Cleveland 1, Cubs 0 (World Series Game Three)

In Commentary And Analysis by berselius115 Comments

OSS: That’s not quite what I expected.

Three+ up:

  1. Jorge Soler had a good day at the plate, going 2-3 with a single and a Chisenhall/wind assisted triple as well as a great throw to third base to take out the soon to be lead runner on the lone Cleveland RBI. At least one move today turned out to be right. FWIW I don’t think Heyward gets to that ball either, he would probably have been playing even deeper.
  2. Kyle Hendricks had the most efficient >1 strikeout per inning outing I’ve seen, even more impressive considering how he was stranding baserunners all night. The bullpen in general did a pretty good job with the number of innings that was handed them, but one run was all it took.
  3. Rizzo got the rally started in the ninth with a leadoff single, which was the biggest positive WPA play for either offense.
  4. Javy had a brutal day at the plate, but we still got out typical one incredible defensive play per game in this one, where Javy ranged over to get a ball that got past Rizzo and still managed to throw out a runner at first base.

Too many down

  1. What the hell happened? I get Cleveland not getting much loft on the ball against a ground ball guy like Hendricks, but neither team was able to take any advantage at all with the wind howling out in this game. I think the hardest hit ball of the night was the screaming liner off Montero’s bat in the fifth off Miller, as unlikely an outcome as you would guess. As it went in this game, it was hit right at an Indians defender. Soler’s wind-triple was the only one that I can remember that got much loft on it that wasn’t simply popped up. Tomlin should have been a guy the Cubs destroyed, I don’t get this at all. Except that baseball happens. Fack. The Cubs let one get away.
  2. Also, what the hell Joe? I sort of get bringing Montero in to try to commit to Miller early, but then leaving him in to hit rather than bringing in Almora doesn’t make a whole ton of sense. Even worse was leaving Edwards in for so long, including letting him give up the game winning hit to a lefty when Montgomery was right there in the pen. Well, Crisp is a switch hitter, but he hits RHP better than lefties, and Edwards isn’t exactly a long man. To quote GW, “At least if the Cubs lose, they can say they had their fourth-best reliever going.
  3. The Cubs were swinging all over the damn place last night against these pitchers, Bryant and Baez in particular. Ugh.

Next up: John Lackey faces Hans Kluber, pitching on short rest, at 7 PM CT tomorrow. We’re going to need some more beer for this one. They’re still a great team, but gotta get out of this hole first.

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Comments

  1. Smokestack Lightning

    I’ve been varying degrees of irritated that John Lackey is a Cub for almost a year now, and at no point have I thought he’s pitched well, even when he’s pitched well.

    Time for him to shut me right up for good (or at least until ST next year).

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  2. mebphd

    Time for the Cubs hitters to stop swinging at the low outside breaking ball, the eye-high fastball, and start swinging at those pitches down the middle that they spent too much time watching in games 1 and 3. Time to stop failing. Just effing stop failing. It isn’t cute. It isn’t adorable. It isn’t admirable. I don’t care about their character, grit, effort, or anything other than winning. Win. Just win. Enough losing already. And I don’t care that they won 103 games in the regular season. I don’t care that they beat SF and LA. I care about now. Win now. This franchise has kicked my ass, and abused my hopes for far far far too long. No more. Win this year. Win this series. Win.

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  3. SK

    Hans Klüber (* 25. November 1902 in Köln; † 1. November 1981 in Mannheim) war ein deutscher Politiker (SPD).

    If the Cubs can’t beat this guy they don’t deserve a championship.

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  4. dmick89

    JonKneeV,

    I’ve always wondered why people thought he was so awesome. I’m not sure he’s made me laugh in 20 years. It pisses me off he gets so much attention from FOX when the Cubs are in the playoffs.

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  5. Albaloney

    dmick89:
    JonKneeV,

    I’ve always wondered why people thought he was so awesome. I’m not sure he’s made me laugh in 20 years. It pisses me off he gets so much attention from FOX when the Cubs are in the playoffs.

    I’ll take that over Dempster’s “comedy” routine any day of the week.

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  6. WaLi

    dmick89,

    He seems like a generally nice guy, is a huge Cubs fan (and Chicgao sports fan), and was hilarious in his prime. In the past 20 years he hasn’t really starred in any movies (sweeps Garfield under the rug) so that may be why he hasn’t made you laugh in 20 years. I don’t think he goes looking for attention, it just finds him. He seems like he would prefer to be out of the spot light. I’m not a huge Bill Murray fan by any means, but don’t think he warrants any dislike either.

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  7. SK

    Soft spot for Bill Murray here even if he can be irritating. We are from the same neighborhood and I used to know his (much younger) brother Joel. I was even a terrible 14 year old caddy at the same country club he worked at.

    That daffy duck thing was a tribute to Harry Caray though, right?

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  8. dmick89

    If i was Joe, I’d be starting Lester tonight. I don’t think the Cubs have much of a chance of winning three more games, but they’d have a better chance of doing it if Lester started tonight. For some stupid reason, the Cubs offense can’t piece together back to back hits more than a couple times a week these days.

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  9. dmick89

    SK: That daffy duck thing was a tribute to Harry Caray though, right?

    Pretty poor tribute if that’s what it was intended to be. Why give him a tribute anyway? Why not mention some of the great Cubs players who never got the chance to play in a World Series? If people feel the need to honor someone, honor the ones who actually deserve it. That list of players includes Sammy Sosa, but I’ve given up hope this organization will do what’s right with Sosa anytime soon.

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  10. cerulean

    Smokestack Lightning:
    I’ve been varying degrees of irritated that John Lackey is a Cub for almost a year now, and at no point have I thought he’s pitched well, even when he’s pitched well.

    Time for him to shut me right up for good (or at least until ST next year).

    You’ve just invoked the curse of the Fourth Horseman. Nice job. Cubs lose.

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  11. cerulean

    Bill Murray is the living embodiment of the fundamental conflict of existence—Man vs Meaninglessness. I appreciate his ability to point out the futility of the struggle and continue despite it.

    Edited to eliminate hyperbole.

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  12. EnricoPallazzo

    mebphd:
    Time for the Cubs hitters to stop swinging at the low outside breaking ball, the eye-high fastball, and start swinging at those pitches down the middle that they spent too much time watching in games 1 and 3.Time to stop failing. Just effing stop failing. It isn’t cute. It isn’t adorable. It isn’t admirable. I don’t care about their character, grit, effort, or anything other than winning. Win. Just win. Enough losing already. And I don’t care that they won 103 games in the regular season. I don’t care that they beat SF and LA. I care about now. Win now. This franchise has kicked my ass, and abused my hopes for far far far too long. No more. Win this year. Win this series. Win.

    They will.

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  13. Perkins

    Saw some guy on BN talking about how Cubs fans in Cleveland were so much louder because real fans travel.

    Or it’s because the Cubs did fuck all at the plate last night. I was there last night: the crowd was fired up when Hendricks got strikeouts and when the Cubs got out of jams. There’s just not a lot to get excited about when Josh fucking Tomlin is shutting down the best team in MLB.

    This is why I don’t participate at BN.

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  14. Smokestack Lightning

    dmick89: If i was Joe, I’d be starting Lester tonight.

    I’d probably do this too if I were Joe, but he has to weigh that against the high probability Lackey would hang him from the scoreboard before he could submit the lineup card.

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  15. Smokestack Lightning

    Still can’t figure out why the Cubs were swinging out of their shoes out of the zone all night when they made their bones all year by not doing that.

    I just don’t get it. You adopt an intelligent, patient approach that makes you one of the very best offenses in all of baseball, and then you totally abandon it against some soft-tossing mediocrity… why?

    When has “swinging at everything, strike zone be damned” ever fucking worked?

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  16. Smokestack Lightning

    Can’t wait ’til tonight, though, for the Cubs to readopt their “patient” approach, and look at strike three 2000 times again.

    Man, I’m in a good mood.

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  17. Perkins

    Smokestack Lightning,

    I think the aggression (against Tomlin, at least) was intentional. His BB% this year was 2.8%, and he’s never been a guy to walk many. And he has a huge HR/FB rate while being an extreme flyball pitcher.

    A guy who pounds the zone with less than quality stuff on a night with the wind howling out should be cake to take deep. It just didn’t work put that way because baseball is an asshole.

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  18. dmick89

    If this series goes six, it will be even more frustrating watching Tomlin shut this team down on short rest.

    Why did this offense have to shit the bed in the postseason?

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  19. Author
    berselius

    dmick89:
    It’s not all bad news. The Cubs will at least be able to brag all next year about how they beat Trevor Bauer.

    They took him behind the podshed

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  20. Smokestack Lightning

    Perkins: I think the aggression (against Tomlin, at least) was intentional. His BB% this year was 2.8%, and he’s never been a guy to walk many. And he has a huge HR/FB rate while being an extreme flyball pitcher.

    All true, but I don’t see why it means the Cubs should change their approach, which at its simplest form is “Don’t swing at stupid shit.” Suddenly changing course to a “Let’s all be Javy tonight” when your regular approach would destroy Josh Tomlin as well or better than any switch to aggressiveness is baffling. Josh Tomlin is trying to build the case for his own DFA every time he takes the mound. Maybe it’s just baseball doing baseball things when he miraculously has a good start, but I saw a lot of swinging at nonsense out of the zone last night. Just dumb baseball. And this team does not generally play dumb baseball.

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  21. Rizzo the Rat

    The Cubs’ offensive performance was frustrating but meaningless. James Shields held this team scoreless for 7.2 innings. The next day, they scored 8 runs, and the day after that they beat Chris Sale. Strange things happen in small sample sizes.

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  22. Rizzo the Rat

    Also, while much has been made about the wind blowing out, I’m not sure the weather conditions were hitter-friendly. It was damp and cold, and the ball didn’t seem to carry much for either team.

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  23. Smokestack Lightning

    Rizzo the Rat: Strange Stupid things happen in small sample sizes.

    Nah, I’m not chalking this one up to variance. Cubs played dumb baseball at the plate last night. They saw the wind was blowing out, heard that Tomlin gives up more than the occasional HR, and threw away their typical approach, expanded their zone, and handed the Indians a gift.

    That said, as you astutely pointed out, whatever happened last night doesn’t mean the same thing will happen going forward. This team can beat anybody.

    But I can’t agree that last night was baseball being baseball. Cubs blew it.

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  24. GW

    berselius: They took him behind the podshed

    (dying laughing) In Bauer’s defense, he was eight when that movie came out, which is pretty much peak age to become a fanboy of whatever is right in front of you. My guess is that a lot of people his age feel that way, but aren’t as honest.

    I mean, how many people born in the late 70s prefer The Goonies to, say, The Great Escape or Laurence of Arabia, or whatever.

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  25. Perkins

    Lot of high stress pitches for Hendricks last night, and a lot of runners on base. While most of the contact against him was on the ground, it sounded like harder contact than usual.

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  26. Perkins

    GW,

    Tastes are supposed to evolve as one gets older, though. I was 16 when Episode II came out, and kind of enjoyed it. But I also understood fuck all about screenwriting and chemistry between actors. Now I find the movie mostly objectionable.

    Though I’ll never not enjoy seeing a bunch of Jedi fighting a bunch of robots. (dying laughing)

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  27. GW

    Perkins,

    That would be nice. But I think it’s overly optimistic.

    To take another tack, I know that I will never enjoy a Cubs team as much as I did the ’89 Cubs. They are my “favorite” Cubs team, even though they were nowhere near as good as the Cubs are now.

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  28. Perkins

    GW,

    Fair. I’ll always have a soft spot for the ’08 team, even though last year’s and this year’s teams were objectively better.

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  29. Millertime

    I feel like as far as celebriteis go, having Bill Murray as your go to Camera Celebrity isn’t too bad. Every start that Murray gets in the “Camera Celebrity” spot is one less start that Jeff Garlin gets.

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  30. Perkins

    SK,

    On a couple of occasions, my Latin teacher took the class there in lieu of learning because we were well ahead of pace. It was pretty rad.

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  31. Millertime

    SK,

    I know it’s dumb, but the 2008, 2003, and 1998 teams are all teams I like better than the 15/16 Cubs. Not that I dislike the 15/16 Cubs by any means. 1998 because of the HR chase, and Kerry Wood being awesome. 2003 because I had totally dropped off as a Cubs fan until the playoffs. Even though they botched that double play in game 6 and lost the series, it really re-ignited my fandom. 2008 was great because it had so many of my favorite players.

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  32. SK

    Cubs winning % was .640
    Postseason winning % so far is .615
    Cubs win almost two out of three.
    Having lost 2 out of the last 3, they are due to win at a about a .750 rate the next few games. Which is good, because they need to.

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  33. Perkins

    SK:
    Perkins,

    Loved the ’08 team.

    They were a hell of a lot of fun. Good combination of expected talent and pleasant surprises. Like turning Ryan Dempster from a mediocre closer into a frontline starter, and getting great production out of reanimated Jim Edmonds.

    It was also awesome feeling like every time Aramis Ramirez came up in a clutch situation, he’d deliver. He was a really fun player to watch.

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  34. Rizzo the Rat

    I have a soft spot for 2014. Breakout seasons by Rondon, Rizzo and Arrieta. Samardzija made himself a valuable trade piece. Bryant was tearing it up in the minors. Pivotal year, though the team became unwatchable after they traded half their rotation and their two best hitters went on the DL. Also, that outfield was atrocious.

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  35. Smokestack Lightning

    Millertime:
    SK,

    I know it’s dumb, but the 2008, 2003, and 1998 teams are all teams I like better than the 15/16 Cubs.Not that I dislike the 15/16 Cubs by any means.1998 because of the HR chase, and Kerry Wood being awesome.2003 because I had totally dropped off as a Cubs fan until the playoffs.Even though they botched that double play in game 6 and lost the series, it really re-ignited my fandom.2008 was great because it had so many of my favorite players.

    I don’t think any of that’s dumb at all. I prefer 2003-04 to this current Cubs juggernaut. It was an awakening for me. I’d gotten used to the Cubs only surfacing from the murk of perpetual mediocrity to be good by accident every ten years or so, and the idea that the organization would one day look to be good long-term was something that I had long given up on. This current Cubs team is v3 of what was started 13 years ago. It’s certainly the best, most dominant version yet, but the first is still the most special to me.

    Also, I loved Sammy to the bitter end. And I always tend to go bonkers for pitchers who miss all the bats. Watching peak Wood/Prior/Z was among the purest joys I had as a baseball/Cubs fan. Not even watching Bryant, Rizzo, et al, turn into superstars has been able to touch it yet.

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  36. Author
    berselius

    Rizzo the Rat: Also, that outfield was atrocious.

    Good point, the underrated move of that offseason was switching to Scotts Turf Builder Plus™ for all their lawn care needs.

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  37. Millertime

    Kipnis, on the Indians breaking the Cubs fans’ hearts: “I love it,” said Indians second baseman Jason Kipnis, a man who grew up outside of Chicago, dreaming of playing in a World Series at Wrigley Field. “I hope we break all of them. I hope we break every single one of them. I hope I come home for Thanksgiving, Christmas, the offseason, and I just want to have a smile on my face when I look at all these Cubs fans.”

    I actually think that’s awesome. I would love to have a player with that kind of attitude on the Cubs.

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  38. Millertime

    cerulean,

    I think I disliked 2009 the most because it seemed like everyone just became shitty, all at once. Bradley played ok, but something about him and Cubs fans brought out the worst in each other, and that whole relationship just sucked all year. Non-stop complaining about Bradley, Soriano, Ramirez, Fukudome, Soto, Marmol, Zambrano, Harden. Just a really crappy experience.

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  39. Rizzo the Rat

    My only problem with Lackey is that sometimes he over-emotes when he should be getting into position, e.g. to cover a base. He needs to take up meditation or something.

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  40. Perkins

    I think Hammel is the only person on this team I’d come close to disliking, and I don’t dislike him. It’s just annoying to see people bitch about being taken out of games when their performance doesn’t warrant being left in.

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  41. Rizzo the Rat

    Lackey earned my respect with his willingness to come out of the bullpen in those extra-inning games. According to Maddon, he went to the pen with no hesitation whatsoever. His DL stint may have been partly a result of all those extra warm-up pitches he threw.

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  42. dmick89

    Rizzo the Rat,

    I don’t really care, but why would breaking the hearts of millions be so enjoyable? What should be enjoyable is winning and it should be unfortunate that so many have their hearts broken. Athletes are fucking morons though and Kipnis is no exception.

    It’s just a dumb thing to say. It’s a dumb thing to think about to be honest. Why the fuck would he care about Cubs fans at this point?

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  43. Smokestack Lightning

    Millertime:
    Kipnis, on the Indians breaking the Cubs fans’ hearts: “I love it,” said Indians second baseman Jason Kipnis, a man who grew up outside of Chicago, dreaming of playing in a World Series at Wrigley Field. “I hope we break all of them. I hope we break every single one of them. I hope I come home for Thanksgiving, Christmas, the offseason, and I just want to have a smile on my face when I look at all these Cubs fans.”

    I actually think that’s awesome.I would love to have a player with that kind of attitude on the Cubs.

    That’s all bullshit. Kipnis cried when the Cubs won the pennant. Now he’s overcompensating so Cleveland fans don’t think he’s a Judas.

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  44. Perkins

    I think a lot of the personality traits that bother people about Lackey will also bother them about Lester in a few years. Except the resting dickface; that’s all Lackey.

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  45. Smokestack Lightning

    Rizzo the Rat: Yeah, he’s signaling his loyalty.

    He’s likely caught some heat for his pro-Cubs-related comments, not unlike a guy saying nice things about his ex-girlfriend, and then having to turn and reassure his current girl that not only did he not mean any of it, but he hates that bitch.

    I fully expect Kipnis to rush the field with the rest of the Cubs if they pull this out.

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  46. Smokestack Lightning

    dmick89:
    Rizzo the Rat,

    I don’t really care, but why would breaking the hearts of millions be so enjoyable? What should be enjoyable is winning and it should be unfortunate that so many have their hearts broken. Athletes are fucking morons though and Kipnis is no exception.

    It’s just a dumb thing to say. It’s a dumb thing to think about to be honest. Why the fuck would he care about Cubs fans at this point?

    Also, Kipnis comes from a family of rabid Cubs fans, so my guess is he was, in addition to hiding where his true loyalty lies, also trolling them.

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  47. cerulean

    berselius:
    *guy peeking behind brick wall* I wouldn’t have minded Coghlan in LF and Baez on the bench

    Didn’t Coghlan look terrible against Hans on Tuesday? I get matchups and frustration with Javy, but meh.

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  48. Rizzo the Rat

    Smokestack Lightning,

    I don’t think he’s hiding his “true loyalty.” He’s a member of a team, and he worked hard to help get his team as far as he has. I have no doubt he really wants to win this thing. But I’m sure he is trolling to an extent, which is why I said, “it’s fun to play the villain.”

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  49. Millertime

    dmick89: why would breaking the hearts of millions be so enjoyable

    Because it would mean the Indians had won the series. I don’t think he should actively try to break fans hearts, but I don’t think he should feel bad about it either.

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  50. cerulean

    So Jose Fernandez had cocaine and lots of alcohol in his system when he died. Anybody here up for vilifying him like Taveras? Did he reap his just reward? Did he deserve to die?

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  51. Author
    berselius

    cerulean:
    So Jose Fernandez had cocaine and lots of alcohol in his system when he died. Anybody here up for vilifying him like Taveras? Did he reap his just reward? Did he deserve to die?

    Fuck that shit. Neither of those guys deserved to die.

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  52. dmick89

    Millertime,

    He shouldn’t feel bad about it. That would be about as stupid as anything, but say you want to win. Do you think there’s a single Cubs player who gives a single fuck about any Indians fan? I sure hope not because that would be fucking stupid. I hope all the Cubs players want to beat the Indians and give zero fucks how that makes the Indians fans feel.

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  53. Author
    berselius

    cerulean: Didn’t Coghlan look terrible against Hans on Tuesday? I get matchups and frustration with Javy, but meh.

    Just seems like the worst kind of matchup for Javy at the plate, the guy has some of the best breaking stuff in baseball.

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  54. Smokestack Lightning

    Rizzo the Rat: I don’t think he’s hiding his “true loyalty.”

    I was being facetious with that part.

    Same with the expectation that he’d rush the field with the Cubs if they were to win.

    He was a big-time Cubs fan for most of his life, tho. And he did weep when they won the pennant.

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  55. Perkins

    cerulean:
    So Jose Fernandez had cocaine and lots of alcohol in his system when he died. Anybody here up for vilifying him like Taveras? Did he reap his just reward? Did he deserve to die?

    Jose wasn’t driving the boat, if I’m not mistaken. Shitty situation all around, whatever the case may be.

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  56. Smokestack Lightning

    cerulean: Anybody here up for vilifying him like Taveras?

    Did we do that with Taveras here?

    I seem to recall everybody here being sad about it. BN might have been gloat-y and judge-y. But that’s BN, whose comments section is the Khloe Kardashian of the Cubosphere to BCB’s Kim.

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  57. cerulean

    dmick89,

    Agreed 100%. And I would bet that Fernandez was driving the boat too—it was his boat. It’s almost exactly the same as Taveras, except that instead of killing his girlfriend, it was “just” two friends.

    The point of the provocative question is that it is okay to tolerate others honoring the life of a friend even if they died by their own hand, intentionally, idiotically, or otherwise.

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  58. cerulean

    Perkins: Jose wasn’t driving the boat, if I’m not mistaken. Shitty situation all around, whatever the case may be.

    There is no way to tell who was driving, but the report said it was Jose’s boat. If he wasn’t driving at that moment, he almost certainly was driving during the excursion.

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  59. Smokestack Lightning

    Perkins:
    Smokestack Lightning,

    I was…less than generous about Taveras. A good friend of mine got killed by a drunk driver at 19, so I have a pretty short fuse about that.

    There’s legit reason to be angry with Taveras in that sort of situation, but that’s different from the gloating and really nasty stuff I seem to recall seeing in other comment sections. One can be angry and refrain from the “They got what was coming to them and I’m glad it happened” kind of sentiment.

    If J-Fer was driving the boat, he did a dumbfuck thing that cost him his life and the lives of his friends. If someone else was driving, then they did a dumbfuck thing that cost lives. I don’t think any of them deserved to die for the coke and booze, but that doesn’t change how reckless and foolish they were.

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  60. dmick89

    Assuming the passengers are adults, they are responsible for their own actions (getting in a car with a drunk driver or in a boat with someone on cocaine). They know the risk.

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  61. Perkins

    On a lighter note, I don’t think Joe West is calling balls or strikes tonight or tomorrow. With Lackey and Lester pitching, that’s a plus.

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  62. Smokestack Lightning

    cerulean:
    Smokestack Lightning,

    We are all reckless fools some of the time. We are probably more likely to die or cause the death of others during these moments. That’s fucking life.

    Yep. I can think of at least a couple of occasions when I was younger where I was being a irresponsible dipshit and could have caused at minimum lifelong harm to someone else.

    So while I’m not pleased Fernandez either exhibited or was the victim of fatally poor judgment, I also wish he’d caught the breaks the rest of us have gotten and was still alive and well today.

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  63. cerulean

    dmick89:
    Assuming the passengers are adults, they are responsible for their own actions (getting in a car with a drunk driver or in a boat with someone on cocaine). They know the risk.

    I disagree. They are probably as blind to the risk as the others.

    And more fundamentally, we cannot know the risk of things beforehand. We can guess with greater or lesser degrees of accuracy, but guesswork is not knowledge.

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  64. cerulean

    One last tidbit on foolishness and Fernandez. He jumped out of a boat to save someone who had fallen into the ocean during his final and successful escape attempt from Cuba. He ended up saving his mother’s life. That reckless disregard for one’s own mortality is the same kind of reckless disregard that led to his death. It’s a kind of mental acuity that athletes hone because its a necessary requirement for success.

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  65. dmick89

    cerulean: And more fundamentally, we cannot know the risk of things beforehand. We can guess with greater or lesser degrees of accuracy, but guesswork is not knowledge.

    Perhaps they don’t know the degree to which they are at risk, but I don’t buy that adults aren’t aware of the dangers of drinking and driving or operating any motorized vehicle under the influence. I’m willing to cut the passengers on Fernandez’s boat more slack because boating and getting intoxicate have gone together quite well for a long time. Still, they are responsible for their own actions.

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