March 2007

A Final Message To Cubs Fans Before the Season Starts

Lou_and_soriano The Cubs have looked great in Spring Training.  They have finished spring training with a 17-13 record.  Carlos Zambrano's contract is just about finished, with the announcement of a new contract coming on Monday at the latest.  The team is ready to open the season against Aaron Harang in a rematch of last years' Opening Day.  This is a way different ballclub then last year and there are high expectations on the north side.  I guess that's why I am writing this post to send a message to Cubs' fans.

Banks_1 I have been worried about the behavior of Cubs fans lately.  Last year was especially brutal.  Cubs fans have always been known as good, loyal fans, Ernie even named it the Friendly Confines.  Many ex-Cubs have said that every ballplayer should experience starting at Wrigley at least once in their careers.  But as we reach one hundred years since our last World Series, some fans are getting impatient.  The one thing that bothers me the most has been the booing.  I always made it a rule to never boo a Cubs player unless they say something negative about the fans.  The booing was out of control last year and I think it gave all Cubs fans a bad rap. 

Juan Pierre told the Trib that;

Pierrebunts_2 "Chicago might be a good place to play, but it is a tough place to lose, one of the toughest.  They love their Cubbies in that town, and they sell out almost every game at Wrigley. We lost almost 100 games and the fans voiced their opinion.  It was unpleasant and sometimes it got nasty, but you knew they were yelling because they love their team. That's what made it so disappointing."

If that's the opinion of a good guy like Pierre, you know that other players probably have heard the same or worst about Cubs' fans.  That's only going to hurt the Cubs' chances of signing free agents.  One thing I have noticed over the years is that free agents, like Juan Pierre and Jacque Jones last year, take a little bit of time to adjust to playing day games.  The Cubs play more day games than any other team in baseball.  I don't remember any free agent coming over and starting out that fast.  Pierre and Jones finally got in a good rhythm and finished with good numbers, but the season was a bust.  The fans last year were especially cruel to Jones.

Jone_strikes_out_vs_stors_1 "I have no problem with fans being impatient," first baseman Derrek Lee said. "I like it. I like the sense of urgency. I don't like how they treated Jacque, throwing [a ball] at him and the racist comments. That's uncalled for.

"I don't mind the fans being impatient over winning. I think we need that as a team. We need the urgency. We feel like, 'Let's get it done or they're going to be on us.' I like that part of it."

I don't know who is still stuck in the 1950's, yelling racial slurs or sending racist hate mail, but please stop.  Root for another team or change your ways, but don't give the rest of the Cubs' fans a bad name just because you are ignorant.  Former reliever LaTroy Hawkins, former manager Don Baylor, and former Patterson_2 centerfielder Corey Patterson were all the victims of these ignorant comments.  In fact former manager Dusty Baker said he didn't want to call up Felix Pie last year because he didn't want to expose him to the same type of treatment that Patterson got.  Was it Patterson's fault he was poorly coached?  You think he wanted to strike out all the time?  And finally, do you think the booing helped his situation or made it worse? 

I always talk about my great experiences at Wrigley, but my worst occured last year when the Cubs played the White Sox at Wrigley.  Dempster blew another Cubs_vs_sox_7106_023 lead in the ninth, losing the game to our crosstown rivals.  I was just as upset as any Cubs' fan was, but then people started throwing garbage on the beautiful Wrigley Field outfield.  It was just sickening.  I know some of the guys on the ground crew who were had to come out and pick up the garbage thrown on the field.  It was embarassing to the whole city of Chicago. 

It's not just Cubs fans either.  Chicago fans in general need to remember that it's only a game.  Whether it was the father and son white trash tag team that attacked the Royals first base coach a few years back at a White Sox game, or the people in Soldier Field who booed Grossman and the Bears as they were heading to the Superbowl, we need to stop this.  We are turning into a second rate Philidelphia.  What's next, throwing snowballs at Santa Claus like some Philly fans did a few years back?

Look, I know what it's like to watch a team play badly.  And the prices of the tickets are high, so I'm not going to tell you how to act.  And I have been drunk Cubs_vs_tigers_61706_016 at many a Cubs' games so I am not going to criticize anyone for drinking.  All I am saying is that everyone needs to support our Cubbies.  If you want to get angry, talk to a friend, call a sports radio show, comment on this blog or any other Cubs blog, but don't boo, don't act like an idiot, and for God's sake, don't make any racial comments.  You want to show the Cubs your displeasure;  Don't show up to the games.  When you don't go, like fans did last year, then they lose money on parking, souveniers, beer, food, and much more.  That's what helped cause the shake up at the end of the last season and it sends a strong message to management.  It says that we won't show up and spend money if they won't put a quality product on the field.  I have taken down all my photos from last season's games that I attended.  Come Monday, it's a fresh new start.  If Soriano, Ramirez, or any other players start out slow, relax, it's a long season.  Let's be supportive and see if we can will our Cubbies to a post season run.

And let's put the "Friendly" back into the "Friendly Confines".

Go Cubs!

Viva Las Vegas!

The Cubs have officially broken camp in Arizona and will travel this weekend to Lou_watching_2 play Seattle in Las Vegas.  The lineup is set, the 25 man roster is ready, and we have our starting pitcher.  All the talk, all the hype, all the money, it all comes down to one day; April 2 when the Cubs start their season in Cincinnati.  This is the lineup Lou has penciled in;

1. Alfonso Soriano, CF
2. Matt Murton, LF
3. Derrek Lee, 1B
4. Aramis Ramirez, 3B
5. Jacque Jones, RF
6. Michael Barrett, C
7. Mark DeRosa, 2B
8. Cesar Izturis, SS
9. Carlos Zambrano, P 

No big surprises here.  Murton has earned his spot on the team and will bat second.  The biggest problem is the lack of left handed hitters.  With the way Cliff Floyd has played the outfield this spring, I hope he isn't in too many games.  I know he has a left handed bat, but that guy has been brutal. 

The rotation is also set; Zambrano, Ted Lilly, Jason Marquis, Rich Hill, and Wade Miller.  Zambrano will start on opening day.  The bullpen includes closer Ryan Dempster, set up men Scott Eyre, Bob Howry, Will Ohman, Michael Wuertz, and designated long men Neal Cotts and Angel Guzman.

The bench includes backup catcher Henry Blanco, backup shortstop Ronny Cedeno, back up outfielder Cliff Floyd, and back up infielders/outfielders Ryan Theriot and Daryle Ward.

Not on the Roster

There are a few guys I would have liked to have seen on the team who didn't make the cut.  The team optioned outfielders Felix Pie and Angel Pagan and Pie_3 pitcher Rocky Cherry to Triple-A Iowa.  I am not a Cliff Floyd fan and I would have rather kept Pagan.  He is a switch hitter with a lot of speed. Pie played fantastic defense, swung the bat well, and showed his quickness.   Cherry had the most successful spring training, but didn't make the team.  I can't wait until they call these guys up in September.  The one person who also didn't make the cut, and didn't deserve to is Mark Prior.  As I said over a month ago, Prior will make his start in Iowa.  And it's about time someone made a rational decision on this issue.  Pinella chose Miller over Prior because Miller pitched better than Prior.  Prior is going to have to prove he belongs on the team, and the only way to do that is to get him on some kind of routine.  Prior obviously wasn't happy;

"I'm not going down that road," he said. "I'm under their control until I'm not Prior_joging under their control. It's up to them whether they want me. I'm just an employee.  Look, I'm a controlled player.  There's nothing I can do with what their decisions are, so I'm not going to sit there and fight it. I don't really have a whole lot of control, and until you get in a position where you have any leverage, then maybe you can argue and try to find out what other options there are.  When there are no other options and they've made a decision, you accept it and move on. I'm going to play ball."
He also had some smart *** comments about making the Triple A allstar team.  You know what's funny about Prior and Wood?  They don't realize that in the real world, if someone was unable to perform at their job like these two yahoos, they wouldn't continue to collect multimillion dollar paychecks.  I'm glad someone finally had the balls to put both of these guys in their place.

Coaching Staff

I have had nothing but high praise for the whole coaching staff.  I have seen more improvement out of these players in one spring then I did during the whole Trammell_batting_practice Dusty era.  First base coach and excatcher Matt Sinatro has been working on defese with Michael Barrett.  Bench coach Alan Trammel has been working hard with Ronnie Cedeno.  Third base coach Mike Quade has been trying to turn Alfonso Soriano into a centerfielder.  Gerald Perry has taught the team to take some pitches and work the count.  Coach Ivan DeJesus has been drilling the pitchers on a regular basis.

"He's really been working a lot on bunting, push bunting, just making sure we get our bunts down consistently," pitcher Rich Hill said. "He pulls us to the back field, and we'll have 20 bunts one side, 20 bunts the other side, and do it again and do it again until we consistently get it down until it becomes second nature. That's the way it feels just because of the time we've spent in Spring Training."

Heck, I have even seen Aramis Ramirez hustling.  This is what I call coaching.

Predictions

I have seen the Cubs picked anywhere from first place to fourth place.  Me personally, I think they will finish in first.  I think they have more depth then anyone else in the Central.  Houston and St.Louis didn't do enough to improve and lost a lot of key guys.  Cinnci and Milwaukee look better, but they still have weaknesses, and god help us if we finish behind Pittsburg again!  Especially with the money that was spent.

Problems

Yes the Cubs also have their share of problems.  I remain skeptical about the outfield defense.  As I said before, I would rather have Soriano play left, Pie play center, and Jones play right.  Oh well.  I am also worried about the spring performances of Neal Cotts and Michael Wuertz.  I hope Dempster regains his 05 form.  I don't want to see Floyd complain about playing time.  The pitching staff is going to be key.  The  starters need to keep us in ballgames and give us innings.  The bullpen cannot be overused, since Dusty did that last year.  Finally, the biggest concern is Zambrano's contract.  Hendry usually finished these things last minute, but I will say it again;

The Cubs do not want the Zambrano contract circus screwing up this season.  Get this done and we have a chance.  The deadline is quickly approaching.

All and All

All and all, this should be a much more pleasant season of baseball than last year. It will be more exciting, there should be more fundamentally sound baseball, and their are some fun storylines and characters on this team.

I hope you enjoy this season as much as I am planning on and keep coming back for all your Cubs news and use the comments section to sound off!

GO Cubs!

I'm Shocked, Shocked!

Renault A scene from the classic movie Casablana;

Rick;  How can you close me up? On what grounds?
Captain Renault;  I'm shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on in here!
[a croupier hands Renault a pile of money]
Croupier Your winnings, sir.
Captain Renault; [sotto voce] Oh, thank you very much.

Why?  Why do we do this.  And who cares anyway?  Yes, Kerry Wood is on the DL and Mark Prior will soon join him.  Why is anyone surprised?  Wood has been a Wood_throws_4 walking disaster since he came to the major leagues.  Yes, he had the 20 strikeouts versus the Astros in 98'. Yes he had an amazing Game 5 of the NLDS versus the Braves.  But the one thing that has been constant has been his injuries.  Wood has been on the DL 11 times in nine seasons because of the following reasons;

Elbow soreness, elbow surgery, a strained oblique muscle, shoulder tendinitis, a strained biceps, a sprained supraspinatus muscle, shoulder inflammation, shoulder surgery a partly torn rotator cuff andarthroscopic knee surgery. 

During the  three year 32 million dollar contract he signed before the 2004 season, Wood won 12 games in those three years.  He only pitched 230 innings.  The guy can't even get out of a hot tub without huring himself.

Prior_pitches_4 Prior hasn't been much better.  At least Wood can tell you which body part is falling off.  Prior injuries have been freakish and somewhat of a mystery.  Prior is expected to be placed on the disabled list for the ninth time in his six-year career.  Like Wood, since the magic of 2003, Prior has been a big disappointment. In the three years since 2003, Prior has won 18 games. 

In 2003, Prior and Wood combined to give the Cubs 32 wins.  Since that time, they have 30 wins between them. That averages to be about five wins a piece for the Cubs projected 1-2 starters in the last three seasons. 

Yet as big a deal as the Chicago sporting media is making this, it is not that big of a deal.  As I've been saying all along, the Cubs planned to get nothing out of Priorlovestowels_6 Prior and Wood this year.  If they would have miraculously stayed healthy, everything they would have gotten out of them would have been a bonus.  Prior was battling for the fifth starter spot, Wood was auditioning for the role of long reliever.  A far cry from the days when their health determined the Cubs' season.  So they won't pitch.  Who cares?  It doesn't matter.  I wish the Cubs would have let those guys go so they wouldn't have to deal with this circus. 

There are many more problems the Cubs fans need to worry about than those two yahoos.  While the Wood and Prior story was on page 1 of most Chicago sports newpaper sections, talk of Carlos Zambrano going to the Mets or White Sox was pushed to the middle of the paper.  I'm sorry, but losing one of our top pitchers to either the Mets or White Sox would affect me and the Cubs a lot more then Wood or Prior not pitching.  That should have been on page 1.  That should have been the topic of sports radio discussions.  Not Wood and Prior.

In case you didn't know, Opening Day is about a week away, the deadline Zambrano_pitching_2 Zambrano set for the Cubs to sign him to a long term extension.  He also has said he will not sign with the Cubs if they don't sign him before the season starts.  He backtracked on those comments, but I believe he was serious when he said them.  The reporter from Sports Illustrated asked Zambrano if he would pitch for the Yankees.  Zambrano replied;

"I like the Yankees, but I don't see myself pitching at Yankee Stadium. Too many rules. If I play in New York, it's going to be with the Mets. First of all, because I get to hit. And I love hitting. I can't say … that I would never play for the Yankees. Hopefully no, but you never know."

Of course the Mets would love to acquire Zambrano.  They have one of the best lineups in baseball with a weak pitching staff.  They also have oodles of cash.  It is also being reported that Zambrano would be interested in playing for Ozzie Guillen and the White Sox if things didn't work out with the Cubs.

Losing Zambrano or having this extension hanging over both Zambrano and the team is something Hendry must avoid at all costs.  It's no surprise that Wood and Prior are dominating the headlines over Zambrano. It's been that way throughout Big Z's career.  While he has carried this team, the focus has always been on the other two clowns.  The Cubs need to reward him or he will be the greatest pitcher to leave the Cubs since Greg Maddux

That Cubs fans, is the real cause for concern.
Worry about the present and the future, not two has-beens from the past.

Let Me Make A Suggestion

We Cubs fans have a bad habit of falling in love with players sometimes.  We get so attached that we don't see that a change might actually improve the team.  As the season starts in one week, there are still a few concerns that I have.  What do you do with Wood and Prior? Can Neal Cotts continue to give up so many runs from the bullpen?  Is Daryle Ward that great of a pinch hitter?  Which Dempster will show up in 2007?  Will Big Z get his contract this week?  Oh yeah, and what about that outfield defense?

The Cubs look much better than last year, but that's not saying much.  They have more depth, the pitching is better, Derek Lee is back, and Lou is at the helm.  Soriano_error But the biggest weakness is the outfield defense.  Nobody is going to be scared to run on Murton or Jones.  Wrigley Field is an extremly difficult place to play an outfield position, much less centerfield, yet the Cubs are going to put Soriano out there.  Soriano has only played the outfield for one year. After seeing some of the bad jumps and bad reads he has had in Arizona, it is making me more nervous.  So let me make a bold suggestion.

Trade Matt Murton

Go ahead, yell at me.  Call me crazy.  Insult me up and down.  I deserve it.  But here is my point.  Pie is a natural centerfielder.  He can handle the centerfield duties at Wrigley. He is fast and has a cannon for an arm.  He has had one less at bat than Matt Murton, but he is batting .352 to Murton's .255.  Pie has on OBP of .397 while Murton's is .328.  Murton has three home runs and Pie has none.  But Pie_2 let's be realistic. Matt Murton is not going to be a power hitter.  That's why Boston threw him in as part of the Nomar trade.  He was never going to be a power hitter in Fenway, just like he won't in Wrigley.  What Pie will give you is speed and good defense.  Yes, Murton is a patient hitter, but the reason us Cubs fans loved that so much is we were used to the free swinging bunch under the Dusty Baker regime.  Lou and hitting coach Gerald Perry have taught the Cubs to be much more patient.  Murton will give up more runs then he produces with his defense.

If the Cubs traded Murton somewhere for some prospects, the Cubs could put Jacque Jones in left, Pie in center, and Soriano in right, which in my opinion is Jones_diving just as good offensively and a huge upgrade defensively.  I think it would also help both Soriano and Pie to have each other. They seemed to have hit it off well and could really help each other out.  Also, think about the possibility of having Soriano and Pie hitting first and second. That kind of speed up top would be unbelievable.  Pie would also add another left handed bat on a team that is mostly right handed.

Theriot Maybe you think Pie is not ready.  Fine.  Then put in Theriot in left against righties.  Theriot has played five positions, including left and right field, committed only one error, hit .385 (with an on-base percentage of .448) and gone 5-for-5 on stolen bases. He is better offensively than Murton, faster, and just as good if not better defensively. 

I know this is not a popular idea, but think about it.  It might just make sense.

Team Lou

Wood_throws_3 It sounds like a few Cubs are getting a little snippy, and it's Lou's job to put them back in their place.  The two snippiest players seem to be Kerry Wood and Mark Prior.  Shocked that people are reporting on their injury progress, they keep copping some sort of attitude.  I don't think either of those guys should get angry when the media and fans question their readiness for this season.  After three years of waiting on them as they sat on the DL and ****** our payroll, I for one, am ready to move on.  The latest squabble involved Kerry Wood, who pitched one inning on Friday, gave up just one hit and no runs.  Since Kerry will be pitching out of the bullpen, Lou is thinking about having Wood start the season pitching an extended spring training.  He wants to see how Wood reacts to back to back starts and wants him to get some more innings in.  When the media asked if he could go back to back, Kerry said

"It's something we talked about before spring training, that it's not necessary for me to go back-to-back days in spring training," he said. "Can I do it? Yeah. What's the point right now? I have to stay on the field and continue to pitch and get better."

Wood claimed that he was being singled out and treated unfairly. He pointed out that none of the other relievers had pitched back to back games, until Bob Howry did today. 

Woodinjured_4 "So why is everybody worried about me?" Wood said.

Because you can't stay healthy you idiot and we don't want to waste a roster spot on a reliever that can only pitch once a week.  But I'll let Lou take over.

"He shouldn't be questioning anybody, truthfully," Piniella said. "All I'm saying is when we [say we want] back-to-back and two-inning [stints], that's the proper way to get the bullpen prepared for the start of a season.  With Kerry that hasn't been the plan, obviously, and the reason I say that is because he has had a couple of setbacks. Now, if he hadn't had those setbacks, that would be the plan."

Pinella added;

"I don't know what was talked about in the off-season.  All I know is the way I've been preparing bullpens … I've always had pretty good success with my bullpens, kept them nice and healthy and strong all year. But you have to lay the foundation in spring training.

Lou_watching_1 "You can't not use them here that way, and then all of a sudden the first week of the season you start piling up work for them. They're not ready for it. That's how you hurt yourself."

Kerry Wood is lucky he is still making a paycheck.  After robbing the Cubs blind the last few years, he should do absolutely no complaining until he becomes a contributing member of this ballclub again.  Until that happens, he should keep his mouth shut and do what his manager tells him.

I know Kerry pitched well against San Fran, and Prior looked better the previous day against the Padres, but if you think that these guys should just be given spots because they had a few moments of success, then you're wrong.  These two need to earn their way on to this team.

As I said before, that ship has sailed.

So you show them who's the boss Lou.

We got your back.

Second Round of Cuts

The  Cubs lightened the load today when they announced their second round of roster cuts, reducing its spring roster from 44 players to 36 players.

Marshallhouston_1 Sean Marshall (recovering frome arm soreness), Carlos Marmol (erratic) and catcher Geovany Soto have been optioned to Triple-A Iowa. Five non-roster invitees have been returned to minor league camp, including left-handed pitchers Ryan O'Malley and Carmen Pignatiello. Infielders Casey McGehee and Micah Hoffpauir, as well as catcher Jake Fox, have also been returned to minor league camp.

Chicago's spring roster of 36 players consists of 18 pitchers, three catchers, eight infielders, and seven outfielders.  They will break camp with 25 players.

The 18 pitchers are;

  Starters; Carlos Zambrano, Ted Lilly, Jason Marquis, Rich Hill, and Wade Miller

  Bullpen; Rocky Cherry, Angel Guzman, Neal Cotts, Scott Eyre, Bobby Howry,  Juan Mateo, Roberto Novoa, Will Ohman, Michael Wuertz, Les Walrond, (why is he still with the club?), and closer Ryan Dempster

Soon to be on the Disabled List; Kerry Wood and Mark Prior

Let's say that the Cubs break camp with 12 pitchers.  We know the five starters will be on the team, and Eyre, Howry, and Dempster will close the games.  Ohman is needed because he is a lefty.  We'll also assume that Prior and Wood Cotts_1 will start the season on the DL.  Les Walrond won't be on the team.  That's nine pitchers and three more spots.  Wuertz and Novoa are both overcoming arm injuries and are behind everyone else.  Cotts has a big contract, but has pitched terrible.  Rocky Cherry is the feel good story of the spring, but will he be able to keep it up?  So to you, the intellingent Crawly's Cub Kingdom reader, which three do you keep in the bullpen?

Your choices are;

Rocky Cherry, Angel Guzman, Juan Mateo, Michael Wuertz, Neal Cotts, and Roberto Novoa.

Regardless of contracts (I'm looking at you Neal), which three would you want to keep?

Let's hear those comments!

The "Doomsday Twins"

Wood_and_prior_spring_o7_3 Ouch!  No that's not the sound of Wood or Prior getting injured again.  It's the reaction that a lot of Cubs fans had when they read that senior baseball writer Scott Miller of CBS SportsLine.com recently referred to Prior and Wood as the "Doomsday Twins," referring to their ability to doom the Cubs' chances of contending because of injuries.  In a piece written five days ago, Miller discusses five things that you need to know about the Cubs.  Although I disagree with Miller on many of his thoughts, Miller was right when he points out that Wood and Prior are no longer the focus of the pitching staff, which those of us in Chicago already knew.  Wood was supposed to be a long reliever and Prior the fifth starter.  Wood_throwing Unfortunately, the press keeps focusing on these two guys.  Prior and Wood are obviously sick of it all.  Wood refused to talk to the media last week, referring to it as "the circus".  When the press asked Prior what the next step was after a minor league start, he sarcastically answered "Go home and get some lunch -- I don't know."

They are not the only two that are sick of it.  Sweet Lou is getting tired of the madness also. 

"They played a big role here in the past, and obviously everybody's concerned," Piniella said. "I'm concerned also. But at the same time, regardless, they've got to be able to help you. In Wood's case, [relieving] is a new role for him. Giving him a little more time than necessary is not a bad idea, as opposed to rushing him."
"There's one difference this year," Piniella said. "We said that whatever we got from these two fine young men would be a bonus, and we've made different preparations. … It's not like it's the end of the world if they're not quite ready for the season."

The reason the Cubs aren't in a Doomsday situation is because they brought in Lillythrowing_1 Ted Lilly, Jason Marquis, and resigned Wade Miller.  They are counting like young guys like Rich Hill, Angel Guzman, and Carlos Marmol to take up a little slack.  The trouble for Cubs fans is that we know how much better a healthy Wood and Prior make this team.  Everytime we see them on the mound, we think "Maybe, maybe they will finally stay healthy."  Personally, I think it would be a lot easier if the Cubs told everyone at the Cubs Convention and everyone at spring training  that Wood and Prior were hurt.  Then, nobody would expect anything.  But the Cubs organization keeps telling us how healthy these guys are, we get our hopes up, and then they get crushed.

Piniella_cubs_1 Heck, even Lou Pinella fell into the old trap of pretending that everything was ok.  Until this week, Lou said that he felt that Prior still had a shot at the fifth spot in the rotation.  Nobody who has watched Prior pitch this spring would ever think that.  But Lou kept saying it.  Prior, who will start on Thursday, has worked only three innings in Cactus League games.  Same with Wood.  Neither of these guys are ready, so maybe it's time for everyone to let it go. 

For the first time in four years, I feel confident we can win without them.

Red Baron Lets One Slip

Sutcliffe While watching the Cubs getting blanked by Angels pitcher John Lackey, I had to rewind the TIVO when I heard Rick Sutcliffe doing an interview with Len Kasper and Dan Pleasac. Pleasac spent the majority of the game blabbering the company line about Prior being fine and just needing to "fine tune" things, yet when he asked Sutcliffe about Prior, if he could return to his old form, Sutcliffe said something similar to this;

He will be given every opportunity to get back [to his old form], but the guy I have seen is not even close.  I hope, I pray that I am wrong, but to me, he looks like he is favoring something.  He could possibly have an injury that he's trying to pitch through.  He's not the same guy.  You don't see the extension, the velocity is inconsistent.

I tried to write down his exact words, but they were close to this.  Did Sutcliffe not get the Cubs memo explaining that you are never supposed to be honest about Prior?  I wonder if the mainstream media will pick up on this.  I would like to hear Cubs' managements explanation.

Scores can be Decieving

The Cubs lost both games this weekend, 7-3 to San Diego, and 4-0 to Anaheim.  RHill ich Hill gave up three runs on three hits over five innings while striking out four against San Diego, but pitched well, while Derek Lee had a monster 3 run blast.  The game was a close one until Neal Cotts and Les Walrond came into the game.  Against the Angels, Carlos Zambrano went 5 2/3 innings, surrendering nine hits and four runs while striking out four and hitting one batter. He ran into trouble in the third when he gave up three singles and a triple to Chone Figgins.  The triple was out of the reach of firstbaseman Darryl Ward.  Had Derek Lee been in the game, Carlos might have got out of that inning without giving up any runs.

Take the Walks, Don't Give Them Any

Last year, Cub pitchers led the league in walks allowed (687) while Cub batters drew the fewest walks (395).  Under Pinella this spring training, the Cubs pitchers have walked 57 batters, while Cub batters have drawn 66.  Zambrano had 0 walks against the Angels, Hill has not had any in the ten innings he has pitched, and the Cubs have been improving throughout the spring.  They have also been much more patient at the plate, taking more pitches.  Let's hope this trend continues.

Screwed by the White Sox?

Did the Cubs get the short end of the David Aardsma for Neal Cotts trade?  The Sosa_1_4 Cubs/Sox trades have been infamously lopsided, remember when the Cubs traded George Bell for Sammy Sosa, or when the Sox got Jon Garland for Matt Karchner ?  While the jury is still out on this one, Cotts has been God Awful this spring.  Cotts has allowed eight runs in eight innings, including two Saturday against the Padres.  Fortunately, Aardsma is not doing much better, pitching in 5 games with a 9.45 ERA.  He has given up eight runs in 6.2 innings pitched.

They're Here!!

Tickets_2007_007 First off, let me say I have them!! My season tickets are in!  Whoo Hooo!  Could these tickets be the ones that take us to the World Series!!  Only time will tell, but it is just another sign that the season is getting closer.  This years design is "Cubs in the National Baseball Hall of Fame".  They have the Cooperstown plaques of Ryne Sandberg, Fergie Jenkins, Hack Wilson, Gaby Hartnett, Billie Williams, and Ernie Banks.  They look pretty cool.  Ok, enough about the tickets, let' s look at the Prior Watch and the Battle for the Fifth Starter.

Prior Watch

Prior threw four innings against Double-A hitters. Prior gave up one hit, two Prior_pitches_3 walks, hit a batter and struck out four. In his first inning, he threw three strikes out of nine pitches. He finished with first-pitch strikes to seven of the 15 batters he faced. He threw threw 68 pitches, 45 for strikes.  I am still not impressed, especially since he was facing Double A hitters. 

"[My command] was better," Prior said. "I threw a lot of [breaking pitches] for strikes. That was the goal, to locate it a little better."

Two walks and a hit batter?  Doesn't sound like he had much control again. 

Cubs management came out in force to see what was going on with their own eyes.  Cubs general manager Jim Hendry, team president John McDonough, special assistant Gary Hughes, player development director Oneri Fleita and team physician Dr. Stephen Adams were gathered in the tower in the center of the four practice fields at Fitch Park to watch Prior.  Boy, to be a fly on the wall in that room.  I really wonder what they were discussing.  One thing is for sure; They must know he will not start in the Majors this season.

Guzman vs Miller

Angel Guzman didn't do much to help his case Friday against the White Sox.  Guzman_1 Guzman gave up five runs on seven hits over 3 1/3 innings. He walked one and didn't strike out a White Sox hitter.  He wasn't able to get through the four innings he was scheduled to pitch.  It was the no strike outs that had Guzman, Lou Pinella, and Larry Rothchild wondering.

"My body, my arm, everything feels good," Guzman said. "I was throwing a lot of strikes, but when I got to two strikes, I didn't get guys out. Those guys were the ones who scored." 

Lou Pinella went behind home plate to talk to a couple of Cubs scouts to see if they saw something.  Pinella believes that Guzman may be tipping his pitches.  Pinella and Rothchild are going to analyze the film to see if they can pick something up.

"They don't swing and miss at him much," Cubs manager Lou Piniella said. "He gets two strikes and doesn't put the hitters away, and he's got pretty good stuff up there."

Miller probably has the advantage over Guzman now, but there is still few weeks, and if Guzman can hide his pitches better, who knows what can happen?

The Rest of the Arms

Guzman and Prior were not the only ones throwing on Friday.  Jason Marquis is looking impressive, and has been moved to third in the rotation, behind Marquis_spring Zambrano and Ted Lilly.  Roberto Novoa threw in his second game and Michael Wuertz threw in his first spring training games.  Both were dealing with sore arms.  Novoa did a lot better than his first outing, giving up no runs, hits, or walks with one strike out.  Wuertz struggled a bit, giving up two hits, but didn't walk any or give up any runs.  This seasons feel good story, Rocky Cherry (yes that's his real name) has continued to make a name for himself.  So far has given up one earned run on five hits over seven innings in seven games.  He has certainly earned a spot on the roster.  Cherry was in the Cubs minor league system, but had to have Cherry Tommy John surgery.  While rehabbing, he took a job selling paint at the Home Depot in Mesa.  In 2006 he returned and moved into the bullpen, where he had a 2.22 ERA and 50 strikeouts in 482/3 innings.  Could you imagine the Wrigley crowd the first time he takes the mound?  The crowd chanting "Rocky! Rocky!"  With Woods injury, it looks more and more like this could be a reality.

Speaking of the Injuries

When we talk about the usual Prior and Wood injury reports, isn't it nice to know that our whole season doesn't depend on these two guys.  Since 2004, the plan was that Wood and Prior would be our 1 and 2 starters, and whenever they were Wood_and_prior_spring_o7_2 hurt(always), we would be waiting for them to return (which never happened).  Our whole season depended on these two guys.  Now, Prior is battling for the fifth spot and Wood is trying to be our long reliever. We already have guys that can pitch in that fifth spot, Miller or Guzman, and we already have a long reliever, Neal Cotts.  Any thing we got out of Wood and Prior was going to be a bonus.  Now that they still can't get their stuff together, its not the end of the season. 

Nice feeling, isn't it :)

He Got Me Again!

Wood_throws_2 Why Kerry, why do you tease me the way you do.  Every time you lead me to believe that this time it is going to be different, and everytime you let me down.  In case you haven't heard, Kerry Wood has a "slight injury".  On Sunday, he apparently tweaked his triceps because of bad footing on the pitching mound at HoHoKam Park. Wood apparently tried to extend his stride past a hole in the mound and felt it in his arm.

"He had a little strain in his triceps on the posterior, on the bottom, and not where he was cut [during surgery]," Cubs general manager Jim Hendry said. "We'll give him a couple days and let Mark [O'Neal, Cubs athletic trainer] work on him. I'm not anticipating any long-term difficulty. He'll skip the next couple days."

Just when he was looking so good.  Darn you Kerry, Darn you

Nice to Hear

Lillythrowing Ted Lilly is putting a lot of pressure on himself.  He wasn't too happy after his start Thursday because he reached 75 pitches in 3 2/3 innings. Lilly knows that he has to locate better to go deep into games.  He expect a lot out of himself this season.

"I expect to do something to help this team win," he said. "I think that's where the pressure is. I don't know how you ever justify, in my opinion, the kind of money that people make in entertainment in general. There's pressure and expectations of myself, and I feel my teammates will be relying on me to go out there and give them a chance to win."

I really like the attitude of this whole team.

Everything Has to be Bigger in Texas

Sosa_rangers Funny to see that two former Cubs with dubious backgrounds have made the 40 man roster in Texas.  Sammy Sosa, the former Cubs slugger has hit his way on to the Rangers squad.  There have long been rumors of Sosa's steroid use, and he was even dragged before Congress.  Jerry Harriston Jr, who was implicated in the recent HGH scandal, also got a roster spot.  They certainly share a lot in common.

Put on the Red Light

It was announce that the reunited Police will be playing Wrigley Field on July 5th.  Season ticket holders get a chance to enter a pool to get tickets, while the general public  can buy tickets on Monday, March 26th @ 10am. Tickets will cost $254.00, $94.00 or $54.00 and will be available at www.tickets.com or by calling 1-800-THE-CUBS.

There Coming!

The best news of the day!  Season tickets have been shipped out!  Horray!!

Confidence Booster

We have all needed a boost of confidence before.  A shot in the arm, someone to tell us to keep our head up, and of course, as Mark Grace would call it, a "slump buster" (sex with an overweight woman).  Something to get us back on track.  One guy who definately needs to get back on track is Mark Prior.  Lou Pinella decided that Mark Prior will be making his next start against the minor league "B" team. 

"His confidence is playing with him a little bit," Piniella said Sunday. "I told him, 'Look, you have to relax.' I think this is the right approach. If I didn't think it was the right approach, I wouldn't send him down there. He can go down there and relax and just pitch. He doesn't have to answer to the media. Leave him alone, let him pitch."

Prior_pitches_2 Prior was supposed to throw on Thursday, but after a side session with pitching coach Larry Rothchild, that start was pushed back to Friday.  Quick question;  What if Prior gets lit up by a bunch of minor leaguers?  Where will his confidence be then?  What if he still throw a breaking pitch for a strike?  What if his velocity doesn't go up? With less then a month to go before opening day, Lou really can't think that Prior will be on the opening day roster.  Not the way he has been throwing.  Pinella willl choose between Wade Miller and Angel Guzman for the fifth starter spot.  As I have said before, I believe that Prior will start the season in Triple A. 

Dempster Gets in on the Giving Spirit

Anout a month ago Michael Barrett announced a donation of $50,000, plus $10,000 for every home run he hits for Project 3000, whose goal is to find a cure for Lebers Congenital Amaurosis (LCA). LCA has affected Lee's daughter, Jada, and resulted in a loss of vision in one eye. Now closer Ryan Dempster is getting in on Dempster_close_up the act.  Dempster is making a $50,000 donation to Project 3000 and will contribute $1,000 for every save in 2007. In January, Cubs TV broadcasters Len Kasper and Bob Brenly held a charity concert and raised nearly $53,000, with a portion of that going toward Project 3000.   Could this be something that brings this Cubs team together? Who knows who will be next in offering their support for D-Lee.

"It shows you not only what kind of teammate he is but what kind of person D-Lee is," Dempster said.

It is always great to hear something like this in an age where all the athletes seem to have paternity suits, gun charges, and act like ******.  I wish the national media would pick up on this.

Go Cubs!

First Cuts

Well, the Cubs have made their first round of cuts.  They trimmed their roster from 58 players to 44.  Infielder Scott Moore and left-handed pitcher Clay Rapada have been optioned to Triple-A Iowa. Neither were too impressive.  Infielder Brian Dopirak has been optioned to Double-A Tennessee.  I like Dopirak, but there really isn't room for him on the roster anytime soon.  I wonder if he could Samardzija_cubs be trade bait?   Pitcher Jeff Samardzija has been optioned to Single-A Daytona. Samardzija pitched today against the Giants and gave up four hits and one walk while striking out two over two innings.  Samardzija looked great up here and I have a feeling that we'll see Jeff at Wrigley in the not too distant future. Ten non-roster invitees have been returned to minor league camp, including right-handed pitchers Jason Anderson, Sean Gallagher, Adam Harben, Ben Howard, John Webb and Randy Wells. Infielders Mike Kinkade and Eric Patterson, as well as outfielders Tyler Colvin and Chris Walker, have also been returned to minor league camp.

Not Even Funny

Seeing the replay of Carlos Zambrano falling on his shoulder was enough to turn Zambrano_tumbles the stomach.  In the first inning, with a runner on and two outs against Matt Morris, Zambrano hit the ball to deep right and took off. Zambrano was running around the bases, but stumbled and fell between second and third. The scary thing was that he was thinking about going home for an inside the park home run. Zambrano finished the game giving up two runs on three hits and two walks over four innings, while striking out five. The Cubs won the game 10-5. Hendry was right when he said;

"I was more worried about his hamstring than his belly flop, to be honest with you. Let's applaud him for playing the game right, running every ball out. If he's not running the ground ball to short out hard, then he's not hustling. I'll take a guy any day on my club that you have to pull back the reins a little bit than somebody you have to jump start."

Some people worry about giving Carlos a big contract because they are worried that he may just get out of shape and lose motivation. I don't buy that.  This guy is an insane competitor.  Who really tries to hit an inside the park home run in spring training?  He's always looking for a challenge and even though he may say things like the Cubs are going to win the world series and he's going to win the Cy Young, and least you know he cares and wants to win.

I didn't see enough of that from the Cubs last year.

I do this year.

Cut Day

After tomorrows game versus San Francisco, Lou Pinella will make his first rounds of cuts.  Rich Hill and Ryan Theriot have nothing to worry about.  Pinella has already assured both of them a roster spot.  The real interesting battle that is shaping up will be for the fifth starters spot.  The battle was originally between Mark Prior and Wade Miller, but now the front runners are Miller and Angel Guzman.  Both Miller and Guzman are making  good cases for themselves, while Prior is going to make a minor league start after another horrible outing.

Guzman and Miller

Both pitchers looked bad last year.  Both pitchers were recovering from injuries.  Both have been dominant in the past.  Both want the fifth starters spot.  Guzman pitched three inning against the Royals and looked sharp. 

"I feel pretty good," Guzman said Sunday. "I think I've been locating my fastball and most of my pitches where I should. I'm going to keep working hard to do things to stay here."

Pinella had some good words to say about Angel;

"You've got to like the young man," Piniella said. "He's thrown 94, 95 [mph]. He's getting his breaking ball over. You've got to like what you see, you really do. He's pitching like he wants a job on the staff, whether it's in the bullpen or in the rotation."

Guzman_vs_pirarte_1 At one time Guzman was considered the Cubs' top prospect until injuries set his career back.  Guzman was dominating the minor leagues in 2003 and was supposed to pitch in the Major League All Star Futures Game before he was diagnose with a torn labrum in his shoulder and had struggled to regain his form.  He was called up to the Cubs last year after the Cubs had nobody to pitch for them.  He finished 0-6 in 10 starts with a 9.28 ERA.  He pitched in winter ball this year and he has looked good in his spring starts.  Against K.C. on Saturday,  Guzman allowed one run on five hits in three innings with no walks. The true test will come on Friday when he starts versus the White Sox.

Millerpitching Miller used to be a stud on the Houston Astros staff before injuries derailed his career.  In 2002 he had a 12 game winning streak, and for his career he has held teams to 2 run or less 69 times and 3 runs or less 89 times.  In 2004, Miller had rotator cuff surgery and has been struggling to regain his form.  He was 0-2 last year with the Cubs with a 4.57 ERA. 

Miller was sharp in his first start, but struggled on Thursday against San Diego.  Miller allowed only one run but gave up six hits and two walks, while allowing eight of 13 batters he faced to reach base. 

Prior Pathetic

Prior_pitches_1 Watching Prior struggle on Saturday was difficult.  By the time it was all over, Prior was torched for four earned runs on four hits in two innings. Prior, who never topped 88 mph with any of his pitches, walked three and did not record any strikeouts. He threw 40 pitches in two inning, 20 of them for strikes.  He was all over the place.  He threw some breaking ball, but none of them for strikes.  Once KC realized this, they sat on his fastball and whacked it all over the place. 

"I didn't like the way I threw but there were some positive things out of it," Prior said. "I was a little better out of the windup. [Pitching from the] stretch is still an issue. I've got some issues. Now I have to work on my curveball a little. I really haven't thrown a whole lot of them on the side."

In two outings this spring, Prior has given up seven runs on eight hits and five walks over 3 1/3 innings, and has not struck out a batter, and has an 18.90 ERA.  Pinella called him in on Sunday to let him know he would be making  a minor league start.  Pinella hope that the minor league start will help boost his confidence, but with the way he is pitching now, there is no way Prior will start the season with the Cubs.

Who's Team?-Lou's Team!

Lou_watching It was only a few days ago that Lou became unhappy.His team was 0-3-1 and had just got their butts handed to them by White Sox.  That's when Lou called a meeting.

"We've got some work to do," Piniella said. "This is no push-button operation, I can tell you that. I'm beginning to find that out. But we'll get it done. [I've] started having some meetings today with individual components on our team, and we'll continue to do that until we get the thing the way we want it.  Let me tell you this—there's a job at hand."

Drills "I talked to the players about some things today, based on what I've seen in games and what I expect in the rest of these exhibition games," Piniella said. "What would you expect? To play better baseball, execute better on the field, go out there and throw the ball the way you're capable of, those sort of things."

After the meeting, new pitcher Ted Lilly said;

"I looked around the room at the guys while he was speaking and you could tell he had everybody's attention. He just has that presence that commands your attention right away. Some people just have it. Born leaders. You can tell he's one of them."

Since that day, the Cubs are 4-0.  The point is that there are no excuses with Lou, which is the exact opposite of the last coaching regime, where everything from the weather to the color of a players' skin was an excuse.  Lou saw the Pinella_training team playing sloppy, uninspired baseball, and demanded a change.  Bad baseball, whether in practice, spring training games, or whenever, will lead to bad baseball during the regular season, and lord knows we have seen plenty of that.  The Cubs are looking much better all the way around.  They have had wins against the Mariners, Brewers, A's and Padres.  Although there is still a lot of work to do, the Cubs look like their playing better.  The Cubs have seen good outing out of their starting rotration; Zambrano, Lilly, Hill, Marquis, and Wade Miller.  Prior is not close to where he needs to be, but the other five should be able to hold their own.  I really like Lou's honesty and coaching style and really feel that it will pay off when the season starts.

Gerald Perry

One thing that I talked about after the Cubs Convention was that I walked away really impressed with the coaching staff.  One coach who really impressed me Pie_1 was Gerald Perry.  He was brought in from Oakland to teach the Cubs that on base percentage wouldn't "clog up the bases".  Cubs fans watched as many promising young players seemed to regress under Dusty and his coaches.  Now look at what's happening with Felix Pie.  He had a disappointing winter in the Dominican Republic, hitting .219 (although he had a successful playoff run in the DR winter league).  Now he has been working with Gerald Perry and looks alot better.

"We flattened his bat, and I'll tell you, he's picked up some nice bat speed," Piniella said. "Like I told these kids today when I talked to them, there aren't many jobs here. But, boy, if you want one, just go grab it and see where that takes you."

"[Pie] hit the ball hard three times, and went out and chased a few balls in center field, which he's capable of doing."

Here Today, Gone Tomorrow

It is with great sadness that we mourn the loss of two fellow Cubbies.  John Vukovich, a former Cubs coach and interim manager, died Thursday. He was 59.
Vukovich began his coaching career with the Cubs in 1981, and was named interim manager for two games in 1986 after Jim Frey was fired.  The other was Cubs_convention_saturday_010 former Cub catcher Gene Oliver.  He died last Saturday of complications following lung surgery.  I saw Oliver at the Cubs Convention, joining fellow 69 Cubs Ron Santo, Glen Beckert and Rich Nye in a game of Cubbie Jeopardy against the 2007 Cubs.  It was a lot of fun and he was really funny.  The thoughts and prayers of Cubs fans everywhere are with the families of John Vukovich and Gene Oliver.

The Rise of Wood?

Sorry, it's the 12 year old in me that can't pass up a good "Wood" joke.  Well, the return of the bad arm brothers, Kerry Wood and Mark Prior,  had mixed results.  Wood_and_prior_spring_o7_1 Mark Prior looked horrible.  Scheduled to go two innings, Prior only lasted an inning an a third, throwing 41 pitches -- 16 chest-high or higher.  Not only that, his fastball had no movement, he threw no change up, and seemed to have no control.  He also couldn't get the ball past the mid-80;s.  From the get go it was bad.  It took Prior 21 pitches to get out of the first inning.  By the time he was pulled in the second, he was charged with three runs on four hits and two walks.

Manager Lou Pinella gave his assessment after the game;

"Obviously, he needs to throw the ball better -- let's be perfectly honest," Piniella said. "I think he knows that, too. At the same time, you've got to get Prior_pitches started somewhere. He threw his allotment of pitches, and we got him out of there. Hopefully he comes to the ballpark [Tuesday] and doesn't feel any stiffness or discomfort, and he gets into a regular routine. I think the next time out, he'll feel better about himself and pitch with more confidence."

Let's hope so or Mr. Prior may be starting the season in Iowa.

Wood on the other hand was dominant.In shape and looking good, he was throwing 95 mph fastballs and wicked sliders  He retired the Mariners in order in the fifth. He struck out Jose Guillen and threw 12 pitches, eight of them strikes.

Pinella's assessment of Wood

Wood_throws "That's 95 miles per hour nice and easy. After I saw him throw the first five or six pitches, I said, 'I had a good day already."'

There is a long way to go to see if Wood can warmup quick enough and stay healthy enough to be a closer, but this was a good start.

One of these guys needs to come through to help the Cubs win the division.  Either Prior or Wood has been on the disabled list for 430 of 859 days since Prior was called up to the big leagues on May 22, 2002.   One of these guys has to step up.

Lost in the Mix

Lost in the Wood/Prior mix were some nice performances from Felix Pie and Ted Lilly.  Pie went 3-for-5, scored a run and drove in a run and Lilly pitched two innings, giving up only one hit in the Cubs first spring victory.  The Cubs take on the Brewers tomorrow with Jason Marquis getting the ball.

Boy Do I Feel Stupid

Ozzie_and_lou To celebrate the Cubs-Sox game, I dusted off the old "Sox ****" shirt.  Always classy.  Anyway, the White Sox proceeded to whoop the Cubs 13-2.  Rich Hill, feeling a little under the weather, did ok, giving up one run on one hit, a Konerko solo shot, with three strike outs. Soriano went 3-3, but other than that, it was not pretty. The scary thing about this game?  The Sox only brought over half their team while the Cubs put in everybody except for Michael Barrett.The trouble with the Cubs is the same old same old.  Untimely hitting, too many walks Sorino_vs_sox issued, and letting the opposing team hit home runs after giving up walks.  Take the first inning for example;  Alfonso Soriano hits a double-Matt Murton walks.  Guys on first and second with nobody out.  Derek Lee strikes out and Aramis Ramirez hits into a double play, inning over.  Or take Juan Mateo, who gave up back to back walks before giving up a home run, bursting the game right open.  Didn't look good and Lou was not happy;

"I'm glad it was only Spring Training," Piniella said.  "That's the only good, saving grace out of this thing. Our pitchers aren't pitching well, and our hitters aren't hitting very well. Outside of that, we're OK."

Sounds like Lou is wondering if he should have given up that tv gig.

"I've only been here four days, but I certainly don't like what I see," Piniella said. "I'm being truthful. There's a whole lot of work to do here. I'm talking about everything. You walk people, and right after the walks come the big flys. The ball carries well in Arizona, but it seems like it's only carrying for the other side right now."

These games may not count, but that doesn't change Piniella's competitive fire.

"Who likes to lose? You put the uniform on, and you want to compete and you want to come out on top," he said. "Teams that win the most games in Spring Training usually don't do nearly as well in the season, but at the same time, you'd like to see games be competitive, good baseball where the pitchers are making good pitches, your hitters are getting timely hitting, and if the other team beats you, so what?

So what does Lou to fix the situation?

We're getting lopsided here," he said. "I can't do anything about it now. I have to keep running these people out because we need numbers. When I can do something about it is cut time, and then we'll do something about it, and hopefully quick."

Cubs fans need tohope that Prior and Wood, along with Ted Lilly, perform well on the mound tomorrow.

Welcome to our world,Lou.

A Mighy Bold Prediction

Zambrano_throw "I believe this year, I can win the Cy Young," Carlos Zambrano said after pitching two shutout innings against the LA Angels.

OK, I'll buy that.  Zambrano has finished near the top of the Cy Young voting last season despite pitching for a last place team and going 0-for the month of April.

"And besides that, we will win the World Series. I guarantee that. I have faith in that."

Guaranteed?

"Right. I'm saying that," Zambrano said. "I'm almost sure about that.

Well, Zambrano may not fully understand the concept of a guarantee, but at least he's fired up.  I'd rather have that than a group of sloths.  Zambrano and Cubs fans should have many reasons so far for the opitimism.

Sure, the Cubs have gone 0-2-1 in spring training so far, but thing are looking ok.  Miller The Cubs projected rotation, Zambrano, Marquis, and Miller, have each pitched two innings and have given up two runs, six hits, six stike outs, and no walks.  Zambrano struck out four of the seven batters he faced.  Members of the bullpen have also done well, with Ryan Demspter, Bob Howry, and Will Ohman each pitching one inning and giving up no runs.  Even Jeff Samardzija worked a scoreless inning.  Unfortunately, Carlos Marmol and Neal Cotts did not look good in their inning of work.  The Cubs are going to start Prior on Monday with Kerry Wood coming in relief.  That will be interesting to see.

After starting out slugginsh, the hitting is coming around.  Today, Michael Barret Dempster_and_murton had an inside the park home run, Cedeno hit is second home run of the spring, and Ryan Theriot had a triple.Yesterday Matt Murton made a good case to keep him in the two hole, 3-for-3 with four RBIs, and a home run, and Eric Patterson, Corey's little brother, had a two run homer.

Speaking Of Barrett

Michael Barrett has emerged as a leader in the Cubs clubhouse, and a stand up guy during a time where most athletes are acting like selfish jerks.  On Friday, Barretthaircut Barrett announced that he will donate $10,000 for every home run he hits in the 2007 regular season to Derek Lee's Project 3000, and the Cubs catcher kicked off his fund-raising efforts with an initial $50,000 donation.  Derek's little girl Jada was diagnosed with Lebers Congenital Amaurosis, which has resulted in the loss of vision in one eye. It is a rare disease that affects 3000 people.  Derek's season ended September 14th last year so he could spend time with his family.

"When he called us this offseason and offered to do this, it was touching," Lee said. "We don't even know how to thank him. It's such a great reach-out by him to our family, and not only our family, but everyone with LCA. The donation his family is going to make is going to go so far to the research department in finding a treatment and ultimately a cure."

Lee_batting_cages "Beyond that, it speaks volumes of the person Michael and Stephanie [Barrett] are," Lee said. "They wanted to reach out and help. It means a lot to me to have Michael as a teammate and, more important, as a friend."

It's great to hear this type of stories after hearing all the steroid problems, shooting incidents, and athletes dumping eighty thousand dollars that make the news.  Barrett and Lee are two amazing athletes that remind people what athletes should behave like.

That didn't take long

Piniella_cubs It didn't take Lou long to get fired up.  Pretending to be all new age, Lou was all smiles and sunshine during spring training, but don't think he will be smiling when bad baseball is being played on his team.  After the Cubs committed three errors on Thursday, Lou said;

"We made three errors, and three errors scored seven runs.  Don't like to be sloppy, butat the same time, it's the first game of the spring.  I don't like the idea of throwing the ball around, even though it's spring training.  From that standpoint, I'm not pleased. Outside of that, we got our feet wet and we'll continue to work."

So was Piniella willing to give them a pass in the first game?

"It has nothing to do with a pass," he said. "What it has to do with is, if you want to win baseball games, whether it's now or three months from now, you have to make plays. That's all."

After the Cubs tied Oakland today, gonig 2-15 with runners in scoring position, Lou said

"You look at this ballgame today, and we just didn't really execute. We had runners on second base twice with no outs and couldn't get them over. The game ended up 5-5, and we could've lost the darn thing. But these are the things we're Pinella_batting_cagesgoing to have to work on. I don't expect my boppers to do that, but the rest of these kids in the lineup will have to play that type of baseball if they want to stay in the lineup. That's how you win baseball games. You don't win baseball games with a two-run lead in the seventh inning hitting batters and walking people. These are the things we have to correct and find the right combinations for. That's just fact, and nothing more but fact. These are the things we have to work on. There's talent here, but we have to get it to mesh and we have to get it to execute the way you have to do to win baseball games with consistency. If not, it's just a struggle." 

Don't expect Lou to protect his players.  He is going to call you out if he is unhappy.  That is one of the reasons the Cubs fans are going to love him.

The Cubs play the White Sox tomorrow with Rich Hill going against Jon Garland.  Last time Hill faced the Sox, he got lit up like a pin ball machine, got chewed out by Ozzie Guillen, chewed out by Dusty Baker, and sent to the minors.  He came back with a vegence in September, so it'll be interesting to see how tomorrow goes.

Go Cubs!

And awwwaaaayyy we go!

ZbbdjhbcDon't it feel good to see baseballs being thrown?  Yeah, the score didn't favor the Cubs, but its only spring training.  By just looking at the score, you might not be too happy, but it wasn't that bad.  The Cubs dropped their first spring training game of the season 9-2.  Eight of those runs were given up by guys that are not going to make the team.  New Cub Jason Marquis who gave up one run on three hits over two innings in his Cubs debut.
  "We're working real hard on keeping my sinker down in the zone, gettingahead of hitters and eventually getting to two strikes and putting them away," Marquis said. "I'll take that every time -- 20 pitches, two innings, five, six ground balls."

Unfortunately, the Cubs bats were silent.  Alfonso Soriano, in his first at bat in a Cubs uniform, struck out.  Michael Barrett, Aramis Ramirez, Jacque Jones, Mark DeRosa, and Soriano all went 0-2.   The biggest loser of the day had to be  shortstop Ronnie Cedeno, fighting for a backup infielder job, was 0-3 with an

Lou Pinella  managing for the first time in a year in a half, didn't feel great about the three errors the Cubs had (1 by Cedeno, 2  by back up third baseman Scott Moore)

"I don't like throwing the ball around, even though it's Spring Training," Piniella said after the game. "From that standpoint, I'm not pleased. We got our feet wet, and we'll continue to work."

No beating around the bush with Lou.  He is letting the other guys know where he stands.  This is how Lou is dealing with things.  When Aramis Ramirez said that he didn't run hard because he was playing hurt and Dusty said it was ok, Lou let it be known that if anyone was hurt, they would be seated and let someone from the bench play until that person got better.  You think Aramis got the message?

Lou added
"I've only been in this organization a few months, but I feel like a Cub, I really do. I'm looking forward to a very successful season, and it starts with Spring Training games."

Iueeqpry "We have a lot of work to do here in the next 28, 30 ballgames, and it'll give me a chance to familiarize myself with the players so I can utilize them the right way. At the same time, I can start the evaluation process."

Sounds good Lou.

I thought there was also an interesting quote from Derek Lee (who got a broken bat single),

"Last year, things got away from us," Lee said. "This year, we have a clean slate. Guys have dedicated themselves, guys are motivated and I think you'll see a different team."

What does that tell you about the managerial staff last year?  But as Lou says about last year,

"It has no bearing on what happens starting April 1, or actually, starting today.  I look at the present and the future, and I think that's the best way to do it. The past -- what can you do but learn from it?"

Tomorrow Big Z, Carlos Zambrano takes the mound.
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