Showing posts with label carlos pena. Show all posts
Showing posts with label carlos pena. Show all posts

Monday, September 26, 2011

9/26/11 Chicago Cubs 0, San Diego Padres 2

Petco Park, San Diego, CA
Game 1 of 3

Casey Coleman is a GREAT pitcher. I believe in Casey Coleman.

The final series of the 2011 season finds the wayward Cubs in Petco Park to face the Padres, who very much like the Cubs are looking at a losing season with barely 70 wins and nearly 90 losses apiece. When I hear the baseball pundits complain about teams who “aren’t in the race” at the end of the season and how this may or may not affect their performance on the field, I think about games like this and I’m glad that I don’t subscribe to this way of thinking. The Cubs and the Padres both played as if they had a chance; especially Casey Coleman and his opponent Mat Latos.



Pretend for a moment that you are not aware that both of these teams are mathematically and metaphysically out of the running for a postseason appearance. The Cubs need Casey Coleman to continue his 2011 performance in the years to come…the same goes for Mat Latos, whose 2011 wasn’t quite as stellar as his 2010 campaign, but he (as well as Coleman) are damn good pitchers, and are both young enough to improve. Perhaps that’s what is driving them to excellence tonight, where they stare each other down for 5 straight innings of scoreless baseball; the greatest tangible advantage being the no-hitter that Latos has going on through those 5.

I fly my “Pitchers who can hit are sexy” flag fairly high and prominently, and I can’t imagine a day, time, year, or dissertation that could ever persuade me otherwise. That being said, Coleman breaks up Latos’ no-hitter with a 1-out triple in the top of the 6th. That’s just plain down and dirty awesome. As you may be able to tell from this photo, Coleman looks a bit peaked standing at 3rd after a run like that. Pitchers who hit well, I love it and I promote it. The same may not be said for pitchers who are aggressive baserunners…most Cubs fans still have a wince on their face from when Carlos Zambrano yanked a leg muscle a few years ago running to first to beat out a grounder and missed several starts. Here, the impact is more immediate; as soon as you can say “wow, did he really just do that??” Len Kasper and Bob Brenly immediately speculate on how Coleman’s hard drive to 3rd may affect his work on the mound in the bottom of the 6th. After all, they could be wrong…but there’s a point to be made there, couldn’t he have kept it to a double and be done with it?

Bottom of the 6th, Coleman yields a solo HR to Will Venable on a 0-1 pitch. Jason Bartlett grounds out to Coleman right after, but it seems as if the Padres have found his sweet spot as Jesus Guzman reaches on a ground-rule double that was nearly another HR. Nick Hundley strikes out swinging, but Cameron Maybin doesn’t, with a seeing-eye line drive down the left field line for a run-scoring double. The Padres are on the board, Coleman’s triple run seems to have revealed the truth in Kasper and Brenly’s statement, and Rafael Dolis gets the final out of the inning in his MLB debut.

Casey…please…next time, buddy, make it a DOUBLE.

Latos, in the meantime, stays in through the 7th inning and finishes with 9K and 1BB. Chad Qualls and Heath Bell administer 2 perfect innings and the Cubs are done for the evening.

Carlos Peña earns his 100th free pass of the season and is the 1st Cub since the 1900s to walk this many times in one season. Starlin Castro extends his hitting streak to 9 games and his on-base streak to 38 games. In addition to Dolis, Steve Clevenger makes his MLB debut.




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Sunday, August 14, 2011

8/14/11 Chicago Cubs 6, Atlanta Braves 5

Turner Field, Atlanta, GA
Game 3 of 3

Brandon Beachy is a GREAT pitcher!He’s also the only professional baseball player that I know of whose alma mater is the same as my own…so WORD, Brandon Beachy!!

The ‘rubber match’ of the strangest Cubs series of the season could only end on a stranger note than the way it started, so let’s recap with a quick game of “Cubs: TOAD or HERO?”

Game 1: TOAD = Carlos Zambrano
Game 2: HERO = Randy Wells
Game 3: HERO = Carlos Pena With one swing of his bat, he makes a 2-run HR difference between the Cubs winning and the Cubs losing.

Beachy strikes out 8 Cubs; the entire Braves pitching staff strikes out a whopping 18 Cubs total, my goodness. No Cubs walk, at all.

In his end-of-the-year ”Strange stuff…in 2011 regular season” article on ESPN.com, Jayson Stark lists this game as one of his “Five strangest but truest games of the year”:
”Only the Cubs could win an Aug. 14 game against Atlanta in which they struck out 18 times, drew no walks and committed four errors. How many other teams in modern history have won a game in which they did all that? None, of course. But remember, they're the Cubs!

Cubs fans are well-accustomed to this type of notoriety, and while it’s true that it’s been a long time since the Cubs were really this weird, in retrospect I’m glad that I not only watched this game, but committed it to record with my scoresheet…if neither had happened, I wouldn’t appreciate the events of this game quite as much.



Beyond the weirdness alluded to in Stark’s article, there is more!

Brandon Beachy (see above) really is amazing. In a weird way.

Dan Uggla’s hitting streak ENDS at 33 games; in his 3rd plate appearance Darwin Barney robs him of a clean base hit in a brilliant defensive play at which he had no real shot at making…thereby making him the most unpopular man in the entire state of Georgia.

The Cubs fail to successfully execute one of my favorite “rundown” plays ever: the less-than-traditional “6-5-plunk Jose Constanza in the back-6” play.

Those 4 errors in the game? All throwing errors.

Atlanta does not get any extra base hits.

The Cubs win 11 of their last 14 games, and they win their 4th consecutive series.

Last, but not least, Jose Constanza (who was discussed in my Game 2 post) is finally caught on camera licking his bat after getting a piece of a fastball.

First he gets a whiff of the wood, something many batters do…Then, there goes his tongue…YES, his tongue…as he gets a taste!A different angle…Can you believe this??

SCOREKEEPER’S NOTE: You read my dissertation in the Game 2 post regarding Chipper Jones being charged with an error, then seeing it vanish into thin air after the fact…in this game, the Official Scorer apparently learned the hard way that “you don’t charge Chipper with an error and get away with it,” as Chipper once again fails to make a routine throw to first in the top of the 9th, allowing Aramis Ramirez to reach 1B safely with 2 outs. Yes, the home field Official Scorer would rather give Ramirez credit for a base hit as well as open up the possibility for Craig Kimbrel to end up with at least 1 earned run, should anybody score in this inning, rather than go through the headache of charging Jones with an E and having to answer for it later on. Due to the game situation, I concur with the Official Scorer’s ruling this time around and don’t charge an E against Jones.

Why, you ask?




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Friday, August 5, 2011

8/5/11 Cincinnati Reds 3, Chicago Cubs 4

Wrigley Field, Chicago, IL
Game 1 of 3

…a game that will go down in history as
the TONY CAMPANA game

This marvelous “Tony the Blur” Cubs Error card courtesy of The Heckler, via this great post.

My only trip to “hallowed ground” Wrigley Field this year; thanks once again to my friend Bill H, who was generous enough to share his company’s season ticket seats today with me, our great pal Ranny, and my esteemed brother-in-law Mark (you know him from the BIL Tour we did in 2009 and 2010, sadly taking this year off). Also, just like last year, we are here to see the Cubs take on the Reds. Last year’s visit didn’t go so well…absolutely GREAT time, yes, but a Reds shutout of the Cubs, ewwwww…I’m here today confident that the Cubs will WIN and I will be able to hear (and sing along with) the song we all love to hear…



And hey, Cubs…let’s get things running hot right away, instead of waiting until the latter innings to do so. A leadoff single by Starlin Castro brings Tony Campana at bat, who at first squares to bunt for a ball, looks at another outside pitch from Mike Leake, and then the inexplicable happens…Campana gears up an opposite-field scorching grounder to bounce around the left field corner. Yonder Alonso is suddenly lost back there, jumping and flipping around, fidgeting for Campana’s biscuit…Castro barely crosses home plate before Campana screeches across for a standing up INSIDE THE PARK HOME RUN, Campana’s first career HR and, of course, he was nothing less than a friggin’ blur cruising around the basepaths. If you watch the clip, you can just barely spot me in the stands, with my clipboard in the air, chugging Oxygen the whole time.

Now, I have to be straight with you, my friends…after rubbing my eyes in disbelief after this occurrence, and also after having seen Yonder Alonso in Louisville with the Bats for about a year-and-a-half, my first inclination as a scorekeeper was to score this as a Hit and an Error, charged to Alonso. Before you throw fruit, just look at the replay again…the corners at Wrigley can be difficult to negotiate, but where was Alonso’s brain and/or reflexes while that ball was bouncing around like that? My first thought was, “you chump, you should have been able to at least hold Campana to a triple!” The guy behind me asked “how would you score that?” and I told him what I just shared with you, and he frankly commented “OK, sure…but what about home field advantage? [wink]” Yes, how about it…good point, bro. Ultimately, I considered Tony Campana advantage…that dude is really that darn fast, so I reversed my initial knee-jerk judgement and went with the ITP homer. I still feel I have to go on record as saying…”Yonder Alonso, what were you thinking??” UPDATE PUNCHLINE: The very next day, Alonso would again commit a costly mishandling of the ball down the line…this time his acrobatics were blamed on his stepping on a sprinkler head out there. Really???

This fantastic round trip with less than 10 minutes on the clock was a formidable pre-late innings rally for the Cubbies, and they continued their damage against the Reds with a Tyler Colvin lead-off solo HR in the 2nd and a marvelous insurance run scored by Starlin Castro on a Carlos Peña SAC fly in the 7th.

Dempster shook it up a little bit, but was fortunately facing this year’s Mike Leake (who is not last year’s Mike Leake) and with Campana’s offensive boost early on…the Cubs had a great deal to be proud of today.

Oh yeah, and Campana kept up his great game with a spectacult “Ivy Grab” in the 7th to kill a potential XBH for Brandon Phillips. In typical Marmolian fashion, the top of the 9th had me reaching for my Pepto Bismol and Tums cocktail as Carlos Marmol did his usual “enter with a Save attempt, make a great effort at blowing that opportunity, and then somehow come out smelling like a rose.” If you aren’t a Cubs fan, just ask any of us. Pitch for pitch, our Closer can make one sicker to their stomach than any other Closer you got in the major leagues. For real.

One of my favorite highlights from the game (that I unfortunately did not capture on camera, but have burned into my memory forever) was Joey Votto’s pure disgust in being struck out by Marmol in the 9th. Like the true 6th grader that he strives to resemble in terms of character, Votto slammed his bat in the brickdust in contempt, in the same way a pimply teenage would. Reds fans, don’t get me wrong, but this is what Joey Votto wants. He doesn’t hate the Cubs, he just hates Cubs fans. Feh.

What a great game. CUBS WIN. I love this team, I love this place. Enough with my half-analysis…let’s get on with the photos!!! A fantastic visit, a fantastic day! Thanks to Bill for the opportunity, and to Ranny and Mark for sharing their time with us.

…and thank you, Dr Shelley, for hosting the ‘real quick’ tour of Marina City for my friends and for the beers and camaraderie…you’re too generous!!

The greatest place in the WORLD…Wrigleyville before the game! (Photo taken in front of Sports Corner)


Ranny, Mark, and Bill at the Cubby Bear before the game


Let’s score the game with The Baseball Enthusiast!!...a boy with his ultra-green clipboard and a few Old Style beers


My posse (L to R: Stevo-sama, Bill, Mark, and Ranny) in our great seats (228-3-8)…note the multi-tasking scorekeeper!


Starlin Castro at bat



Carlos Peña at bat




Right Field stands, from our seats

Closeup featuring the old Torco sign with today’s Miller Lite banner


Jay Bruce at bat, hoping that for today only he is unable to help out my Fantasy team


Ramon Hernandez faces Ryan Dempster, Yonder Alonso on deck


Is this a Cubs game or a Bats game? Of course I know the difference, but Todd Frazier is playing today, so here are a few obligatory Todd Frazier photos

Todd walks in the 4th inning and reaches 1B

Todd approaches the plate in the 6th inning



Dempster delivers the pitch that Todd held back on for Ball Four, his second consecutive free pass today




Yonder Alonso faces Ryan Dempster in the 6th inning



Alfonso Soriano faces Mike Leake in the bottom of the 6th with 2 on and no outs (Soriano magnificently grounds out to 3B)


The beautiful Wrigley Scoreboard during Soriano’s at bat…long may it stay there!!


Starlin Castro at bat in the 7th


Tony Campana at bat in the 7th, still standing after rounding the bases in the 1st!

Tony squares up to bunt

Tony looks at a strike from Jose Arredondo…surprise surprise, on the next pitch he sends a screamer into left center to score Castro!


Carlos Peña faces the bionic man, LHP Bill Bray, with 2 on and nobody out



The Center Field stands and Scoreboard during Peña’s at bat


Soriano faces the high-back-leg-kicking righty reliever Logan Ondrusek


“Kid K” Kerry Wood warms up in the 8th inning

Ramon Hernandez vs. Kerry Wood; Ramon wins with a solo HR to left field

Yonder Alonso looks at a Kerry Wood fastball for a strike


Koyie Hill faces the Cuban MISSile Crisis himself, LHP Aroldis Chapman, in the 8th inning and strikes out swinging


DAR-win! BAR-ney! *clap clap clapclapclap*



Good eye, buddy…take your base!! Chapman walks Barney after 2 back-to-back swinging strikeouts


Starlin Castro faces Chapman; with one swing (this one) he belts a single between first and second

Castro at 1B, Barney at 2B


Carlos Marmol with a Save opportunity…I think that’s Ramon Hernandez again


CUBS WIN!!, here’s a ‘designed shot’ of the Scoreboard during “Go Cubs Go,” where the verse ”to be the BEST in the National League” is displayed…

Final Score, bleachers emptying…


Bill, Stevo-sama, and Ranny – mugshot near the visitors’ dugout


Bill, Stevo-sama (with Heavy Metal fist-pose), Ranny, and Mark…game’s over, let’s go get a BEER!! Go CUBS!!





Today’s issue of VineLine, the Official Magazine/Program and Scorecard of the Chicago Cubs…Darwin Barney on the cover! w00t!







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