Record: 3-3
Final Record: 54-70
This road trip began like many other for the Cubs, as they were mauled on Friday night in Atlanta. Dan Uggla extended his hitting streak with two homers, both off Carlos Zambrano. Chipper Jones, Jose Constanza, and Freddie Freeman also homered off Zambrano, who took out his frustration on Jones by throwing at him twice, hitting him the second time. The Braves won 10-4.
Zambrano was thrown out and walked out on his team, earning him a 30-day suspension on the rarely-used disqualified list which could mark the end of his Cubs career. Apparently anger management classes last year didn't hold up, and Zambrano started telling everyone in the clubhouse he was going to retire immediately before he cleaned out his locker and beat it. Later, calling in on Chicago Tribune Live on CSN, he said he was upset that word of his potential retirement escaped the clubhouse and got to the media. Either way it was a stupid thing to say so he doesn't have much of a right to be mad.
The Cubs won on Saturday thanks to an array of RBI singles and doubles, but Uggla extended his hitting streak to 33 with a home run. I was impressed at how the Cubs attacked Derek Lowe, knocking him out of the game after six, allowing ten hits. Final score was 8-4.
They also won on Sunday 6-5, ending Uggla's hitting streak at 33. The Braves rocked Matt Garza for four runs in the first four innings, but the Cubs fought back and eventually tied the game on a wild pitch. Although Alex Gonzalez got the Braves the lead back on an error in the next half-inning, Carlos Pena blasted a long two-run homer to take the lead. With the tying run on second base in the ninth, Carlos Marmol got Martin Prado out to take the series 2-1 from the NL's second-best team.
As shocking as that series win was, I was even more excited for the Cubs to head to Houston to play MLB's worst team and hopefully go for the sweep. The Cubs should've swept too, but the Astros took two one-run games to sneak out the series win.
Two two-run doubles were enough, barely, to beat the Astros 4-3 on Monday night thanks to a save from Kerry Wood, his first as a Cub since 2008. The loss for the Astros dropped them to 19-41 at home. On Tuesday night, the Cubs played a solid game and took a 5-2 lead into the ninth. Tyler Colvin and Aramis Ramirez both hit homers in the game, but Ramirez's shot will be on highlight reels all season long as it landed on the train tracks above the wall in left field, an estimated distance of over 450 feet. But what will most be remembered from this game will obviously be Brian Bogusevic's walk-off grand slam off Marmol to win the game 6-5. I bet the Cubs wish they had used Wood again. Marmol has this remarkable ability to somehow find a way to lose a game, and showed right here. Brian Bogusevic? Really?? And did I mention that this was his second career Major League homer, and his first ever at home?
Casey Coleman gave the Astros the lead in the 4th of Wednesday afternoon's game, and they would never give it back. The Cubs offense was shut out for four innings by the Astros bullpen, which featured David Carpenter, Sergio Escalona, Fernando Rodriguez, and Mark Melancon, only one of whom has thrown more than 40 innings in the Major Leagues. I might as well just have named four construction contractors. Added with Bogusevic, and the Cubs lost a series to a team to a team that will be 50 games under .500 by the end of the year because of five nobodies. Nice going, guys.
Cub fans should be pleased with their effort in Atlanta because they're not an easy team to face at all. The important thing was that they scored early to avoid having to battle against the bullpen which is, in my opinion, the most dominant in baseball. Hardthrowers Jonny Venters and Craig Kimbrel are two of the most toughest pitchers in the league because everything they throw is hard, hard, and harder. Kimbrel hasn't allowed a run since June. The results of the Houston series, however, is pretty much unacceptable. Marmol found a way to lose then so did the offense the next day. Although these two events probably didn't directly have anything to do with Jim Hendry's dismissal, it definitely didn't cheer up the franchise's outlook at all.
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