Game NEVER MIND: Cubs PPD San Diego

This was among the shortest broadcasts ever – it seemed no more than a 30 minute show between start (after the delay) till cancellation (oddly right during an interview.) They seemed so sure they were going to play until the end, it was sad to watch even while knowing what was going to happen. If everyone was going to travel to Cooperstown anyway, you’d like them to have played the game.

My idea is they should merge the Futures Game and the Hall of Fame Game, having all the kids play at Cooperstown. I think there might be a timing issues and people not wanting to leave the All Star site to see the game, but it’d be fun and it’s going to have to be minor league players if they ever resurrect the concept.

Game 60: Padres 2 – Cubs 1

Cubs 38-22
Padres 24-37

POTG: SP Ted Lilly (7.1 IP, 7 H, 2 R, 2 BB, 8 K)
Runner Up: SS The Riot (2 H, 2B)

Yea, they got owned by Maddux. No, this doesn’t mean they should sign him. This was more the Cubs making him look by going after him too strong. Maddux can still beat you if you let him average 10 or less an inning, and the Bell/Hoffman combination is still strong enough to shut the door when the Padres are capable of getting theĀ  that far.

Maddux Game Scores:
Good: 70, 74, 71
Okay: 64, 65
Below Average: 49, 45, 32, 50, 47, 59
Horrible: 16, 26

Yes, he can still throw a game game, but he’s throwing a lot of disappointing ones and he’s relying a lot on the his team to get the outs for him.

The whole “do you need another starter” argument is another one entirely, but if you agree that the Cubs should trade for one, you ought to be aiming higher than that. When the Cubs brought Maddux back last time, it made he was four years younger and hadn’t declined nearly as much. It was decent tactical move that happened to have some nostalgia thrown in. Picking Maddux over other options would be all nostalgia now, and that’s not something a playoff team can afford. I’d be happy for him if some other team picked him up for One Last Run, but I also wouldn’t mind the Cubs facing him during that run.

Meanwhile, in a season where Lilly’s pitched bad and won, this was an actual good perfomance. He may have hung around just a little too long, but he did enough in this game.

Game 59: Cubs 9 – Padres 6

Cubs 38-21
Padres 23-37

POTG: LF Soriano (HR, 2B, SB, BB, 3 RBI, 2 R)
Runner Up: SS The Riot (2 BB, SB), 3B A Ram (2B, 2H, RBI), CF Reed Johnson (2 H, 2R, 2B, 2 SB), RP Scott Eyre (1.1 IP, H, K, 0 R, 1 stranded)

Lots of walks, and a few steals. The Cubs really didn’t do a lot to Wil Ledezma, but getting him to 100 pitches before the end of the 5th is quite something. A lot of it was just talking the walks he was giving, because the cubs didn’t start getting hits until the relievers came in. (And then they started getting big hits.)

Any game your team steals six bases is a fun game. I so do not miss Barrett.

Hart sealed his fate for the time being by coming in and being completely ineffective. Cotts was no wonder himself, but he did get the ground ball they were looking for. Marquis was as really just as bad as Ledezama, but his bullpen was just a bit stronger, thanks to Eyre, Howry and Wood.

Game 58: Cubs 7 – Padres 6

Cubs 37-21
Padres 23-36

POTG: SP Z!! (5 IP, 5 H, 3 R, ER, 4 BB, W; 3 H, 3B, RBI)
Runner Up: SS The Riot (3 H, R, RBI), 3B A Ram (2 H, R, 2B), CF Edmonds (2 RBI, 2 2B)

You can’t hold the short start too much against Z; this was a rebound thing after the 130 last time out, and they understandably wanted to get him out early if at all possible. After an iffy first inning, Z was solid for everything after the Gerut pickoff, and more than made up for the 1st inning with his hitting.

This really shouldn’t have been a close game, but Marmol struggled when he came out for his second inning – this time runners were on when he gave up the home run.

Despite scoring 7, it seems like the Cubs left some runs on the table. At least they took as much advantage of a replacement pitcher as they could, and you always like it when the team puts a heavy load on the bullpen in a the first game of a series.

Game 41: Cubs 4 – Padres 0

Padres 15-27, 5th (-11.5) Cubs 25-16, 1st (+1.5) POTG: SP Ryan Dempster (8.1 IP, 0R, 6 H, BB, 12 K, W [5/64], QS [7]; H, R, RBI, SH) Runner Up: 3B A Ram (3 H, 2B), 1B D Lee (2 H, 2 RBI), LF Soriano (2 H, R), RF Fukudome (2 BB, H) I don’t … Continue reading “Game 41: Cubs 4 – Padres 0”

Padres 15-27, 5th (-11.5)
Cubs 25-16, 1st (+1.5)

POTG: SP Ryan Dempster (8.1 IP, 0R, 6 H, BB, 12 K, W [5/64], QS [7]; H, R, RBI, SH)
Runner Up: 3B A Ram (3 H, 2B), 1B D Lee (2 H, 2 RBI), LF Soriano (2 H, R), RF Fukudome (2 BB, H)

I don’t believe in the Jim Edmonds signing. Time comes for everyone, and it sure looked like time came from Edmonds late last year and early this year. I find it very peculiar he could hit 175/265/233 while declining in the field and everyone in the Cubs is all “he looks like fine to me! :)” Lou noting he hasn’t seen Edmonds is pretty telling.

However, I’m willing to give him the benefit of the doubt. The Cubs had a seemingly irrational faith Ryan Dempster would make a good starter this season, and I don’t think any outside of the team thought he’d be any better than mediocre (and no one was really confident about even that.) Dempster’s been a top 20 starter this season, and this was as good a start as you’re going to get.

I think there are two things going on here

1) sometimes the team may know things other people do not
2) not everyone marches exactly on the improve/decline bell curve. There are detours along the way

The Cubs are playing well enough to take a chance to give a centerfielder some time to see if he’s got anything to contribute. I just still wish they gave that time to Felix instead of Edmonds, but they’ve earned the right by going 25-16.

Really not a lot of offense in this game, but a little was enough. San Diego has some really good bullpen days. 11 Hits in 4 1/3 innings seems to indicate Greg Maddux needs to fix something or it’s about over for him – all the Padres talk about flipping him for prospects if things go downhill might be moot if he can’t contribute a little more.

PIRATES. I’m bored with facing the Pirates, especially the same starters.

FRI: Gorzelanny vs Gallagher – I dunno
SAT: Duke vs Z!!! – this looks good
SUN: Dumatrait vs Marquis – I dunno either

Game 40: Cubs 8 – Padres 5

Cubs 24-16, 1st (+1.0) Padres 15-26, 5th (-10.5) POTG: C Soto (HR, 2H, 3RBI) Runner Up: LF Soriano (HR, 2H, 3RBI), SS The Riot (2 H, R), 3B A Ram (2B, 2H, R, RBI), 2B DeRosa (2 H, R), RP Marmol (2 IP, 3 K, 0 BB, 0 H, 0 R) Baseball is weird. I … Continue reading “Game 40: Cubs 8 – Padres 5”

Cubs 24-16, 1st (+1.0)
Padres 15-26, 5th (-10.5)

POTG: C Soto (HR, 2H, 3RBI)
Runner Up: LF Soriano (HR, 2H, 3RBI), SS The Riot (2 H, R), 3B A Ram (2B, 2H, R, RBI), 2B DeRosa (2 H, R), RP Marmol (2 IP, 3 K, 0 BB, 0 H, 0 R)

Baseball is weird. I think everyone figured the Cubs would probably split the last two games. No one thought the Cubs would do it by pounding Peavy and getting shut down by Estes. I’d like to have a great reason why this happens, but I have no idea. Just weird.

I don’t know if Lilly actually had a good start or not. He sure did strike out a lot of people (11!), but he also got hit decently hard the second time thru the lineup. I wasn’t paying close enough to decide, but maybe both teams very high strikeout totals might have been umpire related.

If you projected Soto’s stats for 162 teams games, he’d have .321, 28 HR, and 117 RBIs in the stats the writers actually pay attention to, plus high marks behind the plate. I don’t know that it’s possible for him to keep it up but as long as he does, he’s soared past going for the ROTY and All Star awards to getting MVP consideration. Just average production from the catching spot would be a big boost off what the Cubs got there last year, but Soto is far above and beyond that.

AVG/OBP/SLG
2007 CHC C: 239/304/369
2007 ML C: 256/318/394

2008 CHC C: 322/420/564
2008 ML C: 270/339/398

Why you use your closer while up by 4: Wood gets incentives for Games Finished, not saves. Doesn’t really matter how bad he was, he still gets GF #14. He starts getting bonuses at #20. (Last year, Dempster got 58, despite only 28 saves.)

No point in talking about the awfulness of signing Jim Edmonds – everyone not employed by the club (and Z) seem to think this is a dumb way to go, but the people employed with the clubs get to decide these things. I found it especially amusing that they announced a new fan interaction e-mail address just last night; someone must’ve set up an Edmonds filter this morning.

Game 39: Padres 4 – Cubs 3

Cubs 23-16, 1st (+1.0) Padres 15-25, 5th (-9.5) POTG: RP Michael Wuertz (3 IP, 1 H, 1 K – best performance of the year) Runner Up: LF Soriano (2 H, HR), CF Reed Johnson (2B, 2 RBI) I didn’t see that one coming. I didn’t think they’d get the game in. I was watching trees … Continue reading “Game 39: Padres 4 – Cubs 3”

Cubs 23-16, 1st (+1.0)
Padres 15-25, 5th (-9.5)

POTG: RP Michael Wuertz (3 IP, 1 H, 1 K – best performance of the year)
Runner Up: LF Soriano (2 H, HR), CF Reed Johnson (2B, 2 RBI)

I didn’t see that one coming.

I didn’t think they’d get the game in. I was watching trees bend in the breeze outside my window around 6pm, with the sky half very dark clouds and half really bright. It wasn’t the greenish skies of really bad Illinois weather, but it looked very ominous. The rain hit hard out here around game time. It was rarely drizzling, mostly always a deluge and the most lightning we’ve had all year. I guess the new field is how Wrigley kept playable, but I was sure there had to be a delay at some point. The umpires just had them play all the way thru.

I didn’t think Estes would do as well as he did. He really didn’t do great – 5.1 and 7 hits isn’t going to work out well most days – but he managed not walk his way into trouble. The real difference make was the Padres bullpen. After everyone coming out of it on Monday seemed to get shelled, the three pitchers today gave up no hits and 1 walk in 3.2 innings. Estes gets the win, but the Cubs of recent days usually score something late and it’s a credit to the Padres that it didn’t happen this time.

It didn’t occur to me until this game that the reason the Cubs are working so hard to figure out a fifth starter and giving so many different people chances is not because they think they’re just one starter away. I think the people with decision making power realize Jason Marquis can’t stay around if he’s going to pitch the way he has, and they’re going to ultimately need two starters. You can always go back to Jon Lieber for the last spot, but I think they’re trying to figure out if Marshall or Gallagher or a returning Rich Hill can consistently give them something better than Marquis. Plenty of teams have been swallowing salaries like Marquis’ this season.

To be fair, Marquis only had one bad inning. But it was enough to get the loss.

Wuertz should get credit for keeping the Cubs in the game and lasting three innings. Eyre’s probably got one batter in him if the Cubs need him tonight, but otherwise everyone else is rested and ready to go, which you wouldn’t have figured when the Cubs had 3 innings to fill.

There are no words to describe Simon Le Bon’s performance. That was quite something.

Game 38: Cubs 12 – Padres 3

Cubs 23-14 Padres 14-25 POTG: LF Soriano (2 H, HR, 2B, 2 RBI, 2 R) Runner Up: SS The Riot (2 H, 3 R, 2 BB), 1B D Lee (2B, SB, 2H, R, RBI), 3B Ram (H, BB, 2 R, RBI), RF Fukudome (3 BB, RBI, 2 R), C Soto (2 RBI, H, BB), 2B/3B … Continue reading “Game 38: Cubs 12 – Padres 3”

Cubs 23-14
Padres 14-25

POTG: LF Soriano (2 H, HR, 2B, 2 RBI, 2 R)
Runner Up: SS The Riot (2 H, 3 R, 2 BB), 1B D Lee (2B, SB, 2H, R, RBI), 3B Ram (H, BB, 2 R, RBI), RF Fukudome (3 BB, RBI, 2 R), C Soto (2 RBI, H, BB), 2B/3B DeRosa (2 H, 2 RBI, BB, R), SP Z!!!! (2B, 2H, R; 7 IP, 6 H, 3 R, 2 BB, 5 K, W [6/88], QS [7])

0) I bought the tickets for the game myself. There comes a sad point in life where it just starts making more sense to be buying gifts from you to you. There’s little better in life than someone getting you something you needed (without even knowing you needed it), but more often, if you want to something done right, you’ve got to do it yourself.

So way back on single ticket sales day, I got on to the ticket system as fast as I can, hurried to this game, and got the best tickets I possibly could. I think I’ve been to all the home guys on my birthday for the last few years, and I’m going to keep it up as long as I can afford it.

The rest of my birthday celebration involved having a meal at one house with people who didn’t bother to get out of their pajamas for it, and later going to someone else’s house so they could all spend time together while I sat bored, eating a tiny cake. Fun times!

1) I was super prepared for everything, after much past troubles. I had directions and a GPS unit, I had cold weather gear, I had a spot arranged to meet someone there to give them their ticket. I got to Jim’s house to pick him up in pretty fast time, knowing that we need as much time as possible to get thru interstate traffic

And then Jim’s drive to his house started late, and went longer. Something like an hour longer than usual. Oops.

We ended up leaving at about 6 for a 7:05 start, and the drive usually takes 90 minutes. Things worked out really well – outside of one gapers delay and despite the GPS goofing up, traffic was light for rush hour and we were able to take 15 minutes off the top This might have involved me pushing the car north of 80 for stretches, but don’t tell anyone.

2) We got to our seats in the bottom of the 1st, just before D Lee stole third. Not that any of can figure out what the deal is with everyone stealing third this year.

I had section 9, row 11 seats. There’s really only 10 rows in section 9. At some point in the last few years, when they’ve been trying to find ways to add more seats and stop people from strolling around the seating area, someone must’ve decided to add another row of seats on what’s used to be the walkway between the sections. The row is fenced off from the rest of the walkway, and you’ve got to get waved by an usher every time in and out. It’s not quite big enough for two rows, so you’ve got one row with tons of foot room and not much for viewing angles – you’re seeing a lot off the back of heads if you’re looking at the plate and not seated just right.

On the other hand, you’re in the 11th row. Which is cool.

3) I thought Z had an outside chance of getting a no-hitter today. Well, everyone’s chance of getting a no-hitter is pretty outside, but just watching the Padres batting averages come up as they got up was eye opening about how bad their offense is this year. Lots of guys who can only hope they get 250.

Jim disagreed, pointing out Z’s low strikeout rate this year, and he was right. A ball was bound to get thru, and did to start the third. The stirkeout thing is still worrisome, but it’s working with this defense. Hopefully he can get the Ks when he needs them later on.

4) We had no idea what as up with the trainer’s visit in that inning until after the game, except it had something to do with his forearm and perhaps bananamania was involved. I decided to to run for food rather than see the ace pitcher walk off the mound hurt (he didn’t), and Jim happened to come with me (which was good because I didn’t know yet that I had left my wallet in the car.)

Jim caught up to me in the hallway, and we had a conversation that went approximentaly like this

Jim: “Did you see who you just walked passed?”
Me: “No, who?”
Jim: “That restruant chick”
me: “What?”
Jim: “The restruant woman from PBS 11. I spotted a celebrity.”
me: “The indian girl? She doesn’t count as a celebrity.

I eventually came up with Check, Please!, but neither of us could actually remember Alapana Singh’s name, so I think I win that one. Mike had no idea who were talking about when we finally got back to the seats, which is also fair.

I bummed $10 off Jim, got pizza and wanted hot chocolate, but they didn’t have what it where I was stuck and I didn’t want to wander around looking for it, so I made the poor decision to get a cold Mountain Dew.

Jim, who can not leave his house without running into some random person he knew at one point, could not make it back to his seat without running into the husband of someone he worked with. 5 million people in the metro area, only 39,000 in this building, and it was an absolutely certainty he’d get roped into some conversation with someone he barely knew.

5) It was COLD. Unbelievably cold for this late in season, irrationally cold compared to early in the day. When I started my winding trip to the ballpark around 4pm off in the suburbs, it was 70 degrees and warmer than that in my car. When I left Jim’s around 6, it was 65. At 7pm, in the city, the offical game time temp was 41 and the wind blowing in to make it colder. Lake or no lake, this was quite ridicouls. I should not be seeing my breath and wishing for gloves on May 12th.

I felt bad for the people who got the ice cream concessions today. I wish I had my wallet to unload it on the people selling hot chocolate (which they ran out of it in some of the concession stands, because who keeps that much around in mad.) I was amused by the people who were selling tiny thin blankets for $20, the biggest rip off in a stadium full of jacked up prices.

6) Jody Gerut coming back to hit a home run and put the Padres ahead was one of the least predictable things every. Perhaps they made a smart move calling him up? Z was so ticked going to the dugout after that inning and that home run, it was funny to watch

7) Z! and me and most of the stadium thought his hit in the bottom of the 5th was going out. It just missed, maybe two feet more and it’s in the basket. I think he may have taken a slow trot to first anticipating it going out, but he got the double anyhow.

Soriano’s ball was kind of the same way, except it was hit higher and hit harder to escape the wind. It just barely cleared the wall itself.

I don’t understand why the Padres didn’t get someone up at this point. They waited until about after Ram to finally do it, but that meant the inning (and the game) would probably be decided one way or another before the reliever was ready to come.

8) There was really no big hero in this game. Soriano’s home run was huge, but the game was blown out via lots of walks and lots of singles getting past guys. IF the infield was about a step quicker, maybe things wouldn’t have gotten out of control.

9) After the walk in the 8th, I decided someone’s got to track “most walks with the bases loaded”, because Kosuke is clearly going to run away with it if they keep bating him fifth. You can not make him swing at a bad pitch in that situation, and he’s very content in scoring a run without putting the ball in play if the pitcher wants to do it.

10) Kevin Kouzmanoff had a decent shot at beating Ram to third, but Ram just got off to a great jump on the 3-2 count and beat him. That part wasn’t really much his fault, but that throw he made to first was atrocious. It didn’t help that Adrian Gonzalez had fallen asleep. The ball was so far away, Gonzalez seemed to decide he might as well just let it fly into the crowd and give up the base. Which it didn’t, which cost them an extra run.

I think that should’ve been a fielders choice and an error, but I’m fine with DeRosa getting a free hit.

11) We were debating if Z could go 8 during the middle innings. I was thinking so, others were doubting. It looked really good when he only needed 9 pitches to go thru the heart of the Padres order in the 6th, but the long Jody Gerut at bat doomed him even more than 9 run lead. I think Lou might have given him a shot with under 95 pitches, but the walk ended it.

12) We took off after the bottom of the 8th. There probably are times where I still stick around for 9 run blowouts, but when it’s getting on 10pm, people have to get up early, and you’re freezing while Howry and Eyre conspiracy to pitch as slowly as possible, it’s time to go. I wanted to stick around long enough to see Henry Blanco bat and, seeing as he never took the bat off his shoulder, I’m not sure he actually did.

Really fun to see a blowout, a Z win, and a Cubs win to push them 1 full game in first place. It is getting a bit concerning to see the offense go thru these binge/purge cycles – Baseball Musings pointed out the Cubs have yet to score just 4 or just 5 runs in a game. I hope it it’ll even out, but it seems like right now that the some opponents of the Cubs have figured them out and some have no clue, and it’s not clear if everyone will eventually figure it out or if the Cubs will just adjust.