Showing posts with label Joe Maddon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Maddon. Show all posts

Saturday, August 14, 2021

Jake Arrieta and the 2015 Cubs

Jake Arrietas second tour of duty with the Cubs recently ended with his unconditional release after a series of disastrous outings that gave club president Jed Hoyer no alternative but to pull the plug. But it wasnt so long ago that Arrieta’s emergence as the best pitcher in baseball signalled that the Cubs infamous world championship drought was likely to end sooner rather than later.
Arrieta started the 2015 season at 4-4 before winning 18 of his last 20 starts. For good measure, he then won his first nine decisions in 2016. For almost exactly a year—June 4, 2015 to May 31, 2016—Arrieta went 27-2 with a 1.32 ERA, an 0.81 WHIP, and two no-hitters.
The passage below reviews the Cubs heady late-season run in 2015, for which Arrieta deserved much of the credit.   
 
  
JAKE ARRIETA

After 99 games, the 2015 Cubs were 52-47. What would happen next? Would they a) fade away as the pennant race heated up? b) continue to muddle along near the break-even mark? or c) prove to be genuine contenders?
The correct answer is “c.” The rebuilt Cubs were for real. They won 15 of their next 16 games, including a four-game sweep of the San Francisco Giants (one of their main rivals for a postseason berth) at Wrigley Field. They won more games after August 1 than any other team in either league. They ended up at 97-65, an amazing achievement for a club which featured four rookies (Kris Bryant, Addison Russell, Kyle Schwarber, and Jorge Soler) in the starting lineup and whose oldest regular (catcher Miguel Montero) was just 31.
The Cubs’ record was the third best in all of baseball—but also third in their own division, behind St. Louis and Pittsburgh. Therefore, they needed to win the National League wild-card game vs. the Pirates in order to go any further. Fortunately, the right man for the job was on hand; righthander Jake Arrieta was in the midst of one of the greatest stretches for any pitcher in history. Over his last 20 starts, he had gone 16-1 with an 0.86 earned run average and three shutouts, including a no-hitter at Los Angeles on August 30. He was soon to receive the Cy Young Award.
Arrieta remained true to form in the wild-card game. He went the distance in blanking the Pirates on five hits and no walks, while striking out eleven. Dexter Fowler scored three runs, Schwarber knocked in three, both homered, and the Cubs won 4-0. 
After the game, manager Joe Maddon was asked if he’d had a maximum pitch count in mind for his ace. “Yes, I did,” he replied. “Infinity.”
Next, the Cubs dispatched the arch-rival Cardinals in the National League Division Series. After dropping the first game 4-0, the Cubs bludgeoned St. Louis pitchers for 20 runs in the next three games, all victories. They also pounded ten home runs, including a monumental shot by Schwarber that landed atop the new video board behind the right-field bleachers at Wrigley.
The Cubs advanced to their first National League Championship Series since 2003 with high hopes and growing respect from all quarters. Alas, they ran into the proverbial buzzsaw in the form of the New York Mets’ outstanding starting rotation. The Cubs were swept out of the postseason in four games.
It was a disappointing end to a thrilling season, but in truth the Cubs had been playing with house money. The rebuild was ahead of schedule, and its ultimate objective was just a year away.


Check out our book Heydays: Great Stories in Chicago Sports on Amazon. 


 

 

 

Thursday, July 29, 2021

Worth a Thousand Words: Kris Bryant and Anthony Rizzo

It was November 2, 2016, at Progressive Field in Cleveland. The Cubs led the Indians 8-6 in the tenth inning of Game 7 of the World Series. They were only one out away from that which their fans had dreamed of for so many decades. 
    
KRIS BRYANT (foreground) and ANTHONY RIZZO.

Then Cleveland's Brandon Guyer coaxed a walk from Cubs reliever Carl Edwards and promptly stole second. Rajai Davis, whose two-run homer off Aroldis Chapman had tied the ballgame in the eighth inning, rapped the next pitch over second base to score Guyer. 
     Cubs manager Joe Maddon called on lefty Mike Montgomery to face the next htter, Michael Martinez. Martinez took the first pitch for a called strike. He swung at the next offering and chopped it to the left of the mound. Cubs third baseman Kris Bryant charged in, made a nifty pickup on the run, and fired the ball across the infield as his feet slipped out from under him on the wet grass.
     Despite Bryant's slip, the throw was true. It landed in first baseman Anthony Rizzo's glove with Martinez still about two steps from the bag, and that was that. 
     "The Chicago Cubs are world champions," Rizzo said after the game. "Let that sink in."
 
Check out our book Heydays: Great Stories in Chicago Sports on Amazon. 

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Cubs in the Postseason

After their back-to-back world championships in 1907 and 1908, the Cubs did not win another postseason series of any kind until 2003, and, of course, they didn't win the World Series again until 2016. 
     The Cubs won seven more pennants in the first half of the 20th century (and narrowly missed several more), but never captured the ultimate prize. They came closest in 1945, when they lost a seven-game Series to the Detroit Tigers and then disappeared from all postseason play for 39 years and from the Fall Classic for 71 years.
     Lou Piniella's 2007 and 2008 teams were the first Cubs to make back-to-back postseason appearances since Frank Chance's legendary teams exactly a century earlier. Alas, Piniella's Cubs failed to win a single playoff game.   
     Below is the complete list of Cubs teams in the postseason.
    
JOE MADDON

 
1885
W. 87    L. 25    .777    
Manager: Cap Anson
Best Player: John Clarkson
Finished first in National League
Tied St. Louis Browns 3 games to 3 in World Series
 
1886
W. 90    L. 34    .726
Manager: Cap Anson
Best Player: King Kelly
Finished first in National League
Lost to St. Louis Browns 4 games to 2 in World Series
 
1906
W. 116    L. 36    .763
Manager: Frank Chance
Best Player: Mordecai Brown
Finished first in National League
Lost to White Sox 4 games to 2 in World Series
 
1907
W. 107    L. 45    .704
Manager: Frank Chance
Best Player: Orval Overall
Finished first in National League
Defeated Detroit Tigers 4 games to 0 in World Series

1908
W. 99    L. 55    .643
Manager: Frank Chance
Best Player: Mordecai Brown
Finished first in National League
Defeated Detroit Tigers 4 games to 2 in World Series
 
1910
W. 104    L. 50    .675
Manager: Frank Chance
Best Player: Solly Hofman
Finished first in National League
Lost to Philadelphia Athletics 4 games to 1 in World Series
 
1918
W. 84    L. 45    .651
Manager: Fred Mitchell
Best Player: Hippo Vaughn
Finished first in National League
Lost to Boston Red Sox 4 games to 2 in World Series
 
1929
W. 98    L. 54    .645
Manager: Joe McCarthy
Best Player: Rogers Hornsby
Finished first in National League
Lost to Philadelphia Athletics 4 games to 1 in World Series
 
1932
W. 90    L. 64    .584
Managers: Rogers Hornsby, Charlie Grimm
Best Player: Lon Warneke
Finished first in National League
Lost to New York Yankees 4 games to 0 in World Series 
 
1935
W. 100    L. 54    .649
Manager: Charlie Grimm
Best Player: Billy Herman
Finished first in National League
Lost to Detroit Tigers 4 games to 2 in World Series
 
1938
W. 89    L. 63    .581
Managers: Charlie Grimm, Gabby Hartnett
Best Player: Bill Lee
Finished first in National League
Lost to New York Yankees 4 games to 0 in World Series    
 
1945
W. 98    L. 56    .636
Manager: Charlie Grimm
Best Player: Stan Hack
Finished first in National League
Lost to Detroit Tigers 4 games to 3 in World Series
 
1984
W. 96    L. 65    .596
Manager: Jim Frey
Best Player: Ryne Sandberg
Finished first in National League East
Lost to San Diego Padres 3 games to 2 in N.L. Championship Series  
 
1989
W. 93    L. 69    .574
Manager: Don Zimmer
Best Player: Ryne Sandberg
Finished first in National League East
Lost to San Francisco Giants 4 games to 1 in N.L. Championship Series
 
1998
W. 90    L. 73    .552
Manager: Jim Riggleman
Best Player: Sammy Sosa
Finished second in National League Central
Lost to Atlanta Braves 3 games to 0 in N.L. Division Series 
 
2003
W. 88    L. 74    .543
Manager: Dusty Baker
Best Player: Mark Prior
Finished first in National League Central
Defeated Atlanta Braves 3 games to 2 in N.L. Division Series
Lost to Florida Marlins 4 games to 3 in N.L. Championship Series
 
2007
W. 88    L. 74    .543
Manager: Lou Piniella
Best Player: Mark Prior
Finished first in National League Central
Lost to Arizona Diamondbacks 3 games to 0 in N.L. Division Series
 
2008
W. 97    L. 64    .602
Manager: Lou Piniella
Best Player: Ryan Dempster
Finished first in National League Central
Lost to Los Angeles Dodgers 3 games to 0 in N.L. Division Series
 
2015
W. 97    L. 65    .599
Manager: Joe Maddon
Best Player: Jake Arrieta
Finished third in National League Central
Defeated Pittsburgh Pirates in N.L. Wild Card Game
Defeated St. Louis Cardinals 3 games to 1 in N.L. Division Series
Lost to New York Mets 4 games to 0 in N.L. Championship Series
 
2016
W. 103    L. 58    .640
Manager: Joe Maddon
Best Player: Kris Bryant
Finished first in National League Central
Defeated San Francisco Giants 3 games to 1 in N.L. Division Series
Defeated Los Angeles Dodgers 4 games to 2 in N.L. Championship Series
Defeated Cleveland Indians 4 games to 3 in World Series  
 
2017
W. 92    L. 70    .568
Manager: Joe Maddon
Best Player: Kris Bryant
Finished first in National League Central
Defeated Washington Nationals 3 games to 2 in N.L. Division Series
Lost to Los Angeles Dodgers 4 games to 1 in N.L. Championship Series
 
2018
W. 95    L. 68    .583
Manager: Joe Maddon
Best Player: Javier Baez
Finished second in National League Central
Lost to Colorado Rockies in N.L. Wild Card Game
 
2020
W. 34    L. 26    .567
Manager: David Ross
Best Player: Yu Darvish
Finished first in National League Central
Lost to Miami Marlins 2 games to 0 in N.L. Wild Card Series
 
("Best Player" based on Baseball Reference Wins Above Replacement.)
 
 
Check out our book Heydays: Great Stories in Chicago Sports on Amazon.