Carlos Zambrano in Atlanta, right after he was thrown out for throwing at Braves 3B Chipper Jones. |
The latest blowup by Carlos Zambrano came a year after he took anger management classes as a result of his blowup before that. Locating his pitches effectively when he returned, Zambrano went 8-0 to finish the season, which had Cubs fans thinking the man had finally reinvented himself. Instead, he's been inconsistent and generally mediocre all season long, including a dismal strikeout rate. He now finds himself on the 30-day disqualified list with no pay (not that he needs any) and his future with the Cubs is in jeopardy. But the real question is, how will he be remembered by the fan base that made him what he is now?
Zambrano vs. Michael Barrett, 2007. |
Zambrano vs. Derrek Lee, 2010. |
The daily warmup ritual with 5'7" Mike Fontenot. |
Once he clears the 30-day disqualified list, I hope the Cubs let him back into the rotation for probably three or four starts, which is all that will be left in the season. The ending in Atlanta is too abrupt for a veteran like Z, and I think it would be good for the fans and team to let him have one last (peaceful) goodbye before the team moves on. This offseason, the new GM will probably come in with a no-tolerance-for-misbehavior attitude, and show it off by dumping Zambrano. Whether this means releasing him or miraculously finding a taker in the trade market, the end will probably come at the end of this season for the big guy.
While I understand the anger fellow Cubbie fans have felt at Zambrano for all of these years of inconsistencies and questionable decisions, I know I'll be one who misses him for many reasons. The awkward kill-the-ball swing that got him 23 career homers. Zambrano pinch-hitting at Wrigley to a standing ovation out of entertainment and laughter. The pointing to the sky coming off the mound which never seemed to help his anger issues. Firing fastballs past the game's best hitters pack in the old days. Breaking bats over his knee. The bunt singles. The traditional whack-a-mole warmup routine with Mike Fontenot. The obscure, Red Bull-influenced injuries. His insistence on wearing the blue alternate jerseys. Even watching his BP sessions. The overall energy and character that made the Big Z truly earn himself a place in Cubs history, for bad or (usually) good reasons. And of course, the no-hitter against the hurricane-relocated Astros in Milwaukee. Even if they drove us crazy mad, thanks for the good (and bad) times, Carlos.
A great teammate for the most part, smiles and jokes were always in abundance during a day at the office for Z. |
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