Author: Tom Stryker - Wednesday, June 25, 2008
There are plenty of signs regarding the Cubs' World Series chances - both
good and bad. Do you want the cup to be half empty or half full?
Let's look at the good signs first.
The Cubs rank fourth in ERA among all Major League teams (3.67). The Cubs to
date have the highest team batting average in both leagues (.283). So they are
taking care of business both offensively and defensively.
The Cubs, entering Tuesday's series against the Baltimore Orioles, have won 14
straight home games and are an incredible 32-8 at home.
Chicago has a blend of power and speed, a bench that continues to produce and a
bullpen that features one-time strikeout master Kerry Wood, who has notched 19
saves through the first half.
All of the above can't be fashioned by a flash-in-the-pan ballclub over a
stretch of 76 games. But there is some bad news too.
The Cubs are only 16-20 on the road and have to bolster that mark if they are
going to stay ahead of the St. Louis Cardinals and Milwaukee Brewers, who
currently only trail the Cubs by 4 1/2 and 6 1/2 games respectively.
After a 3-game home series with Baltimore, the Cubs play 10 straight on the road
and have only 10 home games the entire month of July.
Two of the Cubs biggest stars are injured - outfielder Alfonso Soriano and
All-Star pitcher Carlos Zambrano. (There is some good news here, however.
Zambrano had no structural damage to his injured throwing shoulder and is only
expected to miss a couple of starts. Soriano, similarly will be back not long
after the All-Star break).
Sometime baffling reliever Carlos Marmol has lost his touch of late. After
posting an ERA of 1.69 in April and 1.93 in May, Marmol's ERA in June is 9.00.
He will have to regain his form if the Cubs want to hang on.
Ryan Dempster, an amazing story with his 9-2 record as a starter after spending
last year in the bullpen, has already thrown more than 100 innings. How much
will he have left in September?
The Cubs have plenty of young talent, enough that good to be trade bait for
another solid starter in case Zambrano or Dempster flounder. C.C. Sabathia or
Rich Harden seems to be on the Cubs wish list.
Despite the 100-year drought, the jinxes, all the ghostly stories, etc., there
is reason for optimism.
Derek Lee at first and Aramis Ramirez at third give the Cubs proven power and
experience at the corners. After a weekend sweep of the Chicago White Sox, Lee
was hitting 294 with 15 homers and 48 rbi, while Ramirez was at .299 with 14
homers and a team-leading 53 rbi.
Second-baseman Ryan Theriot leads the regulars with a .310 average and "rookie"
Kosuke Fukodome is at 297. Even catcher Geovany Soto, in his first full season,
has been a force with his .274 average, 12 homers and 43 rbi.
Manager Lou Piniella also can be considered on the plus side of the Cubs'
ledger. The once volatile, seasoned leader, has been pushing all the right
buttons so far.
Just keep an eye out for black cats, billy goats and an assortment of other
potential jinxes.
The year of the Cub? Could be.
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