn't help the Cubs from looking absolutely dreadful in the doubleheader against the Giants on last Tuesday. The Cubs were blown out by baseball's worst offense, reminiscent of their similar drubbing of the Cubs at Wrigley Field last year. For the Cubs, Doug Davis and Rodrigo Lopez started the two games and the results are history.
Thankfully, the Cubs salvaged the last two games in impressive fashion. A 1-0 ninth inning lead was blown by Carlos Marmol, but Ramirez singled home the winning run just a half-inning later on Wednesday night.
On Thursday afternoon, the Cubs put together one of their most complete wins since 2008. Marcos Mateo pitched five incredible innings of relief after Carlos Zambrano's injury allowed him just one inning. Ramirez erased a 1-0 deficit on a 95 mph fastball off Giants closer Brian Wilson. Darwin Barney hit a huge clutch double in the 13th inning to tie the game at two after the Giants took the lead in the top half. Geovany Soto stepped up and, two pitches later, ended the game with a three-run walk-off homer that was one of the most amazing moments the Cubs have had in the last decade. The game was intense throughout and the Cubs trailed twice facing a loss, coming back both times.
In their millionth attempt to win a third game in a row, the Cubs were again denied, this time by the White Sox. The Cubs didn't commit any errors on Friday in the series opener, according to the box score. A mental error by manager Mike Quade cost the Cubs the lead in a tie game. Quade has been sharply criticized this season for leaving in starters too long, and although much of this criticism is unfair, there's a case for this game to be examined. Randy Wells gave up the two-run lead he had in the seventh, increasing his runs allowed total to four. After Alex Rios reached base, Quade allowed Wells to pitch to Juan Pierre who lined a two-run triple to gave the Sox a lead they wouldn't give back. Quade's mental error wasn't something major on his part, but I believe it was just the wrong decision.
A blown call at second base on a double play ball prevented the Cubs from tying Saturday's game at one, and the Cubs lost 1-0. Garza threw a complete game despite losing, a sign I love to see. Back in the Lou Piniella days, Garza would've been yanked after eight regardless of his low pitch count and the fact that his performance had earned him another inning. Garza has been the beneficiary of some serious bad luck this season, and his value to the team has been far underrated thus far.
The Cubs finally got a win on Sunday, which salvages all Cubs fans everywhere from having to hear those Sox fans yappin' their yappers about how they swept us in our own park, yadda yadda yadda. Thank God. A Starlin Castro RBI triple and Ramirez two-run homer built a small lead, and although Kerry Wood allowed the bases loaded in the 8th, the Cubs escaped, avoiding the sweep. The Sox now lead the Crosstown Series 12-6 since 2009.
On this homestand, Cubs pitchers really started throwing strikes. In the case of Wells, Lopez, and Davis, who was released after his latest shellacking, this tactic didn't work so well. In the case of Garza and Ryan Dempster, this worked very well. Keeping a lower pitch count should allow the starters to go later in games, which is something the Cubs need. Garza's performance on Saturday was incredible; but not as incredible as the fact that he lost.
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