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Saturday, October 29, 2016

Los Angeles Dodgers RHP Kenley Jansen named NL Reliever of the Year

Major League Baseball today awarded Los Angeles Dodgers RHP Kenley Jansen with the Trevor Hoffman NL Reliever of the Year award for the 2016 MLB season.

Jansen has tossed scoreless relief in 14 of 16 career postseason games, while successfully converting all eight save opportunities. His eight saves are the most in Dodger postseason history. he has pitched more than 1.0 inning in four of his six postseason appearances this year. He picked up the NLCS Game 2 save with 2.0 scoreless innings, and, according to the Elias Sports Bureau, only four other pitchers saved a 1-0 postseason game by pitching more than one inning: Al Holland, Phillies vs. Dodgers in the 1983 NLCS (2 innings); Roger Mason, Pirates vs. Braves in the 1991 NLCS (2 IP); Mariano Rivera, Yankees vs. A's in the 2001 first round (3 IP); and Koji Uehara, Red Sox vs. Tigers in the 2013 ALCS (2 IP). In Game 1 of the NLDS, Jansen became the first Dodger since Jay Howell in 1988 (2.1 IP) to record a save while working the final five outs or more. He Established career highs with both 51 pitches and 2.1 innings in the Dodgers’ NLDS Game 5 win at Washington

In the 2016 regular season, Jansen tied with Zach Britton and Mark Melancon for second in the Majors with a career-high 47 saves in 53 opportunities. He was selected to his first-career All-Star game, where he earned that honor by tossing scoreless relief in 61 of 71 appearances. He ranks second among NL relievers in ERA (1.83), limiting opponents to a .150 batting average, which was the best in baseball. His 0.67 WHIP also ranked first in the Majors. He recorded 104 Ks, which ranked third in the National League. He walked just 11 batters, and owned the best strikeout-to-walk ratio in the National League (9.45). Jansen Appeared in three games against the Cubs this season, allowing one run in 3.0 innings while recording two saves. Batters were 1-for-10 (2B) against him.

On June 21 vs. Washington, Jansen established new Dodger franchise marks in saves, finishing the year with 189 after surpassing Eric Gagné (161). He also set the franchise record for strikeouts as a reliever (632), eclipsing Jim Brewer’s mark of 604. He was the only Dodger to record a save this season. The first time that’s happened since the save became a statistic in 1969. He posted a 1.60 ERA (7 ER/39.1 IP) and held the opposition to a .111 average at Dodger Stadium this year
Righties hit just .109 (13-for-119), and was strong against left-handers as well (.191, 22-for-115). Jansen Had a sub-2.00 ERA in every single month this season except for August (3.97). He recorded at least six saves in every month First batters hit .092 (6-for-65) with five walks against him, and batters were just 2-for-25 (.080) against with runners in scoring position and two out.

Baltimore Orioles LHP Zach Britton named AL Reliever of the Year

Major League Baseball today awarded Baltimore Orioles LHP Zach Britton with the Mariano Rivera AL Reliever of the Year award for the 2016 MLB season.

Britton recorded 47 consecutive saves this season, going 47-for-47. According to STATS, LLC., Britton has the longest save streak in as many chances to start a season by a left-handed pitcher in Major League history and ranks third all-time. Britton led the AL and tied for second in the majors in saves. His 0.54 ERA (4 ER/67.0 IP) led Major League relievers and was the lowest in Major League history among pitchers with at least 50.0 innings pitched.

According to the Elias Sports Bureau, only two other pitchers in Major League history have had an ERA below 1.00 in a season with at least 40 saves: Dennis Eckersley in 1990 (0.61, 48 saves) and Fernando Rodney in 2012 (0.60, 48 saves). Britton ranks third on the O’s all-time saves list with 120 and is one of two left-handers in O’s history with at least 100 career saves (also Tippy Martinez). Britton is the active Major League leader with 49 consecutive saves, dating to October 1, 2015. A total of nine relief pitchers have won the Cy Young Award and the last reliever to win the award was RHP Eric Gagne (Dodgers, 2003).

Indians, Cubs face off in Game 4 of World Series

CHICAGO – Saturday night, the Cleveland Indians and the Chicago Cubs face-off in Game four of the 2016 World Series. Cleveland won Game three on Friday night 1-0 to take a 2-0 series lead.

This is the 87th time in World Series history that the Fall Classic has stood at 2-1 after three games, and it is the 13th time in the last 17 Series (beginning 2000) it has occurred.

Of the previous 86 times that a World Series has been 2-1 after three games, the team leading the series has won Game 4 to take a 3-1 series lead 43 times (50.0%).

Of the 43 teams leading 2-1 to have won Game 4 and take a 3-1 lead, 37 (86.0%) have gone on to win the Series, including each of the last 10 times (Los Angeles in 1988, Toronto in 1992 and 1993, Atlanta in 1995, New York Yankees in 2000, St. Louis in 2006, Philadelphia in 2008, New York in 2009, San Francisco in 2010 and Kansas City in 2015). The last team to take a 3-1 series lead and lose the Fall Classic was the 1985 St. Louis Cardinals.

The Indians improved to 13-6 all-time in Game 3 of a Postseason series, including 7-4 in a best-of-seven. Cleveland is now 4-2 overall in Game 3 of the Fall Classic. The Cubs dropped to 6-16 all-time in Game 3 of a Postseason series, including 4-11 in a best-of-seven. Chicago is now 3-8 overall in Game 3 of the World Series.

This marks the fifth time that the Indians have led 2-1 in any best-of-seven Postseason series. The other instances include the 1948 World Series vs. Boston (won Game 4, won series in 6); the 1997 ALCS vs. Baltimore (won Game 4, won series in 6); the 1998 ALCS vs. New York (lost Game 4, lost series in 6); and the 2007 ALCS vs. Boston (won Game 4, lost series in 7).

This is the eighth time that the Cubs trail a best-of-seven Postseason series, 2-1. They have lost the series in six of the previous seven instances, with the only exception coming in this year's NLCS against Los Angeles (won Game 4, won series in 6). The first six instances include the 1906 World Series vs. Chicago White Sox (won Game 4, lost series in 6); the 1918 World Series vs. Boston (lost Game 4, lost series in 6); the 1929 World Series vs. Philadelphia (lost Game 4, lost series in 5); the 1935 World Series vs. Detroit (lost Game 4, lost series in 6); the 1945 World Series vs. Detroit (lost Game 4, lost series in 7); the 1989 NLCS vs. San Francisco (lost Game 4, lost series in 5); and the 2016 NLCS vs. Los Angeles (won Game 4, won series in 6).

Last night's Game 3 was just the 25th 1-0 game in World Series history, as well as just the second in the past 20 seasons (The deciding Game 4 of the 2005 World Series was a 1-0 White Sox win).

Friday night marked the fifth World Series shutout in Indians history, joining Game 6 in 1920 (1-0 over Brooklyn), Game 7 in 1920 (3-0 over Brooklyn), Game 3 in 1948 (2-0 over Boston) and Game 1 of this series (6-0 win).

The Cubs will start RHP John Lackey. Lackey went 11-8 with a 3.35 ERA (70 ER/188.1 IP) in 29 starts in his first season with the Cubs, where he recorded 20 quality starts and logged a 1.06 WHIP, his lowest single-season mark in his career and sixth-lowest in the N.L. He held opponents to a .218 average, by far the lowest mark of his career. His previous best mark was a .246 opponent average in 2006 with the Angels. His .645 opponent OPS was also the lowest mark of his career.

The Indians will start RHP Corey Kluber. The 30-year-old right-hander is slated to start Game 4 of the World Series at Wrigley Field on Saturday night. He will be starting on a shortened three days’ rest since starting Game 1 of the World Series on Tuesday, October 25 at Progressive Field. He went 18-9 with a 3.14 ERA (75ER/215.0IP) in 32 regular season starts.

REVIVAL | 112th WORLD SERIES

» The Cleveland Indians & Chicago Cubs are meeting in Major
League Baseball’s 112th World Series, the first meeting in Postsea- son history between the two franchises...second consecutive series for Cleveland to face an opponent for first time in PS history (also Toronto in ALCS); in ALDS, Tribe faced Boston for the sixth time in PS history.
» The 2016 Fall Classic has proven to be an historic event, as this year’s World Series features pennant-winners with baseball’s two longest championship droughts, as Cleveland is looking for the franchise’s first title since 1948 (68 years), while Chicago-NL is seeking to end a dry spell that dates back to 1908 (108 years)...the Indians last ap- peared in the World Series in 1997, the Cubs in 1945...additionally, this easily signifies the largest combined title drought between two teams facing one another in the World Series (source: Elias).

AIN’T WASTIN’ TIME NO MORE | TRIBE WINS GAME 3

» Cleveland edged Chicago-NL in Game 3 by a score of 1-0 to take a 2-1 lead in the series...the two teams split the first two games, as the Indians posted a 6-0 shutout in Game 1, while the Cubs responded with a 5-1 victory in Game 2...was first Indians home loss this Postseason (5-1 at home)...marks the 5th time for Cleveland to hold a 2-1 lead in any best-of-7 Postseason series (others: 1948 WS, 1997 ALCS, 1998 ALCS, 2007 ALCS); won Game 4 in ‘48, ‘97, ‘07...37 of the 43 teams (86.0%) that have held a 2-1 World Series lead AND then went on to win Game 4 have subsequently gone on to win the World Series overall; last team to take a 3-1 lead and lose the World Series was the
1985 St. Louis Cardinals.

ONE WAY OUT | 1-0 SHUTOUT

» The Indians posted the 25th 1-0 shutout in World Series history last night in Game 3, just the second over the past 20 seasons (2005 World Series G4; White Sox clinched WS with 1-0 win).
» With last night’s 1-0 win in Game 3, Cleveland’s pitching staff posted (a) the team’s fifth shutout of the 2016 Postseason (b) the 13th shutout in Cleveland Postseason history - 5th ever on the road - and (c) the fifth shutout in Cleveland World Series history - first ever on the road - the others coming in 1920 WS Games 6 & 7 vs. Brooklyn, 1948 WS Game 3 vs. Boston-NL & 2016 WS Game 1 vs. Chicago-NL.
» Cleveland’s 5 shutouts have established a new MLB record for a single Postseason, as previous record of 4 was accomplished by the 1905 Giants, 1998 Yankees, 2010 Giants & 2012 Giants.
» Cleveland is the first team to throw multiple shutouts in the same Fall Classic since the Giants in 2012 vs. Detroit (2-0 G3 win; 2-0 G4 win)... prior to 2012, the last team to have multiple shutouts in a single World Series was the 1966 Orioles (3 SHO’s)...the Indians are the first team to have each of their first two wins in a single World Series come by SHO since the 1959 Chicago White Sox vs. Los Angeles-NL (11-0 win in G1, 1-0 win in G5).
» Cleveland’s only previous 1-0 World Series win came in Game 6 of the 1920 Fall Classic at Cleveland’s Dunn Field.
WHIPPING POST | WINS & LOSSES
» Cleveland has a combined record of 103-69 in 2016, as the Indians
are 9-2 in the Postseason after finishing the regular season at 94-67... Cleveland swept Boston in 3 games to win the ALDS before taking 4 of 5 from Toronto in the ALCS...the Indians have won 12 of their last 14 dating back to regular season (14 consecutive games w/o losing 2 straight)... club is 19-7 since Sept. 16, losing consecutive games just twice in that 26-game span.

BLUE SKY | SCORELESS FRAMES

» Tribe hurlers have held opponents scoreless in 81.0 of the staff’s
98.0 innings pitched overall during the 2016 Postseason (82.7%)... the record for a single Postseason belongs to the 2014 San Francisco Giants, who tossed 130.0 scoreless frames.
» Cleveland’s 1.65 team ERA is the lowest figure among all 10 teams in the 2016 Postseason...next-closest team is current Toronto, who fin- ished with a 2.52 ERA...1.65 ERA currently ranks 22nd all-time for lowest team mark in a single Postseason - 6th-lowest in the Expansion Era (since 1961) behind only the 1966 Orioles (0.50), 1963 Dodgers (1.00), 1983 Orioles (1.10), 2014 Nationals (1.23) & 1961 Yankees (1.60).
» Cleveland pitchers saw the staff’s streak of 18.0 consecutive score- less innings come to an end in the 1st inning of World Series Game 2 (was first run allowed since 8th inning of ALCS G4 at Toronto), just 5.0 frames shy of the club’s franchise record of 23.0 - a streak that spanned 1948 World Series Games 2-4.

MIDNIGHT RIDERS | THE ‘PEN IS MIGHTIER

» ANDREW MILLER (15.0 IP) & CODY ALLEN (10.0 IP) have become
just the third pair of teammates to begin a single Postseason with 10+ innings of scoreless relief each...Allen and Miller join Dave Giusti/Bruce Kison (1971 Pirates - Won WS) & Wade Davis/Luke Hochevar (2015 Royals - Won WS)...should Allen make it to 11.0 scoreless IP, they will become the first pair ever to make it that far.
» Since acquiring Miller on July 31 (including Postseason), the Indians are 28-2 (.933) when holding a lead after 5 innings, 2nd-best in MLB (Texas 23-1, .958)...two losses were August 15 & 17...thanks to Aaron Charlton from STATS for research support.

STATESBORO BLUES | TRIBE POSTSEASON HISTORY

» Cleveland has gone 53-44 (.546) all-time in Postseason games, the
3rd-highest Postseason winning pct. of any A.L. team since 1901 & 5th-highest by any team in the Majors behind Florida (.667, 22-11), New York-AL (.590, 223-155), New York-NL (.573, 51-38) & Baltimore (.551, 54-44)...record would be 54-44 if 1948 A.L. Pennant playoff game of cially counted...Cleveland’s 97 of cial Postseason games are 6th- most played by any A.L. team since 1901, T12th-most in the Majors.
» Tribe’s longest Postseason winning streak is 6 games (Oct. 6-17, 2016), as this fall Cleveland became just the  fth team in MLB his- tory to win 6 consecutive games to begin a Postseason run...lon- gest Postseason losing streak is 4 games, done twice (Sept. 29-Oct. 2, 1954 - 4G WS sweep - & Oct. 18, 2007-Oct. 2, 2013).

DREAMS | CLEVELAND FALL CLASSICS

» The Cleveland Indians are appearing in in the franchise’s sixth World Series all-time...Tribe’s 6 appearances are tied with Baltimore and Oak- land for 5th-most in A.L. history behind New York-AL (40), Boston (12), Detroit (11) and Philadelphia-AL (8)...have appeared in the World Series on  ve (5) previous occasions, winning titles in 1920 (5-2 over Brook- lyn Robins) & 1948 (4-2 over Boston Braves)...the Tribe came up on the losing end in Fall Classics played in 1954 (4-0 to NY Giants), 1995 (4-2 to Atlanta) & 1997 (4-3 to Florida)...Cleveland is 16-17 (.485) all- time in World Series games; Tribe’s 33 World Series games played are 7th-most in the A.L. all-time...the 1903 World Series is considered to be Major League Baseball’s  rst modern installment of the event.
» This marks the  rst time for Cleveland to hold home- eld ad- vantage in the World Series...teams with home- eld advantage have won 6 of last 7 (exception: 2014 Kansas City Royals) & 9 of the last 12 Fall Classics.

RAMBLIN’ MAN | TITO IN THE POSTSEASON

» TERRY FRANCONA’s teams are 37-20 (.649) all-time in Postsea-
son play, the highest win% by any manager with at least 50 Postsea- son games managed...Tito’s 37 Postseason wins are tied with Casey Stengel (.587, 37-26) for 6th-most in MLB history after passing Hall-of- Famer Sparky Anderson in the ALCS.
» Francona has gone 10-1 (.909) all-time in the World Series...Tito’s 9-game World Series winning streak came to an end on Wednesday, as he lost for the first time ever in a Fall Classic...Tito is the only manager in Major League history to have won each of his first 9 World Series games...his streak of 9 straight wins was 3rd-longest ever by a manager behind Joe Torre (14) & Joe McCarthy (10).

SOUTHBOUND | CUBS SERIES NOTES

» The Cleveland & Chicago-NL franchises are meeting for the first time in MLB Postseason history...the two clubs have split 18 regular season meetings all-time (9-9), as the Indians have gone 6-5 vs. the Cubs at Progressive Field, while holding a 3-4 mark at Wrigley Field.
» The Indians & Cubs met most recently in 2015, splitting 4 decisions (1-1 in each city)...that season included a memorable trip to the North- side, as a June 15 rainout coincided with Game 6 of the 2015 Stanley Cup Finals - that same night, the Blackhawks defeated the Tampa Bay Lightning 2-0 to win Lord Stanley on home ice for the first time since 1938 and then brought the Cup to Wrigley Field the next day for a pre- game warning track lap prior to first pitch between the Indians & Cubs.

YOU DON’T LOVE ME | INTERLEAVE PLAY

» Cleveland went 13-7 against the National League during the 2016 regular season, going 7-3 at home with the DH and 6-4 on the road... secured club’s first winning season in N.L. parks since 2005 (7-2)...out- scored N.L. opponents by a 113-77 (+36) margin...offense batted .277 (195-703) with 15 HR, a .763 OPS (.346 OBP/.417 SLG) and 5.7 runs- per-game (3rd in A.L., 4th in MLB), while pitching staff registered a 3.68 ERA (74 ER/181.0 IP), the A.L.’s 4th-lowest Interleague figure in 2016... Cleveland is 183-180 all-time in Interleague Play (1997-2016), going 103-77 vs. N.L. teams at home and 80-103 on the road in N.L. parks.

WASTED WORDS | MISC. NOTES

» The Indians have scored first in 8 of their 11 Postseason games thus far, going 8-0 in those contests; club is 1-2 when opponent scores first. » The Indians have struck out 8-or-more batters in 12 consecutive Postseason game dating back to the 2013 A.L. Wild Card Game, establishing the longest such streak in Postseason history (previ- ously mark was held by the Los Angeles Dodgers, who had an 11-game stretch that spanned 2014 NLDS Game 4 - 2016 NLDS Game 5)... Cleveland’s pitching staff has racked up 112 strikeouts across just 98.0 innings during the 2016 Postseason (10.29 SO-per-9.0IP), 2nd-most K’s by any team in the playoff field behind only Los Angeles-NL (113 in 96.0IP)...record for a single Postseason is held by the 2015 Kansas City Royals, who fanned 160 batters across 148 innings.

CLEVELAND ROCKS | THIS DAY IN MUSIC...

» 1971: Duane Allman was killed at the age of 24 following a motorcycle
accident in Macon, Georgia.
» BORN ON THIS DAY: (1946) Peter Green, founding member of
Fleetwood Mac; (1955) Roger O’Donnell, keyboards, The Cure; Kevin DuBrow, Quiet Riot; (1965) Peter Timmins, drummer, Cowboy Junkies; (1970) Toby Smith, keyboards, Jamiroquai.

WHY MUST YOU SHUT ME OUT?

The Chicago Cubs tonight play game four of the best-of-seven World Series against the Cleveland Indians after last night falling in game three, 1-0 ... Chicago, down two-games-to-one, was blanked for the second time in the Series (also a 6-0 setback in game one) and for the fourth time this postseason.
© Last evening marked Wrigley Field’s first World Series game since October 10, 1945, when the Cubs hosted the Tigers in game seven of the 1945 Fall Classic (a 9-3 Tigers win).
© According to ESPN Stats & Info, since Wrigley Field last was the site of a World Series game, 45 other ballparks have hosted a World Series contest.
© Chicago’s most recent World Series win at Wrigley Field was game six of the 1945 World Series, on October 8 ... that was an 8-7, 12-inning win over Detroit.

PITCHING IN

Cubs pitching has held opponents to one or no runs in three of their last four playoff games, including each of the last two games of this World Series ... Cubs starting pitchers have a 2.30 ERA (4 ER/15.2 IP) in the first three games of the Fall Classic.
© Jake Arrieta on Wednesday spun 5.1 innings of no-hit ball, which was the longest no-hit bid in a World Series game since Jerry Koosman of the New York Mets spun 6.0 innings of no-hit ball in game two of the 1969 Fall Classic.
FEAST OR FAMINE: The Cubs have plated five or more runs in eight of their 13 post- season contests this month, but have scored just one run combined in the other five games, including four shutouts.
© Chicago has averaged 6.0 runs per game in its eight post-season victories this
month while averaging 1.0 run per game in its five setbacks ... the Cubs are 8-1 when scoring at least one run this postseason.

QUITE A RETURN

Kyle Schwarber, who missed a majority of the season recovering from a left knee injury, went 3-for-7 (.429) with a double, two walks and two RBI as the team’s DH in the first two games of the World Series ... he is now hitting .343 (12-for-35) with a double, five homers and 10 RBI in 12 career post-season games.

EXPERIENCE ON THE BUMP

John Lackey tonight makes his 23rd career post- season start, the most for any active pitcher in baseball ... tonight’s outing will move him past Whitey Ford for the sixth-most starts in post-season history ... John Smoltz is fifth with 27 career post-season starts while Andy Pettitte holds the all- time record with 44 post-season starts.
© A win this evening would make Lackey the first pitcher in MLB history to record a post-season victory with four teams (Angels, Red Sox, Cardinals, Cubs).

YOUTH MOVEMENT

Wednesday night’s Cubs starting lineup featured six players under the age of 25: Kris Bryant (24), Kyle Schwarber (23), Javier Baez (23), Willson Contreras (24), Jorge Soler (24) and Addison Russell (22) ... that sets a World Series record for one team, surpassing the previous mark of five, done eight times (last by Cincinnati in game four of 1970 World Series).

BACK IN THE FALL CLASSIC

The Cubs this season have captured their first N.L.
Pennant since 1945, and now make their 11th appearance in the World Series ... Chicago won the Fall Classic in both 1907 and 1908.
© According to Elias Sports Bureau, no team in the four major North American sports had ever gone longer than 71 years without an appearance in a championship game/series.
© Including this year, Chicago’s 11 World Series appearances are surpassed by only six franchises: the Yankees (40), Giants (20),
Cardinals (19), Dodgers (18), Athletics (14) and Red Sox (12).
© Chicago now has won 17 National League Pennants ... only three Senior Circuit teams have won more: the Giants(23), Dodgers(21) and Cardinals (19).

A LOOK AT GAME FOUR

The Cubs are 8-10 in game four of post-season series, including a 2-0 record this year and a 1-1 mark in 2015 (won game four of the NLDS vs. St. Louis, 6-4; lost game four of the NLCS vs. the Mets, 8-3) ... Chicago is 4-6 all-time in World Series game fours.

NLCS CO-MVPS

Cubs pitcher Jon Lester and infielder Javier Baez were named co-MVPs of the NLCS ... they are the first NLCS Co-MVPs since Rob Dibble and Randy Myers in 1990 for Cincinnati.

BACK IN THE POSTSEASON

Chicago, who last season advanced to the NLCS, makes consecutive post-season appearances for just the second time since 1909 ... the Cubs made consecutive NLDS appearances in 2007-08.

FLY THE W

The Cubs compiled a 103-58 regular season record, tops in the majors and the team’s most since going 104-50 in 1910.
© With 103 wins, the 2016 Cubs are one of just three major league teams to win 100 regular season games within four seasons of losing 100 contests ... the Cubs, who went 61-101 in 2012, join only the 1969 Mets (100-62 after going 50-112 in 1965 and 61-101 in
1967) and the 1995 Indians (100-44 after going 57-105 in 1991) ... thanks to STATS, Inc.
© The Cubs have now reached 100 regular season wins six times in their 141 seasons dating to 1876 ... they’ve done so in 1906(116-36), 1907 (107-45), 1909 (104-49), 1910 (104-50), 1935 (100-54) and now in 2016.

O CAPTAIN, MY CAPTAIN

Manager Joe Maddon is only the second skipper in club history to reach the postseason in his first two seasons ... he joins Lou Piniella, who led the 2007-08 Cubs to the playoffs ... this is his sixth postseason appearance as a manager, having taken Tampa Bay to the playoffs in 2008, 2010, 2011 and 2013.

START ME UP

Jon Lester is making his fourth-straight trip to the playoffs ... during the regular season, he went 19-5 with a 2.44 ERA (55 ER/202.IP), the second-best mark in baseball.
© Lester recorded a quality start in all 15 of his home appearances, setting the franchise record (since at least 1913) for the most
home starts in a single season without throwing a non-quality start.
© Kyle Hendricks, the owner of an MLB-best 2.13 ERA (45 ER/190.0 IP), and Lester combined to notch baseball’s top two ERAs,
becoming the first teammate pair to do so since Roger Clemens (1.87) and Andy Pettitte (2.39) did so with the 2005 Astros.

ROUSING ROTATION

Cubs starters combined to allow only 6.91 hits per nine innings, the third-lowest mark all-time and the lowest mark since 1968 ... the Cubs are the first team to have four or more starters win 15 or more games in one season since the 2004 Cardinals ... Elias notes the Cubs have five pitchers with more than 10 wins for the first time since 1945 when Hank Wyse (22 wins), Claude Passeau (17), Paul Derringer (16), Ray Prim (13) and Hank Borowy (11) turned the trick.

THIS IS OFFENSIVE


The Cubs, with 808 runs scored in the regular season, have surpassed 800 runs for only the fourth time since 1938 (855 runs in 2008, 831 in 1998, 806 in 1970) ... overall, the Cubs have reached 800 runs only nine times in modern franchise history starting in 1900.

Indians edge Cubs 1-0 at Wrigley Field for 2-1 Series lead

CHICAGO (AP) — Cody Allen, Andrew Miller and the Cleveland Indians' nasty bullpen shut down a Wrigley Field party 71 years in the making.

Allen escaped a ninth-inning jam and the Indians pitched their fifth shutout this postseason, holding off the Chicago Cubs 1-0 Friday night for a 2-1 lead in the World Series.

The crowd began forming beyond the ivy-covered walls in the early morning, all revved up for the first World Series game at Wrigley since 1945.

Fans were roaring after a two-out error by first baseman Mike Napoli helped Chicago put runners on second and third in the ninth. Allen silenced the neighborhood ballpark, striking out co-NL Championship Series MVP Javier Baez to end it.

Indians starter Josh Tomlin went 4 2/3 innings, then Miller, Bryan Shaw and Allen took over.

The Cubs have been blanked four times in the last eight games this postseason. It was their first 1-0 loss in the World Series since Babe Ruth and the Boston Red Sox beat them in 1918.

Game 1 winner Corey Kluber starts for Cleveland on Saturday night on three days' rest, and John Lackey goes for Chicago.

Thursday, October 27, 2016

Arrieta deals, Cubs awaken, top Indians to even Series at 1

CLEVELAND (AP) — Jake Arrieta made a brief run at a no-hitter and ended another 71-year pause between celebrations for the Chicago Cubs and their faithful fans.

Not only are they back in the World Series, they've won there again.

One more drought quenched, one more to go.

Arrieta carried a no-hit bid into the sixth inning, Kyle Schwarber drove in two runs and the Cubs brushed off a shutout to even the Series with their first Fall Classic win in more than seven decades, 5-1 over the Cleveland Indians in Game 2 on Wednesday night.


Arrieta, who pitched a no-hitter earlier this season, briefly invoked Don Larsen's name by flirting with one deep in October before the Indians touched him for two hits and a run. However, the right-hander helped give Chicago just what it needed — a split at Progressive Field — before the Cubbies return to their Wrigley Field den for the next three games starting Friday night.

"It's always crazy good," Cubs manager Joe Maddon said when asked how he expected things to be on the corner of Clark and Addison for Game 3. "But I'd have to imagine a little bit more than that, especially coming back at 1-1. I think the folks will be jacked up about the win tonight.

"It's the finest venue there is in professional sports and maybe in all of sports."

The Cubs hadn't won in the Series since beating Detroit 8-7 in 1945 to force a decisive Game 7, and after their latest win, hundreds of Chicago fans gathered in the pouring rain in the rows behind their first-base dugout, where they danced and sang. A few waved the familiar white and blue "W'' flags.

They hope to do it three more times.

The big-swinging Schwarber, who made it back for Chicago's long-awaited Series return after missing six months with an injured left knee, hit an RBI single in the third off Cleveland's Trevor Bauer and had another in the Cubs' three-run fifth — highlighted by Ben Zobrist's run-scoring triple.

In Game 1, Schwarber doubled and walked.

"No, it's not that easy, first off. Baseball's a crazy game," he said.

Even the presence of star LeBron James and the NBA champion Cavaliers, sporting their new rings, couldn't stop the Indians from losing for the first time in six home games this postseason.

And Cleveland manager Terry Francona's magical touch in October finally fizzled as he dropped to 9-1 in Series games.

"We gave up nine hits, eight walks, two errors, and we only gave up five runs," Francona said. "For us to win, we generally need to play a clean game, and we didn't do that."

With rain in the forecast, Major League Baseball moved the first pitch up an hour in hopes of avoiding delays or a postponement.

It turned out to be a good call as the game went on without a hitch and ended after more than four hours as light rain was beginning to fall.

Arrieta and the Cubs provided the only storm.

The bearded 30-year-old coasted through five innings without allowing a hit, and his no-hit bid was the longest in a Series game since Jerry Koosman of the New York Mets tossed six no-hit innings in 1969.

For a brief period, Arrieta looked as if he might challenge Larsen's gem — a perfect game — in 1956 before Indians second baseman Jason Kipnis, a die-hard Cubs fan as a kid, doubled with one out in the sixth .

Arrieta has two career no-hitters, in fact, including the only one in the majors this year.

"I knew I hadn't given up a hit all the way to the sixth," Arrieta said. "That's really not the focus in a game like this. Whether they get a hit or not really doesn't affect the way you continue to approach that lineup, especially with a five-run lead."

Kipnis was impressed.

"We didn't get much going," he said. "You have to tip your hat to Arrieta. He was awesome."

Cubs lefty Mike Montgomery replaced Arrieta and worked two scoreless innings before Aroldis Chapman came in and unleashed his 103 mph heat while getting the last four outs in his Series debut.

The teams will have an off day before the series resumes with Game 3 at Wrigley, which will host its first Series game since 1945, when tavern owner Billy Sianis was asked to leave with his pet goat, Murphy, and a curse was born.

Josh Tomlin will start for the Indians, who will lose the designated hitter in the NL ballpark, against Kyle Hendricks.

Schwarber might also wind up on the bench after two days as the DH. Maddon loves the way he's swinging but isn't sure he's ready to play in the outfield.

"That's something I'm waiting to hear from our guys, from our medical side, because obviously he looks good," he said. "He looks good at the plate. Running the bases he looks pretty good so far."

And the Cubs finally do, too, as they head home.

Unlike his start in Toronto on Oct. 17, when his stitched cut opened up and Bauer was forced to make a bloody departure in the first inning, his finger held up fine.

The Cubs, though, put a few nicks in him in 3 2/3 innings.

"I just wasn't sharp for whatever reason," Bauer said.

The drone accident has brought attention to the quirky Bauer, and one Chicago fan tried to rattle the right-hander by sending a smaller version of the remote-controlled, flying object that cut him.

Bauer posted a photo of it on Twitter, saying "I see the @Cubs fans love me! How nice of them to send me a gift!"

ODDS AND ENDS

Francona's nine-game winning streak was the third-longest in Series history, trailing Joe Torre (14) and Joe McCarthy (10). ... The Cubs are 7-1 this postseason when scoring first. ... The teams combined for a Series record-tying three wild pitches. ... Indians RHP Danny Salazar made his first postseason appearance since starting the 2013 AL wild-card game. ... This is the 58th time the Series has been tied 1-1. The Game 2 winner has won the title 29 times.

SHORT REST

Looking ahead, Francona has already decided he'll bring Corey Kluber back on short rest for Game 4. It wasn't much of a decision, really, after the right-hander confounded the Cubs in Game 1, painting the corners for six-plus innings.

UP NEXT

Cubs: Hendricks is coming off his brilliant performance in Game 6 of the NLCS when he pitched two-hit ball for 7 1/3 innings as the Cubs clinched their first pennant in 71 years. The right-hander led the majors with a 2.13 ERA.

Indians: It will be an emotional night for Tomlin, who will pitch on 12 days' rest with his ailing father, Jerry, in attendance. The elder Tomlin became stricken with a spinal condition in August, when the right-hander was struggling on the mound.

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Kluber, Perez, Indians beat Cubs 6-0 in World Series opener

CLEVELAND (AP) — Corey Kluber and the Cleveland Indians are off to a pitch-perfect start in the World Series.

The Chicago Cubs, meanwhile, fell completely flat in their first appearance since 1945.

Kluber dominated into the seventh inning, Roberto Perez had four RBIs with a pair of home runs and the Indians beat the Cubs 6-0 in Tuesday night's opener of a highly anticipated matchup between the teams with baseball's longest championship droughts.

"It's almost like you have that extra level of intensity," said Kluber, who became the first Series pitcher to strike out eight batters in the first three innings.

AL Championship Series MVP Andrew Millerescaped a bases-loaded, no-out jam in the seventh and stranded runners at the corners the eighth, preserving a three-run lead and delighting the sellout crowd of 38,091 in Cleveland's first-ever Series home opener.

"The atmosphere in the World Series is so great," Miller said. "You can't help but get caught up in it and enjoy it."

The Indians pitched their fourth shutout in nine games this postseason. After stifling two dangerous lineups in Boston and Toronto during the AL playoffs, Cleveland shut down a hard-hitting Cubs team that scored 23 runs against the Dodgers in the final three games of the NLCS.

Back in the Series for the first time since 1997, the Indians scored twice in the first off October ace Jon Lester.

Perez hit a fourth-inning solo shot and added a three-run drive in the eighth against Hector Rondon, becoming the first Cleveland player and the only No. 9 batter to homer twice in a Series game.

"Oh, I don't think I've ever had a night like that," Perez said.

He has three home runs in 27 at-bats during the postseason after hitting three in 153 during the regular season.

"I've come a long ways," Perez said,

Francisco Lindor added three hits as the Indians improved to 8-1 this postseason. Cleveland manager Terry Francona is 9-0 in the Series, including sweeps by his Boston teams in 2004 and '07.

The Game 1 winner has taken the title in the last six Series and 17 of 19.

"I have no concerns," Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. "It's the first game. I'm fine. We're fine."

Trevor Bauer, trying to come back from a sliced pinkie caused by a freak drone accident, starts Game 2 for the Indians on Wednesday night against Jake Arrieta. Because the forecast called for an increased chance of rain later in the evening, Major League Baseball took the extraordinary step of moving up the first pitch by an hour to 7:08 p.m.

Kluber painted the corners, and 24 of his 59 strikes were called by plate umpire Larry Vanover. Twelve batters were caught looking, including seven Cubs.

"I think his ball was moving too much today," said Perez, Cleveland's catcher. "We got guys off balance the whole night."

Kluber combined with Miller and Cody Allen to fan 15 — two shy of the Series record for a nine-inning game — and Chicago went 2 for 15 with 10 strikeouts with runners on base.

With the Indians hoping for their first title since 1948 and the Cubs seeking their first since 1908, Lester stumbled in the opening inning.

He entered 3-0 with a 0.43 ERA in three Series starts and got his first two outs on five pitches before Cleveland loaded the bases with two outs. Jose Ramirez had a run-scoring swinging bunt single and Brandon Guyer was hit by a pitch — he led the majors with 31 during the regular season.

"There is an importance on small ball, but you can't try to hit a swinging bunt. That's a little bit of good fortune," Francona said. "Then Guyer got hit, which he is really good at."

Perez connected in the fourth for a 3-0 lead.

"When you're going against a guy like Kluber who's locked in from pitch one, to give up two in the first, that makes it tough," Lester said.

Teams that combined for 174 seasons of futility, America's biggest droughts since the Great Plains' Dust Bowl of the 1930s, captivated even many non-baseball fans.

On a night of civic pride, LeBron James and the NBA's Cavaliers received their championship rings next door prior to their season opener, and Cleveland hosted a World Series opener for the first time.

The Cubs had not played in the Series since five weeks after Japan signed the Instrument of Surrender ending World War II.

Kluber, whose win in the All-Star Game gave the AL home-field advantage in the Series, improved to 3-1 in the postseason and lowered his ERA to a sparkling 0.74.

He was pitching on six days' rest, and his two-seam fastball darted through the strike zone. Kluber struck out nine in six innings and walked none.

Kyle Schwarber, making a surprise return in his first big league game since tearing knee ligaments on April 7, doubled off the right-field wall in the fourth — a drive kept in by a stiff wind on a 50-degree night. Kluber then got Javier Baez to fly out.

Zobrist's leadoff double in the seventh finished Kluber, and Cleveland loaded the bases with no outs against Miller on Schwarber's walk and Baez's single. Pinch-hitter Willson Contreras flied to Rajai Davis in short center, and Davis threw home rather than double up Schwarber, who had strayed far off second.

Using his intimidating slider, Miller struck out Addison Russell and David Ross to escape the jam, stranded runners at the corners in the eighth by fanning Schwarber with his 46th pitch, his most in five years. Miller has thrown 20 scoreless innings in postseason play, including 13 2/3 innings with 24 strikeouts this year.

Allen worked the ninth to close it out.

Ramirez also had three hits each for the Indians, who beat Toronto in the ALCS despite hitting just .168. Zobrist had three hit for the Cubs.

Lester gave up three runs, six hits and three walks in 5 2/3 innings. He was rattled by Vanover's calls, barking at the umpire in the third, then stopping for a discussion at the inning's end.

"I'm confident. I know our guys are, too," Schwarber said. "We put up good at-bats against those guys today. We just didn't come up with a knock when we needed to."

UP NEXT

While Arrieta went 18-8 with a 3.10 ERA during the regular season, he struggled to a 5.01 ERA in his final four starts. He allowed four runs over five innings in Game 3 of the NLCS.

Bauer lasted only two outs in his ALCS when his pinkie began bleeding.

THEY'RE BACK

Dexter Fowler took a called third strike from Kluber leading off the game, becoming the first Cubs player to bat in the Series since Don Johnson hit into a game-ending forceout against Detroit's Hal Newhouser in Game 7 in 1945.

TAKE A SEAT

Chicago benched right fielder Jason Heyward, in a 2-for-28 postseason slump, and started Chris Coghlan.

Tuesday, October 25, 2016

D-backs name Amiel Sawdaye as senior vice president and assistant general manager

PHOENIX -- The Arizona Diamondbacks (@Dbacks) named Amiel Sawdaye (Ah-me-el Saw-day) as Senior Vice President & Assistant General Manager, as announced by Executive Vice President & General Manager Mike Hazen.

"I'm excited Amiel is joining our team." said Hazen. "His experience on the scouting side is evident in his track record of finding talented core players."
 
"I appreciate the D-backs giving me this opportunity," said Sawdaye. "I look forward to continuing to work with Mike and share his vision for bringing this franchise success. I also thank the Boston Red Sox for the opportunities afforded me along with great memories."
 
Sawdaye, 39, worked with Hazen in Boston from 2006-2016. Overall, he spent 15 seasons with the Red Sox from 2002-16, most recently as Vice President, Amateur and International Scouting since January 2015. As Director, Amateur Scouting from 2010-14, he oversaw the drafts that secured Matt Barnes, Mookie Betts, Henry Owens, Travis Shaw, Blake Swihart, and Brandon Workman.
 
His other roles with the Red Sox include Assistant Director, Amateur Scouting (2005-2009), Scouting Assistant (2004) and Baseball Operations Intern (2002-03).
 
The Baltimore native graduated from the University of Maryland in 1999 with a degree in decisions information systems.
 
Sawdaye and his wife, Danielle, have 2 daughters, Lily and Mia, and a son, Max.

Cleveland Indians set World Series roster

The Cleveland Indians have set their 25-man roster in advance of the start of the 112th World Series tonight against the Chicago Cubs at Progressive Field.

The Cubs and Indians play the first two games of the World Series tonight and tomorrow night in Cleveland before the series moves to Wrigley Field for Game Three on Friday, October 28, Game Four on Saturday, October 29 and Game Five (if necessary) on Sunday, October 30. The clubs would return to Cleveland for Games Six and Seven (if necessary) November 1-2.

From the previous round, RHP Danny Salazar has replaced RHP Cody Anderson on the Indians' roster.

PITCHERS (12/1)
37: Allen, Cody -- 6-1, 210 -- 11/20/88 -- Orlando, FL
47: Bauer, Trevor -- 6-1, 190 -- 1/17/91 -- North Hollywood, CA
52: Clevinger, Mike -- 6-4, 202 -- 12/21/90 -- Jacksonville, FL
28: Kluber, Corey -- 6-4, 215 -- 4/10/86 -- Birmingham, AL
53: Manship, Jeff -- 6-2, 205 -- 1/16/85 -- San Antonio, TX
34: McAllister, Zach -- 6-6, 240 -- 12/8/87 -- Chillicothe, IL
54: Merritt, Ryan -- 6-0, 170 -- 2/21/92 -- McKinney, TX
24: Miller, Andrew -- 6-7, 205 -- 5/21/85 -- Gainesville, FL
61: Otero, Dan -- 6-3, 215 -- 2/19/85 -- Miami, FL
31: Salazar, Danny -- 6-0, 190 -- 1/11/90 -- Santo Domingo, DR
27: Shaw, Bryan -- 6-1, 210 -- 11/8/87 -- Livermore, CA
43: Tomlin, Josh -- 6-1, 190 -- 10/19/84 -- Tyler, TX

CATCHERS (2):   
10: Gomes, Yan -- 6-2, 215 -- 7/19/87 -- Sao Paulo, Brazil
55: Perez, Roberto -- 5-11, 225 -- 12/23/88 -- Mayaguez, PR

INFIELDERS (6):
22: Kipnis, Jason -- 5-11, 190 -- 4/3/87 -- Northbrook, IL
12: Lindor, Francisco -- 5-11, 190 -- 11/14/93 -- Caguas, PR
1:   Martinez, Michael -- 5-9, 180 -- 9/16/82 -- Santo Domingo, DR
26: Napoli, Mike -- 6-1, 225 -- 10/31/81 -- Hollywood, FL
11: Ramirez, Jose -- 5-9, 165 -- 9/17/92 -- Bani, DR
41: Santana, Carlos -- 5-11, 210 -- 4/8/86 -- Santo Domingo, DR

OUTFIELDERS (5/1):
8: Chisenhall, Lonnie -- 6-2, 190 -- 10/4/88 -- Morehead City, NC
4: Crisp, Coco -- 5-10: 185 -- 11/1/79 -- Los Angeles, CA
20: Davis, Rajai -- 5-9, 195 -- 10/19/80 -- East Lyme, CT
6: Guyer, Brandon -- 6-2, 200 -- 1/28/86 -- West Chester, PA
30: Naquin, Tyler -- 6-2, 190 -- 4/24/91 -- Iola, TX  

Chicago Cubs set World Series roster

The Chicago Cubs have set their 25-man roster in advance of the start of the 112th World Series tonight against the Cleveland Indians at Progressive Field.

The Cubs and Indians play the first two games of the World Series tonight and tomorrow night in Cleveland before the series moves to Wrigley Field for Game Three on Friday, October 28, Game Four on Saturday, October 29 and Game Five (if necessary) on Sunday, October 30. The clubs would return to Cleveland for Games Six and Seven (if necessary) November 1-2.

Here is a look at the Chicago Cubs World Series roster:

PITCHERS (11)
6-Carl Edwards Jr., RHP
28-Kyle Hendricks, RHP
34-Jon Lester, LHP
37-Travis Wood, LHP
38-Mike Montgomery, LHP
41-John Lackey, RHP
46-Pedro Strop, RHP
49-Jake Arrieta, RHP
52-Justin Grimm, RHP
54-Aroldis Chapman, LHP
56-Hector Rondon, RHP

POSITION PLAYERS (14)
3-David Ross, C
5-Albert Almora Jr., OF
8-Chris Coghlan, OF
9-Javier Baez, INF
12-Kyle Schwarber, OF/C
17-Kris Bryant, INF
18-Ben Zobrist, INF
22-Jason Heyward, OF
24-Dexter Fowler, OF
27-Addison Russell, INF
40-Willson Contreras, C
44-Anthony Rizzo, INF
47-Miguel Montero, C
68-Jorge Soler, OF

Sunday, October 23, 2016

Cubs beat Dodgers 5-0 to reach 1st World Series since 1945

CHICAGO (AP) — Anthony Rizzo caught the ball for the final out and Wrigley Field erupted.

"I'm sleeping with this thing tonight," the Chicago Cubs first baseman told the pulsating crowd moments later, kissing the prized souvenir. "Are you kidding me? We're going to the World Series."

Cubs ... World Series? Yes, the Cubbies!

Next up, Game 1 in Cleveland.

With fans chanting, singing and waving those Ws, shaking the century-old ballpark and jamming the streets of Wrigleyville, the Cubs celebrated a moment many of their faithful wondered whether they would ever see.

Kyle Hendricks outpitched Clayton Kershaw, Rizzo and Willson Contreras homered early and the Cubs took their first pennant since 1945, beating the Los Angeles Dodgers 5-0 Saturday night to win the NL Championship Series in six games.

"Listen to them. Outside before the game was crazy. Inside the game was crazy," Cubs pitcher Jon Lester said.

"These guys have done nothing but support us from Day One. It's been unbelievable to be here and be part of this. Words can't really describe where I'm at right now," he said.

Cursed by a Billy Goat, bedeviled by Bartman and crushed by decades of disappointment, those "Lovable Losers" now have a chance to win it all.

Trying to win their first crown since 1908, manager Joe Maddon's team opens the World Series against Cleveland on Tuesday night.

The Indians haven't won it all since 1948 — Cleveland and Cubs have the two longest title waits in the majors.

"This city deserves it so much," Rizzo said. "We got four more big ones to go, but we're going to enjoy this. We're going to the World Series. I can't even believe that."

All-everything Javier Baez and Lester shared the NLCS MVP. Baez hit .318, drove in five runs and made several sharp plays at second base. Lester, a former World Series champion in Boston, was 1-0 with a 1.38 ERA in two starts against the Dodgers.

The drought ended when Aroldis Chapman got Yasiel Puig to ground into a double play , setting off a wild celebration. And if they bring home the elusive championship?

"I may make the 'W' a tattoo," said chairman Tom Ricketts , who once lived across the street and met his wife in the bleachers.

Deemed World Series favorites since opening day, the Cubs topped the majors with 103 wins to win the NL Central, then beat the Giants and Dodgers in the playoffs.

The Cubs overcame a 2-1 deficit against the Dodgers and won their 17th pennant. They had not earned a World Series trip since winning a doubleheader opener 4-3 at Pittsburgh on Sept. 29, 1945, to clinch the pennant on the next-to-last day of the season.

The eternal "wait till next year" is over. No more dwelling on a history of failure — the future is now.

"We're too young. We don't care about it," star slugger Kris Bryant said. "We don't look into it. This is a new team, this is a completely different time of our lives. We're enjoying it and our work's just getting started."

Hendricks pitched two-hit ball for 7 1/3 innings . Chapman took over and closed with hitless relief, then threw both arms in the air as he was mobbed by teammates and coaches.

The Dodgers sent the minimum 27 batters to the plate and no one got past first base.

The Cubs shook off back-to-back shutout losses earlier in this series by pounding the Dodgers for 23 runs to win the final three games.

And they were in no way overwhelmed by the moment on Saturday, putting aside previous frustration.

In the 1945 Series, the Billy Goat Curse supposedly began when a tavern owner wasn't allowed to bring his goat to Wrigley. In 2003, the Cubs lost the final three games of the NLCS to Florida, punctuated with a Game 6 defeat when fan Steve Bartman deflected a foul ball.

Even as recently as 2012, the Cubs lost 101 times.

This time, no such ill luck.

Bryant had an RBI single and scored in a two-run first . Dexter Fowler added two hits, drove in a run and scored one.

Contreras led off the fourth with a homer.Rizzo continued his resurgence with a solo drive in the fifth.

That was plenty for Hendricks, the major league ERA leader.

Hendricks left to a standing ovation after Josh Reddick singled with one out in the eighth. The only other hit Hendricks allowed was a single by Andrew Toles on the game's first pitch.

Kershaw, dominant in Game 2, gave up five runs and seven hits before being lifted for a pinch hitter in the sixth. He fell to 4-7 in the postseason.

"This day is never fun, the ending of a season," Kershaw said.

The Dodgers haven't been to the World Series since winning in 1988.

Pitching on five days' rest, Kershaw needed 30 pitches to get through the first. Fowler led off with a double against the three-time NL Cy Young Award winner, and Bryant's single had the crowd shaking the 102-year-old ballpark.

Fans had more to cheer when left fielder Andrew Toles dropped Rizzo's fly, putting runners on second and third, and Ben Zobrist made it 2-0 a sacrifice fly.

The Cubs added a run in the second when Addison Russell doubled to deep left and scored on a two-out single by Fowler.

LINEUP SHUFFLE

Maddon benched slumping right fielder Jason Heyward in favor of Albert Almora Jr.

"Kershaw's pitching, so I wanted to get one more right-handed bat in the lineup, and also with Albert I don't feel like we're losing anything on defense," Maddon said. "I know Jason's a Gold Glover, but I think Albert, given an opportunity to play often enough would be considered a Gold Glove-caliber outfielder, too."

Heyward was 2 for 28 in the playoffs — 1 for 16 in the NLCS.

SEEN

Kerry Wood, wearing a Ron Santo jersey, threw out the first pitch and actor Jim Belushi delivered the "Play Ball!" call before the game. Pearl Jam front man Eddie Vedder and actor John Cusack were also in attendance. And Bulls great Scottie Pippen led the seventh-inning stretch.

Friday, October 21, 2016

Cubs beat Dodgers 8-4, head home with 3-2 lead in NLCS

LOS ANGELES (AP) — One win away. Two chances at home. Seven decades of waiting.

The Chicago Cubs closed in on their first World Series trip since 1945 by beating the Los Angeles Dodgers 8-4 on Thursday in Game 5 of their National League playoff.

Jon Lester pitched seven sharp innings , Addison Russell hit a tiebreaking homer and the Cubs grabbed a 3-2 lead in the NL Championship Series.

On deck, a pair of opportunities to wrap up that elusive pennant at Wrigley Field.

"The city of Chicago has got to be buzzing," manager Joe Maddon said. "We're not going to run away from anything. It's within our reach right now."

The Cubs' first opportunity to clinch comes Saturday night in Game 6, when Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw faces major league ERA leader Kyle Hendricks.

"That's a game we expect to win," Los Angeles manager Dave Roberts said.

Of course, the Cubs were in the same favorable position 13 years ago — heading home to Wrigley with a 3-2 lead in the NLCS.

But even with ace pitchers Mark Prior and Kerry Wood starting the final two games, Chicago collapsed against the Marlins in one of its most excruciating failures.

More than a decade later, the franchise is still chasing its first World Series championship since 1908.

"We've heard the history," center fielder Dexter Fowler said, "but at the same time we're trying to make history."

Budding star Javier Baez was in the middle of everything for the Cubs, a common theme this October. The second baseman made a sensational defensive play when the game was still close in the seventh, and his three-run double capped a five-run eighth that made it 8-1.

After busting out of his postseason slump Wednesday, Russell hit a two-run homer for the second straight game. This one was a sixth-inning drive off losing pitcher Joe Blanton that gave Chicago a 3-1 lead.

"Just rounding the bases, it was pretty exciting," Russell said. "Pumped up, not only for myself but for the team and that little cushion that Jonny had to go forward from that."

Baez had three of Chicago's 13 hits, matching the team's total in Game 4, when the Cubs snapped a 21-inning scoreless streak and won 10-2.

Lester allowed one run and five hits, improving to 2-0 in three playoff starts this year. He has given up two runs in 21 innings.

The left-hander struck out six and walked one in a slow-paced game that lasted 4 hours, 16 minutes.

"These guys won the game for us," Lester said, nodding toward Russell and Baez. "I was just kind of along for the ride."

Anthony Rizzo's run-scoring double gave the Cubs a 1-0 lead in the first.

Los Angeles tied it in the fourth on Adrian Gonzalez's RBI groundout.

Russell homered on an 0-1 pitch from Blanton, who gave up a single to Baez leading off the sixth. Baez stole second before Russell's shot to left-center put the Cubs ahead on another unusually hot night at Dodger Stadium.

Blanton took his second loss of the series. The veteran right-hander gave up consecutive homers in the eighth inning of Game 1, including a tiebreaking grand slam by pinch-hitter Miguel Montero.

"Our confidence hasn't wavered," Roberts said . "This series certainly isn't over."

With the Dodgers trailing 3-1 in the seventh, Gonzalez found himself on the wrong end of a replay review for the second consecutive night.

With Baez playing way out on the outfield grass in shallow right, the slow-footed Gonzalez tried to take advantage with a drag bunt leading off the inning. Baez rushed in for a barehanded scoop and off-balance throw, but Gonzalez initially was called safe by first base umpire Ted Barrett. The Cubs challenged and the ruling was overturned.

In Game 4, Gonzalez was tagged out at home to end the second after diving with his left hand stretched toward the plate while catcher Willson Contreras applied a tag. The Dodgers challenged, but the video review upheld umpire Angel Hernandez's out call.

Chicago jumped on struggling Dodgers rookie Kenta Maeda from the start. Fowler singled leading off the game and scored on Rizzo's double to right two batters later.

Maeda gave up one run and three hits over 3 2/3 innings. The right-hander has allowed eight earned runs in 10 2/3 innings this postseason.

The Dodgers' defense fell apart in the eighth.

Gonzalez tried flipping Russell's slow roller to reliever Pedro Baez, who came over to cover first and bobbled the ball for an error.

Contreras followed with a pinch-hit single, and the runners moved up on pinch-hitter Albert Almora Jr.'s sacrifice bunt. Fowler reached on an infield single to first, with Gonzalez losing a foot race when Fowler slid into the bag as Russell scored.

Kris Bryant reached on an infield single to third, with the Dodgers unsuccessfully challenging the call that he was safe.

The Dodgers thought they'd finally escaped the inning when Rizzo lined out to second baseman Kike Hernandez, who nearly doubled up Fowler at second. But the Cubs challenged the call and it was reversed, prolonging the inning.

Pedro Baez got yanked after walking Ben Zobrist to load the bases. Ross Stripling came on to face Javier Baez, who doubled to deep right, driving in three more runs.

"We can grab that momentum by one name: Kershaw," Gonzalez said. "We don't want to put it all on him, but if we score a couple of runs, we'll feel real good."

SCULLY RETURNS

Vin Scully was back at Dodger Stadium for the first time since ending his 67-year career behind the microphone earlier this month.

The 88-year-old Hall of Fame announcer attended as a spectator and proclaimed, "It's time for Dodger baseball!" from an upstairs suite.

UNDERSTATED

Cubs outfielder Matt Szczur isn't on the NLCS roster, but he's contributing. A day after his bat was borrowed by Rizzo to hit a home run, Szczur revealed during an in-game TV interview that Russell wore a pair of his underwear leggings Wednesday after leaving his own at home.

UP NEXT

Dodgers: Kershaw takes the mound in Chicago on an extra day of rest. The left-hander is 2-0 with a 3.72 ERA in three starts and one relief appearance this postseason. Overall, the three-time Cy Young Award winner is 4-6 with a 4.39 ERA in 17 career playoff appearances.

Cubs: Hendricks' 2.13 ERA was tops in the majors this season. The right-hander allowed a solo homer over 5 1/3 innings in Game 2, his longest career postseason start. The Cubs lost 1-0 to Kershaw.

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Cubs homer twice in 10-2 win over Dodgers; tie NLCS 2-2

LOS ANGELES (AP) — After striking out in his first two at-bats, Anthony Rizzo needed something to bust his slump. He found it in teammate Matt Szczur's bat.

Using the borrowed lumber, Rizzo homered and ended a postseason skid with three RBIs. The rest of the Chicago Cubs' hitters broke out equally as big in routing the Los Angeles Dodgers 10-2 on Wednesday to even the NL Championship Series at 2-all.

"I know Szczur's bat has a lot of hits in it," Rizzo said. "I've done it a few times this year, just switching up the bat, switching up the mindset."

Addison Russell's two-run homer highlighted a four-run fourth that stopped Chicago's 21-inning scoreless streak and ensured the NLCS will return to Wrigley Field for Game 6 on Saturday.

"It's definitely a sigh of relief to have a big night," Russell said.

Kenta Maeda is set to pitch for the Dodgers in Game 5 on Thursday against Jon Lester. Manager Dave Roberts said he will not start Clayton Kershaw on short rest after the Los Angeles ace threw a bullpen session Wednesday.

"It's not an elimination game," Roberts said.

Following consecutive shutout losses, the Cubs rapped out 13 hits on an 80-degree night with the warm Santa Ana winds fluttering the flags in center field.

Rizzo used Szczur's bat on Tuesday night and got a broken-bat single. Szczur, left off the NLCS roster, didn't mind. He wrapped another one for Game 4, figuring Rizzo might want to use the bat that is the same weight and size but a different model than his.

"I just saw him walking up with my bat, and I started laughing," Szczur said. "And then he hits a homer with it."

Rizzo and Russell had three hits each. Chicago's 3-4-5 hitters — a combined 2 for 32 in the first three games — busted out. Every Cubs starter got at least one hit except Kris Bryant, who walked twice and was hit by a pitch.

"It's contagious, just like the lack of it is contagious," Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. "When you start hitting, it's contagious, defense, this whole game really follows itself."

Los Angeles was limited to six hits and made four errors in a game that dragged on for 3 hours, 58 minutes.

"It happens, but we haven't had a game like that in a long time," Roberts said . "You've got to brush off and get ready for tomorrow."

Mike Montgomery won in relief of John Lackey, removed after consecutive walks opening the fifth. Four days shy of his 38th birthday, Lackey allowed two runs, three hits and three walks.

"I thought we put ourselves in a position to get to Lackey, but he escaped," Roberts said.

At 20 years, 68 days the youngest postseason starting pitcher in major league history, loser Julio Urias gave up four runs and four hits in 3 2/3 innings. He was the third consecutive left-hander to start for Los Angeles.

"I wish I had taken advantage of this outing," he said through a translator.

Chicago rattled off three straight hits to open the fourth, sparked by Ben Zobrist's leadoff bunt single to third.

"With the way that our bats were swinging it at the beginning of the game, we just had to do anything we could. That was my thought process," Zobrist said. "I felt like if he threw a strike, I could get one down in a good spot and was able to do it."

He took second on Javier Baez's single to left, and Willson Contreras followed with a single to nearly the same spot in shallow left, scoring Zobrist.

Baez moved to third and Contreras took second on left fielder Andrew Toles' errant throw to the plate that skidded all the way to the backstop.

Jason Heyward hit a run-scoring groundout , and Russell followed with his first extra-base hit since Sept. 30 and his first homer since Sept. 19. He jubilantly pumped an arm as he rounded the bases on his two-run drive, which put the Cubs ahead 4-0.

Rizzo homered off Pedro Baez leading off the fifth, snapping his 0-for-11 skid in the series. Rizzo had entered 2 for 26 in the postseason.

Los Angeles closed to 5-2 in the fifth. With the bases loaded and one out, Justin Turner's likely double-play grounder caromed off Montgomery's glove and Russell, who scrambled on all fours at shortstop as the ball went into left-center field for a two-run single.

"If he just gets his glove out of the way, he gets out of the inning," Maddon said.

Chicago tacked on five runs in the sixth off relievers Ross Stripling and Luis Avilan. Dexter Fowler singled in the first run, Rizzo added two more on a bases-loaded single and Javier Baez hit a sacrifice fly , with a second run scoring on an error by center fielder Joc Pederson.

By then, attention started turning to Thursday.

"It's about confidence," Maddon said, "and I want to believe they're going to show up tomorrow with a lot more confidence than they showed up with today."

YOU'RE OUT ON REPLAY

Dodgers 1B Adrian Gonzalez was tagged out at home to end the second. A sliding Gonzalez stretched his left hand toward the tip of the plate as catcher Contreras applied the tag with his left hand near Gonzalez's upper left arm.

"We've got plenty of still frames that prove I was safe," Gonzalez said. "Usually they say the play stands, but they said there wasn't enough evidence, which means they know I was safe."

The Dodgers challenged Angel Hernandez's decision, and the video review let the call stand. That drew online scorn from Washington star Bryce Harper.

"He was safe! Replay system still broke..Same thing all year long! (hashtag)DontMessItUp," Harper tweeted.

SCULLY RETURNS

Hall of Fame broadcaster Vin Scully will attend Thursday's game, his first time back at Dodger Stadium since calling his last home game on Sept. 25. The 88-year-old ended his 67-year career this month with the regular-season finale at San Francisco.

FACES IN THE CROWD

Ashton Kutcher and wife Mila Kunis announced the Dodgers' starting lineup . Also on hand were Rob Lowe, Charlie Sheen, George Lopez, Larry King and Mary Hart.

UP NEXT

Lester allowed one run in six innings of Game 1 in the series, getting a no-decision in Chicago's 8-4 victory. ... Maeda has a 9.00 ERA in two postseason appearances. He allowed three runs and four hits in four innings of the NLCS opener and didn't factor in the decision.