Wrigley Field, Chicago, IL
Game 2 of 3
I don’t mean to sound like a religious freak, but I prayed for a good start on the behalf of Paul Maholm this morning.
Hey, I’m not kidding. I really did.
One of the brightest moments of the Cubs’ somewhat snarky off-season signings was their acquisition of Paul Maholm from the Pirates as a free agent. Don’t ask me to provide any splits or spray charts, but I like Paul Maholm. As a guy, as a player, and as a pitcher. I like his stuff, and I like his attitude. I’m less surprised the Pirates let him go (free agency; it is what it is) but more surprised the Cubs were able to pick him up. When the Cubs pick up a great pitcher from the Pirates, you’ve gotta say “hey, that’s great.”
In 2011, the Pirates pwned the Cubs; with Maholm on the mound the Pirates were 2-2, Maholm was 2-1 with a no decision…some of us are still rubbing our eyes after his CG shutout of the Cubs at Wrigley on 5/28/11. Cub fans know he’s pretty good, and we also know better than to hold our breath until something better might come along. A 4.36 ERA, 96 ERA+, 5.5 SO/9 and 1.85 SO/BB in 7 seasons with the Buccos is definitely nothing to sneeze at. He has great stuff, he seems to have recovered from his shaky 2010 season, and he really really is a great person. A hard-working, honest pitcher.
His first 2 starts for the Cubs this year were kinda rough, and while it’s too early to write off anyone’s success (or lack thereof), I realized that his record against the Cubs last year notwithstanding, in 26 starts for the Pirates last year, he never once faced the Reds. Call it something special in my coffee, or a bright notion in my heart, but I thought it best to give some thanks and ask for a positive outing for Maholm today…not to set any record straight (I don’t need that), but to give him and the Cubs a boost of confidence while they wade through the first few weeks of what is looking to be a season that is every bit as dismal as most of us could have imagined. I mean, what can it hurt?
After the Cubs graciously afforded Homer Bailey the opportunity to reflect upon his performance and feel like a good pitcher in Game 1 of the series, the Cubs came back and helped Paul Maholm (and the rest of the team) clear his cobwebs with a well-played win. Maholm pitched a season-high 6 innings, allowing only 4 hits, 1 ER, 3BB and 5K. Maholm starts with another shaky 1st inning, but settles down to keep the Reds handcuffed.
The Cubs broke out of their spell with 20 total bases, going 5-15 with RISP. Only Blake DeWitt and Ian Stewart fail to score a runner. The Reds, on the other hand, go 2-10 with RISP and can’t seem to figure out Maholm or the lukewarm Cubs bullpen. The big surprise for me was the unlucky outing of Cincinnati’s Mike Leake…he doesn’t seem to be the guy he was 2 years ago, and while I did pray for Maholm’s success, I may have sealed the deal by choosing Leake over Maholm in Pitch or Ditch…but that’s OK, my conscience is clear. Leake’s 5 ER are the most runs he’s ever allowed vs. the Cubs in any of his 8 career starts against them.
The wagon is still broken, there are lots of things happening (and not happening) with the Cubs this year, but today…you couldn’t get the smile off of my face with a blowtorch. That just isn’t going to happen.
Go CUBS!
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Showing posts with label mike leake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mike leake. Show all posts
Monday, April 23, 2012
Tuesday, September 6, 2011
9/6/11 Cincinnati Reds 4, Chicago Cubs 2
Wrigley Field, Chicago, IL
Game 2 of 3

I will suspend the shoplifting jokes…as if I had ever participated in them in the first place…but this was Mike Leake’s gem that wasn’t a gem…

Rodrigo Lopez was pretty impressive tonight, and considering the circumstances might have been remembered for a “fairly decent outing”…however, former Reds pitching phenom Mike Leake was decidedly on his way to Reds history, pitching 8 scoreless innings of 1-hit 6K baseball (he threw only 91 pitches, 65 for strikes...that's HUGE), until a 2-out 2 RBI Homer by Bryan LaHair tied the game, forced extra innings, and shut the door on what would have been the outing of Leake’s career.
It was also Bryan LaHair’s first HR as a Cub.
Dave Sappelt and Chris Valaika make their 1st MLB starts; Sappelt goes 3-for-5 with a double and a run scored, Valaika goes 0-for-2 with a walk and leaves the game in the 9th, replaced by Paul Janish.




If you enjoy my work, I encourage you to spread the word via Twitter
(I am @yoshiki89), and also please leave a comment!
Game 2 of 3

I will suspend the shoplifting jokes…as if I had ever participated in them in the first place…but this was Mike Leake’s gem that wasn’t a gem…

Rodrigo Lopez was pretty impressive tonight, and considering the circumstances might have been remembered for a “fairly decent outing”…however, former Reds pitching phenom Mike Leake was decidedly on his way to Reds history, pitching 8 scoreless innings of 1-hit 6K baseball (he threw only 91 pitches, 65 for strikes...that's HUGE), until a 2-out 2 RBI Homer by Bryan LaHair tied the game, forced extra innings, and shut the door on what would have been the outing of Leake’s career.
It was also Bryan LaHair’s first HR as a Cub.
Dave Sappelt and Chris Valaika make their 1st MLB starts; Sappelt goes 3-for-5 with a double and a run scored, Valaika goes 0-for-2 with a walk and leaves the game in the 9th, replaced by Paul Janish.




If you enjoy my work, I encourage you to spread the word via Twitter
(I am @yoshiki89), and also please leave a comment!
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!
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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