One of the Finest Days in Cubs History: September 27, 2003

In Commentary And Analysis by Obstructed View Staff99 Comments

Here we are, in a Cubs baseball season that was deposited into the septic tank of history approximately 150 days ago.  If you can name the Cubs current starting rotation, well, that’s just sad.  Get a life. The Cubs underperformed major-league caliber baseball again today, but let’s forget about that and find something else to think about. We could celebrate the 172nd birthday of Thomas Nast by smashing piñatas in the form of GOP elephants and Democratic Donkeys (because Santa Claus and Uncle Sam should never be piñatas).  We could muster as much excitement as possible over Saturday night’s Toledo-Western Michigan game.  We could lament the loss of the NHL preseason. Or, we could reflect on how, only 9 years and 2 days ago, the Cubs had one of their best days in history.

On the morning of Sept 27, 2003, the Cubs were half a game in front of Houston for the NL Central lead, with 3 games left to play. They had to play a double header against Pittsburgh because the previous night’s game was rained out.  Mark Prior started game 1 and would eventually go 6.2 innings, striking out 10, on his way to win #18 and a lifetime of arm trouble. He only threw 133 pitches that day which was OK, because he only threw 131 in his previous outing, so he was rested.  Kyle Farnsworth and one of my all-time favorite Cubs, Joe Borowski, closed out the game.  The score was 4-2.  Josh Fogg took the loss. The offensive star was Situational Hitting, in a cameo appearance in Cubs history, as the Cubs scored 2 runs on sac flies and one on a bases-loaded ground out to short.  The other run came on a Damien Miller home run, his last as a Cub.  As the game was winding down, Houston lost to Milwaukee, setting up game 2 as the clincher.

It was a damn-good Pittsburgh team though (after all, they won 75 games in 2003), so a double-header sweep was unlikely.  I have a distinct memory of the feeling of dread that the Cubs would be unable to sweep.  Odds and Cubbishness argued for a split.

Game 2 featured the Bearded Wonder against Ryan Vogelsong, in the 7th start of his career.  Turned out to be one of his shortest too–he lasted only 1.1 innings and gave up 6 runs. All the Cubs had to do was hold on and they’d clinch the division championship. Sosa hit his 40th HR and Moises Alou hit his 22nd. No one shook Alou’s hand after his jack though.  Matt Clement cruised, giving up no runs, 5 hits, and 1 BB through 7 before a run-scoring triple and a passed ball. The Cubs won 7-2.  Despite the offensive explosion, no Cub batter had more than one hit or run-scored, and  Mark GrudF7 had the most RBI for the game; two.  I guess Situational Hitting stuck around for a nightcap. Even Koyie Hill, I mean Paul Bako, had an RBI and run scored on 1 for 3 hitting.

Riding the momentum of their division-clinching double header, the Cubs lost the next day but beat Atlanta in 5 games in the Division Series.  I’m not really sure what happened after that.

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  1. Author
    Rizzo the Rat

    If you can name the Cubs current starting rotation, well, that’s just sad.

    Let me think. Wood, Volstad, Berken, Rusin, Bailey? Not sure about first names, though.

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  2. Author
    Mucker

    Sadly for me, the only things I remember about 2003 are Patterson’s hot start, Prior collision with Giles and the playoffs.

    The finest moments for me in Cubs history are A Ram’s walk off against White Sox in 07, Fukudome’s debut, Soto’s walk off against Brewers in 08, Zambrano’s no hitter and the 4 game sweep against the Breweres to basically clinch in 08.

    I really miss 2008

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  3. Author
    Rizzo the Rat

    You know your rotation is in trouble when Samardzija is your de facto no. 1, and then even he gets shut down.

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  4. Mobile Rodrigo

    I’ve said this here before but I think my favorite moment of that season is when the Cubs took 4 of 5 from St. Louis at Wrigley in early September (I think).

    It should of been 5 of 5 if not for a bad call on a would be run scoring double by Alou. That for me was the moment when the Cubs finally became the real deal.

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  5. Author
    Rizzo the Rat

    @ Rice Cube:
    From the comments:

    In this house- we obey the laws of thermodynamics!

    (Although it really should be “gravity,” not “thermodynamics,” but then the reference would be less obvious.)

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  6. Author
    SVB

    2003 also featured two of the best Cubs trades in history, IMO. Eric Karros and Mark GrudF7 from the Dodgers for Todd Hundley. ARam and Loften from the Pirates for Nobody, Hype, and Jose Hernandez. These aren’t quite as good as Bowa and Sandberg for Ivan deJesus, but they were excellent moves from the Cubs POV.

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  7. Author
    SVB

    By the way, this post was motivated by the comment a few days ago: There is nothing to write about this team. Springsteen started humming in my head, Glory Days. There is always history!

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  8. Author
    Suburban kid

    Mobile Rodrigo wrote:

    It should of been 5 of 5 if not for a bad call on a would be run scoring double by Alou.

    Wasn’t that the play where Alfonseca came out of the bullpen bitching about the call and bumped an umpire?

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  9. Author
    mb21

    SVB wrote:

    There is always history!

    If someone started a history of the Cubs blog and discussed only the good moments, I’m confident a blog about the shitbag rotation the Cubs have would have more content. (dying laughing)

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  10. Author
    WaLi

    Fucking UCF lost to Mizzou. We had more total yards, TOP, and every other saber metric stat that said we should win. By they had a punt return for a td. And now I will have to hear about it from my Mizzou friends. Fuckers.

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  11. Aisle424

    Best reasoning from a Sox fan I have seen about their seeming disinterest in a Sox team that is a game out of first. It was a comment on one of my friends’ Facebook posts wondering how the attendance is so low on a perfect Saturday with Chris Sale on the mound:

    Non-Sox fans never understand the relationship between fans and ownership that truly contributes to the low attendance. Ownership killed their relationship with a lot of fans over the years and their own tactics have caused low attendance. To understand some of the causes, you need to understand the history of the fan/ownership relationship on the south side. First the team tried to move to Florida. (That stadium in TB wasn’t built for the Rays, it was built for the Sox.) Then, after a great 1993 postseason run, the team was a favorite to win the World Series all through the 1994 season. Then the strike hit and ownership was leading the charge to a strike for the owners. Add to that damage the “White Flag Trade of ’97” in which the team gave up an a pennant race that the fanbase still believed in. Attendance then dropped. For 6-7 years the team was bad. We had Terry Bevington as our manager in there! Then we catch lightning in a bottle and win the 2005 World Series. All is forgiven. The fans return. In 2007 the team tanks. Attendance drops. Ownership publically rips the fans as a cause for a badly constructed team. From this point on the GM gets on TV constantly and blames his shortcomings on the fan attendance when the team is bad. The manager phones in a few seasons. Meanwhile the team raises ticket prices. Oh, and you cannot leave the upper deck to see the whole ballpark anymore if you have upper deck seats. Then they collapse in 2011 and the team sends season ticket holders a letter stating that if they don’t pay for postseason tix even though they are eliminated they lose their season tickets. (Lots of season ticket holders left insulted.) With no expecatations for 2012, attendance sucks early on. Their own flagship radio station barely covers them the first half of the season except to say that they are not going to hold on all year. (That sells tickets, huh?) Then that same station and management rips fans for not going to a Yankee series in which prices were doubled on a weekday! Insult after insult was thrown at the fanbase all year. Then they collapse at the end. After all of that, your walk-up crowd may be hurt this week. Just sayin’.

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  12. Author
    mb21

    @ Aisle424:
    Interesting. One thing I thought of was with Cubs attendance also down, tourists can more easily get a seat at Wrigley and would presumably much prefer going to a Cubs game. I do wonder what that impact is. If the Cubs were good and sold out, would attendance there be higher or would it be the same? Not that I think it would be double what it is, but it’s had to have some noticeable impact.

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  13. Author
    Rizzo the Rat

    Finally got around to watching Moneyball. My main takeaway is that it doesn’t matter how you get on base (a walk is as good as a hit) or whether you’re old and slow and can’t play defense. (Wait, why is Jeremy Giambi being traded to improve the defense? Does that mean the scouts had a point?)

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  14. Author
    Rizzo the Rat

    It actually wasn’t a bad movie, but it was hard for me to get too engaged because I kept wanting to punch the protagonist in the face.

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  15. Author
    Rizzo the Rat

    Ryan Howard done for the year, finishes with -1.0 fWAR. So far the contract extension is not looking so hot.

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  16. cwolf

    Since I’m older than dirt, I remember that as soon as Reinsdorf bought the Sox, he alienated a lot of the casual Sox fanbase as well as the relatively common (at that time) dual-interest Cubs and Sox fan. His first move was to move the Sox telecasts to pay TV where you had to buy some set-top box and pay a fee to watch the games. Then he got in a feud in Harry Caray which resulted in Harry going to the Cubs. And some other stuff I can’t remember. (dying laughing)

    He also had a main business partner who was kinda the front man / spokesman for the team and who was a big-time asshole. Not sure whatever happened to that guy.

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  17. Author
    Rizzo the Rat

    I think it would be nice if (assuming they lose today) they were to win the next 4 in a row to finish with fewer than 100 losses.

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  18. Author
    SVB

    Fantasy ends for me tomorrow but for some reason we can still make transactions, even though it’s a non-keeper league. So I dropped Mike Leake for Adam Greenberg.

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  19. Author
    Suburban kid

    DENVER — The Cubs’ are-you-kidding-me finish to this WTF season took another Ripley’s-worthy turn in the sixth inning of a 6-0 loss to the Colorado Rockies Wednesday night when Joe Mather inexplicably became the second Cub in two weeks to wipe out a run at the plate by trying to take third on a would-be sacrifice fly.

    I love it when Gordo tries to get digital-age edgy with his 1940s breathless sportswriting style.

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  20. Author
    SVB

    @ Suburban kid:
    WTF actually made the final copy? Are there no standards there anymore? Will they be printing this next: Bobby Valentine said, “These F****’ veterans on the Red Sox are a f*****’ bunch of sh**.”

    Or maybe we’ll get the unedited transcript of Elia’s homage to Cubs fans.

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  21. Author
    WaLi

    @ mb21:
    I think work blocks it because I doesn’t have a category per the software. For instance this sites category is probably “blog” and cubs.com is probably “sports”. Josh’s website is blocked too because it doesn’t have an assigned category.

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  22. Author
    josh

    @ WaLi:
    I don’t even know how to do that. I should just assign it a category like “NEWS” No one blocks that, right?

    First I’d have to figure out how one even does that. I know nothing about SEO.

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  23. Author
    mb21

    josh wrote:

    First I’d have to figure out how one even does that. I know nothing about SEO.

    I don’t think there’s a way. At least not that I’m aware of. Surely I’ve had heard about this if it was something I could do. It has to be his work firewall.

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  24. Author
    josh

    @ mb21:
    Maybe it has something to do with submitting your sitemap to Google?

    That’s a thing, right? Whenever I see SEO type stuff, they’re always talking about sitemaps.

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  25. Aisle424

    Jerry Green would like you whippersnappers to take your fancy WAR and get off his lawn: http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20120929/OPINION03/209290399/

    ESPN claims that Trout merits the MVP award — despite Cabrera’s possible Triple Crown — on the basis of WAR. This is not the kind of war that Ted Williams fought in twice amidst his Triple Crown-style seasons. Or the war that brought Willie Mays into the Army during his career.

    It is that relatively new “Moneyball” style of crackpot Sabermetrics stat described as wins above replacement. Whatever that means.

    Once upon a time, the MVP was not decided on the basis of some imaginary numbers that are jammed into a murky, invented stat such as WAR.

    Unlike WAR there is no stat in Sabermetrics known as LOGIC.

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  26. Author
    Suburban kid

    josh wrote:

    I don’t even know how to do that. I should just assign it a category like “NEWS” No one blocks that, right?

    First I’d have to figure out how one even does that. I know nothing about SEO.

    Regardless, Josh, it’s great to see how much progress you have made on your site.

    http://tinyurl.com/8ddhbkj

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  27. Mobile Rodrigo

    (dying laughing) @ Justin Germano

    “I heard someone yelling at me,” he said. “It wasn’t on purpose that I hit Montero. I even made eye contact with Montero. He knew, but I feel like everyone in the stadium thought it was. It was just bad timing after a home run. … I think he was yelling ‘Hit me, hit me’ after I did. That’s not really my game. I give up home runs all the time. If I hit people after (homers) I’d be hitting quite a bit of people.”

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  28. Author
    josh

    @ Aisle424:
    This attitude isn’t surprising. WAR tries to take into account the total player, but writers only care about offense. That’s why the player with the best offense tends to win the Gold Glove. In most people’s minds, good offensive player = good player. End of story.

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